martes, 13 de octubre de 2009

El extraño caso de la tormenta que no llovia

Hola machinos y fans machinos:

Espero que esten disfrutando su dÍa de tormenta (Martes) en el que casi no ha llovido; asi ha de estar la crisis en el mundo que ahora las tormentas nos las mandan con poca agua para no pagar mucho en el recibo; ya llegará el agua en unas horas.
Lamentablemente no tendremos taller el día de hoy lo cual es una pena ya que nuestra primer letra esta a unos pocos cambios de quedar terminada; pero por lo pronto les pondré algunos videos para que se
inspiren un rato. Todos estan trabajando muy bien, a unos de ustedes
aún les cuesta un poquito mas que a otros el expresar lo que escriben o  piensan, Machinos; entre nosotros no existe la pena porque entre nosotros solo existe la critica constructiva; y recuerden que todos tenemos la capacidad de aportar y cada uno de nosotros limita su participación.

Espero que tengan a la mano su BBB y puedan utilizar un rato de su día para escribir lo que salga de sus creativas mentes.

Tenagn en cuenta que la peor idea es la que no se expresa.

Un abrazo para todos de su "no tan Honorable" Sensei musical.



Videos Prometidos

Machinos mas videos que ver una y mil veces para estimular su creatividad.
Disfrutenlos!


  
Stomp (fragmento de la pelicula Pulse)


 
Bobby Mcferrin Drive


Bobby Mcferrin and Tamango

lunes, 5 de octubre de 2009

Doomsday Clock by Smashing Pumpkins

Is everyone afraid?
Is everyone ashamed?

They're running towards their holes to find out

Apocalyptic means are lose among our dead
A message to our friends to get out
There's wages on this fear
Oh so clear
Depends on what you'll pay to hear

They're bound to kill us all in whitewashed halls
Their jackals lick their paws

Please don't stop it's lonely at the top
These lonely days when will they ever stop?
This doomsday clock ticking in my heart
Not broken

I love life every day
In each and every way
Kafka would be proud, to find out
I'm certain of the end

It's the means that has me spooked
It takes an unknown truth to get out
I'm guessing I'm born free, silly me
I was meant to beg from my knees

Please don't stop it's lonely at the top

These lonely days when will they ever stop?

This doomsday clock ticking in my heart

These lonely days when will they ever stop?

We gotta dig in
Gas masks on
Wait in the sunshine, all bug-eyed

If this is living?

Sakes alive!

Well then they can't win

No one survives
Is everyone afraid?

You should be ashamed

Apocalyptic screams mean nothing to the dead

Kissing that 'ol sun to know all there is

Come on, last call

You should want it all
Ah, it's lonely at the top
These lonely days when will they ever stop
This doomsday clock ticking in my heart

These lonely days when will they ever stop

This ticking in my heart
Is everyone afraid?


                      
                                 

Doomsday Clock



The Doomsday Clock is a symbolic clock face, maintained since 1947 by the board of directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists at the University of Chicago, that uses the analogy of the human species being at a time that is "minutes to midnight", where in midnight represents "catastrophic destruction". Originally, the analogy represented the threat of global nuclear war, but since includes climate-changing technologies and "new developments in the life sciences and nanotechnology that could inflict irrevocable harm".[1] The closer the clock is to midnight, the closer the world is estimated to be to global disaster.

 
Since its inception, the clock has appeared on every cover of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Its first representation was in 1947, when magazine co-founder Hyman Goldsmith asked artist Martyl Langsdorf (wife of Manhattan Project physicist Alexander Langsdorf, Jr.) to design a cover for the magazine's June 1947 issue.


The number of minutes before midnight – measuring the degree of nuclear, environmental, and technological threats to mankind – is periodically corrected; currently, the clock reads five minutes to midnight, having advanced two minutes on 17 January 2007


TIMELINE



IT IS 5 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT



2007: The world stands at the brink of a second nuclear age. The United States and Russia remain ready to stage a nuclear attack within minutes, North Korea conducts a nuclear test, and many in the international community worry that Iran plans to acquire the Bomb. Climate change also presents a dire challenge to humanity. Damage to ecosystems is already taking place; flooding, destructive storms, increased drought, and polar ice melt are causing loss of life and property.





IT IS 7 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT



2002: Concerns regarding a nuclear terrorist attack underscore the enormous amount of unsecured--and sometimes unaccounted for--weapon-grade nuclear materials located throughout the world. Meanwhile, the United States expresses a desire to design new nuclear weapons, with an emphasis on those able to destroy hardened and deeply buried targets. It also rejects a series of arms control treaties and announces it will withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.


IT IS 9 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT



1998: India and Pakistan stage nuclear weapons tests only three weeks apart. "The tests are a symptom of the failure of the international community to fully commit itself to control the spread of nuclear weapons--and to work toward substantial reductions in the numbers of these weapons," a dismayed Bulletin reports. Russia and the United States continue to serve as poor examples to the rest of the world. Together, they still maintain 7,000 warheads ready to fire at each other within 15 minutes.