׉?4ׁB! בCט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://uOg8MQHAe2Jc31i16J06JKNoEHUuxgBdDx90egMk3CA l`׉	 7cassandra://9N_pfctP32GE3t-lmUixagf59RPwmw6thzAGDruRVvỲd`r׉	 7cassandra://yTmUpuVjKdFGzbLbuY0k5epEaquSist8A0KbkUcKQew%=` g#гH׈Eg#г"׉E׉	 7cassandra://yTmUpuVjKdFGzbLbuY0k5epEaquSist8A0KbkUcKQew%=` g#г#g#г"בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://2VakEGiT7sfn1Hhi9vAHelTZDwkPJDPHZFIsD84yRKM x`׉	 7cassandra://2E2llE-Qr-DyMoYByxeCmBvNFZk-2DZrAm6hJ121sa8x`r׉	 7cassandra://7rfeqpETTqJr2pKJNh6eoN1HdpWLuNvhurkE_UDJxVg&` g#гKט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://9pOuCdgPa16xHk7M6IR-6QlabzSisaCMFvsixCdQwuQ }`׉	 7cassandra://QZmWf0gM1ygjLCTKu_IiVd3Ro0-Pp-kkzNoFisjYH3kg`r׉	 7cassandra://P9-aIQiCzyVs1d6kAq_XBsawEGXtJEK0ZyaPqp5ZXGE!` g#гLנg#гS 	9ׁH  http://BIRDYMAGAZINE.COM/CONTACTׁׁЈנg#гR s̧	9ׁHhttp://BIRDYMAGAZINE.COM/SHOPׁׁЈנg#гQ F	9ׁH $http://BIRDYMAGAZINE.COM/SUBMISSIONSׁׁЈנg#гP Wp
9ׁHhttp://BIRDY.MAׁׁЈ׉E׉	 7cassandra://7rfeqpETTqJr2pKJNh6eoN1HdpWLuNvhurkE_UDJxVg&` g#г$׉EISSUE 131 | NOVEMBER 2024
TITHI LUADTHONG AKA GRANDFAILURE
1984: JONNY DESTEFANO
THE STRANGER: KRYSTI JOMÉI
ANIMAL FARM: JULIANNA BECKERT
NO EXIT: KAYVAN S. T. KHALATBARI
CAT'S CRADLE: CRISTIN COLVIN
GUT FEELING: MARK MOTHERSBAUGH
SHEEPLE: MEGAN ARENSON
NOTES FROM UNDERGROUND: MARIANO OREAMUNO, HANA ZITTEL, DS
THORNBURG, PHIL GARZA, ZAC DUNN, MAGGIE D. FEDOROV, CRISTIN
COLVIN, CONRAD FRANZEN, MARTY MANDRESH, LISA EBERHARTER
FRONT COVER: DAVE DANZARA, SAME AS IT EVER WAS - @LOSTINTIMEDESIGNS
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CHRIS AUSTIN, JOEL TAGERT, TOM MURPHY, GODRIC, TOMMY COYOTE,
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NAUSEA: TITHI LUADTHONG, SELIN SERHII, ROSA JAY, AARON LONGSLEEVES,
MARIO DE LOPEZ, MARK KEANE, KASSIIA SERGACHEVA, NINA PODLESNYAK,
YULIYA DERBISHEVA, AMANDA SIROSKEY, LAURA DAVIDSON, LANCE RYAN
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1
׉	 7cassandra://P9-aIQiCzyVs1d6kAq_XBsawEGXtJEK0ZyaPqp5ZXGE!` g#г%g#г$בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://SgPx-kZwEyswTMm4oPXkH-iEHwONWXXlkkOWIwrKaFc `׉	 7cassandra://YVc907py5TdOVJcieqkKSKyGajiJvfPjxpyEmGwQxIAI`r׉	 7cassandra://ocbCAXfwSHNVk_4VKh98ZcxhrPBeqG6SkuGSIj__umA` g#гOט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://pxlPyuazXnSL6vu8KPEdO3w4FdJY0K4N9MZCvyhzq_E 	;` ׉	 7cassandra://b2kxRn2oyrfm30hU5bVnAW8p447fEDOJu1jV7v5sMyg͢`r׉	 7cassandra://rYXK5eR_SWZGYX35gsofLqJukaLKu2vzYwdEq1LL2yk*"` g#ѳT׉E 3CUJO AND
THE DARTS
BY ZAC DUNN
ART BY SELIN SERHII
׉	 7cassandra://ocbCAXfwSHNVk_4VKh98ZcxhrPBeqG6SkuGSIj__umA` g#г&׉EaHe stepped out of the van looking smug.
She was not impressed. It had been a very dry spring and the boxes
that were filled with DART-driven dreams were hungry to house the
DENDROBATIDAE.
LICK THE TOAD.
The low monotone voice said from behind the black curtain of the
cube in the back of the service station next to old Highway 7 that leads
out to the dead oil field.
The cages in the basement made the entire station smell like a
swamp. They had bought the property because they knew about an
old aquifer that was not protected and could be tapped easily. This
would be very important for breeding and cloning the DART FROGS.
Producing METHAMPHETAMINE had been quite lucrative but it was
time to diversify into a more organic income stream. One that required
less dealings with machine gun wielding cartel hoods than soccer
moms who simply couldn’t find a reason not to blow their brains out
while awaiting the NAIL SALON tech to dry their GEL NAILS.
The gas station also served BOBA and shitty TACORITOS.
The girl behind the counter greeted people with profound indifference
so as not to leave any impression. This was a skill handed down to the
ladies of the plains from GRAMS to TIKES. This quiet and profound
facade of majestic confidence and apathy was one of the first things
slayed into silence by the men who wielded long steel cannons on
thunderous hooves.
The gaze that penetrates and deflects the eye of the beholder is older
and bolder than the eyes that could ever spy upon them. She would
always give change and say thanks like a burden of admission that you
took something from her and you would now owe her in perpetuity.
As the man descended deep into the double-wide trailer he’d sunk
into the ground behind the station, the smell of FROG FECES rumpled
the stiltskin hairs on the back of his neck more profoundly with each
step. The low groan of the small creatures in the dank expanse of the
bunker was stark. The smell would envelope him first before the quiet
dampness would hold his feet firmly down. The whole place seemed
in order. All the sub-bass systems were in check, keeping the FROGS
very happy and stimulated in the manner that would produce the most
potent and unctuous DART essence to emit freely.
HOWEVER, the secret was to allow the generations of DARTS to stack
up and not touch any component of the organic conversation that was
instigated within the microcosm of the bunker.
He begrudgingly began to select his annual brood of several dozen
prime specimens to harbor the bloodline safely. He’d chosen a remote
inlet in OAXACA for his breeding facility with natural fortifications to
prevent molestation by his sinister rivals. The entire DART movement
and revolution had been started by him in a different iteration of his
journey prior to the accident that would divert his focus from malice to
alchemy and mysticism
The sound of several large vehicles all pulling up in a convoy disturbed
the incubator of DART magic. It reminded him that his vision would
always attract the eyes and hands of greedy lessers who sought to
unwind the thread by which he alone hung.
It was very simple what would happen next:
The girl behind the counter pressed a large red KILL SWITCH button
next to the cash register. Massive steel plates dropped over the
enclosure of the station. She sighed and grabbed her backpack, vexedly
making her way to the broom closet that hid the cellar door to the
station’s own self-contained bunker full of cozy accouterments. She
chuckled as she closed the submarine style hatch shut and pulled the
wooden handle that brought the piss-stained rug over to conceal the
entrance. She turned on the closed-circuit display spread and popped
open a LACROIX.
Four SUVs all faced a completely armored station on a windswept
plane just a skip north of the border.
The man took his seat at his console and grabbed hold of his trucker
mic to welcome his guests.
WHO GOES THERE? YOU CAME WITH MANY PEOPLE UNANNOUNCED!
I’M CURIOUS HOW I CAN BEST ASSIST YOU?
The first three SUVs’ doors popped open and eight men stepped out
holding assault rifles and tactical armor. The headlights of the fourth
SUV blinked before a honk sounded. The men all broke into a tactical
formation moving forward around the back of the station with GUNS
pointed to unload as they approached.
AH. I SEE THAT YOU COME BEARING GIFTS.
The man at the console snickered and pressed a fat yellow button
next to his left hand. As the squad stormed around the back of the
station in a very tight and contrived formation, a spread of simple lawn
sprinkler sockets popped up from the back of the yard.
AHOY HOY!!! LET US BEGIN.
The man proclaimed quite plainly over the speakers. The little girl
rubbed her tiny paws eagerly from her perch below the station.
An AIR HORN sounded from a small shed that was roughly 50 yards
out on the edge of the MESA. A pounding and growing sound began to
emerge from the shed.
The men of the squad looked down at the sprinkler heads that were
now whizzing away, sounding like a siren scream, as a bright yellow gas
rushed out, all but obscuring their line of sight. They began gasping and
running like headless chickens to escape the footprint of the CANARY
STRAIN ANTHRAX MUSTARD GAS the man had cooked up fresh for
them. Five of the squad flopped like a side of beef sliding off a hook
into a grinder.
They twitched and gasped briefly as the remaining three scampered
away desperate for cover. The shed was still chugging away as they
caught their breath, awaiting a command from the boss in the last SUV.
The man rubbed his eyes and turned to look back at his beloved
DARTS. He yawned and thought about having a tea once the mess was
cleaned up.
He picked up the trucker mic again.
HE WHO CONTROLS THE SPICE SHALL CONTROL THE UNIVERSE!
He quite simply but firmly proclaimed.
The sides of the ominous chugging shed exploded outward at this
time exposing a NAVAL grade anti-aircraft cannon that was pointed
at the last SUV. The remaining men made a sound that was almost
audible prior to the noise of ALL of the SUVs being blown back from
the station in a typhoon of metal and fire. The cacophony carried like
a phoenix rising from the very sandy earth that lay below. A deep and
calm vacuum of space embraced them as the shell collided with the
front right axle of an SUV in a delicate and almost liquid-like manner.
The sheer weight of the shell, over 100 pounds, was essentially like a
small refrigerator colliding with the DENALI SUPREME, brewing up a
human meat stew fit for a king.
The little one opened up a bag of chips and picked up her trucker mic.
HEY! DO YOU GUYS LIKE DOGS!? I LOVE MY DOG, CUJO! GET TO
KNOW HIM!
With that she made a strange and guttural sound that brought up the
3
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like he was not done napping. But hungry as always he would gladly
break up his down time for some TCB and a bit of light exercise. She
rubbed his wet nose on her nose and purred at him.
OKAY, BOY. GO EAT NOW.
With that she pressed a button opening a decent sized dumbwaiter
contraption that CUJO sauntered over to casually. His stride deep with
steps that sought to shake his sleep, he prepared his chop to dine.
CUJO put all of his weight in the box and it clicked, opening a small
compartment on the bottom right corner where a portion of cool fresh
water appeared for him to enjoy. A proper amuse-bouche before the
sun would constrict his doggie’s pupils into pinpoints searching for
meaty calves of screaming men who didn’t put on pants one leg at a
time that day expecting all of this.
A bulkhead hatch sprung up on the far side of the station and CUJO
stepped silently off the pad, his pure white fur gleaming in the sun.
He was a mutt of too many varieties to ever discern, but was every bit
of 150 pounds of muscle and mind that simply loved his people, the
DARTS and a solid meal after a good nap.
The remaining men looked at each other from their hiding places.
The crackle of the burning and still vibrant conflagration that was
quite actively barbecuing the fallen into HUMANO BARBACOA was a
little disconcerting and made hearing the dog impossible.
CUJO snuck up behind the first man and closed his windpipe with his
mouth, gently letting him go to sleep forever. He was taught to smell
and not see. But CUJO loved to see the look of the men when he made
them know he was the one who would be escorting them to the other
side of the great river of death.
The next man could quite plainly see the dog approach but had lost his
weapon in his haste to escape the MUSTARD GAS DEATH GARDEN. He
tried quite pitifully in vain to ward off CUJO’s amorous advances with
a fully extended right hand. But CUJO latched onto it and drove the
man’s head directly into his back, breaking his arm out of the socket
and ripping it clean off. CUJO had been trained in a brutal form of DOG
TAI CHI that allowed him to BREAK things using weight against the
anatomical structure of the THING he chomped onto. This was not
something that any HUMAN could show or teach.
The many who begat him were of a certain
bloodline that believe in devotion and
brutality. Dogs in the pecking order slide
in different directions, but will ultimately stand to man’s side always.
His blood knew that this was only a matter of contextual dominance.
By credo, they would only serve a just master who acted in a purer
manner than their predecessor.
CUJO was ready to just start chewing the arm in his mouth but knew
the JOB was not yet done. The third man had made a run for the hills
and now looked like a wide receiver charging downfield desperately
hoping fate and skill would collide in glory.
This really pissed off CUJO. He was not in the mood to go for a run at
all but knew it would only make the meat more tasty as he enjoyed it.
With that, he dropped the dripping man arm and let out a tiny sniff of
desert dust. His weight and girth galloped with haste consuming the
yards between him and the last man who was panting for breath and
struggling to run full sprint while unholstering his GLOCK.
CUJO’s eyes blazed as fountains of saliva splashed on the sand. His
mass pounded forward at the weaker and slower critter who was rapidly
losing the tiny shred of space that separated them from the inevitable.
CUJO liked to get really close and let the prey feel him ready to chomp,
but not so near they actually slow down out of pure fear. The man
began to shit and piss himself violently. This only made CUJO more
angry as he was never in the mood for shitty piss-soaked food.
So he latched onto the ACHILLES of the man with his lower jaw. He
flipped him like a rag doll before barrel rolling (as he had been taught)
while bringing down his own weight, crushing the man’s body as they
spinned over several times, creating a rapid sound like bags of shells
being smashed with a heavy iron hammer.
CUJO let go and left the bloody broken sack of human meat for the
coyotes and buzzards to enjoy. They prefer meat to be coated in fear
and feces.
CUJO cooly rolled himself in bloody sand until he felt clean of his
defeated foe’s plasma and poo. He gave himself a stern shake and could
see the man and the girl standing by the service station. A wrecker and
roll-out dumpster slowly crept across the plain toward them to remove
the smoldering remnant of the ZETAS who came to play.
1.26.24V 9:59: AUX MORTEM AB CHAO
REGES ANTIQUI IN SANGUINE FUDERUNT
FOLLOW FOR MORE — IG: @UZIEGO | TUMBLR:
@SAVAGESNEVERSLEEPNYC
PHOTO BY ROSA JAY
No. 131
׉	 7cassandra://0LkEwxoaH4xUHEsF4Zq_qRNDcmJRt1t6zebH9h7BVqA#` g#г(׉E FDAVE DANZARA, MASS PSYCHOSIS - @LOSTINTIMEDESIGNS - BEST OF BIRDY 112
׉	 7cassandra://I7Pb9yoO5TdfdQWUFqaCVRUgk65yR4evO7Hy1YL-s6Q$6` g#г)g#г(בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://-Si4QilELcKt99XbPRlIxW1piL_SdJELZLzbNbS9Yk8 `׉	 7cassandra://cJqZKqSXaAisOHduFc4tYAwvniSBmXpGNTcnZE0tRVorT`r׉	 7cassandra://10004BDtFZcVny9DXbIdqd3GxNzFGahLz7JPEokHT34*` g#ѳ[ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://QQ_GW55bP3jQZ6rLNZkHYh8Wh-ZMCidypgZULExGe1Y dW`׉	 7cassandra://ixRlXXhrB0G2jxZcCH8Adj1SJ9Q0bElGzaLPQlmlqDk>`r׉	 7cassandra://nus2I2FaQ6kPGBffPO24pSWDn5UWb4dhRKT2qva88NA$` g#ѳ\׉E׉	 7cassandra://10004BDtFZcVny9DXbIdqd3GxNzFGahLz7JPEokHT34*` g#г*׉E +JONNY DESTEFANO, SAUCY - BEST OF BIRDY 080
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BUT FIRST I HAVE SOME WORK TO DO BY BRIAN POLK | ART BY JASON WHITE
THE ONLY TIME I WISH I WOULD GET A GODDAMNED RED
LIGHT FOR ONCE IS WHEN I’M TEXTING AND DRIVING
Ordinarily the inconvenience of stopping at a red light inspires
moments of fleeting disappointment. Of course, this could very
well be exacerbated by how many cycles it takes to get through
a particular traffic light and/or how bad you have to use the
restroom. But every now and again, I’ll find myself in a really
entertaining text exchange, and I don’t want to have to wait to
respond just because I happen to be driving at the time. And that’s
when I not only hope for a red light, but I actually get mad when
I don’t get one. “Another fucking green light,” I yell to no one.
“When is my luck going to change?” Of course, I could pull over
No. 131
and finish my text exchange in a secure parking space, but I mean,
come on. I got places to be.
ARE YOU READY TO JOKE ABOUT THAT YET?
Remember that time your hair caught fire when you were trying to
light a cigarette at the park, and we noticed before you did and dumped
our beer on your head to put it out? And you got mad at us for all the
beer on your person? And we tried to explain that your hair was on fire,
but you simply wouldn’t believe us? Then you cried, and said you hated
all your friends so much, and you wished we would just leave you alone?
And after we got home that night, you saw all the singed hair in the
mirror, and felt bad for yelling at us? So we dumped beer on your head
׉	 7cassandra://f2fQdcJlZs9cV8rmtgVsNTLSitm6LSZgZp3tzIWqKDo-w` g#г,׉Ehagain — but this time, just for kicks? And you cried yourself to sleep and
swore you would never hang out with us again? That’s still not funny
to you? Yeah, I know it happened last week, but you think with the
passing of time, you’d be a bit more humble about it … Hmm, I see. So
the answer is no. Okay, fair enough. I’ll try again next week.
ONE TIME I WAITED ALL THE WAY UNTIL WEDNESDAY
TO GET DRUNK, AND THEN WAS DISAPPOINTED WHEN I
REALIZED IT WAS STILL MONDAY
As a bonafide old, I try to take it easy on the alcohol consumption
— mainly since I have no plans to quit, and it’s not exactly healthy.
Therefore, I try to take at least four days off per week from visiting
my friends in the bar and having fun. And with this system, I’ve
experienced contradicting outcomes. For example, the other day
I was so proud of myself for making it all the way to Wednesday
without even so much as wanting a drink. Once I got drunk, however,
I realized it was Monday all along. The thing was, I had to work on
Saturday, and I helped someone move on Sunday, so it didn’t feel like
a Monday. It had a very distinct Wednesday feel. But you’ll be happy
to know that I remained sober that Tuesday and then got drunk again
on Wednesday, so I did make it eventually. And don’t you just love a
happy ending?
THE VERY FIRST DAY AFTER MY EX AND I BROKE UP, I
WENT TO THE BAR, AND THIS GUY SAID, “DATING IN YOUR
40s IS LIKE A EUROPEAN VACATION: LOTS OF BAGGAGE.”
And I was like, What the fuck? The corpse of our relationship wasn’t
even cold yet, and here he was telling me things were only going to
get worse. Of course, he had no way of knowing that I recently broke
up with my ex, but still. It was not what I wanted to hear at the time.
And the worst part of it is that he was totally right. Post 40 courtship
is a damned nightmare! Nowadays, when I go on the first date with
someone, I feel like I could ask, “So what health issues are you currently
battling?” “How much do you resent your parents for so thoroughly
fucking you up?” And, “What mental health issues are currently
percolating in that damaged noggin of yours?” It’s terrible. I think I’d
have more fun at church.
… JUST KIDDING. THERE’S NO FUN TO BE HAD AT CHURCH
I don’t want to disrespect anyone’s beliefs here, but I will say that I’ve
never personally had a good time at mass. Then again, displays of guilt
and shame were never my thing.
… I SUPPOSE I’LL TRY AGAIN TOMORROW
I’ve been having a lot of bad days lately. And the ones that are
particularly terrible, I say some words of affirmation to myself before
I try to go to bed for the night. Usually, it goes something like this:
“I didn’t do well today, but I’m still here. Since the only way out is
through, I suppose I’ll try again tomorrow.” It’s how you know I’ve hit
rock bottom. I wouldn’t be saying that shit if everything were puppy
dogs and rainbows. But I’ve had a whole lot of rabid cats and lightning
bolts sent my way — so to speak — so I have no choice but to rely on the
one thing I never even wanted to try: positivity. As you might imagine,
results have been mixed.
9
׉	 7cassandra://0Qct-qfefPSklCkaK6Z3q17FVQZnb6ZCzWHS6KCsHnI(_` g#г-g#г,בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://4GLlJVBDNmyrLPzMXTqxTXP4XQFG6YET-5JBzKiPxu8 E`׉	 7cassandra://GoRwDhQZ7ZKt8B-_Mui_POCWe9IkEpyloryg26caZ2oKY`r׉	 7cassandra://y9PW7fl0qHMIG2C6hZ8KMUu9Q6N8JzdHks3Z77kkvQE}` g#ҳaט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://SZ9ENCjoX91Ef572rO44RXtRjF1vjQ5axpnZZ0N6nbE t`׉	 7cassandra://olhMDCns_4xfDdtS0UpKnjq6nTKaloENnlYc9QcY2n0s'`r׉	 7cassandra://SPsP5AF3a7-RiIoZznRdt0-6ZssOuCEd16_21trDZds#<` g#ӳbנg#ӳd 8
9ׁH !mailto:WEREWOLFRADARPOD@GMAIL.COMׁׁЈ׉E )TYLER GROSS, LOSING IT
BEST OF BIRDY 063
׉	 7cassandra://y9PW7fl0qHMIG2C6hZ8KMUu9Q6N8JzdHks3Z77kkvQE}` g#г.׉EIt’s a rare day when one uncovers yet another reason to fear
quicksand. Granted, there was only one to begin with but a sandy
berth unto the planet carries a mortal consequence so great almost all
of us can recall where we were when we first saw the death of Artax.
Everybody under 40, check out The NeverEnding Story. I promise you
this scene will hit. Bring a tissue. Skip the sequel.
Yazoo City, Mississippi, 1884: A town that loved Vince Clarke so
much they prematurely named it after one of his projects. Yazoo’s
own Huck Finn, a child named Joe Bob Duggett, was rafting down the
Yazoo River when he “heard moans coming from a house.” Which, of
course, he decides to investigate. Yes, it does sound like a weird riverkid
was spying on strangers to case their homes, but the story takes
a decidedly un-Twainian turn. Allegedly Duggett — definite creep —
witnessed a double human sacrifice. Two bodies were splayed on the
floor as the owner of the house, a woman written off by the entire
town to a degree that she historically has no name, appeared to be
casting some kind of spell.
Well, Joe Bob done freaked out and went back to his raft to go
full town crier. He snitched out the clearly unwell woman who,
supposedly, the entire town didn’t care for and, as is totally
normal, is invited into the posse that goes to commit a
homicide. Roughly the same amount of effort needed
to become a police officer today.
And like modern police, they did a noknock
visit.
They didn’t find a witch. Or any bodies. Almost like everything
Duggett said wasn’t true. There’s of course no nearly equivalent
historical event that rhymes with Halem, but that didn’t stop
them from investigating. What was found was an attic full of
starving cats, supposedly two skeletons and an old (old seems very
subjective in articles about her, by the by) woman leaping from a
window to escape a bunch of dudes that she knew were there to
kill her.
Here’s where the sand becomes quick. She was pursued into
the woods and got all caught up in the swamp. To the point that
Duggett, on his deathbed, talked about seeing her fall under,
cursing the town as she died. As curses go, it was pretty emphatic.
Turning children into squirrels? Naw. Making every cooked pizza
many toes? Again, no (but like, no shame if that works for you). She
declared that in exactly 20 years the town would be burned.
Burn it did.
May 25, 1904: Something happened. Probably an oven gone
awry. Flames were said to be leaping building to building with
supernatural alacrity. The wind they said. Twenty buildings. It’s just
the wind, we can put it out. Fifty buildings. It’s just … It’s just …
All of Yazoo City.
They did do one right thing. They gave the unnamed witch a burial.
They surrounded it with iron chains. Chains that broke the day their
town burned.
But it was a nice thing to do anyway.
HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE PARANORMAL?
SEND THEM TO: WEREWOLFRADARPOD@GMAIL.COM OR TWITTER: @WEREWOLFRADAR
IT’S A BIG, WEIRD WORLD. DON’T BE SCARED. BE PREPARED.
׉	 7cassandra://SPsP5AF3a7-RiIoZznRdt0-6ZssOuCEd16_21trDZds#<` g#г/g#г.בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://vbwzs04ccxEbwft0z3z2DOFbdmO0Lqyul-eQ9tMS_68 S`׉	 7cassandra://jR6YvlR0zq_G70FQMjnBPXJAE49xUsddlFTwqtNfo2c͐;`r׉	 7cassandra://t0faXvlz1SfCuy6FC9D-TtVc0byVSPiTBsoGH3zeunU/J` g#Գeט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://1HmV1Zign7u-c39-I_5A0hA4WCpDSqxSLqasL2zZW7A L`׉	 7cassandra://kpW54COypuJpPp2Wm1mkFzwkagwkaEegWNmTdTKpzIQ͟`r׉	 7cassandra://d-APiZ5N7MvM1zdiAD8BWjnlgnfXGtl0IOdhZ9EvXKg5` g#Գfנg#ճh Jx9ׁHhttp://POSTARTFORDEMOCRACY.COMׁׁЈ׉EA COLLECTIVE POST ART DEMONSTRATION FROM MARK MOTHERSBAUGH & BEATIE WOLFE
Legendary musician and composer Mark Mothersbaugh and acclaimed
conceptual artist and musician Beatie Wolfe once again joined forces
to reactivate Postcards For Democracy — their non-partisan, collective
post art campaign in anticipation of the 2024 Presidential Election.
Weaving together the power of art and community to underscore the
importance of democracy and voting rights, Postcards for Democracy
invites people to create a piece of mail art and send it in to become
part of a public art demonstration, with an exhibition and book to
follow. Participants are encouraged to create postcards reflecting
their personal journeys, thoughts and hopes for the future as a symbol
of their commitment to democracy. In celebration of USPS — a vital
institution — anyone can join the movement (even postelection) by buying
stamps, creating a piece of postcard art and mailing it to: Postcards for
Democracy, 8760 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, CA 90069.
“Postcards for Democracy is back again! Show your thoughts
regarding this election and post a message through the U.S. Post
Office to us. Honorary postal delivery man Mark Mothersbaugh!” Mark
Mothersbaugh states.
Originally launched during the COVID-19 lockdown ahead of the 2020
election, Postcards for Democracy has stirred tens of thousands of
people to create and contribute to the public art movement, supporting
the USPS while reminding and mobilizing people to vote. Mark and
Beatie have received postcards from every part of the U.S. and across
the world with the ever-growing collection, which first exhibited at the
Bob Rauschenberg Gallery in 2021. In 2022, a selection of the art was
taken into the permanent collection of the Smithsonian’s National
Postal Museum.
“I believe in the power of art to activate change and that we all have
the chance to envision — and create — the kind of future world that we
want to live in with much more of a say, both as individuals and as a
No. 131
׉	 7cassandra://t0faXvlz1SfCuy6FC9D-TtVc0byVSPiTBsoGH3zeunU/J` g#г0׉Ecollective, than we may realize. This postcard project, rooted in a deep
love of physical communication, is a celebration of what connects
us. And like the Postal Service, we have to use our power, our voice,
our freedom of choice and not take any of it for granted,” Beatie
Wolfe explains.
Leading up to the 2024 Presidential Election on November 5,
Mark and Beatie have been holding Postcards for Democracy popups
across Greater Los Angeles’ universities, parks, libraries,
community centers, museums and the occasional sidewalk where
anyone can create mail art with them. Unveiled last month with
the help of renowned actor, comedian and musician Fred Armisen,
the legendary iconic Oscar Niemeyer designed Mutato Muzika now
showcases a monolith mailbox on its sidewalk. The installation will
be in place until after the election with Mark and Beatie holding
impromptu pop-up postcard creation tables.
FOR POSTCARD INSPO & TO LEARN MORE,
HEAD TO: POSTARTFORDEMOCRACY.COM
FOLLOW ON INSTAGRAM:
@MARKMOTHERSBAUGH
@BEATIEWOLFE
@POSTCARDSFORDEMOCRACY
PHOTOS OF MARK, BEATIE & FRED BY AARON LONGSLEEVES | PHOTOS OF MARK & BEATIE AND CICLAVIA EVENT BY MARIO DE LOPEZ
׉	 7cassandra://d-APiZ5N7MvM1zdiAD8BWjnlgnfXGtl0IOdhZ9EvXKg5` g#г1g#г0בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://4usk2ky0Q0erPFettdxClVkCN2bIRbFsmCyHgZi64TE y`׉	 7cassandra://r5AmC_qPJFtrt4d_-XVhli3Ftkm3XbQAuhpHzZ41484͆`r׉	 7cassandra://w8o_m3XjbkBTVVTmfFh31Lio-8jnaTHURYgy9x04hGU*c` g#ճiט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://mzQ6CGlvzyDLPW2-TsoTlQl1g0um3x5t3mZnXbM7-BU 4`׉	 7cassandra://-BVJPwm_ZLj98ibfsjwKaG9Fgqj4g8psfrvRrGixNuQ͔R`r׉	 7cassandra://PNS6Z6x7J8l9Kb81FmgQaQiB06soLGiVhr-qYMOu83M(` g#ճjנg#ճp e9ׁHhttp://ERICJOYNER.COMׁׁЈ׉ENCue the Sun! The Invention of Reality TV by Emily Nussbaum (2024)
Emily Nussbaum’s latest book began as an idea all the way back in 2003. Hoping
to capture the emerging trend of reality television, Nussbaum was inspired to
cover the phenomenon in response to the massive hits of Survivor which debuted
in 2000, and American Idol and The Bachelor first airing in 2002. Instead, she
waited, and in retrospect, that was the best choice. Looking back from 2024, it
would have been hard to predict that these low cost productions, without actors
or often writers, would come to dominate the television and cultural landscape.
Cue the Sun! takes its name from a line delivered by the show creator in the
1998 film, The Truman Show, when Truman is close to escaping his staged life as
the star of a never-ending reality program that started at his birth. Like in
The Truman Show, the architects of the reality TV boom, profiled in Nussbaum’s
book, were tenacious creators flexing ethical boundaries to explore a new way of
making television and capturing the human experience. At best, many were cinéma
vérité purists and pranksters, and at worst, master manipulators driven by the
untapped potential of this inexpensive format.
Though its media dominance seems sudden, the base ideas of reality TV have
roots in radio. Audience participation radio programs rose to popularity in
the 1940s with shows like The Candid Microphone, which eventually translated
onscreen to become the more famous Candid Camera, and Queen for a Day, a game
show where women could plead for new possessions or financial and medical aid.
The popularity of these programs proved that vast audience appeal could be
created without a script, capitalizing on the raw emotions of real people.
As the genre transitioned to television, the breadth of human experience and
emotion was on full display from shows like Chuck Barris’ The Gong Show and
The Newlywed Game that captured the shock and humor of the unexpected, to
the unscripted moments on the early PBS production, An American Family, that
displayed the intensity, drama and complexities of familial love.
Going on to explore its darker sides, Nussbaum dives into the explosion of hits
like The Real World, Survivor and the “copaganda” parading as entertainment
in Cops. Each of these shows was a pioneering format in the genre that had
grim undercurrents in their productions and methods. As she analyzes the rapid
ascent of reality TV, Nussbaum leads us to the corrupt culmination of these
creations, a reality TV star president, and people who have turned the fad into
a perpetual influencer creation machine.
Nussbaum’s history of the genre is thorough, fascinating and surprisingly evenhanded.
A genre that is easily disparaged, Nussbaum also shows the good side of
this boom, the ability of reality television to diversify the characters we see
on our TVs and produce wider access to stories told by those who are living them.
Cue the Sun! is a wonderfully captured cultural analysis of a genre that has
woven its way onto our screens and has created an inescapable cultural shift.
Bless the Daughter Raised By A Voice in Her Head by Warsan Shire (2022)
“At parties I point to my body and say
Oh, this old thing? This is where men come to die.”
Warsan Shire’s first full-length poetry collection sharply captures youth,
womanhood, the body, grief, family, and migration with elegant prose and
distinctive form. Shire is a Somali British poet and the poetry writer for
Beyoncé’s Lemonade. In this collection, her poems blend the deeply personal
with the universal, the discomfort and beauty of youth, and her own trauma and
family relationships. In Home, an incredibly strong poem on migration early in
the collection, Shire writes:
I want to go home, but home is the mouth of a shark.
Home is the barrel of a gun. No one would leave home
unless home chased you to the shore. No one would
leave home until home is a voice in your ear saying —
leave, run, now. I don’t know what I’ve become.
A visceral poetry collection, Shire’s work is mesmerizing, leaving lingering
imagery and creating a singular reading experience. Shire is the author of two
previous chapbooks, Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth and Her Blue Body. She
is also the author of the film Brave Girl Rising about a young girl living in one
of the world’s largest refugee camps.
No. 131
By Hana Zittel
׉	 7cassandra://w8o_m3XjbkBTVVTmfFh31Lio-8jnaTHURYgy9x04hGU*c` g#г2׉E .ERIC JOYNER, SUNKEN TREASURE - ERICJOYNER.COM
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No. 131
׉	 7cassandra://CpHg60G9qWU4C0TnIHdDLZm9J71m6DFCHJSZDHviTZ4` g#г6׉EHERON, GULL AND CROW
BY MARK KEANE
Heron clambers onto the makeshift rail-cart and wedges himself between
Gull and Crow. Hunched over, feet on the pedals, they aren’t able to force
him off. Heron clings onto the frame.
“Get off,” Gull cries.
“I’m not going nowhere,” says Heron.
No room to manoeuver, they can’t dislodge him.
“For God’s sake,” pleads Gull. “We can’t get enough speed with three of us.
There’s only space for two to pedal.”
“The train’s coming,” Crow says, his dark eyes bulging.
Gull looks back, and sees two lights and the shape of the first carriage as
the train rounds a bend in the narrow pass. Two minutes away, three at
most.
Gull and Crow push as hard as they can. Breathing heavily, they pound the
pedals. Not fast enough, nowhere near fast enough, not with Heron’s extra
weight.
“Get off, you fat bastard,” Gull wheezes. “You’re slowing us down.”
“Me, fat?” says Heron. “If anything, I’m too skinny — not a lard-arse like
you.”
“There’s no way we can make it.” Crow looks up, sweat spilling from his
face.
“I’m not getting off.” Heron tightens his grip on the frame. “If I do, I’ll be
run over.”
They pedal with all their might. Lungs ablaze. Sinews straining.
Gull moans. “I’m cramping.”
“Don’t be such a loser,” Heron screams into Gull’s ear. “Pedal harder.
There’s a siding less than a mile away. We reach that and we’ll be safe.”
Gull bends farther forward, arse in the air. He forces his legs up and down.
Slower and slower. Painfully slower. Inexorably slower.
“I can’t take any more.”
Gull nudges Crow. They stop pedalling.
“I’m getting off.” Gull drags his leg over the frame. “With you two pedalling,
you’ll make it to safety.”
“No, Gull,” says Crow. “Don’t do it. Heron should get off.”
“He won’t.” Gull sighs. “You know what he’s like.”
Heron watches the other two without speaking.
“Ah, fuck it.” Crow spits on the ground. “Heron, you’re a complete shit.”
The rumble of the train grows deeper. Hot metal on metal, no more than
a minute away.
“All right,” says Heron. “If Gull’s getting off, then so am I.”
“What do you mean?” Crow shakes his head. “I can’t go fast enough by
myself. We’ll all be killed.”
“So be it.” Heron shrugs. “I don’t see why I should give you the pleasure of
living by allowing Gull to die.”
“Fuck it.” Crow bangs the frame. “You’re the worst sort of fucker ever. I’m
getting off.”
“Suit yourself,” says Heron.
Crow stands beside Gull on the track. The train flashes its lights. Heron
places his feet on the pedals and reaches to one side.
“You pathetic numpties, you had the brake on the entire time.”
He pulls a lever and, pumping his long legs, sets off at a good clip, waving
back at his two companions.
Heron turns into the siding.
The train whooshes by, carrying with it bits and pieces of Gull and Crow.
19
ART BY YULIYA DERBISHEVA | NINA PODLESNYAK | KASSIIA SERGACHEVA
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A BE
DIVING INTO INSTALLATION ART AS AN ARTISTIC
MEDIUM AND THOUGHTS FROM MEOW WOLF
ARTISTS ON HOW TO GET STARTED
INTERVIEW BY AMANDA SIROSKEY
Let’s say you’ve just walked through one of the many worlds of Meow Wolf.
Or maybe you saw some sick pictures of one of the rooms and you start to
feel inspired, and think of the work that was put into such epic displays of
creativity. Maybe you wonder, How could I possibly get started on something
like that?
Many people (myself included) get that itch to create, but might not know
how to begin. That’s why we’re looking at approachable art: painting, video
design, sculpture, drawing, and our fi rst topic in this series — installation art.
Arguably our biggest artistic medium within our exhibits, we’re answering
questions like, “What is it?” or “Where does someone begin with this?” We’ll
cover the basics before checking out a few Meow Wolf artists’ perspectives
on their journeys into installation work.
A MINI INSTALLATION ART (NOT BOOK) REPORT:
Installation art is immersive, perspective-changing, sensory-engaging
and transformative (lots of adjectives, I know, but they’re all true!). The term
“installation art” came about in the 60s and 70s, and was infl uenced by
multiple artistic roots, like theatrical performance and conceptual art. This
genre often challenges viewers to think beyond what they see and to discover
the underlying message(s) the artists are expressing. These messages could
range from social commentary to philosophical conundrums to cultural
shifts in perspectives. This art form crosses the boundaries between
multiple disciplines like painting, sculpture, architecture, video, lighting and
more, depending on the type of installation art.
Types of installation art vary, however many intersect with each other
in practice. A few specifi c types include: Environmental, Interactive,
Immersive/Multimedia, and Site-Specifi c.
Environmental installationart focuses on nature and its relationship with the
art, whether it’s recycled materials or natural elements integrated in the piece.
Interactive installations allow viewers to interact with the space through
touch and engage in the art itself.
Immersive and Multimedia installations are very similar in their utilization
of full-sensory experiences to transport the viewer into the created world.
Site-Specifi c art focuses on the location itself in which the art is curated,
and can spur commentary on the importance of that location and the
statement made with the resulting piece.
Of course, these are just a few of the main categories of installation art,
but there are plenty more in the world(s). All of these types lend themselves
to a DIY-attitude in creating them, which happens to be right up Meow
Wolf’s alley. Speaking of our own immersive spaces, we talked to a few of
our installation superstar artists about how to get started with a medium
like this, and to share their stories:
LAURA DAVIDSON
What do you do at Meow Wolf?
My title is Manager of the Art Team Task Force. I support our Meow Wolf
artists who create at our studio in Santa Fe year-round while they are onsite
installing a new exhibition alongside construction. We primarily work in
spaces creating art that is site-specifi c, and not planned prior to arriving in the
space — tying the parts of the exhibit together. Occasionally in my role, I get to
jump in on art-making for our exhibits, usually using bits of material that were
left over from other art-making. In The Real Unreal, I created a chain of snake
hangers from fabric left from foliage we created for the forest and stuff ed
them with wool leftover from Morgan Grasham’s The Greeter sculpture.
How did you get started in installation art and how have you grown in that
medium?
When I was in college, I started gathering decaying found objects from
sheds in the alleyways of the town. Many of them were time capsules of
objects that people had kept in the 50s through the 70s and left behind
when they moved. I knew Matt King as my summer camp counselor growing
up, and had been following the work of his art collective, watching how they
transformed found objects into collaborative art installations. (Some of you
may be familiar with this collective as Meow Wolf.)
One of my fi rst shows was at a former gas station in Denison, TX with
Ghost Town Arts Collective in 2010. I built stairs that walked through the
drink fridge door into a collection of objects excavated from alley sheds.
These days in my personal art practice, I cast objects from paper waste and
native plant seeds to create impermanent outdoor installations. I’m always
looking for opportunities to build more colorful immersive spaces with soft
sculptures created from textile waste and handmade recycled paper.
Do you have any advice for anyone starting out with installation art?
So much of what I love about installation is the ability to play with modular
pieces. Let go of any perfectionism and arrange objects that you have
created or found, knowing this arrangement is impermanent. If you don’t
like it, try again until you do!
If your art could talk, what would it say?
“Thanks for pulling me out of the trash, Laura!”
LANCE RYAN MCGOLDRICK
What do you do at Meow Wolf?
My job title is Senior Artist. I have been with the company since 2015,
making everything from large-scale kaleidoscopes and found object
sculptures to hammer-spheres and Ratterblades.
How did you get started in installation art and how have you grown in that
medium?
In 2010, I moved into an art studio at the Factory on 5th in Albuquerque.
I was screen printing and illustrating at the time, when I met David Cudney
(fellow MW Artist) who was then managing the gallery and studios. He
 CARMEN'S CLOSET BY LAURA DAVIDSON AT THE REAL UNREAL. PHOTO BY KATE RUSSELL  CRYSTAL CLOUD CAVE BY LANCE RYAN MCGOLDRICK AT THE REAL
UNREAL. PHOTO BY PAUL TORRES  CRYSTAL GROTTO BY SOFIA HOWARD AT HOUSE OF ETERNAL RETURN. PHOTO BY ATLAS MEDIA
׉	 7cassandra://3IV75N0XlPyB3Cm6hxmwUqoeCpYKufEzSWeai2_mlKU&` g#г8׉Eqdid an installation with over 80 gold, waving lucky cat fi gures and it blew
my mind. Soon after, I started making assemblage sculptures.
In 2011, I got a job for Urban Outfi tters building the art installations for
the store in Albuquerque. That job gave me the space and the budgets
to fall in love with installation art. I then began building large-scale
immersive sculptures out of scrap material, found 2x4’s and fencing
material, often using light and geometry as well.
Do you have any advice for anyone starting out with installation art?
Work with materials you fi nd interesting — there are a lot of materials
online for free and trash is everywhere and unfortunately plentiful. Make
work that you want to see in the world. Your vision rarely matches up
with what you make, keep making! Your vision will eventually match.
Find a mentor! Collaborate! Large-scale works are hard to produce alone.
Most of all, have fun!
If your art could talk, what would it say?
“I’m feeling a little emotional today!”
SOFIA HOWARD
What do you do at Meow Wolf?
My current job title with Meow Wolf is Senior Artist, but I have been
involved since the build of House of Eternal Return, where I worked as
a volunteer and then as part of the inaugural team of docents, as well
as helping with Exhibit Maintenance. I do a plethora of diff erent things
including painting, sculpting, making miniatures, and traveling to install and
fi nish pieces onsite in our various exhibits. I have also done a fair amount of
art direction and leading small teams to complete collaborative projects. I
try to keep the playful spirit of MW that fi rst drew me toward it as a 14-yearold
alive to the best of my ability through how I plan and execute my art.
How did you get started in installation art and how have you grown in that
medium?
As a kid, I built fairy towns in my bedroom using scarves as terrain and
blocks as buildings. I was constantly hot gluing popsicle stick houses and
making Sculpey models with my best friend for my entire childhood and well
into middle school.
When I started high school at New Mexico School for the Arts (NMSA) in
2011, we went on a walking fi eld trip to see Meow Wolf’s installation The Due
Return at the Center for Contemporary Arts Santa Fe. I had never seen art
like that before, and it totally changed my beliefs about what art was and
how you could make it.
My fi rst serious installation project was for my senior project before I
graduated from NMSA. It was an installation of my bedroom in a corner of
the gallery complete with a bed, laundry and other personal belongings. I also
suspended and displayed piles of prints of fi lm photos I had taken through
the duration of my time at the school with dates and autobiographical
captions. A Meow Wolf Founder came to our public opening and told me
that my installation reminded him of The Due Return, which was the biggest
compliment I could possibly receive at that time, and he invited me to
come and help build House of Eternal Return, which I took him up on several
months later.
I never went to college so Meow Wolf has been my art school for the past
almost nine years, and my work has been transformed and molded by the
collaborative visions we bring to life. I have learned a ton of material skills,
and I also learned that I love painting murals — which was a shock to me
because I hated painting in high school. As I have made more and more work,
I have realized that the process of making it is usually the most important
and enjoyable part to me, rather than the fi nal outcome. The biggest lesson
to me in my growth with this medium is that you can make literally anything
you can dream of if you team up with friends who have diff erent skill
sets than you, then work together and keep open minds about how it will
transform.
Do you have any advice for anyone starting out with installation art?
Just start arranging by arranging items in your home, let every surface be an
opportunity for a vignette. See how shape and color and form can speak to
each other. Then get weird with it, and share it with as many or few people as
you want to. Dioramas are a great container to practice installation in if you
don’t have a lot of space to make something life-sized, just add a tiny person
and suddenly it’s huge! Look into the vast and varied history of installation
art, there are SO many diff erent approaches and Meow Wolf’s style is
just one of millions. Visit your local natural history or nature and science
museums, they often have installations and dioramas that someone or a
team of someones worked hard on, let those inspire and inform you. Learn
how to use an impact driver and drywall anchors correctly :) And don’t be
afraid to fuck up, just own up to it when you do. That’s how you learn.
If your art could talk, what would it say?
“I am the product of the miasma of collective unconscious, a piece of the
hivemind of everyone I have ever known, worked with, loved and missed.”
There’s no one way to get started with your own installation art. The
key is to try, by yourself, or with friends, where you get to discover the
process. Therein lies the magic — building the idea, collecting items or
media elements, piecing the puzzle together, and culminating in your
own personal “wow” moment. You can make all that happen, you just
have to take that fi rst step to start.
If you need some additional inspiration or a little creative guidance —
from mask-making to stained glass creating and more — try out one of
our Meow Wolf Makers Workshops. Heck, you could even use one of the
things you create IN your installation!
KEEP YOUR EYES PEELED FOR A MEOW WOLF MAKERS WORKSHOP NEAR YOU: TICKETS.MEOWWOLF.COM/EVENTS
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׉	 7cassandra://ZaHVnO-BXCoaV97O_GZKOinoFAb29OwgZ6JQhNDOwWEV` g#г:׉E YMARK MOTHERSBAUGH W/ POSTCARDS FOR DEMOCRACY. JOIN THE MOVEMENT: POSTARTFORDEMOCRACY.COM
׉	 7cassandra://GZjva-nmsFbgzgZ8L2WzhdwIHGLKtpLdIWfk82I9wTs#` g#г;g#г:בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://9sGVxCaJQLUamjlEz4kNoR-KSHoODvg6RsYtYapu9PU `׉	 7cassandra://LA7WmYHGD98xxGnQZq4oUHbHW6HJpFajFms8CQHoU54Eg`r׉	 7cassandra://VPcUgC9o4rg62uhbTAYs-xFMWrgrV_hCfprMNcgDt5M` g#۳{ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://2PKeNSzPFT8Qoyw5Jekrv8mDMOJ2md9zmuh4_sznxy8 S`׉	 7cassandra://z0RCr0Ffd_T6t1Zdo92OHXKqSwP2ghzbDxbHSSsE16Q_o`r׉	 7cassandra://p0bxZ-rmvJrYTNQvgfaR-VS2aUFSkGasVU-hZkwJoFk` g#۳}׉ECHRIS AUSTIN, LET'S GO HOME
׉	 7cassandra://VPcUgC9o4rg62uhbTAYs-xFMWrgrV_hCfprMNcgDt5M` g#г<׉EBY JOEL TAGERT
Chris walked in crimson, the goggles’ night vision painting the willow
and aspen with a red and bloody brush. It was fall, the ground dry, and
his steps would have been noisy but for the wind rasping the leaves, a
wind that also brought him a rich breath of woodsmoke half a mile from
its source. When he saw the windows, bright yellow in the infrared, as
though the cabin’s log courses contained the devil’s own inferno, he
crouched and considered the ground.
The cabin stood in a meadow, uphill fifty yards from the edge of the
wood. He could circle around to approach it from the north, but that
direction lay the road, and even less cover. Probably it didn’t matter.
It was dark, and few people were capable of reacting quickly to a
determined attack.
Why do I have to use a knife? he whispered voicelessly, but of course he
hadn’t said the daemon’s name and so received no response. Charybdis,
he tried again, why do I have to use a knife?
What’s wrong with a knife?
The voice in his ear (silent to anyone else) sounded exactly like Lance
Corporal Marcus Dorsey, formerly the communications specialist for their
Marine Raider element. Marc liked to joke that he’d joined the Marines to
get ahead in his radio career. Voice like a submarine propellor. Dead with
the rest in the Osprey.
Well first of all, it’s more risk, Chris said. More exposure. You use a gun
so you don’t have to get close to the target. You set an explosive for a
delayed kill. A knife means you’re in reach.
You’re bigger and stronger than they are, and better trained. You also
got the advantage of surprise. This should be easy for you.
Do you think I’m a psycho?
You really want to discuss your psych profile right now?
Do you think killing someone’s easy for me? Up close like this?
No, not easy. Pleasurable.
That’s fucked up.
Charybdis said nothing more, this not being a question or anything that
needed answering, and a sense Christian had lost the argument seeped
into the ensuing silence. Charybdis, god of the deep, who sent whirlpools
to swallow ships. Like a great white shark swimming over his shoulder.
It didn’t matter though. It was all just like a video game, or an afterlife,
or a vivid dream. The waving branches, the deepness of the night, carried
him further into that feeling.
Still, why the knife? he whispered. Charybdis?
It’s complicated.
Unless there’s some time-sensitive need here, I’m going to wait until
the target goes to sleep. That work for you?
Yeah, that works.
So we’re not in a hurry. Explain.
A knife offers the greatest chance of success in the event of outside
interference. Like they say in the movies, there are other forces at work here.
You mean another AI.
Another superintelligence, yeah.
And the target is what, this thing’s agent?
That’s right.
What kind of interference?
Not sure. Probably nothing. But after it’s done, I need you to remove
the target’s neuroport.
Well that’s fucking gruesome.
Your knife is equipped with a saw blade. With it you can cut through
the back of the—
Yeah, I get it. I get it.
He had died in that crash, and been resurrected. He had lain dead
and God had come for him and healed his damaged brain stem. A god,
anyway. And Charybdis said, Walk, and lo, he walked. The lights in the
cabin winked out.
Orion was high before he stood up. He walked slowly and silently up the
slope to the cabin. He was, as he understood it, to bring about the end of
the world. Charybdis had promised him a paradise afterward. He circled
a bit to avoid the gravel drive and its loud crunch. No moonshadow to
worry about falling onto the windows. The knife was in his hand.
He stopped outside the door. He braced himself. He kicked the door in
and jumped inside.
Something clipped his forehead and right brow and he fell. Another
blow was coming, but slow — fucking cast iron pan, is what it was — and
he drove right, head lowered, knife stabbing. Instantly they ducked low,
came up under his knees like a wrestler, his whole body wheeling at its
center of gravity, crashing onto his shoulders with head tucked.
He rolled with the motion, twisting, trying to slash at their legs with the
knife, but quick as a cat they slipped away and kicked a small coffee table
at him. He jumped to his feet and they squared off, her back to the tiny
kitchen and his to the broken door.
She was a young woman, maybe five-two, slender. He’d known this
going in. She was wearing big bug-eyed goggles that he assumed were
AR, though he’d never seen the brand. Her flesh was bright in the
infrared.
You don’t have to do this, she said.
Maybe, he replied. But it’s paradise on one hand and hell on the other.
He feinted, then jabbed three times as fast, knowing that no one,
realistically, could fully block that kind of scissor attack.
The knife struck home, and again, but something was different. He
looked and he was holding a bouquet of flowers, for some reason bright
and multicolored in his goggles. He was so baffled that he didn’t see the
young woman’s flying elbow to his temple at all.
When he came to, she was long gone, the knife (or flowers) with her.
Charybdis, he said, did I imagine that? The gun turning to flowers?
No. Your senses reported it correctly.
Charybdis, he said, screwing up his courage. Is this a sim? Is it? Has it
been a sim all along? But the daemon didn’t answer.
25
׉	 7cassandra://p0bxZ-rmvJrYTNQvgfaR-VS2aUFSkGasVU-hZkwJoFk` g#г=g#г<בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://y5W8OctGqEGOwPoOjx4eFJuwt5oGaB7gC5mBGyxhknM X`׉	 7cassandra://88AwEwevtNrFHh6OwOvxRWdBCyd0a7X3o1eb9qDtVe8s`r׉	 7cassandra://2rbqilCDAGbnrCvP1qft-txddH49qcsRE_RjtVrCktQ&` g#ݳט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://Wgw_-4D0bbl97GJY0IMZo9pdzsV1sDbzWxd_xSVa7bI Ǹ`׉	 7cassandra://S6tvfHxrh0q0rvPJW6JTkhY5ERPYLgRtztFO9Mg6s9o͐`r׉	 7cassandra://VtSqVrtWZMilUgVlg2UJK5rJuxXwcKYa7zFiaB9wd80*6` g#נg# ́9ׁH *http://queencitysoundsandart.wordpress.comׁׁЈ׉E׉	 7cassandra://2rbqilCDAGbnrCvP1qft-txddH49qcsRE_RjtVrCktQ&` g#г>׉EBY TOM MURPHY
ALMANAC MAN – TERRAIN
A scathing, noisy and sustained stab at
dangerously delusional thinking, collective
trauma and despair. As the title suggest
this album examines the lay of the land
in America in the present tense and the
dire implications of its politics for its own
population and the world in general. Its
crawling, fractured soundscape nonetheless
yields moments of what might be described
as a cathartic melodicism, akin to what you
might hear on a Chat Pile record, offering a
shard of hope in resistance to a seemingly
doomed future.
A PLACE FOR OWLS – HOW WE
DIG IN THE EARTH
In the earnest and expertly crafted, intricate
melodies of this album, it is impossible to
miss a sense of urgency and keen sensitivity
to the precariousness of life. A Place For Owls
takes a track title like “find your friends and
hold them close” — that is all but a meme
now from social media posts about the death
of loved ones and the fragility of existence
— and imbues it with a striking poignancy
and vibrant delicacy. You don’t need to be a
fan of midwestern emo to be drawn into the
band’s vulnerable hopefulness, but it has the
open-hearted expressiveness of the best of
that music.
BLAMESHELLS – S/T
The relatively lo-fi production on this
record is really the only way to capture
and convey tracks that are written with an
unpolished spirit informing the songwriting
and performance. Calling it “garage punk”
seems inadequate because the attitude in
the vocals has the kind of irreverence and
snarl one hears in the music of L7 and Tribe
8. It has an untamed rock and roll sound, like
the band is not trying to be anything else
but offering its own flavor of memorable
melodies and hooks.
GWISINA – S/T
Amanda Baker’s imaginative production
and command of sonic detail turns songs
that might fall within the realm of glitchcore
into something more coherent and
intentional. Like Alice Glass’ solo work, there
is real pain and self-examination behind
these tracks that the otherworldly, futuristic
vocal processing could — or is even — trying
to hide. Rather, the sounds employed here
embody the way it feels to experience
being immersed in those emotions. Baker
brings you into those peaks and valleys of
lived psychological states for a collective
catharsis through art pop.
GLASS PARADE – PATH OF
GREATEST RESISTANCE
The glittery guitar tones and gritty
melodies of the songs on this Glass
Parade album, along with its fairly eclectic
songwriting, are reminiscent of an all but
lost time of 90s and 2000s alternative
music. Like it’s coming to us from a
universe where Sunny Day Real Estate,
Hammerbox and Velocity Girl are the primary
touchstones of musical DNA. Thread in
some post-punk synth and moodiness and
you get a sound that’s markedly different
from the group’s regional peers.
For more, visit queencitysoundsandart.wordpress.com
27
PLANES MISTAKEN FOR STARS –
DO YOU STILL LOVE ME?
This is the final PMFS album for which
founding vocalist Gared O’Donnell recorded
before his untimely passing in 2021. It
is a harrowing and heavy yet exuberant
statement on loss, death and precarious
preciousness of the time you get to
experience while alive. It also demonstrates
the immense creative growth of the band’s
always striking songwriting to the level of
transcendent catharsis with each track. The
music is dense with ideas and brimming with
an expansive spirit that commands your
attention, revealing added dimensions of
nuance and meaning with repeated listens.
PLEASURE PRINCE – GENERAL
PALLOR
As they deconstruct painful and harmful
narratives we carry as imposed on us by
culture or cultivated lived experience,
Pleasure Prince’s neon pastel melodies
and soothing tones offer a dreamlike realm
of music in which to escape and examine
these ideas from a safe distance. Even more
than the band’s entrancing previous album,
Numbers, General Pallor is like a late 70s Alan
Parsons Project album as imagined through
the lens of modern visionary pop auteurs like
Black Moth Super Rainbow and Air. Except
this duo injects a lush neo-soul flavor and
soothingly transporting yet emotionally rich
vocals with lyrics that honor how the hurt of
life’s slings and arrows can linger longer when
neglected and buried with no real attempt at
self-healing.
׉	 7cassandra://VtSqVrtWZMilUgVlg2UJK5rJuxXwcKYa7zFiaB9wd80*6` g#г?g#г>בCט   u׉׉	 7cassandra://94GVzViyfBHTivpW263gYjtUEaKGCIfSdDeN3vZ-03c m`׉	 7cassandra://WYiSscbl60fkPP2WlY79TUZnfuWTYD2QgSTrS6H6MvIx`r׉	 7cassandra://mmhTaFGsopRg2YxPpAjJu7m5Ng1zBg2k_qClnX4Rnqc$` g#ט  u׉׉	 7cassandra://u1NUSFmujl8HS0qjIelMODhrpPc4Ji2LzWEitHZoJ6U `׉	 7cassandra://RojM5DTcD4Lfk-IjuaJqlphB-u96S6YbeLFNRLqqwfQb`r׉	 7cassandra://NgB2mAfGwaxHzjzkS-1Yb0M46uzSIGTM8tTF94O5VGg!` g#נg# }́e9ׁHhttp://THETOMMYCOYOTE.COMׁׁЈ׉ESButterfly Jazz at
The Cocoon Tonight
By Godric | Photo by Tommy Coyote
It was the Lion’s birthday
round a table
her picked flowers sat
“plucked-too-soon!”
a few spat
Life Benders?
‘stuffing of tombs’
Where The Hard Things Spoil
trouble feeds hiss-soil
and whoever’s left
for a time
is panned,
potted …
boiled
CHANGE(d)
Life’s Lieutenant
track and boar
Wader of Waters
eternity’s peerless lore
Gardens my mind
to field or yield
Time: the real estate
storing our steel
Things will show
haven’t they?
On hind legs
cold as Hell’s Hills
Thus cling
to dreams!
pass the past on
It is sacrilege
burdens may burrow
Chaos might stone vision
life will love you back
Heart marks these missions
worry naught of the neat
Born to fill and marry seats
cut your ribbon at all times
Rise and repeat
maim monsters made mighty
By ancient deceits
their plots
Lay slain and riven
For the living to heed:
how flawless we prance
When courage leads.
FOLLOW GODRIC - @GODRINATI:
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X, PINTEREST, SOUNDCLOUD
FOLLOW TOMMY COYOTE - @TOMMYCOYOTE_
INSTAGRAM, X | THETOMMYCOYOTE.COM
No. 131
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9ׁHhttp://VANESSIESANTAFE.COMׁׁЈ׉E mRELAX, REJUVENATE & SUPPORT
THIS GEM IN THE HEART OF
SANTA FE BY BOOKING A STAY:
VANESSIESANTAFE.COM
No. 131
׉	 7cassandra://vm8HmeCaBP41pLhjZ1DCNYFHg-s_VNgQevxS-VMQhwo*` g#гB׉EINN AT VANESSIE
A New Team Of Women Are Shining Up
Santa Fe's Enchanted Gem With Art & Community
Interview by Krysti Joméi | Photos by Birdy & Courtesy of Vanessie
Tucked away in the corner of the United States’ oldest capitol city, Inn
at Vanessie is an artists’ home away from home. Two blocks from Santa
Fe’s Historic Plaza and Railyard Arts District, this endearing boutique
hotel offers comforting refuge with 21 uniquely designed rooms and
suites, each adorned with a distinctive collection of original paintings
from the owner’s personal collection. Bordering San Francisco and
Water Street, it’s a literal hop-skip to downtown adventures: watering
holes, galleries, indie shops, green spaces, the River Trail, and the art
aficionado’s crème de la crème, Meow Wolf’s House of Eternal Return.
But when you’re ready to call it a day, cozying up is a guarantee, as the
hotel is serenely sequestered on its own block, providing an undeniable
oasis from the hustle and bustle of the city’s streets.
While Vanessie now mainly accommodates travelers and tourists,
for decades it was the local haunt for good food and live music (and
yes, even some ghostly sightings). Their critically acclaimed Piano
Bar — an official Santa Fe Landmark — served residents nightly with
live entertainment and cuisine for over 40 years. But over the course
of various management turnovers, priorities shifted with creativity
taking a back seat, leaving the piano bench empty and the lively bar
and restaurant closed to the public.
However, a heart for art can only beat quietly for so long. A passionate
art collector and supporter of artists, the inn’s owner brought on a
brand new team of women this year trusting in their creativity-centric
vision. Operations Supervisor Valerie Alvarado and Head of Operations
Reyna Sanchez aim to revitalize the soul of Vanessie through their local
wisdom and deep-seeded love for art and building community.
“Art is what has kept Vanessa alive,” Valerie Alvarado explains,
“When the piano bar was open, it was this meeting spot, this social
place to all of Santa Fe. Whether it was people who were working
downtown, those who were retired, artists, tourists, they would meet
here. It brought people together. And I want to bring that back.”
The Santa Fe local decided to join Vanessie’s team in hopes of giving
back to her community and sparking creativity and connection to all
who travel through the inn’s doors. Though she’s currently working to
finish important aesthetic renovations to the rooms and grounds, in
addition to planning the builds of four new art-centric suites, her heart
lies in stoking the flame of Vanessie’s original ember as a gathering
place emphasizing entertainment. “Out of all the hotels in the Plaza,
we’re more for the West Side in a sense of where all the neighborhoods
are than the East Side where there’s a lot of very expensive hotels
around. So Vanessie truly feels like a local gem,” she says.
Reyna Sanchez joined Vanessie with the aim to reactivate the hotel’s
mission to serve as an open-armed community hub. “I just want
everyone to feel at home when they come to Vanessa. I want people to
know that everyone — everyone — is welcomed and they will be loved and
respected.” Her words eco the first painting guests are greeted with in
the grand high-ceiling lobby: an ancient inspired piece gifted by the late
artist Bill Worrell showcasing hand-painted script stating that ALL are
welcome and safe at the hotel. That includes our beloved furry friends,
because at Vanessie, pets are family. Further, this manifesto extends to
the new tight-knit local staff, the majority of which are women.
“We’re not a big chain company, we’re family-owned. And we have
almost all women running the inn, and mostly all women of color. And
the few men on our team are amazing. But it’s time for that change.
I’m full-blood Mexican and I want everyone to know that you can be a
part of the minority and you can still shine bright like a star,” she says.
Reyna also jumped on board to find community herself. Born and
raised in Oklahoma, she longed to be part of a team and a city where
she truly felt like she belonged. “On a personal level, I found a home
at Vanessie, just in the littlest things like listening to the girls here
whenever they pronounce my name. I love the women I work with,” she
expresses.
Growing up in Santa Fe and witnessing firsthand critical issues that
are often swept under the rug like in most larger cities — houselessness,
education disparity, growing substance abuse/addiction issues to
name a few — Valerie is determined to champion inclusivity and make
a difference where she can. “I’m proud to be part of something that
wants to help our community and has the potential, whether that’s
contributing in an artistic way to bring us together, or helping guests
learn a bit of Spanish, or partnering with a local community college to
help our staff learn English,” she says.
A painter herself, Valerie understands the healing aspect of art and
the impact it can have on bridging gaps culturally and socially. In
addition to reactivating the Piano Bar and resturant for dining and
events, one of her goals is to develop an Artist Market showcasing local
talent and vendors. “It’s like what Rumi says, we’re all seeking love, all
of humanity. That’s what unites us. Sometimes we can’t make logic
out of our feelings or the world we live
in, even though we try to so much. And
that’s where art comes in and helps you
just feel. You don’t have to do anything
else with art, just feel,” she closes.
Whether you’re visiting this jewel city
in The Land of Enchantment or it’s the
place you call home, Vanessie’s doors
are always open by the women who
run it. While you stay tuned for what
the future holds for their dining and
entertainment, swing by this gem for a
tranquil stay, local knowledge and tips,
and inspiring conversations about art,
community and more.
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