
- NPR Music’s 25 Favorite Albums Of 2012 (So Far)
- This is forreal: Wu-Tang’s GZA And Neil DeGrasse Tyson Collaborating On Rap Album About The Cosmos.
- An interview with an actual assassin
from VICE’s upcoming Guide to Karachi

- After 11 years, No Doubt will release a new album entitled “Push and Shove.”
- The Top 20 Diplo productions, according to Complex Mag
- Interesting perspective: An open letter to every person I meet who finds out I ride a motorcycle
- 39 New Scientific Concepts That Everyone Should Understand

- Cara Barer uses old phone books, computer manuals, maps, and comic books to create hypnotic sculptures, which she then photographs.



- holy fuck… OuR bOdIeS aRe InFiNiTeSiMaL mIcRoCoSmOlOgIeS

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- Oh man, loving this so much. Gene Wilder’s demands for playing Willy Wonka.

- #PartyTip: My Little Ponies: Andrew W.K. is going to speak at a My Little Pony convention
- Glenn Greenwald explains blowback: “Given the ongoing American quest for violence from that one-day attack (9/11), just imagine the impact which continuous attacks over a full decade must have on those whom we’ve been invading, droning, cluster-bombing, occupying, and indiscriminately shooting.”
- Interesting opinion from a nurse on why donating your body to science is so valuable


- The 22 rules of storytelling, according to Pixar
- 6 hiphop stars with the weirdest stalking cases (including a stalker with 5,000 photos with celebrities)
- Are you a nerd? Do you also have body anxiety? Perfect! Here’s a website where you can enter your weight and see what you weigh on any planet in our solar system.
- I wish I were this cute when I play with my ball
I leave you with this potshot:

Comments:
Round House Theatre Bethesda
The smash hit comedy about romantic errors and bad manners
When Suzanna sets up her best friend Max on a blind date with her husband’s co-worker Becky Shaw, she puts into motion a series of cataclysmic events that forever change all of their lives. Like the Victorian upstart Becky Sharp, this modern Becky is unsure, overdressed and socially ambitious. But she’s no shrinking violet, as the silkily cynical Max soon learns.
A Pulitzer Prize finalist and an Off-Broadway hit, Becky Shaw is a savvy, sharp comedy of romantic errors that keeps audiences on the edge of their seats guessing what will happen next.