Displaying posts tagged with

“Business”

Feb
11
2010

Anarcast #6: Auras, Energies, Good Vibrations

The Playful Anarchist podcast, with Asher Black (Anarcast #6, AsherCast #6). Yielding your personal moral and intellectual sovereignty takes many forms. Asher talks about how adopting a belief in ‘new age’ auras, energies, and vibrations turns otherwise effective intellects into merely receptive tools. Music by Ehren Starks (The Tale of Room 620) and Jan Hanford (Prelude No. 14 in D Minor), both on the Magnatune label. Opinions: solely those of Asher Black. Trying some editing (removing pauses and silences, etc.), trailing music.

icon for podbean Standard Podcasts [6:20m]: Play in Popup | Download

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Feb
11
2010

Anarcast #5: The Edge of Burlington

The Playful Anarchist podcast, with Asher Black (Anarcast #5, AsherCast #5). Asher talks about the Mel Gibson film Edge of Darkness and the shoe section at Burlington Coat Factory (an anarchy of fashion). Music by Paul Berget (Recercar) on the Magnatune Label. Opinions: solely those of Asher Black. Trying some editing (removal of pauses and silences, lead and trailing music).

icon for podbean Standard Podcasts [2:37m]: Play in Popup | Download

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Feb
9
2010

Anarcast #4: Issues and Art

The Playful Anarchist podcast, with Asher Black (Anarcast #4, AsherCast #4). Better audio quality. Late night. An anarchist will acknowledge that everything is political, which is why turning it into something with a life of its own makes little sense. Talking about politics, social issues, and art, as well as health claims in TV commercials. Music is by Fernwood – “Music played by hand on instruments made of wood”. Song is called “Sandpiper”. It’s on the Magnatune label.

icon for podbean Standard Podcasts [6:52m]: Play in Popup | Download

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Feb
7
2010

Anarcast #1: To Hell with the RIAA

The Playful Anarchist podcast, with Asher Black (Anarcast #1, AsherCast #1). When you can’t go along, you go around. – Asher Black. Music: by Beth Quist on the Magnatune label. Opinions: solely those of Asher Black.

icon for podbean Standard Podcasts [3:15m]: Play in Popup | Download

Feb
7
2010

Taggings

Tagged Wall

This wall must have been tagged by a devoted Asherling, Asherite, or Asherian!

Feb
7
2010

From the Second Haunt

Asher Black has lived in many places, been and done many things, worn and still simultaneously wears many hats. Asher has also, at times, quite drastically changed his appearance, and (in keeping with his motto) changed organizations, beliefs, and relationships. Certain things, however, have remained constant. Asher is currently:

  • Writer
  • Publisher/Editor
  • Teacher/Speaker

These things seem unlikely to change, since Asher can’t help but do them wherever he goes, in whatever capacity he works or lives, and however he appears. And if one looks closely, Asher has always written, published, or taught, in part, to persuade. So naturally, he has been many times a salesman, business owner, founder and/or leader of enterprises and organizations, and has appeared (on occasion, in one shape or another) before a microphone, in the lens of a camera, and under a public spotlight.

He has sometimes been told to turn off his mind or keep quiet (which, for Asher, are the same thing). But one day, he looked at himself and said (along with Happy Harry Hardon), “So be it.” He has sometimes been called arrogant or foolish for not taking the advice, but Asher long ago found himself unable to be ashamed (again, very much like the Eat me, Beat me Lady). One could even refer to this web site as though it were a nude portrait — “Asher Unashamed”.

Feb
8
2003

The Overstate

…with all governments everywhere tightening down on everything wherever they can, with their computers and their Public Eyes and ninety-nine other sorts of electronic surveillance, there is a moral obligation on each free person to fight back wherever possible — keep underground railways open, keep shades drawn, give misinformation to computers. Computers are literal-minded and stupid; electronic records aren’t really records . . . so it is good to be alert to opportunities to foul up the system. – Friday

Jul
15
2000

Setting

The tables were sticky. It didn’t matter where one would move. Pull out a chair… it was sticky too. Dim lighting didn’t hide it. Even the missing bulbs at some of the booths failed to conceal the tacky syrupy sheen over everything. Even the waitresses seemed to have it. I wondered if, bumping into one of them, I’d have to pull my loose shirttail from her as though it’d been caught in taffy. The booth-backs were straight as boards, since that’s what they were – boards covered with a janitorial grey vinyl, like smooth icing on maple cake, punctuated only by a column of tufted buttons on each side. One had to lean forward – towards the slime – as soon as one sat down. Like the thickly caked makeup on a faded southern belle, someone had tried to liven it all up with a plastic garland arond each of the suspended lights, which were in fact suspended over the black treadmarked tables only by their black electrical cords from the black foam ceiling panels. There were the usual pufferies: a smoke plastic rack of 1-inch jelly tubs on each table, a shaker of white sugar, some sweet and low packets, salt, pepper. There wasn’t a napkin in sight. Not anywhere. Nothing with which to create a sanitary spot. There was perhaps one ashtray on every fifth table in the designated smoking area, so designated by the occasional stray ash or butt. It is as though any possibility of sensory pleasure had deserted along with any hope of hygiene. One waitress with swampy black hair and a lazy eye which it was difficult not to watch stood resting with arms crossed over the back of one booth. Another sat on a stool at the counter, holding two yellowy fingers to her mouth in which was a half-spent slim brown cigarette, staring vacantly from sunken black spots that could almost have been eyes. I didn’t look at the carpet, fearing it might be the one thing that remained alive after the holocaust that was this diner. The pie cooler chugged away. Something made an occasional shuffling sound through the window to the kitchen. Olivia Newton John crooned, barely audible, over the ceiling speakers – “You have to believe it is magic.” And it was. Black magic, with eye of newt no doubt today’s special.