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kottke.org posts about lists

Suggestions for the name of our solar

Suggestions for the name of our solar system’s tenth planet from New Scientist readers. Neither Matt Webb’s suggestion (Daes) nor this suggestion on LJ (America) are on the list.


Some lesser-known prequels to popular movies, including

Some lesser-known prequels to popular movies, including There Are Plenty of Mohicans and Triassic Park.


Obscenities uttered by Jesus Christ

Obscenities uttered by Jesus Christ. “Holy Mom, mother of me.”


Great list of seven internet companies that

Great list of seven internet companies that should have been big or bigger, but screwed up somehow. I’ve got the comments open, so add your own thoughts. My pick: Moreover. They were into RSS before almost anyone, wanted to get into blog search in early 2001 but instead veered into the safe waters of enterprise software.


New York magazine’s annual cheap eats in NYC issue

New York magazine’s annual cheap eats in NYC issue.


MUG rounds up some sweet treats in Manhattan

MUG rounds up some sweet treats in Manhattan.


The NY Times picks some good bottles

The NY Times picks some good bottles of wine for under $10. For those of you who want to move up from the Two Buck Chuck a little.


Gallery of newspaper front pages from Lance

Gallery of newspaper front pages from Lance Armstong’s 7th tour victory.


24 different ways to lace your shoes

24 different ways to lace your shoes.


20 hamburgers you must eat before you die

20 hamburgers you must eat before you die. That In-N-Out isn’t on here almost got this link disqualified from posting, but since they don’t seem to have any other chains on here, I’ll let it slide.


40 business books to read to get the

40 business books to read to get the equivalent of an MBA.


The top ten web memes from the past ten years

The top ten web memes from the past ten years.


More philosopher ratings, this time from Crispin Sartwell

More philosopher ratings, this time from Crispin Sartwell. “jacques derrida: there’s something to be said for the deconstructuive method, a tool which i’ve been known to throw around myself. otherwise, this is so, so, so full of shit. obviously, it’s intentionally obscurantist, which is i guess supposed to be part of the profound game of defamiliarizing language etc. fuck you.’


BBC Radio 4 poll results for Greatest Philosopher Ever!!

BBC Radio 4 poll results for Greatest Philosopher Ever!!. 1. Karl “Boom Boom” Marx; 2. David “The Kid” Hume; 3. Ludwig “Van” Wittgenstein; 4. Friedrich “Freddie” Nietzsche; 5. Plato “Johnson”


Twelve Sequels to Dances With Wolves That,

Twelve Sequels to Dances With Wolves That, Due to Monetary Constraints, Were Never Produced. “Runs Into at Safeway and Has Some Explaining to Do to Wolves”.


40 things that only happen in the movies

40 things that only happen in the movies. “All beds have special L-shaped sheets that reach to armpit level on a woman but only up to the waist of the man lying beside her.”


Summer reading list from Edge

Summer reading list from Edge. I think I would have rather seen a list of recommendations from Edge members rather than their books. Gee, Dawkins writing on evolution? Didn’t see that coming…


Charley Rosen’s picks for all-time best NBA shooting guards

Charley Rosen’s picks for all-time best NBA shooting guards. Not surprisingly, Jordan tops the list.


Table of contents for The Complete Norton

Table of contents for The Complete Norton Anthology of Emily Dickinson, Post-Zoloft Prescription. Includes “Oh, the ice cubes are melting” and “Today’s a good day for stuff”.


Thirteen favorite albums of the last twenty years

Spin magazine’s recent list of the best albums from the last twenty years (as well as MSNBC’s alternate list) got me thinking about what my favorites list from that era might look like. Since I’m not Spin and my musical opinion doesn’t carry any weight, I felt free to list what I like, influenced me, continue to find enjoyable, and will still listen to in the future instead of what’s actually good…whatever good means.

In rough chronological order and briefly annotated:

  • Nevermind, Nirvana - As I’ve mentioned before, I was a late bloomer musically. Nothing outside of Casey Kasem and his Top 40 countdown existed for me when I was a kid. And when you’re listening to music like that, it’s hard to get excited about music in general…I was pretty much apathetic about the whole thing. My freshman year in college, a guy on my floor got a nice stereo system for Christmas and when he threw on Smells Like Teen Spirit, that was it. I’m sure the bands and songs that opened your mind to the possibilities of music and life were a lot better, but you can’t really choose how/why/when/where that happens.
  • Rave ‘Til Dawn, Various - This is the worst album on the list but may be the most influential in terms of my future listening habits. For a kid who grew up in the country and went to college in a small Iowa city, hearing rave music for the first time was a complete revelation for me. I had no idea people were making music like this, so fast, so joyous, so unlike anything that anyone I knew would enjoy listening to. I loved it immediately and have been a huge fan of electronica ever since.
  • The Chronic, Dr. Dre - Introducing Snoop Doggy Dogg, probably my favorite rapper. So smooth. And Dre’s beats are among the best in the business.
  • Siamese Dream, Smashing Pumpkins - College junior, couldn’t get laid…isn’t this what I was supposed to be listening to?
  • The Downward Spiral, Nine Inch Nails - I still tell anyone who will listen that Closer is one of the best pop songs ever made. Pretty Hate Machine was probably the better album, but I fell in like with this one first.
  • Entroducing…, DJ Shadow - One of the most solid debut albums in the past 20 years.
  • Orblivion, The Orb - Little Fluffy Clouds is my favorite song from The Orb, but Orblivion is the album I’ll never get tired of. Saw them spin/play live in Minneapolis once and when Toxygene came on, it was almost religion.
  • Homework, Daft Punk - Around the World is my answer to the question, “if you were stranded on a desert island and could only take one song with you, what would it be?” I’ve probably listened to it about a thousand times in the past 8 years and I’m still not sick of it.
  • OK Computer, Radiohead - Somehow it wasn’t until mid-2000 that I heard this album (old habits die hard), but it didn’t take long to become a favorite. Still their best…although I haven’t given their earlier stuff the attention everyone I know says it deserves. Radiohead = favorite band.
  • Bedrock, John Digweed - Cheesy trance music, but I love it. This album reminds me of my (then) new Jetta and fine times in Minneapolis.
  • Agaetis Byrjun, Sigur Ros - I found Sigur Ros while poking around on Napster looking for an advanced copy of Radiohead’s Amnesiac. Boy, I thought, this Amnesiac album is going to be fantastic, but what happened to the vocals? Oh, heh.
  • Boards of Canada, Geogaddi - I can’t remember how I found out about Boards of Canada. Online somewhere probably, downloading mp3s off of Limewire or something. After hearing a few songs, I immediately procured Geogaddi and Music Has The Right To Children from my nearest CD shop. Fantastic stuff…they make me wish I could make music.
  • Give Up, The Postal Service - Might be too early to tell, but I think this is a classic.

Conclusions: I seem to like all sorts of music, but the common thread is the mainstream-ness of these albums; they’re typically the most popular examples of a particular genre, style, or time period. Gangsta rap wasn’t that mainstream at the time, but The Chronic went multi-platinum. Nevermind was grunge for the mainstream, and The Downward Spiral was one of the few industrial albums to make it big. The same for Rave ‘Til Dawn, Daft Punk, DJ Shadow, Smashing Pumpkins, and Sigur Ros, if to a lesser extent.


Some film directors’ top ten movies lists

Some film directors’ top ten movies lists. Directors Michael Mann, Sam Mendes, Cameron Crowe, Quentin Tarantino, and others choose their favorite films.


In celebration of its 125th anniversary, Science

In celebration of its 125th anniversary, Science magazine has a list of the 125 biggest questions facing science over the next 25 years. “How did cooperative behavior evolve?”; “Do deeper principles underlie quantum uncertainty and nonlocality?”; “What is the universe made of?”


Authorial Candy Bars, with Their Respective Tag

Authorial Candy Bars, with Their Respective Tag Lines, That Weren’t as Successful as the Oh Henry! Candy Bar. “Mrs. Dalloway Treats โ€” ‘Woolf these down!’” and “Chaucer Sweet Cheese Bar โ€” ‘Of harmes two the lesse is for to cheese.’”


Future winners of the New Yorker cartoon caption contest

Future winners of the New Yorker cartoon caption contest. “I love being wealthy in the Hamptons.”


Food and Wine magazine’s list of the

Food and Wine magazine’s list of the ten best new chefs in America.


AFI’s top 100 movie quotes

AFI’s top 100 movie quotes. Anything missing from the list or something that should be dropped?


The top 500 supercomputers in the world

The top 500 supercomputers in the world.


Spin names Radiohead’s OK Computer the best

Spin names Radiohead’s OK Computer the best album from the last 20 years.


Money Magazine on the 50 smartest things you

Money Magazine on the 50 smartest things you can do with your money. Also includes a list of 15 dumb things to avoid.


A man’s letter to the music industry

A man’s letter to the music industry detailing what he’s stolen from them and why. “I refuse to pay you to play these pointless games with arbitrary dates and obsolete borders.”