Chemtrail Central
Login
Member List
Image Database
Chemtrail Forum
Active Topics
Who's Online
Search
Research
Flight Explorer
Unidentifiable
FAQs
Phenomena
Disinformation
Silver Orbs
Transcripts
News Archive
Channelings
Etcetera
PSAs
Media
Vote


Chemtrail Central
Search   FAQs   Messages   Members   Profile
Marilyn Manson & Illuminati?

Post new topic Reply to topic
Chemtrail Central > Freeform

Author Thread
CDsNuTz





Joined: 16 Jul 2004
Posts: 950
Location: Down the hill a bit
PostMon Aug 16, 2004 10:06 pm  Reply with quote  

Heh! DEVO imagine that, i was so into DEVO when they came out.But what does a 12 yr old know, Think i'll have to find me some DEVO songs to download an take another listen.anyone here have any?I still have the 1st popular album,Whatever it was??Whip it?? but doubt i could find a record player.
 View user's profile Send private message
Swamp Gas





Joined: 06 Jun 2001
Posts: 4254
Location: On a Hill in the Lowlands
PostTue Aug 17, 2004 12:20 am  Reply with quote  

We interviewed DEVO for Keyboard World magazine in 1988. The article is not available online, but I have the issue. It might be worth a laugh scanning and converting. We then went to a private party when they came into town. We were backstage partying with DEVO!!!!!! When the show came on, MTV was recording for a live show, since the "party" was 200 people, with them playing live. Thetaloops and I went dressed as cyber punk aliens. Next thing you know, we were onstage dancing with DEVO, along with some robots. What a blast they are in person. REAL partiers, very smart, and friendly.

We just made an mp3 of everything they ever did, and it fits on 700 meg CD-R. I especially like the "Shout" CD, but I believe the 1st album was Q: ARE WE NOT MEN? a: WE ARE DEVO! Electronic folk artists we labeled them. They REALLY could not stand Reagan and Fundamentalists.
 View user's profile Visit poster's website Send private message
CDsNuTz





Joined: 16 Jul 2004
Posts: 950
Location: Down the hill a bit
PostTue Aug 17, 2004 12:42 am  Reply with quote  

AHH yes "ARE WE NOT MEN,WE ARE DEVO" i remember well now,Well barely since it was almost 25 yrs ago.DAMN TIME FLIES.I think i got that album after i got REO Speedwagon Hi Fi,(damn my long term memory is shot to) ,Which was mellow mainstream.My parents couldnt get a handle on me much after DEVO.HEHE, AHH those were the days.
 View user's profile Send private message
CDsNuTz





Joined: 16 Jul 2004
Posts: 950
Location: Down the hill a bit
PostTue Aug 17, 2004 2:34 am  Reply with quote  

quote:
Originally posted by CDsNuTz
It only proves the MASSES are being conditioned to make judgements strictly on outward appearances."I dont need to hear what you have to say, I see who you are by the way you look". Living in Colorado, With the Columbine thing and all,You dont have to tell me twice about the hysteria surrounding MM. To this day some people still say it had to be MM influence.People to asleep to see the truth.To blind to see beyond outward appearances.To stupid to care.



http://www.turnoffyourtv.com/commentary/syndrome.html




"In the age of television, image becomes more important than substance."
-- S. I. Hayakawa


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Oh, no, I'm getting a zit!"
"Well, he seems nice, but his nose hair needs to be cut."
"I'm losing my hair."
"She's too tall for me."
"Gosh his breath smells."
"Does this skirt make my butt seem big?"
"Oh man, clean your shoes off, you stepped in dog poop."
"Wait, before we leave I have to go to the bathroom."

These real-life adventures never occur on television. These are things TV characters don't have to worry about. Television is, after all, perfect. People are beautiful on television -- they live amazing lives and look great doing it.

I went over a good friend's house and he was watching "The Drew Carey Show" on CBS. Now this has got to be one of the most moronic shows I have ever seen on television. In one scene, the star, Drew, his two male buddies and one female friend were sitting in the kitchen talking. The girl was wearing a low-cut top that also exposed her stomach and an extremely tight miniskirt. I remarked, "This girl is only on this show for her tits." My friend was insulted, "No she's not, she's one of Drew's friends. You see, those four people are old friends so they just pal around together."

At that moment, what my friend didn't seem to comprehend, was that TV characters are not real. The images on television may look real, and the people look real, but they are just images. TV characters live in one dimension. TV characters are fictional. Television shows are fictional.

Now, this is not an attempt to insult your intelligence. Of course television isn't real. Everyone knows that. But how much does the world of television effect our daily lives? How much does TV influence your opinion of people? How does TV impact fashion, speech, and social interaction? This is what is meant by The Beautiful People Syndrome: that TV influences the way we view others.

The Beautiful People Syndrome is what happens when you watch too much TV. You begin to believe, or expect, regular people to act, behave, and look like television stars. Does TV imitate life, or does life imitate TV, or does both happen? Television images portray people as beautiful, smart, wealthy, quick-witted, creative, instantly compelling, and exciting. Television wouldn't be worth watching, for those who watch, if it wasn't unbelievably interesting.

In the book Amusing Ourselves to Death, New York University Professor Neil Postman explains how television has changed modern imagery: "It is implausible to imagine that anyone like our 27th President, the multi-chinned, three-hundred pound William Howard Taft, could be put forward as a presidential candidate in today's world. The shape of a man's body is largely irrelevant to the shape of his ideas when he is addressing a public in writing or on the radio . . . but it is quite relevant on television. The grossness of a three-hundred-pound image, even a talking one, would easily overwhelm any logical or spiritual subtleties conveyed by speech."

Postman goes on to explain that "on television, discourse is conducted largely through visual imagery, which is to say that television gives us a conversation in images, not words . . . You cannot do political philosophy on television. Its form works against the content."

After watching hours and hours and hours of television imagery, those "Beautiful People" will become burned into your mind. The handsome, pretty, skinny and witty characters on the show "Friends" are more famous that writers, poets, politicians and more important that teachers, policemen, or firemen. The characters on "Friends" or "Ally McBeal" live the lives we all should live -- and they don't even have to work that hard.

The Beautiful People Syndrome is attacking the psyche of television-addicted America. For a man, if you are not 6'1'', handsome and wealthy you are not ideal. Any woman who isn't bone-thin with a large chest certainly is below the standard. Television is warping the American mind. Unfortunately, the Americanization of the rest of the world may contribute to mind-warping worldwide. Everyone wants to be one of the beautiful television people.

What is the result of The Beautiful People Syndrome? A lot of unhappy citizens. Post-traumatic-television depression can set in after you realize that your life isn't as wonderful as it TV says it should be.

The ubiquity of television is transforming our lives. If you are not one of the "Beautiful People," you're an outcast.

"Television has become, so to speak, the background radiation of the social and intellectual universe, the all-but-imperceptible residue of the electronic big bang of a century past, so familiar and so thoroughly integrated with American culture that we no longer hear its faint hissing in the background or see the flickering gray light," contends Postman.

"The world as given to use through television seems natural, not bizarre," he says. "Our culture's adjustment to the epistemology of television is by now all but complete; we have so thoroughly accepted its definitions of truth, knowledge, and reality that irrelevance seems to use to be filled with import, and incoherence seems eminently sane."

I hope you know the truth. The trick is to make the truth your conscious and subconscious reality. The truth about the true nature of people: Beautiful People only exist on TV. Beautiful People only exist on TV. Beautiful People only exist on TV. Beautiful People only exist on TV. Make this your mantra. The reality is not as fun or glamorous as television. Rejecting the influence of TV imagery will set you on the path to enlightenment; and make real life so much more worthwhile.


© 2000 By Ron Kaufman
 View user's profile Send private message

Post new topic Reply to topic
Forum Jump:
Jump to:  
Goto page Previous  
1, 2

All times are GMT.
The time now is Sat May 26, 2012 2:05 pm


  Display posts from previous:      



Conspiracy List | Arcade Webmaster | Escape Games


© 21st Century Thermonuclear Productions
All Rights Reserved, All Wrongs Revenged, Novus Ordo Seclorum