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Vampire Weekend is collegiate pretense

18 Jan 2010, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Music, Playground, 0 Comments


Love or hate the band, Vampire Weekend has done an unimpeachable job branding itself. Their most recent record oozes undergraduate, Ivy League-educated, New York hipster pretense (by the second track, we’ve heard about horchata, balaclava and Richard Serra). This in mind, the folks over at GQ blog The Verge (yes, the same magazine that ranked college douchiness) have assembled a list of 16 words and phrases Vampy Weekend needs to include on its third LP.

It begins:

Start a pool in your dorm! If “Sriracha” doesn’t get a name-check on the third record, we will eat a Tretorn.

And, to the tune of “quattro formaggi,” it only gets better. Check it out.

Duke alum the inspiration for Ford/Fraser drama

18 Jan 2010, Posted by Charlie McSpadden in Film, Medical Center, Playground, 0 Comments


As DukeHealth recently reported and Roger Ebert tweeted last night, Duke alumnus Y.T. Chen, MD, PhD, is the inspiration for the upcoming film Extrordinary Measures. The movie, which opens this Friday, stars Harrison Ford as Dr. Robert Stonehill who tries to find the cure for the rare metabolic disorder Pompe disease. Brendan Fraser plays John Crowly. a father willing to do anything in order to save his inflicted children’s lives. The world’s leading expert on the disease, Priya Kishanni, MD, is the current Division Chief of Medical Genetics at Duke Hospital, and was quoted as saying: “I never would have expected that a major Hollywood movie with stars like Brendan Fraser and Harrison Ford would focus on a topic so near and dear to my heart.”

Oxford American’s 11th Annual Southern Music Issue

15 Jan 2010, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Music, Playground, 0 Comments


It happens every year, and its always worth picking up. The Oxford American has put out its 11th annual Southern Music issue, which provides some of the most insightful and well researched music writing of the year. With this edition, the publication launches a new series that will continue throughout the next several iterations of this issue, focusing on the music of a specific state. They start with their home, Arkansas. All Things Considered ran a piece on it the other day, and Wisconsin-based music blog Muzzle of Bees also ran a post on the issue today. As both ATC and the blog noted, Arkansas’ Johnny Cash doesn’t make his way onto the compilation disc, but Linda Martell, Larry Donn, Wiley and The Checkmates, Feminine Complex, the Oliver Lake Organ Trio and William Grant Still are all in the mix. Check it out.

Des Ark at WXDU Sunday

15 Jan 2010, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Music, Playground, video, 0 Comments


WXDU will be hosting a live on-air performance from Des Ark Sunday at 4 p.m. Per the blog (albeit edited a bit), Aimee Argote has been writing a ton of new songs:

…but now i got a pile of new songs, and these new ones, they’re nothing like those two old ones. they’re f–ing sad, & so i’m just writing to let you know that everything is going to be ok, that everything is back to normal. i’m done wasting your time with that sappy happy crap, kicked the bug from my system. i’m playing real songs again. it is time to f–ing cry, y’all!

You can listen here. And in an other bit of Des Ark news, we just unearthed this video of Argote playing solo from the Midtown Dickens release party in April. Remember when she was going to bring everyone outside and play under a tree? That show. Enjoy.

Full Frame to honor Garbus, Kennedy

14 Jan 2010, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Film, Playground, 0 Comments


In a press release issued today, Full Frame announced the duo of Liz Garbus and Rory Kennedy, the founders of Moxie Films, will be the recipients of the festival’s 2010 Career Award. From the press release:

Together, they have produced and directed a wide range of work exploring social issues through the lives of everyday people, including examinations of the U.S. legal system, AIDS, violence, abuse, and human rights.

“We are honored to celebrate the work of Liz Garbus and Rory Kennedy. It has been a privilege to exhibit their work since the Festival’s beginning,” [Director of Programming Sadie] Tillery said. “Their unique directing and producing partnership is responsible for such an incredible collection of films, and we look forward to having the opportunity to showcase a selection from their outstanding careers.”

Garbus produced and directed the Oscar-nominated The Farm: Angola USA, which also received an Emmy nod and won the first ever Full Frame (then Double Take) audience award. She also won an Emmy for 2007′s Ghosts of Abu Ghraib, which Kennedy directed. Kennedy also directed 1999′s American Hollow.

Last year’s recipient was St. Clair Bourne.

In other Full Frame news: A press release from yesterday notes that Steve Bognar and Julia Reichert (directors of last year’s The Last Truck: The Closing of a GM Plant) will curate 2010′s thematic programming. The theme is labor, and a slate of films will be announced in the coming weeks.