Showing posts with label unpublished. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unpublished. Show all posts

Monday, 8 June 2026

 


              TRINITY PARK ANJULIE DISCUSSION

Anjulie at Trinity Park

There is a way to write about pop music as if it is already happening on a screen that never turns off. Not history. Not biography. Just repetition, shimmer, branding, memory, and sound looping back into itself like a commercial that forgot what it was selling.

Anjulie appears in that space like a signal cut from the early digital air of the late 2000s—when pop music was still trying to decide if it wanted to be human or software. She arrives not as a single “voice” in the old sense, but as a series of frames: club lights, MySpace-era glow, neon hooks, the feeling of hearing a song in a car at night and not knowing if it is sadness or advertising.

She is Canadian, yes, but geography in pop is mostly texture. What matters more is frequency. Her early work slides into the electro-pop ecosystem at a moment when everything is flattening into high-gloss surfaces: synths, hooks, repetition. “Boom” is not just a song title, it is an event. A pop object that announces itself like a billboard that learned how to dance. The voice inside it is light but edged, like something smiling while being watched.

 “Love Songs” becomes less a track and more a category of feeling packaged into a clean, playable loop. “Brand New Bitch” is not just a declaration; it is typography in motion, identity as a slogan that keeps reprinting itself in different colours.

The surface becomes the subject. The subject becomes the surface. There is no “behind the music” because the music is already in front of everything, like a screen.

She moves through the 2010s not as a traditional album-to-album narrative arc, but like a series of installations. Each song is a room. Each hook is a neon object placed carefully in the center so that you don’t have to walk anywhere else. “Headphones” feels like isolation made audible—private sound in a public world, the listener disappearing into their own echo. “Rain” slows the palette down, but even sadness is polished, glossy, consumable. Emotional content becomes design.

Collaboration is AnJulie. No single image belongs to one hand. In Anjulie’s case, the pop ecosystem itself is the collaborator: producers, DJs, sync placements, streaming algorithms, television editors choosing the exact 12 seconds of her voice that will repeat under a montage of someone running through a city at night. The artist becomes both source and material.

Anjulie’s work spreads less like a narrative and more like ink in water. You don’t track it linearly. You notice it appearing in places you didn’t expect: a show, a playlist, a background track in a memory you didn’t realize had music attached to it.

The voice itself is important because it refuses to over-explain. It does not insist on autobiography in the traditional singer-songwriter sense. Instead, it performs identity as modulation. Sometimes assertive, sometimes distant, sometimes ironic, sometimes vulnerable, but always slightly detached—as if the emotion is being broadcast and observed at the same time.

The removal of moral hierarchy from expression. A love song is not more important than a brand song. A breakup anthem is not more “real” than a dance hook. Everything becomes equal under repetition. Everything becomes pop.

By the time you arrive at the later phase of her work, the idea of “hits” itself feels like a design flaw in the language. A hit implies a peak, a moment of impact. But Anjulie’s catalogue behaves more like a continuous surface. Not peaks, but waves. Not arrival, but recurrence. Songs that keep returning in different contexts, like they were never fully released—just gradually leaked into culture.

Even recognition in the formal sense—awards, nominations, industry acknowledgment—feels in this framing less like achievement and more like additional layers of print. Another version of the image. Another press run. Another copy of the same face in a slightly different color palette.

And then there is the strange softness underneath all the gloss. Repetition does not erase feeling—it just distributes it. Anjulie’s music carries that distributed emotional field: empowerment, longing, distance, irony, warmth. None of it fixed. All of it circulating.

If you zoom out far enough, she becomes less a person in a conventional biography and more a set of recurring cultural signals: hooks that reappear, phrases that stick, moods that get reactivated when a track starts playing somewhere you didn’t expect.

Nothing ends, it only gets replayed.

Anjulie does not resolve into a “greatest hits” list in this space. She becomes something closer to a looping exhibit—songs as objects, voice as print, identity as repetition that never fully settles. The music does not conclude. It just restarts softly in another room, on another device, under another life that thinks it is separate from the sound but isn’t.

Appendix: Selected Career Achievements — Anjulie

Released debut studio album Anjulie on August 4, 2009, under Hear Music/Universal Republic, marking her formal entry into the major-label pop system at the tail end of the MySpace-to-streaming transition era

Released breakout single “Boom” in 2009, which reached Billboard chart placement in the U.S. dance/electronic space and became one of her most recognizable early tracks across radio and club rotation

Released “Love Songs” in 2010, which charted on Billboard’s Hot Dance Club Songs chart and expanded her presence in U.S. dance-pop circulation

Released “Brand New Bitch” in 2011, which also entered Billboard’s dance chart ecosystem and became a recurring sync/club track in the early 2010s pop cycle

Released “Headphones” in 2012, further consolidating her electro-pop identity during the peak streaming transition period, with sustained use in media placements and curated playlists

Accumulated tens of millions of streams across major platforms for core catalogue tracks such as “Boom,” “Love Songs,” and “Brand New Bitch,” with long-tail streaming continuing years after initial release rather than concentrated peak-era consumption

Maintained ongoing independent release activity through the 2010s and 2020s, including EPs and standalone singles outside a traditional album-only cycle, reflecting post-album industry distribution patterns

Her catalogue has been licensed across television, advertising, and digital media, contributing to recurring synchronization revenue streams typical of mid-tier pop catalogues with strong licensing value rather than one-time blockbuster chart dominance

Performed live across North American club circuits and festival-adjacent venues throughout the 2010s, operating within a touring model aligned with electronic-pop and DJ-supported performance formats rather than stadium-scale touring structures

Sustained industry presence across songwriting and collaborative production networks, contributing to pop-writing ecosystems in Canada and the U.S., particularly in LA and Toronto-based pop production circles


Full CIRCLE

 

There is a temptation, especially in retrospect, to believe that cultural life forms a kind of elegant chain—each link leading logically to the next, as though meaning were something carefully engineered rather than accidentally stumbled into while holding a camera.

Your first real encounter with that world came through photographing Jayde Nicole, a figure suspended in one of those late-era media ecosystems where reality television, fashion imagery, and celebrity branding all blur into a single circulating surface. She wasn’t so much “a subject” as a node—someone briefly illuminated by a machine that is always looking for something attractive to reflect itself back at an audience.

That machine, of course, has its cathedral, and it was called The Hills. A show so carefully unbothered by reality that it accidentally invented a new genre: emotionally air-conditioned life. Nothing sweated, nothing stuttered, everything arrived pre-composed, like a sentence written after the conclusion of its own argument.

And yet somewhere in that same atmospheric layer of pop culture drifted Anjulie, who turns out to be the most interesting kind of anomaly: someone who actually writes the music that all those glossy scenes pretend to generate on their own.

Her songs didn’t just sit in the background of that era—they understood the background. Tracks like “Boom” and “Rain” carried the strange distinction of being both commercially polished and emotionally alert, which is a rarer combination than it should be. She’s one of those artists who can pass through the machinery of television placement and radio rotation without being flattened by it. In fact, she improves the room.

So the chain goes: fashion photograph → reality television glow → pop-cultural diffusion → Anjulie in a park, speaking like someone who has survived being turned into atmosphere and returned intact.

And that is where the joke quietly reverses itself.

Because all the supposed glamour of the earlier links—the curated personalities, the manufactured intimacy, the soft-focus drama of being “seen”—turns out to be far less vivid than a single real conversation with someone like Anjulie. The machine can broadcast her voice, but it cannot quite explain why it feels more precise in person.

The final irony is that you don’t move from reality to illusion along this chain. You move, instead, from illusion toward something unexpectedly grounded. And standing there in the park, camera or no camera, it becomes hard to avoid the suspicion that the most “real” figure in the entire sequence is the one who was making the soundtrack all along.

 
 
 
CITIZENCANADA,Social Media,Zeitgeist,Wonder,VIP,ブリトニースピアーズ,
 
https://zeitgeistpublishing.blogspot.com/2026/06/full-circle-there-is-temptation.html 
 


Monday, 4 May 2026

BRITNEY SPEARS




https://honorificabilitudinitatibus1.blogspot.com/2026/05/britneyspears-myprerogative-citizen.html

 **#BritneySpears #MyPrerogative CITIZEN CANADA SHOW RED LIGHT** 🔴 **“BUY. BELIEVE. OBEY.”**

🗞️ You no read magazine. Magazine read you. Pop lab open. Year ~2004. Beat drop. Voice split. Question asked. “My prerogative.” — system glitch. Star speak back. Industry blink. Tabloid loud. Camera everywhere. Narrative built. Narrative sold. But chorus cut through noise. Control challenged in 3 minutes. Think artist free? Or image scripted? Stage shine. Contract tight. Freedom marketed. Autonomy debated. Audience dance — but also listen. **INSIDE THIS PAGE:** 🧠 **“Pop as Rebellion.”** — Hook sweet. Message sharp. Mainstream song ask: who decide identity? 📺 **“Media Machine.”** — Headlines push story. Persona packaged. Reality edited. 🛒 **“Image for Sale.”** — Style, voice, attitude — monetized. Even “real” becomes product. 🕹️ **“Fan Circuit.”** — Fans echo, remix, amplify. Meaning move beyond original. 🚀 **“Prerogative Core.”** — Final line stay: choice claimed, even inside system. 📸 Photos of thought from #GreatguyTV #scholxpage2 #CitizenCanada #江戸門戸 / #by江戸門戸


Wednesday, 22 April 2026

  ​FIFA BLOWS TORONTO FOR CHEAP TRICKS

by Doc Scholx


There is something almost theatrical in its contradiction about the way the 2026 FIFA World Cup is being prepared for Toronto.

On paper, it is simple enough: the world’s biggest football tournament arrives in Canada, shared across three nations, promising accessibility, global unity, and civic pride. In practice, it increasingly resembles something rather different — a carefully tiered system of access in which the experience of “being there” depends less on passion for the game than on one’s willingness to absorb what can only be described as escalating financial astonishment.

Let us begin with the official structure, because it is here that the story starts to fracture.

When FIFA first opened ticket sales, it introduced a tiered pricing system that already placed the event far outside the reach of the casual supporter. Category 4 tickets — the supposed entry point — were priced at roughly $1,300 CAD. Category 3, 2, and 1 climbed steadily from there, with most mid-tier seats falling somewhere between $1,500 and $2,500 CAD, while premium Category 1 seats reached approximately $3,000 CAD.

Even at this stage, the language of “global accessibility” began to feel slightly strained.

But the structure did not stop there.

FIFA later introduced a new classification — almost as an afterthought, though with rather significant consequences — called “Front Category 1.” These were positioned as the best seats in the stadium: front-row, prime sightlines, the kind of vantage point one would assume had already been included in the highest tier. They were not. Instead, they were priced at at least double Category 1, meaning $6,000 CAD and upward for a single match.

At this point, one begins to suspect that “category” is no longer a description of seating, but of social permission.

Then comes the matter of allocation. Fans were not always buying specific seats, but rather zones within stadiums — broad regions in which their eventual position would be determined later. In theory, this is efficient. In practice, it produces a peculiar kind of post-purchase anxiety: paying premium prices only to discover that one’s “Category 1” experience might involve corners, obstructions, or placements far removed from the imagined prestige of the purchase.

And then, almost inevitably, came revision.

After initial sales, FIFA began releasing additional “last-minute” ticket batches across all 104 matches, including fixtures that had previously been described as nearing capacity. This included high-profile games and so-called “flagship” matches, undermining the earlier sense that availability was genuinely scarce.

This is where the language becomes interesting. “Last-minute release” sounds like responsiveness. “Additional inventory” sounds like logistics. But to many fans, it felt like something closer to retroactive supply adjustment — an attempt to reconcile pricing ambition with actual demand.

The reaction, predictably, was not enthusiasm.

Supporters who had already purchased tickets in earlier rounds expressed frustration at what they saw as shifting rules. Some had paid top-tier prices under the assumption of scarcity, only to see new waves of tickets appear later. Others pointed out that if seats were still being released at scale, earlier pricing may have been calibrated more toward projection than reality.

The criticism was sharpened further by FIFA’s adoption of dynamic pricing, a system in which costs fluctuate based on demand. In principle, this mirrors airlines or concerts. In practice, it introduces volatility into what many still consider a civic or cultural event. Prices rise, shift, and segment in ways that make the final cost of attendance less predictable than ever.

The resale market completes the picture.

Tickets that originally cost $1,300 CAD in Category 4 have appeared on secondary platforms for significantly more. Mid-tier tickets in the $1,600–$2,000 CAD range have become common starting points for resale listings. Category 1 seats, originally around $3,000 CAD, have reportedly been listed for as much as $62,000 CAD in extreme cases.

At this point, we are no longer discussing pricing. We are discussing altitude.

All of this sits beneath the administrative umbrella of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, who has overseen an expanded tournament structure featuring 48 teams and three host nations. The intention, at least rhetorically, is inclusion: more nations, more matches, more access. Yet the lived experience of ticket acquisition suggests a different reality — one in which expansion has been accompanied not by democratization, but by segmentation.

And so we return to Toronto.

What does it mean to host a “global game” in a city where ordinary fans increasingly find themselves priced out at the point of entry? What does it mean to speak of civic pride when attendance is stratified into financial tiers that escalate from the expensive to the prohibitive?

There is, of course, a technical defense available. Markets respond to demand. Premium experiences cost premium money. Not every seat can be cheap. All of this is true in a narrow sense, and irrelevant in a larger one.

Because the underlying question is not whether tickets cost money. It is whether the structure of pricing still bears any meaningful relationship to the idea of a shared public event.

If football is becoming a hierarchy of access codes, dynamic pricing curves, and post hoc ticket releases, then what is being staged is no longer simply a tournament. It is a filtering mechanism. A system that determines not just who watches, but who is meant to.

And Toronto, for all its openness and self-image as a welcoming global city, becomes in this arrangement not a home for the world game, but a showroom for its segmentation.

One is left, finally, with a rather uncomfortable thought: that the most universal sport in the world is being reorganized into something rather less universal in practice — an experience still spoken of in the language of the public, but increasingly delivered in the logic of exclusivity.

Or, to put it less gently, the game remains global.

It is just no longer clear that the seats are.





2026,Economic,fame,FIFA,Propaganda,unpublished,USA,watchlist,ZENO,
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
23y April TOD
"Politeness costs nothing and benefits everyone – let's make it the
norm in Toronto."
- Edmund Scholz
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Monday, 20 April 2026

 

Photo by #江戸門戸

Swipe Culture and the Small Lives of Vampr

by  江戸門戸 and Doc Scholz

There is a certain kind of music story that never makes it into documentaries because nothing explodes. Nobody gets discovered in a clean line from obscurity to fame. Instead, what you find are fragments of careers that shift slightly off course because someone, somewhere, swiped right.

In Toronto, a producer who had been making loops alone in a bedroom for years opened Vampr more out of boredom than intent. He matched with a vocalist in London who had a similar habit of starting songs and abandoning them halfway through. They did not introduce themselves like people in an industry story would expect. There was no “let’s build a project,” no talk of strategy. It started with a file. A rough beat. A voice over it. Then another version. Then a week of back and forth that stretched into something resembling discipline.

They never met. The song never charted. It did not even get released in any meaningful sense. But for about three months, there was a working relationship that did not exist before the app.

That is the pattern underneath almost everything Vampr produces.

In Los Angeles, Saltwives—already an established UK production duo with credits across major pop records—use the app in a very different way. For them, it is not a place of discovery but a kind of casting directory. They look for writers and topliners the way a film set looks for background talent, not because they are unknown, but because their workflow demands more voices than their immediate circle can supply. They describe it in practical terms rather than romantic ones. The app becomes another layer of infrastructure in an already functioning career.

There is no mythology in it. Just throughput.

And then there are the quieter cases, the ones that exist only in aggregate memory. A drummer in one city finding a bassist in another and forming a band that rehearses entirely over video calls. A singer who starts getting feedback from producers she would never have had access to through local scenes. A session guitarist who picks up remote work one track at a time, never fully stepping into a “breakthrough,” but gradually stitching together a livable income from scattered collaborations.

None of these stories look like arrival. They look like continuation.

The founders of Vampr have often pointed to these outcomes as evidence that the system works. Millions of connections, they say, across more than a hundred countries, and in that network are songs that would not have existed otherwise. They are technically correct, but the language flattens what is actually happening. A connection is not a collaboration. A collaboration is not a career. And a career, in music especially, is not a thing that can be cleanly traced back to one tool.

What Vampr actually does—what it consistently appears to do—is remove distance without removing uncertainty. It makes everyone reachable and almost no one accountable. You can match with someone who feels like the exact missing piece of your work, and still never hear from them again after the first exchange. Or you can build something that lasts months without ever deciding it is real enough to name.

This creates a strange economy inside the app. Attention is abundant. Intent is not. Musicians scroll through one another like open invitations that may or may not be real. For some users, especially those early in their careers, it feels like opportunity multiplied. For others, especially those with experience, it feels like signal buried under volume.

The most consistent success stories are not stories of discovery but of adjustment. People who learn how to filter faster. People who learn how to move a conversation from the app into actual work before it dissolves. People who accept that most matches are not beginnings of songs, but brief acknowledgments that two people exist in the same industry momentarily.

The platform does not resolve the central problem of music collaboration, which has never really been access. It is alignment. Timing. Commitment. Taste. Those things do not scale well through interfaces.

So what remains are these small, uneven outcomes. A track completed across continents. A band formed and later dissolved without notice. A handful of working relationships that outlast the app sessions that created them. And beneath all of it, the larger truth that Vampr did not invent: most music careers are not made of breakthroughs but of accumulations that only look meaningful in hindsight.

Nothing in that system guarantees success. But it does guarantee contact. And in the modern music economy, contact is often mistaken for momentum.

That confusion is where the app lives.

Networking For Toronto Music Newbies

 

Vampr vs SoundBetter: The Two-Stage Music Industry Filter Nobody Talks About


Music by Peter Randel, Ember Swift and Doc Scholz

Photos by #江戸門戸



Vampr vs SoundBetter: The Two-Stage Music Industry Filter Nobody Talks About

The modern music industry doesn’t reject most people at the “talent” stage.

It rejects them at the access stage.

That’s what platforms like Vampr and SoundBetter really reveal—not opportunity, but the two-tier system underneath music today:

  1. A chaotic social feed of aspiring musicians

  2. A gated marketplace of professionals who already survived the chaos

And most people never move from one to the other.


Vampr — “It’s networking, but without the power structure”

Vampr sells itself as empowerment: meet musicians, collaborate, build your career.

In reality, it’s closer to a collapsed industry mixer with no gatekeepers and no standards.

One user puts it bluntly:

“It helps me connect with people… but it’s still difficult to actually turn that into real work.”

That’s the real pattern. Vampr creates contact, not consequence.

What it actually is

  • A swipe-based talent pool

  • Mostly early-stage or hobby-level musicians

  • Endless “maybe we should collab” conversations

  • Very little follow-through

It mimics networking without replicating what made networking powerful in the first place: scarcity, reputation, and accountability.


The uncomfortable truth

Vampr is not a career tool. It’s a hope simulator.

You feel productive because:

  • you matched with someone

  • you exchanged messages

  • you shared a demo

But nothing is enforced:

  • no deadlines

  • no contracts

  • no real stakes

So most collaborations die in the same place:

“yo this is sick we should do something”

And then nothing happens.

Pros

  • Easy entry point

  • Low friction discovery

  • Useful for experimentation

  • Good for isolating creative energy

Cons

  • Almost no accountability

  • Extremely uneven quality

  • Conversation-heavy, output-light

  • Rewards attention, not completion


SoundBetter — “Where the industry charges you for skipping the struggle”

SoundBetter is the opposite world: polished, structured, and monetized.

It’s where musicians go when they’ve realized something uncomfortable:

talent doesn’t matter if your mix sounds like a phone recording

One user describes it like this:

“I had no access to professionals until I found SoundBetter.”

That’s the real pitch: access to people who already made it through the system.

But here’s the part nobody says out loud:

SoundBetter is not collaboration. It’s outsourcing.


What it actually is

  • A freelance marketplace for audio labor

  • Mixing, mastering, production, session work

  • Tiered pricing based on perceived credibility

  • Reputation-based hiring system

In other words:

the music industry, but with the gate removed and replaced with a price tag


The uncomfortable truth

SoundBetter doesn’t fix inequality in music.

It prices it.

If you have money:

  • you get professional sound

  • you bypass years of trial and error

  • you skip technical development

If you don’t:

  • you stay in Vampr-land

  • or YouTube tutorial purgatory

  • or endless self-mixing cycles

So the “democratization” story is only half true.

What actually happened is:

the gate didn’t disappear—it became a checkout page


Pros

  • High-quality professionals

  • Clear deliverables

  • Real industry experience available on demand

  • Reliable workflow and structure

Cons

  • Expensive for emerging artists

  • Creative decisions shift to hired experts

  • Reduces learning-by-doing

  • Turns music into service procurement


The real system nobody admits

These platforms are not competitors.

They are filters in sequence:

Stage 1: Vampr (noise phase)

Everyone is:

  • networking

  • experimenting

  • “working on something”

  • not finishing anything

Stage 2: SoundBetter (compression phase)

Only a few remain:

  • people with budget

  • people with clarity

  • people with finished material worth fixing

Everything else gets stuck in between.


What this actually means for musicians

The industry didn’t become more open.

It became more segmented:

  • Vampr = infinite possibility with no structure

  • SoundBetter = structure with a paywall

And the brutal reality is this:

Most musicians don’t fail because they lack talent.
They fail because they never leave the networking layer.

They stay in:

  • conversations

  • demos

  • “we should collab”

  • unfinished projects

While a smaller group moves into:

  • paid production

  • finished releases

  • professional output

  • distribution-ready work


Final verdict

Vampr is where music starts when nobody is watching.

SoundBetter is where music goes when it starts costing money to keep going.

And the gap between them is where most careers quietly disappear.



As always comment directly at my Substack Instagram etc. for insights from an outsider. 



https://scholz01.blogspot.com/2026/04/vampr-vs-soundbetter-two-stage-music.htm



https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/04/networking-for-toronto-music-newbies.html

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

THE MEME THAT WASN’T SUPPOSED TO EXIST (2007–2012): A CULTURAL AND LEGAL AUTOPSY — PART II




There is a strange thing that happens when a culture passes through its own shock threshold. It stops remembering events as events and starts remembering them as atmospheres. The internet of the late 2000s was already doing this instinctively, long before anyone had language for it. It was learning, in real time, that certain artifacts do not persist because they are preserved, but because they are repeatedly re-invented in the act of describing them.

By 2007–2008, what had begun as a fragmented and unstable piece of Brazilian fetish film circulation had already ceased to be about the original clip at all. The object itself—compressed, reuploaded, stripped of context—was less important than the reaction it produced, and even less important than the reaction to the reaction. This recursive structure is what gave the meme its historical weight. It was not a video. It was a feedback loop.

And feedback loops, unlike media artifacts, do not require stability to persist.

The earliest traceable phase of this loop was simple: individuals recording themselves watching the clip and uploading their responses to early YouTube. These were not polished productions. They were not commentary in the modern sense. They were closer to involuntary theater. People sitting in bedrooms, in offices, in dorm rooms, confronting something they had been told not to see, and discovering that the only socially legible way to process it was to immediately perform that processing for others.

The reaction video became its own genre almost instantly, but more importantly, it became a distribution method that no longer required the original source. The clip itself could disappear entirely and still propagate culturally, because what was being transmitted was no longer the content—it was the idea of having encountered it.

This is where the meme crosses a threshold that earlier media systems could not easily conceptualize. In broadcast logic, content is primary and commentary is secondary. In this new logic, commentary becomes self-sustaining. The reaction no longer depends on the object. It begins to generate its own necessity.

By 2008, this structure had already begun to leak into mainstream entertainment, not as imitation but as absorption. Late-night television, still operating within broadcast constraints, began to import internet behavior as material. Comedy writers, sensing that audiences were already aware of viral shock culture, began to construct jokes not around the content itself but around the shared fact that something unwatchable existed and had been seen by “people online.”

The shift is subtle but irreversible. Humor stops describing things and starts indexing awareness of things. The audience is no longer being told a joke about a video. They are being reminded that they belong to a cultural moment in which that video could exist.

Around this same period, stand-up comedy begins to mutate under the pressure of the internet. Comedians operating in the late 2000s club circuit—performing in rooms where audiences were increasingly shaped by early YouTube exposure—begin to rely less on narrative setup and more on shared cultural shorthand. Names like Sarah Silverman and Daniel Tosh circulate within this ecosystem not as direct archivists of specific meme references, but as participants in a broader shift where shock, taboo, and internet literacy collapse into a single comedic language.

But what is notable in retrospect is not what was explicitly said. It is what no longer needed to be said. The existence of the meme becomes sufficient context. The joke is not in the description, but in the acknowledgment that description is unnecessary.

Meanwhile, outside comedy, mainstream news media begins to engage with the phenomenon from a different angle entirely. Networks such as CNN and Fox News frame the rise of “disturbing online videos” as a social concern, particularly focused on youth exposure and the breakdown of content boundaries. But these discussions are structurally constrained: the material itself cannot be shown, only described, and even description is often softened into euphemism.

This creates a strange asymmetry in public discourse. The meme is simultaneously everywhere and nowhere—present in conversation, absent in representation, fully known without being fully visible. It becomes one of the first truly modern examples of what might be called “distributed cultural knowledge,” where shared awareness replaces shared experience.

And yet, as with many internet-origin phenomena of this era, the legal system becomes a site where memory attempts to anchor itself incorrectly.

There is a persistent belief that the meme “went to court,” or that some judicial body ruled on its status as art or obscenity. This belief is not entirely irrational—it emerges from proximity. Around the same period, obscenity prosecutions involving extreme adult material were indeed occurring, most notably under frameworks such as Miller v. California (1973) in the United States and R v Butler (1992) in Canada. These legal standards governed what could be classified as obscene material, and they were actively being applied in cases involving distributors of extreme pornography in the late 2000s.

Among these cases, figures such as Ira Isaacs became symbolic in public discourse, not because they were connected to the meme itself, but because they embodied the kind of legal struggle that the internet imagination mistakenly retrofitted onto it. In Isaacs’ case, repeated prosecutions and a final conviction in 2012 became part of a broader cultural narrative about whether extreme sexual content could be defended as art, intent, or expression.

But none of these cases involved the meme. None adjudicated it. None stabilized it.

What happened instead was a collapse of distinction. Multiple unrelated legal processes, similar in subject matter but distinct in object, began to merge in public memory into a single imagined legal event. The internet, which had already blurred the boundaries between original and copy, now blurred the boundaries between case and narrative.

This is how the myth of the “court ruling on the video” emerges—not from legal fact, but from narrative compression under conditions of cultural overload.

By 2009, the reaction video economy had matured into infrastructure. YouTube, still in its pre-algorithmic but rapidly scaling phase, had become the primary environment for this behavior. The platform itself was engaged in a contradictory process: attempting to remove the underlying material while simultaneously hosting and amplifying its derivatives. Reaction videos remained accessible, commentary proliferated, and the original clip existed only in intermittent, unstable fragments.

Virality, in this sense, was no longer a matter of persistence. It was a matter of oscillation. Content survived through cycles of appearance and removal, each disappearance generating renewed curiosity, each reappearance triggering renewed reaction. The meme was no longer a single artifact but a system of recurrence.

And by the early 2010s, that system had already begun to fade—not because it was resolved, but because it had been absorbed. The internet had moved on to faster cycles, shorter attention spans, and more structurally integrated forms of recommendation and amplification. What remained of the meme was not its content, nor even its reaction videos, but its afterimage in cultural memory.

It survived as a reference to a time when the internet still produced shocks that felt unstructured, unmoderated, and unrepeatable. A time when seeing something once meant carrying the knowledge of it indefinitely, because there was no guarantee you would ever be able to locate it again.

And in that sense, the meme did not disappear.

It simply became the first recognizable form of something the internet would eventually perfect:

a culture built entirely from what it has already seen, even when it can no longer remember how it saw it.




Wednesday, 8 April 2026

WORLD WAR III TRUMP EDITION


WORLD WAR III TRUMP EDITION


1️⃣ Trump’s own statement

  • He said the U.S. will “run” Venezuela until a “safe, proper and judicious transition.”

  • No mention of deploying a full-scale occupation force.

  • The actual operation so far was a special forces raid to capture Maduro and Flores — not a nationwide invasion.

✅ This suggests “running” is intended as control over leadership, narrative, and access to key resources, rather than direct administration of every ministry.


2️⃣ Ground realities in Venezuela

  • Government still exists: Maduro’s party and loyalist officials still control much of the bureaucracy.

  • Opposition still operates: Many local and regional officials are not under U.S. control.

  • No U.S. army in cities: Beyond the raid, there’s no widespread military occupation.

So the U.S. doesn’t have boots on the ground to enforce nationwide governance.


3️⃣ How the U.S. could “run” things without controlling territory

  • Control key individuals: With Maduro captured, the U.S. can claim authority over formal decisions or block key financial and diplomatic moves.

  • Leverage economic pressure: Sanctions, control of oil revenues, and foreign banking relationships can force compliance from officials who remain in-country.

  • Propaganda / messaging: U.S. can control international messaging to shape perception that it is “in charge.”

  • Selective coordination: Work with local opposition leaders willing to cooperate.

This is a classic “de facto control” without full occupation — more like dictating terms to the system from above.


4️⃣ Symbolic vs. practical

AspectLikely Reality
Military presenceMinimal; special forces only
Political controlTargeted, symbolic; can influence key decisions
Public administrationStill largely run by existing officials
LegitimacyLargely symbolic, depends on recognition abroad
DurationTemporary, until U.S. decides “transition” is ready
  • Symbolic power: capturing the leader gives the U.S. perceived control, even if day-to-day governance isn’t under U.S. hands.

  • Practical control: limited to finance, diplomacy, and certain orders via loyalist channels or opposition proxies.


Bottom line

Right now, Trump’s “running Venezuela” is mostly symbolic and leverage-based, not full military occupation. The U.S. controls the top leadership and key levers (oil, finances, international recognition), but the government machinery and local population remain largely independent.

.

Saturday, 28 March 2026



🏠 Lesson 3B – House & Daily Routines (Dialogue)

Context: Morning routine at home.


A: おはよう!この いえ は おおきい ね <このいえはおおきいね>
Romaji: Ohayou! Kono ie wa ookii ne
English: Good morning! This house is big, huh.

B: うん、ほんとうに おおきい ね <うん、ほんとうにおおきいね>
Romaji: Un, hontou ni ookii ne
English: Yeah, it really is big.


A: へや を そうじ した よ <へやをそうじしたよ>
Romaji: Heya o souji shita yo
English: I cleaned my room.

B: えらい ね!おへや は きれい だ ね <おへやはきれいだね>
Romaji: Erai ne! O-heya wa kirei da ne
English: Great! Your room is clean, huh.


A: じゃあ、トイレ を つかおう <トイレをつかおう>
Romaji: Jaa, toire o tsukao
English: Okay, let’s use the toilet.

B: トイレ は きれい だ ね <トイレはきれいだね>
Romaji: Toire wa kirei da ne
English: The toilet is clean, huh.


A: お ふろ に はいろう <おふろにはいろう>
Romaji: O-furo ni hairou
English: Let’s take a bath.

B: いいね!まず、シャワー を あびよう <まず、シャワーをあびよう>
Romaji: Iine! Mazu, shawaa o abiyou
English: Good idea! First, let’s take a shower.


A: それから、は を みがこう <それから、はをみがこう>
Romaji: Sorekara, ha o migakou
English: Then, let’s brush our teeth.

B: はい、歯ブラシ は どこ だ ね <はい、はぶらしはどこだね>
Romaji: Hai, haburashi wa doko da ne
English: Yes, where is the toothbrush, huh.


A: キッチン に ある よ <キッチンにあるよ>
Romaji: Kicchin ni aru yo
English: It’s in the kitchen.

B: ありがとう!それから、着替え よう <それから、きがえよう>
Romaji: Arigatou! Sorekara, kigaeyou
English: Thanks! Then, let’s change clothes.


💡 Extra tip for daily routines: You can mix verbs like:

  • あびる (abiru) = to take a shower

  • みがく (migaku) = to brush

  • きがえる (kigaeru) = to change clothes



Wednesday, 11 March 2026

 

Hot Docs, Toronto — May 2012

Early May, 2012. Outside the theatre at Hot Docs in Toronto, my friend Shelly and I were handed an assignment neither of us expected: escort and protect Rick Springfield.

Yes—that Rick Springfield. The 1980s rock fixture. The voice behind “Jessie’s Girl.” Dr. Noah Drake from General Hospital. And, that night, the subject of the documentary An Affair of the Heart, a film about his decades-long career and the fiercely loyal fans who had carried him in their hearts long after the radio charts had moved on.

I had to admit something quietly to myself: I barely knew him. His songs were fragments in the background of my childhood, drifting through memory like distant signals from an old radio station. To me, he was an icon—recognizable but abstract.

Shelly, on the other hand, was a living archive of pop music history. Her excitement was visible, electric. For her, this wasn’t just a musician; this was a figure who had helped shape the soundtrack of an era. All day she hovered near him, orbiting his presence like a satellite, absorbing every moment with the wide-eyed enthusiasm of someone who had waited decades to see a star up close.

Then the limo arrived.

The moment the door cracked open, the crowd erupted.

What had been a gathering instantly transformed into a living organism—surging, shouting, reaching. Cameras flashed like lightning. Arms stretched forward. Voices cut through the air in shrieks and laughter. The excitement was almost physical, something you could feel vibrating through the pavement.

One scream—sharp and ecstatic—pierced the noise and set off a chain reaction. Suddenly the crowd surged forward in waves.

The plan had been simple: walk Rick into the theatre.

Reality had other ideas.

Instead, I became a human barricade.

My body shifted instinctively—shoulders braced, arms out, stepping backward as the tide of fans pushed forward. I backed him toward the doors, adjusting every second to the unpredictable rhythm of the crowd. Every step required negotiation with momentum and gravity and human enthusiasm.

Rick Springfield stood at the center of it all remarkably composed.

He smiled. Nodded. Acknowledged faces. But his walk was brisk—almost a jog. Whether it was love for the fans or healthy survival instinct, the man moved with purpose. Each nod or glance acted like a small tranquilizer for the crowd, just enough recognition to keep the energy from boiling over.

Still, the pressure was relentless.

Hands reached. Cameras thrust forward. Bodies pressed shoulder to shoulder. The air carried an odd blend of perfume, sweat, and gasoline from idling engines on the street—a strange, human perfume of collective devotion.

Step by inch we pushed through.

I shifted my stance constantly, anticipating the next shove. A push from the right. A surge from the left. The crowd folded into itself like waves colliding. Fingers brushed the edges of our improvised protective wall.

It was chaos—but controlled chaos.

The fans were ecstatic, almost deliriously so, but not malicious. The danger wasn’t hostility; it was sheer momentum. All it would take was one stumble and the whole delicate balance could collapse.

Every inch forward felt earned.

Every breath felt negotiated.

Then the doors appeared ahead of us—the narrow gateway out of the storm.

I steered him toward it as the crowd surged one last time, ricocheting off the entrance. The air throbbed with adrenaline and screaming voices. My arms braced against the doorframe, holding space long enough for him to slip through.

Rick Springfield crossed the threshold and disappeared into the calm of the theatre.

Shelly vanished with him, swept into the orbit of the documentary and its star, glowing with the thrill of it all.

I stayed outside.

Still pushing. Still bracing. Holding the line as the ecstatic tide slowly broke against the doors.

And in those few minutes—no more than five—I glimpsed the raw mechanics of fame.

Not the abstract idea of it.

The real thing.

Fame as pressure.
Fame as heat.
Fame as screaming voices and reaching hands and flashes of light in the night air.

It was volatile, electric, and strangely beautiful.

For a brief moment I stood inside the machinery that allows a star to move through the world without being swallowed by it.

Five minutes.

Short, chaotic, dense with energy.

And ​then I forget​ it ever happened. Back then life just was..


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23y April TOD
"Politeness costs nothing and benefits everyone – let's make it the
norm in Toronto."
- Edmund Scholz
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