with east coast grit and west coast vibe eb brings the grooves that make you dance & the lyrical hooks that make you remember. hop on board, sing along & join us for the ride.
This is a translation of the Hebrew text accompanying the photo, for those who do not read Hebrew:
This photo was taken with the aid of NASA telescope, and it only happens every 3000 years. It is called the eye of G-d. A lot of miracles happened to those that have gazed upon this...
Progression in the electric car industry sure seems to be traveling in the fast lane. Gas-free, or mostly so, vehicles have been around for a while now and car companies are continually making improvements in this budding area of transportation.
Though neither bored nor looking to steal someone else's words, we do feel that Edward Norton's online fundraising and volunteer site is pretty worthy of a gander. Social media meets charity on Crowdrise and it's already drawing a large following.
Audience members at the Rainforest Fund's 21st Annual Benefit Concert Thursday night at Carnegie Hall thought nothing could top the always outrageous Lady Gaga and her equally audacious counterpart, Elton John, banging their hearts out on his and her pianos while singing a duet of her touching song, "Speechless" and his famous hit, "Your Song."
This is amazingly powerful work. Where youtube gets off censoring this and not the millions of truly offensive videos on their site is beyond me. Pass it on if you agree. It's the only way to fight censorship...spread knowledge.
I have been a meditator for about 12 years. It has given me energy, strength, health, wisdom, and access to my own inner stillness, inner silence, inner bliss. It is my connection to myself; it is my connection to the universe.
Our oceans have been the victims of a giant Ponzi scheme, waged with Bernie Madoff–like callousness by the world’s fisheries. Beginning in the 1950s, as their operations became increasingly industrialized--with onboard refrigeration, acoustic fish-finders, and, later, GPS--they first depleted stocks of cod, hake, flounder, sole, and halibut in the Northern Hemisphere. As those stocks disappeared, the fleets moved southward, to the coasts of developing nations and, ultimately, all the way to the shores of Antarctica, searching for icefishes and rockcods, and, more recently, for small, shrimplike krill. As the bounty of coastal waters dropped, fisheries moved further offshore, to deeper waters. And, finally, as the larger fish began to disappear, boats began to catch fish that were smaller and uglier--fish never before considered fit for human consumption. Many were renamed so that they could be marketed: The suspicious slimehead became the delicious orange roughy, while the worrisome Patagonian toothfish became the wholesome Chilean seabass. Others, like the homely hoki, were cut up so they could be sold sight-unseen as fish sticks and filets in fast-food restaurants and the frozen-food aisle.
Bored? Give Nestle a call.Congratulations on finding this article. Your mission has been determined. Here are your instructions:1. Call Nestle: 1-800 295-0051 — it may be busy. Keep trying.2. When asked if you'd like English, say nothing, and wait for a few seconds. The next option will make you smile.3. Select option 4.4. Listen carefully to the Secret Menu and choose wisely. I highly recommend #7.5. Post this on your Facebook page to spread awareness (especially about #7).Good job. Photo by Travis Hornung via Flickr.