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This is a reworking of 1982's "The One Minute Manager" -- rewritten for today using emojis.
This text represents a transcription of the author's use of the internet on one machine during the week of September 25th - October 2nd, 2014. Each "--" represents a shift in attention, each "X" represents the closing of a window, and text that was originally hyperlinked is surrounded by the [LINK] tag. The text is 62 pages long, contains 6,138 words, 28,334 characters without spaces, and 35,123 characters with spaces. All of these numbers are evenly divisible by 3.1.
A “funny, poignant, dishy, and even enlightening” adventure through a tight-knit world of drag performers making art, mayhem, and dreaming of making it big, this book is “the story of America now” (Alexander Chee, The New York Times). In How You Get Famous, journalist Nicole Pasulka raucously documents the rebirth of the New York drag scene, following a group of iconoclastic performers with undeniable charisma, talent, and a hell of a lot to prove. In the past decade, drag has become a place where edgy, competitive showoffs can find security in a callous and over priced city, a shot at real money, and a level of recognition queer people rarely achieve. But can drag keep its edge as i...
Examines how radical bookstores and similar spaces serve as launching pads for social movements How does social change happen? It requires an identified problem, an impassioned and committed group, a catalyst, and a plan. In this deeply researched consideration of seventy-seven stores and establishments, Kimberley Kinder argues that activists also need autonomous space for organizing, and that these spaces are made, not found. She explores the remarkably enduring presence of radical bookstores in America and how they provide infrastructure for organizing—gathering places, retail offerings that draw new people into what she calls “counterspaces.” Kinder focuses on brick-and-mortar venue...
This is a book of poetry that was composed by using CAPTCHAs (an acronym for "Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart") that were gathered while watching television shows illegally over the course of two years.