 |
|
 |
| |
|
|
 |
Hannah Truran |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC Issue 303: giddy flavor
Ah, hormones. With April's impending arrival comes an oft-conspicuous diminishment of seriousness and an abundance of frivolity. Such playfulness can be found this week in a Ridykeulous art show that revels in its misbehavior, the skewed language in Matthew Higgs' new exhibition, and Mind the Gap, which trades in illusory urban environments. Ooze-loving provocateur Matthew Barney sends heads spinning with his long-awaited film collaboration with Björk, Drawing Restraint 9, and '70s anime aims for the loins with The Belladonna of Sadness and a related exhibition at the Museum of Sex. DJ quartet Birdy Nam Nam offer virtuosic but decidedly un-flashy and lighthearted turntablism, and Frostitute crank 'n yank us way past 11. With spring fever just starting to get sprung, we invite you to get out and spread it...
|
|
flavorpill NYC is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.

|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spotlight
|

Flavorpill's Fresh Face
We've just relaunched our website with a new design that unifies all of our publications into one seamless interface. Check it out, click around, and stay tuned for more features coming soon.
|
|
|
 |
| DISCUSSION |
Public Art Fund Talks: John Currin
| when: |
Tue 3.28 (6:30pm) |
| where: |
The New School, Tishman Auditorium (66 W 12th St, 212.980.3942) map |
| price: |
$5 |
| links: |
Event Info | John Currin |
|
|
Tonight, the Public Art Fund's artist talk series kicks off with painter John
Currin, who almost single-handedly redefined the tradition
of portrait painting for the postmodern era. Adding a sense of the grotesque
to his portraits of buxom belles and aging dames, Currin helped revive
interest in figuration in
American painting, paving the way for younger contemporaries such as Lisa
Yuskavage, who mixes blond bombshells with cartoonish aesthetics, and even
Dana Schutz, whose use of color, brushstroke, and narrative elements drags
portraiture into the wilds of her imagination. Feted with an acclaimed
touring retrospective that hit the Whitney in 2003, Currin will be on hand
to discuss his career and his artwork. (AM)
|
|
| DANCE |
Tero Saarinen Company
| when: |
Tue 3.28 - Sun 4.2 (Tue-Sat: 8pm / Sun: 2 & 7:30pm) |
| where: |
The Joyce Theater (175 8th Ave, 212.242.0800) map |
| price: |
$36 |
| links: |
Event Info | Tero Saarinen |
|
|
Finland's dance scene has long been overshadowed by neighboring Russia's
overbearing balletic eminence, but with a new breed of innovative
choreographers like Tero Saarinen, the country is swaying into the
spotlight. Scandinavian minimalism and the Finnish knack for technology
heavily influence Saarinen's work, which combines straightforward movement
with atmospheric multimedia. In Westward Ho!, the
choreographer's breakout work, a trio of male dancers performs a tribal
piece under an electrifying blue light. Showcasing Finland's musical side,
the company presents Wavelengths, a surreal duet featuring Finnish
composer Riku Niemi's original score inspired by Ravel's Boléro. (SP)
What did Meat Loaf title his version of Boléro? The first three correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| ALSO ON TUE |
|
DJ
Pantha Du Prince Tue 3.28 (9pm) APT (419 W 13th St, 212.414.4245) map $8 / $6 advance
Event Info |
|
Pantha Du Prince's productions come spring-loaded from Germany with precise,
electrifying melodies built into each relentless groove. Expect a
moody minimalism and haunting atmospherics in tonight's DJ set. (TW)
|
|
|
|
 |
| ART |
Ridykeulous: Curated by A.L. Steiner and Nicole Eisenman
| when: |
Now through Sun 4.2 (Wed-Sun: 12-7pm) |
| where: |
Participant Inc (95 Rivington St, 212.254.4334) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
The girls are misbehaving at Ridykeulous, A.L. Steiner and Nicole
Eisenman's over-the-top group show. Christian Lemmerz's sculpture,
Charles Saatchi's Dick, revels in castration fantasy, depicting a
representation of the British super-collector's flaccid penis lying
in a urinal amidst feces and blood. Additional reference to original
art-trickster Marcel Duchamp occurs in Lisa Sanditz's mural, Pussy
Den, in which a cropped nude from Duchamp's Étant Donnés
mixes with Liberace-flanked labial curtains. In another gesture of
curatorial gusto, Paige Gratland's Celebrity Lesbian Fist hangs
beneath Keith Mayerson's portrait of Dubya, I, Claudius, and
elsewhere, Lindsay Brant's papier-mâché beavers engage in
cunnilingus. Idols are smashed, predecessors lashed, and cheap shots cashed.
(GKH)
|
|
| FILM |
Drawing Restraint 9
|
|
A labor of Matthew Barney and Björk's love, Drawing Restraint 9
is Barney's first major film since his epic Cremaster Cycle.
Commissioned by the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, Japan, the
film enacts abstracted Japanese rituals aboard a whaling ship. Wrapped in
fur kimonos, the couple performs a tea ceremony before cutting each other
to pieces while liquid Vaseline floods the ship. The sharp, stylized
cinematography, glacial pace, oozing liquids, and sexual metaphors are
familiar from Cremaster, but Björk's quietly ethereal charisma
mixes up the familiar, and her haunting score is used to great effect
— particularly during the gory climax. (BR)
Note: Barney's related exhibition, The Occidental Guest, opens Fri
4.7 at Barbara Gladstone Gallery. CremasterFanatic.com launches an exhibition of Barney-inspired art, video, photography, and memorabilia at Jack the Pelican Presents on Sat 4.1 (7-9pm).
What is the primary whale species hunted today? The first five correct responses each win a pair of tickets for any screening of Drawing Restraint 9 between Mon 4.3 and Thur 4.6.
|
|
| FILM |
Yang Ban Xi - The 8 Model Works
| when: |
Wed 3.29 - Tue 4.11 |
| where: |
Film Forum (209 W Houston St, 212.727.8110) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
With enough flared nostrils, Technicolor pirouettes, and ear-piercing singing to rival Bollywood, it's hard to imagine that yang ban xi — propaganda opera/ballet spectacles from the '60s — were made during one of Chinese history's darkest moments. That contradiction is emblematic of China even today, as baby boomers embrace globalization and Western culture while looking back at their country's recent history with a mixture of nostalgia and discomfort. Through interviews with original actors as well as contemporary culture makers, Yang Ban Xi - The 8 Model Works explores the tangle of paradoxes that is modern China while basking in the campy brilliance of those revolutionary productions. (GM)
Note: There is a Q&A with filmmaker Yan-Ting Yuen following tonight's 8:20pm screening.
Who was the founder of the first museum dedicated to the history of the Cultural Revolution? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to the 6:30pm showing on Mon 4.3.
|
|
| ALSO ON WED |
|
DANCE
Tere O'Connor Dance: BABY Wed 3.29 - Sat 4.1 (Wed-Sat: 7:30pm) Dance Theater Workshop (219 W 19th St, 212.691.6500) map $15-25
Event Info |
|
Tere O'Connor's poignant choreography explores contemporary dance beyond the
"dusty filter of ballet" as he puts it, eschewing narrative for a web of
tangential relations inspired by everyday feelings and ideas. (SP)
|
|
|
DJ
Birdy Nam Nam Wed 3.29 (8pm) Knitting Factory (74 Leonard St, 212.219.3132) map $8
Event Info |
|
Winners of the 2002 DMC Technics World Team Championship, Birdy Nam Nam
apply their combined skills on the decks to transcend mere turntable
trickery and re-create their debut album, entirely cut and scratched on the
fly by the four-person crew. (CJN)
|
|
|
|
 |
| FILM |
The Belladonna of Sadness (1973)
|
|
The Museum of Sex celebrates its new exhibition Peeping, Probing, and
Porn: Four Centuries of Graphic Sex in Japan with a screening of
Eiichi Yamamoto's little-known animated erotic masterpiece The
Belladona of Sadness. Displaying woodblock prints, as well as manga
and anime, the exhibition is an eye-opening tour through Japan's famed
red-light districts. The characters and scenarios depicted present a
narrative of Japanese history, from the wane of shogun rule to first
contact with foreigners and the shifting roles of women during the Meiji era's radical modernization. The animation
takes a more elegiac approach, with an Age of Aquarius soundtrack punctuating immaculately rendered, symbol-laden line and watercolor illustrations.
(AM)
|
|
| MUSIC: Shoegaze-Division |
I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness
|
|
You'd be forgiven for thinking that I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness were a Long Island emo band. Yet instead of bleeding hearts and too much of mom's eyeliner, the Austin quartet wields songs that resound with somber, lonesome lyrics and majestic layers of echoed synths. Granted, the world needs another Joy Division rip-off band about as much as it needs another Simpson sister, but ILYBICD tread lightly on this all-too-familiar, old-new-wave territory; on debut LP Fear Is on Our Side, the band doles out lyrics parsimoniously, allowing for a pleasing, shoegaze-y gloom to permeate. (LT)
Note: ILYBICD play Northsix on Fri 3.31 (9pm).
In 50 words or less, what would you choose over love? The most creative response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
|
|
| ALSO ON THUR |
|
DJ
Steve Bug vs. Luciano Thur 3.30 (10pm-4am) Cielo (18 Little W 12th St, 212.645.5700) map $15
Event Info |
|
One bug we're always happy to see again, renowned Poker Flat-founder Steve
Bug returns after a long absence to join Luciano for a night of exquisitely
groovy, minimal tech-house. (CEH)
|
|
|
|
 |
| FILM |
Brick
| when: |
Opens Fri 3.31 |
| where: |
Various locations |
| price: |
$10.75 |
| links: |
Brick |
|
|
More Dashiell Hammett than John Hughes, Brick is a mystery noir set
in a California high school — a premise that has "gimmick" scrawled
all over it like graffiti on bathroom walls. It's also a premise that
works, thanks to how completely writer/director Rian Johnson commits to it.
The ensemble of actors sling their special brand of slang with the
matter-of-fact panache of short-order cooks slinging hash, and the SoCal
sunshine scissored against institutional concrete appears gloriously gloomy.
Best of all, the unrequited love story, buried in endless tough-guy
standoffs, is carried off by teen detective Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt)
with a steely grimace that even Bogart would have dug. (LR)
|
|
| FILM |
The Devil and Daniel Johnston
|
|
The Devil and Daniel Johnston boasts the same broke-down charm as the
Austin scene that first embraced artist/singer/songwriter Daniel Johnston,
who was diagnosed with manic depression just when he was making his name
with such wheedling anthems as "Speeding Motorcycle." These days he dwells in
his parents' basement, bloated and bewildered and steadily producing art of
such quality that he is featured in this year's Whitney Biennial. In
collage and interviews with the likes of the Butthole Surfers' Paul Leary
(while sitting in a dentist's chair), a lovely, lonely portrait emerges that
far outstrips the standard music biopic. (LR)
What French term describes art made by those outside of traditional artistic society? The first five correct responses each win a pair of tickets to a screening.
|
|
| ALSO ON FRI |
|
COMEDY
Michael Showalter w/ Eugene Mirman and Leo Allen Fri 3.31 (8pm) Warsaw (261 Driggs Ave, Greenpoint, 718.387.0505) map $15
Event Info |
|
Trusted NY alternative pranksters Michael
Showalter, Eugene "Baby Face" Mirman, and former SNL writer Leo Allen present a special show tricked out
with stand-up, stunts, and special guests. (MB)
|
|
|
OPERA
Lysistrata Now through Wed 4.5 (Fri: 8pm / Sun: 1:30pm / Wed: 7:30pm) New York City Opera (20 Lincoln Center Plaza, 212.870.5630) map $25-120
Event Info |
|
Mark Adamo is out to contemporize American opera, which is no small task.
Following his critically beloved Little Women, the composer tackles
an age-old lot of ladies in Lysistrata, a timely riff on
Aristophanes' political spoof. (SP)
|
|
|
|
 |
| MUSIC: Awesomecore |
Frostitute w/ Ulysses S. Rock and eyehateyouandyou'reterrible
| when: |
Sat 4.1 (8am) |
| where: |
P.S. 1363, Geena Davis Auditorium (992 E 89th St, 781.555.5309) map |
| price: |
$2 suggested donation |
| links: |
Event Info | Frostitute |
|
|
If you're going to cook up a rock 'n roll dinner, you might want to start by
serving a hefty slice of NYC's own Frostitute on a plate made of space-rocking
aural soundscapes. A tasty, epic fusion of musique concrete, Bon Jovi-rawk,
and good old-fashioned garage rock circa-'02, frontman Jedediah Frost III
and co. combine all of three of those aforementioned musical elements into a
towering robot that won first place in the interplanetary rocking
competition for two years straight. Infectious in more ways than one (catchy
hooks, warts), Frostitute sound like a My Little Pony doll on Pop Rocks
— pink, frilly, and strawberry-smelling. But with sound! In
conclusion, Frostitute will whisk you away to a magical land of inner
worlds. Eat that, Gibbard! (BS)
Note: Openers Ulysses S. Rock, a blues-based duo that crawled out of the
Gowanus Canal last week, and eyehateyouandyou'reterrible (formerly
Let'smakeagingerbreadhouseokay?) open. This is a benefit show for Ryan's
friend Dan-o, who is broke-ass broke.
|
|
| ART |
Matthew Higgs: What Goes Around Comes Around
| when: |
Sat 4.1 - Sat 5.6 (10am-6pm) |
| where: |
Murray Guy (453 W 17th St, 212.463.7372) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Matthew Higgs' latest show, What Goes Around Comes Around, continues
the artist's virtuoso application of curatorial practice to the presentation
of unique title pages culled from books, photographs of books, and, most
recently, catalogue covers. Often playful, his selections are determined
through a myriad of criteria, including their use of wordplay, font, and
cover condition. Young Mexicans and Artists Say the Silliest
Things are among the more lighthearted titles chosen, their wry humor
exceeding the expectations of a good find. A testament to the growing
importance of language within artmaking today, Higgs demonstrates that
one can make first-rate artworks out of secondhand books. (PJ)
|
|
| PARTY |
Target First Saturdays
| when: |
Sat 4.1 (5-11pm) |
| where: |
Brooklyn Museum of Art (200 Eastern Pkwy, Bklyn, 718.638.5000) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
In a change from their usual Brazilian samba-offs and mash-up DJ sets, the Brooklyn Museum's First Saturday party takes on a sillier tone this week. William Wegman's doggy dress-up exhibition, Funney/Strange, is at the center of the festivities, which include classic silent-film shorts featuring the artist's trademark canines, workshops mimicking the spirit of Wegman's art, and the Upright Citizens Brigade hiding guerilla comedy in places you'd least expect it. The evening is topped off by a disco party boasting dance lessons in forgotten '70s classics like the hustle, giving you a chance to get your Tony Manero on in the Beaux-Arts court. (CA)
|
|
| MUSIC: Electro-Jazz Improv |
Kieran Hebden and Steve Reid
|
|
As Four Tet, Kieran Hebden tangles folk, jazz, and electronic music into dense knots of rhythm, creating sounds that have more in common with the spiritual chaos of free jazz than contemporary electronica. It makes sense, then, that The Exchange Session Vol. 1, Hebden's collaboration with mystical jazz drummer Steve Reid, has as much to do with Don Cherry as it does Richard James. While the album is a pure studio creation, live improvisation is where this collaboraton got its start so tonight's show is sure to be full of unique dialogue and expert explosions of rhythmic experimentation. (DRC)
Note: Hebden and Reid play Issue Project Room on Sun 4.2 (5pm), and the Mercury Lounge again on Mon 4.3 (10:30pm).
According to Hebden himself, how did his first band, Fridge, get signed? The fourth correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
|
|
| ALSO ON SAT |
|
MUSIC: Electro-Pop
The Presets w/ the Heavycoats Sat 4.1 (9pm) Sin-é (150 Attorney St, 212.388.0077) map $10
Event Info |
|
Walking (and rocking) over the line separating pop and electro, Aussie duo
the Presets drench the front row in sweat and synths. Baltimore's Heavycoats
open with moody, echoey anthems and Edge-style guitarwork. (LT)
|
|
|
DJ
PHONO presents Get Physical Records feat. Booka Shade, M.A.N.D.Y., and DJ T. Sat 4.1 (midnight-7am) Avalon (47 W 20th, 212.807.7780) map $25 / $15 with RSVP
Event Info |
|
Booka Shade make up the dark heart and dirty mind of electro-house standard bearers Get Physical Records. Their forthcoming full-length Movements reveals a funkier, more Detroit-centric direction for the duo. (JL)
|
|
|
|
 |
| FILM |
Anna May Wong: Tiger Bay (1933) and Java Head (1934)
| when: |
Sun 4.2 (2pm) |
| where: |
Museum of the Moving Image (35th Ave at 36th St, Astoria, 718.784.0077) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Anna May Wong starred in Hollywood's first color film and was the first
Asian-American actress to gain international fame, but her career was as
troubled as her life. She died relatively young at the age of 56, leaving behind a huge body of work; this series offers the rare opportunity to see many highlights on the big screen. Tonight's Java Head and
Tiger Bay were two major films she made in Britain. In the former,
she plays a noble Chinese princess who marries a wealthy man (John Loder),
scandalizing his conservative family. In Tiger Bay, Wong plays the
owner of a bar who saves a young woman from a gang of sailors. Both films,
though lesser known, feature Wong's best and most nuanced performances. (GM)
How did Anna May Wong's father punish her for skipping school to watch movies? The first two correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this screening.
|
|
|
 |
| MUSIC: Sample Freaks |
Jason Forrest w/ Duran Duran Duran
|
|
Jason Forrest's bombastic sample-collage hijinks: melancholy salvos of overstimulated youth or quintessential postmodern fetishism? Regardless, it's still your best chance to hear massive drum breaks slathered in Blood, Sweat & Tears horn lines. Forrest, who used to record under the confusing moniker Donna Summer, coddled his gonzo ultra-nerd persona while DJing his influential Advanced D&D radio show on the legendary WFMU. Forrest also founded the Cock Rock Disco imprint to support fellow producers like Ed Flis, who performs freaky popcore as Duran Duran Duran tonight. (MP)
Note: Forrest also performs at Maxwell's on Sun 4.2 (9pm).
|
|
|
 |
| THEATRE |
Living Room in Africa
| when: |
Now through Sat 4.15 (Mon & Wed: 8pm / Sat: 2 & 8pm / Sun: 7pm) |
| where: |
The Beckett at Theatre Row (410 W 42nd St, 212.279.4200) map |
| price: |
$35 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Despite the incessant sipping of gin, Living Room in Africa is not
just another play about white people and their unbearable burdens. Edward is
an art connoisseur trying to open a gallery in an AIDS-stricken African
village while his high-strung wife Marie takes it upon herself to quite
literally "save the children." From their strained interactions with two
locals, the aspiring philanthropists learn that art is not always uplifting
and true charity is rarely, if ever, convenient. Rob Campbell is brilliant
as the tormented Edward, while Maduka Steady's performance as his fiercely
ambitious assistant infuses the play with the intense redolence of external
reality. (KI)
|
|
| ART |
Mind the Gap: Curated by Eva Diaz and Beth Stryker
| when: |
Now through Sun 4.30 (Wed-Sun: 12-6pm) |
| where: |
Smack Mellon (92 Plymouth St, DUMBO, 718.834.8761) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Mind the Gap gathers artists exploring the physically ignored and
culturally suppressed in-between spaces of city landscapes through video,
photography, and sculpture. Running the gamut from the didactic to the
meditative, standouts include the Center for Urban Pedagogy, which
unearths Fulton Mall's unique urban commerce of gold dental caps and matzoh
balls. Michael Rakowitz's tent disguised as a Mini Cooper offers a transient
spatial oasis. Bicoastal photographic ruminations surface in Elizabeth
Felicella's moody pictorial atlas outlining JFK Airport and Stephen Hilger's
sunshine-saturated panoramas of Beverly Hills service alleys. Together, the
works challenge the notions of generic public art by forsaking bland,
crowd-pleasing gestures for resourceful statements of intervention and
discovery. (CEK)
Note: A series of performances, workshops, and film screenings is planned to
coincide with the exhibition.
|
|
|
 |
| |
Mighty Winds: Folk Songs for the Five Points |
 |
|
Folk Songs for the Five Points, the first of the Tenement
Museum's Digital Arts in Residence Project, explores the evolution of the
modern immigrant experience through music, using technology in place of
narrative verse. Samples of isolated background noises, interviews with
residents of the Lower East Side neighborhoods — including what was formerly known as Five Points —
and snippets of songs written for the project by PangeiArtist Victor Gama
are plotted on a digital map of the Manhattan neighborhood where visitors can
create their own soundtracks to the city. Remixers can save and share their
compositions or contribute samples to the ongoing project through the
website. (IB)
|
|
| |
|
| |
CD REVIEW: E-40, My Ghetto Report Card |
 |
|
Warner Bros
Released March 2006
$9.96 (Amazon)
|
With recent sightings of Mac Dre bobble heads, "hyphy" hype is approaching a rolling boil. For the uninitiated, hyphy is Oakland, California's answer to crunk: a deadly pairing of chest-caving, minimal beats, rabble-rousing raps, and a kitchen sink's worth of clubby effects that owes as much to the popularity of thizzin' as it does to the influence of Miami bass. The man of the hour is veteran Bay Area MC E-40, who has hooked up with Keak Da Sneak and Lil Jon for My Ghetto Report Card — an album that should blow the lid off the scene. Producers Rick Rock and Droop-E (40's son) fold impish digital flourishes into brutal kick-drum beats that go pound-for-pound with E-40's charismatic delivery. Ensuring that this isn't just a West Coast party, surly cameos from Bun B and Juelz Santana give Report Card a touch of Southern charm and Harlem grit. (TW)
|
|
| |
|
| |
MULTIMEDIA: BBC Collective |
 |
|
We check in this week with our compatriots at the Collective to keep abreast of the latest and greatest emergences from the art/music/culture whirlwind. Read a profile on German-based punk-funk label Gomma, which recently released the impressive CD compilation Gomma Gang 3. Listen to full tracks from Who Made Who and download Munk's "Kick Out the Chairs" (featuring the DFA's James Murphy). Check one-to-watch Nathan Fake's live in-session at the Social in London, alongside an interview and full track of the epic "The Sky Was Pink" on Border Community. Then wrap it all up with a feature and image gallery spotlighting China's bustling contemporary art scene. (CJN)
|
 |
Nathan Fake: Live at the Social (Laptop/IDM)
|
 |
Various Artists: Gomma Label Profile (Electropop/disco punk)
|
 |
Various Artists: China Contemporary (Visual art)
|
|
| |
|
|
 |
| |
| |
| Header Design: |
| Noel Fielding | Hannah Truran |
| |
| Editors: |
| Trinculo | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Ashlee Simpson | Jake Lancaster | | The Darkness | Doug Levy | | Launchpad McQuack | Sascha Lewis | | Symeon | Andrew Maerkle | | Beaker | Mark Mangan | | Balki Bartokomous | Kristin Miller | | Kato Kalin | Colin J. Nagy | | Ricky Nelson | Stephan Paschalides | | Stimpy | Joshua D. Stein | | Yorick | Leah Taylor |
| |
| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in New York City. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
| |
| FEEDBACK |
| Please let us know what's on your mind, any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
| |
| EVENT & DESIGN SUBMISSIONS |
To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design. |
| |
MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS |
| Every week, flavorpill NYC presents one exclusive media partner. Click for more information about advertising opportunities on all Flavorpill publications. |
| |
|
|
| | |
| Contributors: |
| Katie Holmes | Casey Acierno | | Mel Brooks | Mindy Bond | | Fez | Irene Bradish | | Yo Mama | Daniel R. Chamberlin | | Blueberry Head | Todd Goldstein | | Chevy Chase | Carl E. Hagen | | Beavis | Helen Hsu | | Butthead | Kiwa Iyobe | | Ignatius J. Riley | Catherine E. Krudy | | Benny Hill | Paddy Johnson | | Sifl | Gerry Mak | | Olly | Mike Powell | | Prince Myshkin | Bryony Roberts | | Homer Simpson | Lisa Rosman | | Dubya | Brooke Shields | | Bill O'Reilly | Toby Warner | | Sancho Panza | Faith-Ann Young |
| |
Production: |
| Joey Skaggs | Anjuli Ayer | | The Jerk | Chelsea Bauch | | Gideon Wurdz | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Jerry Lewis | Morgan Croney | | Mariah Carey | Rachel Doyle | | Daffy Duck | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Milwaukee | David Morrow | | Judah | Judah Wiedre |
| |
| FLAVORPILL FRIENDS |
When we work offline, we use Orange 32 for all of our print needs.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
MORE FILTERED CULTURE |
Hi-fidelity updates
A twice-monthly email magazine high- lighting the latest in electronic music — including news, reviews, and original features
 |
Books worth reading
A monthly review focusing on smart, readable works of fiction and nonfiction, from current titles to past gems
 |
Global fashion trends
A twice-monthly, insider view on fashion trends breaking in Paris, London, New York, and around the world
 |
International art
A twice-monthly email magazine covering art, design, and architecture with profiles, news, and reviews of inter- national shows
 |
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
© 2006 Flavorpill Productions LLC. All rights reserved.
This is a copy of a flavorpill NYC mailer. Use the link above to subscribe or click to automatically UNSUBSCRIBE. Flavorpill Productions complies with the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003. For more information, please read our PRIVACY POLICY. If you have any questions about subscription to this list, contact us at nyc_subscriptions@flavorpill.net (HQ: 594 Broadway, Ste 1212, NY, NY 10012).
|
|
|