This mordant swipe at the educational system is one of Pi San’s first animations to feature his bubble-headed character, Kuang Kuang. On its first day on the Internet, in 2009, “Blow Up the School” was viewed three million times. Government officials were not amused; they slapped Pi with a fine for “inappropriate content.” -MEGHAN LOUTTIT/The New York Times
Author Archives: lkza
Watch ”Exit Through The Gift Shop” if you haven’t

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You wanna dance with me?
This just in: Art wont save the world
Emily tries but misunderstands
Meanwhile at a supermarket in Bangkok
Meanwhile in America: The Second Gilded Age
Has America Become an Oligarchy?
By Thomas Schulz
At first, the outraged members of the Occupy Wall Street movement in New York were mainly met with ridicule. They didn’t seem to stand a chance and were judged incapable of going up against their adversaries, Wall Street’s bankers and financial managers, either intellectually or in terms of economic knowledge.
Inequality in America is greater than it has been in almost a century. Those fortunate enough to belong to the 1 percent, made up of the super-rich, stand on one side of the divide; the remaining 99 percent on the other. Even for a country that has always accepted opposite extremes as part of its identity, the chasm has simply grown too vast.
A New ‘Gilded Age’
In a book published in 2010, American political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson discuss how this “hyperconcentration of economic gains at the top” also existed in the United States in the early 20th century, when industrial magnates — such as John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie and J. P. Morgan — dominated the upper stratum of society and held the country firmly in their grip for years.
Writer Mark Twain coined the phrase “the Gilded Age” to describe that period of rapid growth, a time when the dazzling exterior of American life actually concealed mass unemployment, poverty and a society ripped in two.
Economists and political scientists believe the US has entered a new Gilded Age, a period of systematic inequality dominated by a new class of super-rich. The only difference is that, this time around, the super-rich are hedge fund managers and financial magnates instead of oil and rail barons.
Read full article at: Spiegel Online
Kids are just so adorable
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