were two hours waiting for something to happen. The apathy and silence of our new friends in New York were infectious. In return, the dancers' asses tobagonians pleasant tremors were due to my lower belly. There was a big parade, West Indian carnival parade, which ran from early morning round in some areas of Brooklyn. Feathered half-naked characters simulating sex acts and voodoo witch doctors, all to the rhythm of reggae and drum and bass. Between them and the cameras of the curious were cordons of policemen dressed in blue. The atmosphere, I must say, was highly artificial, heavily controlled and the joy kept below the level of intemperance. A festive mass with overabundance of males to females, abundance of males and females over-abundance of guards for all.
looking for fun, but I became convinced that a party increasingly militarized and full of passive people who take pictures will never be a party.
-decontextualizes If these photos, the people who will not be able to do anything but be fascinated. I know, the parade is boring, but check out weirdos, just add a few funny caption and you're done. " These words were Silvia
of a piece of truth, the truth that lies behind the occasion to show a condom to an unsuspecting child and tell him which is used to treat the blisters of the feet, he can not help but believe and be fascinated by such a prodigy.
decontextualise to appeal. Take a reality more or less consolidated, clean shades of dull or unpleasant and present it again in a far away place. No matter that the place is physical or conceptual matters is that the new reality is perceived as such.
While I was thinking these things, trying to avoid the gaze of Brian apathetic, Silvia had launched with his camera in the midst of all the other passive observers. At the same moment my thoughts strayed to a speech that Charles I had alcohol a few weeks before in a club full of old Italian-Americans for only drunks watching porn: "Dear Mario, is an illusion, America is all an illusion, you think to buy something for $ 10 and will cost $ 15 instead of, read a newspaper to praise a company that has paid his taxes to fund social and think, damn this is a serious company, but if you have the chance to combine information, you can find that it was simply a tactic, a dirty tactic to get tax relief and make this' action in an act of social solidarity. "
Contribution of view: "Elegant n.2 warfare" by Antonio Riello
looking for fun, but I became convinced that a party increasingly militarized and full of passive people who take pictures will never be a party.
-decontextualizes If these photos, the people who will not be able to do anything but be fascinated. I know, the parade is boring, but check out weirdos, just add a few funny caption and you're done. " These words were Silvia
of a piece of truth, the truth that lies behind the occasion to show a condom to an unsuspecting child and tell him which is used to treat the blisters of the feet, he can not help but believe and be fascinated by such a prodigy.
decontextualise to appeal. Take a reality more or less consolidated, clean shades of dull or unpleasant and present it again in a far away place. No matter that the place is physical or conceptual matters is that the new reality is perceived as such.
While I was thinking these things, trying to avoid the gaze of Brian apathetic, Silvia had launched with his camera in the midst of all the other passive observers. At the same moment my thoughts strayed to a speech that Charles I had alcohol a few weeks before in a club full of old Italian-Americans for only drunks watching porn: "Dear Mario, is an illusion, America is all an illusion, you think to buy something for $ 10 and will cost $ 15 instead of, read a newspaper to praise a company that has paid his taxes to fund social and think, damn this is a serious company, but if you have the chance to combine information, you can find that it was simply a tactic, a dirty tactic to get tax relief and make this' action in an act of social solidarity. "
Contribution of view: "Elegant n.2 warfare" by Antonio Riello
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