June 25, 2010
Rock Ya Girl and Theophilus London crossed paths recently in Miami… and will cross paths once more on July 21st in Ybor City. Yup.

Rock Ya Girl and Theophilus London crossed paths recently in Miami… and will cross paths once more on July 21st in Ybor City. Yup.

June 7, 2010
Not Them's new album!!!

My good friends, Not Them, just dropped a great album on iTunes. check it out asap.

June 7, 2010

sirpagliacci asked: if music was a woman, is that an original song by you? i keep feeling like i've heard it before but just can't put my damn finger on it.

that is an original song sir:)

May 24, 2010
Heartbreaker

Some time ago, I took the band to North Avenue Studios to record four songs. Here’s the first episode:) Many thanks to The Undesigned and Off The Avenue for such a pleasant experience. This song is called “Heartbreaker” and will be pressed up and released sooner than you know.

May 24, 2010
jayparkinsonmd:

Facebook’s Gross National Happiness Index.
With now 500 million people using Facebook, the data they’re generating about our online behaviors that could possibly reflect our inner well-being is being put to use to try and decipher what all of this stuff means. There’s an internal team at Facebook trying to figure all of this out. They just published a recent report Social network activity and social well-being that found users who consume greater levels of content report reduced bridging and bonding social capital and increased loneliness. This makes some sense to me. Are some power-users replacing the positive value we gain from in-person relationships with the less valuable connections made on social networking sites and the gratification of an immediate response to your activity. What if every time you said something funny at a dinner party people could “like” that comment? How would that change your behavior and the conversations in the room? Would it create a conversation full of zingers? Would immediate in-person feedback from friends and acquaintances make you happier?

jayparkinsonmd:

Facebook’s Gross National Happiness Index.

With now 500 million people using Facebook, the data they’re generating about our online behaviors that could possibly reflect our inner well-being is being put to use to try and decipher what all of this stuff means. There’s an internal team at Facebook trying to figure all of this out. They just published a recent report Social network activity and social well-being that found users who consume greater levels of content report reduced bridging and bonding social capital and increased loneliness. This makes some sense to me. Are some power-users replacing the positive value we gain from in-person relationships with the less valuable connections made on social networking sites and the gratification of an immediate response to your activity. What if every time you said something funny at a dinner party people could “like” that comment? How would that change your behavior and the conversations in the room? Would it create a conversation full of zingers? Would immediate in-person feedback from friends and acquaintances make you happier?

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