May 2012
38 posts
April 2012
39 posts
They love your pitch for the beer commercial where the guy is trying to drink his beer but he’s crying too hard so he says to himself, “Get it together Kevin.” Then he takes some deep, pained breaths, and finally manages to stop crying long enough to take a sip, but he’s cried into his beer so…
What do you think of the relevancy of the Street Art Movement?
I don’t really take much notice of it. It seems like most of it is visually derivative and usually espousing some uninteresting pseudo political view. I’ve always liked graffiti though. If you follow graffiti, you know the aesthetics of something is only a part of that world. Scale, location and amount are all equally in play. With “street art” aesthetics seem to be the primary focus, maybe with a little illegality thrown in for sex appeal. Street art seems to pander to public opinion while graffiti attacks it. So for me, while there are some very notable exceptions, (Espo’s “Love Letters” in Philly for one) I’d take graffiti over street art any day.
” —My friend Matt Palladino was interviewed for the San Francisco Arts Quarterly, which you can read online here.THERE IS A FAKE JEWISH DELI IN BERKELEY CALLED SAULS AND PEOPLE SWEAT IT EVEN THOUGH IT IS THE LIMPEST FAKEST SHIT I HAVE EVER EXPERIENCED I BET YOU DUDES NAME ISNT EVEN SAUL I BET YOU HIS NAME IS MOONBEAM