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“Arms and Legs Are Very Expressive, Especially With Bruises”: The Absurdist Photography of Yorgos Lanthimos

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There are photographers who want to make you feel something. There are photographers who want to make you think something. And then there’s Yorgos Lanthimos , who seems determined to make you feel like you’ve just walked into a room where everyone agreed on a joke you weren’t told—and now you’re expected to laugh, nod, and possibly remove your shoes. This is not photography that comforts. This is not photography that explains. This is photography that quietly rearranges your sense of what a body is allowed to do in a frame—and then leaves you there with it, like an uninvited houseguest that refuses to make eye contact. The line—“arms and legs are very expressive, especially with bruises”—isn’t just a description. It’s a thesis. A mission statement. A warning label. Because in Lanthimos’s world, limbs aren’t passive. They’re conspirators. They bend, contort, collapse, hover, and occasionally look like they’ve just been emotionally betrayed by gravity itself. And the bruises? Those ar...

BigXthaPlug Didn’t Just Close a Showcase—He Bulldozed It With Bass, Bravado, and a Whole Lot of Texas

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Let’s get one thing out of the way: when BigXthaPlug closes a show, it’s not a polite “thank you, goodnight.” It’s more like a controlled demolition where the stage, the speakers, and your expectations all get reduced to dust—and you’re somehow grateful for the ringing in your ears. So when he stepped in to close Rolling Stone ’s Future of Music showcase, the premise sounded clean and respectable. A curated lineup. Industry buzz. Emerging artists. You know—the usual polite handshake between artistry and branding. What actually happened? Texas kicked the door in. The Myth of the “Future of Music” Showcase Let’s talk about these showcases for a second. They’re supposed to be prophetic. A crystal ball. A velvet-rope preview of “what’s next.” You get industry insiders nodding thoughtfully, people pretending they discovered artists before they blew up, and an overall vibe that screams tasteful relevance . But here’s the thing: showcases are often wrong. They’re safe when they shoul...

Opinion | I Love the Movies. Here’s How to Save Them.

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There was a time—not so long ago in the grand scheme of human absurdity—when going to the movies felt like entering a temple. The lights dimmed, the curtain pulled back, and suddenly you were somewhere else. Mars. Middle-earth. Brooklyn in the 1970s. A spaceship full of emotionally complicated robots. It didn’t matter. The point was escape. Collective imagination. The shared ritual of strangers sitting quietly together while something magical flickered across a giant screen. Now the average movie theater experience feels less like a temple and more like a slightly sticky airport terminal that happens to show films between advertisements for luxury SUVs. If you say you love movies today, people assume you mean streaming. They picture you half-watching something on a laptop while scrolling your phone and occasionally pausing to reheat leftovers. That’s not loving movies. That’s background noise with a plot. And yet, despite everything—the $18 popcorn, the pre-movie lecture about turni...

These Marketing Trends Are Helping Small Businesses Get Ahead in 2026

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(Or: How to Win the Internet Without Selling Your Soul to the Algorithm Gods) If you listen to marketing gurus long enough, you’ll eventually hear the same prophecy repeated like a cult chant: “Everything has changed.” Apparently, every year is the year marketing gets completely reinvented. Every platform is the future. Every trend is revolutionary. Every software tool is “game-changing.” And every agency promises to “10x your growth” if you just give them a credit card and a vague sense of optimism. Yet here we are in 2026, and somehow the same businesses are still winning: the ones that understand people, communicate clearly, and avoid sounding like a robot that just swallowed a LinkedIn motivational post. Small businesses, in particular, are discovering something delightful. You don’t need a billion-dollar ad budget or a Silicon Valley growth hacker to get ahead anymore. In fact, some of the biggest marketing advantages right now come from doing the exact opposite of what corpor...

Vanderbilt Law School Just Got a “Transformative Gift.” Translation: Someone Wrote a Very Large Check.

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Every university announcement about a massive donation begins with the same phrase: transformative gift . Not “large gift.” Not “extremely generous gift.” Not even “someone backed a Brinks truck up to the admissions office.” No. Universities prefer the phrase transformative gift , because it sounds like something that will reshape the intellectual destiny of civilization rather than, say, help a few hundred law students pay slightly less money for textbooks that cost the same as a small used Honda. Recently, Vanderbilt Law School received exactly that kind of announcement-worthy donation: a huge philanthropic contribution meant to support students and expand opportunities. Cue the press release, the smiling dean photo, the carefully worded gratitude, and the subtle implication that the donor might someday have a statue placed somewhere near the law library. But let’s step back for a moment and talk about what these gifts really mean—because the phrase “transformative gift” is doing a ...