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raspberryspace · 2 months
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3/3/24 - Shimo-Kitazawa
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jessethorn · 4 years
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Some Los Angeles Tips
People are always asking me what they should do when they visit LA. I am by no means the greatest LA expert on earth, but I’ve lived here more than a decade now, and I have some ideas for you. Note that I live in the far Northeast corner of LA, and really rarely travel to the western half of town. So if you are looking for advice on Beverly Hills stuff or Malibu stuff or whatever, I am not that helpful. Also this is very subjective and really non-comprehensive in general. Just some stuff I like!
In General
Rent a car if you drive, but don't be afraid to take the bus or subway. There are some very long distances to traverse, and not everything is convenient to transit, but the transit is reasonably comfortable and efficient for a lot of purposes (going downtown, for example), particularly when combined with some judicious ride-sharing. There's plenty of parking everywhere, despite what Angelenos would have you think. Don't try to do too many things in one day, or cross town on the 10, 101 or 405 at anything even resembling rush hour (ie between like seven and ten thirty or three and seven on weekdays). Stick to one area for the day, maybe two.
The Museum of Jurassic Technology This is the best thing in Los Angeles and one of the best things in the world. It is part museum, part art project. To explain it much further might ruin the experience of visiting it, but please take my word that it is one of the most amazing places in the world.
The Watts Towers As the name suggests, they're in Watts, a bit out of the way for some trips, but absolutely without a doubt worth the travel. They're an incredible artwork/building built in a backyard out of rebar, concrete, glass and tile by an illiterate Italian immigrant in the mid-20th century. Worth signing up for a tour, they are cheap (it's a city park) and not all that long. There's also a little gallery on the site. One of the great works of American outsider art and a deeply beloved city treasure.
Other, More Regular Museums LACMA is a world-class art museum. The collection is a bit scattered (and as of this writing a wing is closed for renovation and replacement), but it's really good. It's in Mid-City on the Miracle Mile, and surrounded by other museums. The Petersen Automotive Museum is pretty cool if you're into cars. La Brea Tar Pits are more park than museum, but the museum is fun in a kitschy way, if you're into prehistoric creatures. It's also a nice place to eat lunch. In Exposition Park are a few major museums - the Natural History Museum is pretty good, though not better than others in other major cities (the Field Museum or whatever). The science museum is OK but significantly outclassed by the competition (it's no Exploratorium), though it does have a real space shuttle, which is pretty sweet. The Annenberg Space for Photography does what it says on the label. A good mid-size museum of photographs, check what show is up. The Broad is a nice contemporary art museum in a beautiful building that's right near Walt Disney Concert Hall, also an incredible building. They have a second campus in Little Tokyo that's very nice but smaller.
Architectural Stuff The LA Conservancy runs affordable walking tours that take you into some of the most fascinating built environments in LA. The subject matter ranges from Art Deco in downtown to the modern skyscrapers of the 50s through 90s. They're mostly Saturdays, but a few also run on weekdays. Can't recommend them enough if you're up for a couple hours of walking. You can go inside the Bradbury Building and up into the upper floors! It's cool. (The Conservancy also runs screenings in the big movie palaces downtown, which are mostly otherwise closed to the public. Definitely recommend those.) A couple of other architectural highlights: the Hollyhock House is in Barnsdall Park in Los Feliz. It's a restored Frank Lloyd Wright estate willed to the city many years ago that as of relatively recently runs regular tours. Also in the park is the city art museum of LA, which sometimes has some cool shows. Cal Poly Pomona students run tours on Saturdays of the Neutra VDL studio and residences in Silver Lake, which can be combined with a nice walk around the lake and some middle-aged-hipster watching. The Gamble House in Pasadena is an absolutely breathtaking craftsman mansion with a lot of
Griffith Park Griffith Park is one of the largest urban parks in the United States. It has all kinds of stuff within it - the LA Zoo, the Griffith Observatory, some great hiking. It's a great place to spend some time. If you have little kids, they will love Travel Town, a train graveyard/museum that's inside the park (and free!). The zoo is good if you like zoos, though not incredibly great or anything. The Autry Museum of the American West is worth a visit if you're into that kind of thing.
The Grove I know that we talk about The Grove a lot on Jordan, Jesse, Go. Please do not waste your vacation time at the Grove. It's a mall. It's fine. This also applies to the Americana at Brand, which we sometimes talk about because we have talked about the Grove too much. Also a mall. A little nicer than some? I went there when I needed a new power cable for my Surface.
Dodger Stadium Look, I am a Giants fan and hate the Dodgers, but if you are a baseball fan, Dodger Stadium is a great place to watch a baseball game. Even I can admit that. Angel Stadium is about as generic as it gets, but if you go on a weekday you can take a train from Union Station in LA.
The Getty Center The Getty Center is a beautiful building on a breathtaking piece of real estate. It's pretty cool to visit, but be aware that most of the art is pretty early, so if you don't like busts or paintings of feasts and stuff from the bible, then it might not be your jam art-wise. And getting up there is a whole thing. That said: it really is a beautiful building and an incredible view, so you probably won't feel like it's a waste. And if you like busts, then get your ass over there.
Downtown Stuff I will again recommend the LA Conservancy's walking tours to get a flavor of downtown LA, which is very walkable and full of incredible stuff. The main library is a beautiful edifice, the history of which is detailed in Susan Orlean's The Library Book. Worth wandering around in. Grand Central Market is a great place to get a bite, though pretty bougie at this point. Right next to Grand Central Market is Angel's Flight, a block-long funicular that is a lot of fun and costs next to nothing. Besides this, there are still functional specialized commercial districts in downtown LA. The flower district is particularly fun - the big flower market opens early for wholesale sales but is open to the public and there are tons of stores selling silk and artificial flowers which are very fun to wander through. There are also areas with stores specializing in selling imported toys, store fixtures (a favorite of mine), jewelry and fabric. Most of the fabric is kinda garbage honestly but there is a good tailor supply store called B. Black and Sons and a great hat making store (worth visiting even if you don't make hats) called California Millinery Supply. FIDM also has a thrift store with cheap fabric leftover from LA-based factories.
Movies The Arclight is a fancy movie chain, and the Hollywood location (near Amoeba Records) is also the home of the Cinerama Dome, which is pretty fun. The Vista is a great single-screen theater on the east side. There are some great rep houses on the west side - check your local listings.
Comedy Stuff The UCB has a few great shows every night at both locations. It's hard to go wrong, though you should be aware you will be seeing things that are a little rougher than whatever makes it to your town as a road show. The signature improv show is Asssscat, which is absolutely as good as it gets. Dynasty Typewriter (right by our office) has a lot of great shows these days. A great standup show is Hot Tub at the Virgil. The big comedy clubs have pretty comedy-club-y comedy in them, not necessarily what I'd recommend, though you will certainly see a lot of relatively big names doing sets. The Improv Lab sometimes has MaxFun-adjacent headliners who've put together their own lineups, as does Flappers in Burbank. Largo has bigger-name shows of this variety as well, and if you go see a show there headlined by a Sarah Silverman or Patton Oswalt, the lineup will likely be packed with their pals, even if they aren't advertised.
Some Places To Eat This is NOT a comprehensive list. First: Jonathan Gold died a few years ago, but he is still the king of LA food. Anything he recommended in the Weekly or Times is still the gold standard (no pun intended). He was also a wonderful writer and a champion of foodways that are unfamiliar to many in LA, much less outside LA. If you are a food nerd, KCRW's Good Food is a superb local food show (and podcast) produced by Nick Liao, who used to work at MaxFun.
Philipe's The French Dip A restaurant that's been around for literally a century, with sawdust on the floor, big jars of pickled eggs, ladies in hairnets and really tasty French Dips. They have competing claims to having invented them but the other competitor turned into one of those goofy sleeve-garter-barman subway tile exposed lightbulb places about ten years ago. Philipe's is totally for real and great.
Pie N Burger This is just a burger place in Pasadena that sells classic SoCal-style burgers and is really great. Cash only, though.
Langer's The only one of the Jewish delis in LA that's really worth a special trip. The #19 (pastrami, cole slaw and swiss on rye) is truly one of the world's greatest foods. Pastrami here is better than anywhere else I've ever eaten, including those famous delis in New York.
Park's BBQ 
One of many great Korean BBQ restaurants in LA, but the only one recommended to me personally by Jonathan Gold. (I also like Soot Bull Jeep, which barbeques over charcoal and will leave you smelling like smoke, and Hae Jang Chong for all-you-can-eat.) (There are LOTS of different kinds of Korean food, but I am not an expert on the soups and blood sausages and bibimbaps and etc., but if you're adventurous, you could eat a different Korean food at a different spot every month in LA and make out well.)
Guelagetza Oaxacan food is one of the best kinds of food in the world, and Guelagetza is an LA institution that serves good-quality Oaxacan food. Moles, tlayudas, queso fundido. If you've never eaten any of this stuff, a couple of chicken moles are a great place to start (as is Guelagetza).
Dim Sum You can drive all the way to the San Gabriel Valley and eat at one of the many wonderful dim sum places there. That's where the best stuff is. If it's not worth a special trip to you, I like a place called Lunasia in Pasadena, and they also serve dim sum for dinner. Not a HUGE menu but good food.
Mozza This pizzeria, now a sort of group of restaurants, is an unimpeachably excellent Fancy Meal in LA. So (per my producer Kevin) are the other restaurants run by the same chef, Nancy Silverton.
The Dal Rae This is an old-timey fancy restaurant in Pico Rivera, a semi-industrial part of LA. It's just a great place to wear a suit to and eat Clams Casino. Famous for their table-made Caesar salad (legit great) and pepper steak (too peppery for me). Generally the food is excellent in a 1955 sort of way.
Bludsoe's Best Texas-style barbeque I've had outside of Texas. Used to be a window down by the airport, now a fancier place on La Brea, but I'm told the food is just as good at the fancy place.
Pupusas I love to eat pupusas. Maybe my favorite food. I really like to eat pupusas at Los Molcajetes on Hoover in Westlake (near Koreatown). Note they are weirdly big here (a regional variation of some kind) and they only take cash. (Note also this is one of 10,000 restaurants in LA named Los Molcajetes.)  I also sometimes eat at a nice sit-down Salvadoran place called Las Cazuelas on Figueroa in Highland Park.
In N Out In N Out is good! It will not change your life! But it is very tasty, especially for a $4 food! Some people complain about the fries, which are fresh-cut and fried only once and thus are less crispy on the outside and fluffy on the inside than some others! I think they are fine! Try In N Out, why not! But maybe don't make a whole special trip to do so!
Tacos and Other SoCal Mexican Food Stuff Everyone has their own favorite taco places, and none of my favorites are so special they should be destinations. They are mostly my favorites because they are close to my home and work. But I can tell you that I like to get sit-down Mexican-American food at La Abeja on Figueroa in LA, where I eat a lot of carne adovada and enchiladas and sometimes albondigas or breakfast. I also really like to eat carne en su jugo at Carnes Asadas Pancho Lopez on Pasadena in Lincoln Heights. I eat tacos from Tacos La Estrella on York in Highland Park or the truck (with no name) across from the Mexican consulate on Park View at sixth in Westlake. At night I sometimes get cheap tacos (I like buche) from the place that opens up on Pasadena at Avenue 37. I like the shrimp and fish tacos at Via-Mar on Figueroa. I like Huaraches from Huaraches Azteca on York. The burritos at Yuca’s in Los Feliz (or Pasadena) are great, though they are totally different from the SF-style burritos that I grew up eating. I sometimes get nachos at Carnitas Michoacan on Broadway in Lincoln Heights, which feature meat and cheese sauce and are gross but also really, really good.  I have also eaten at the very fancy Mexican restaurant Border Grill and to be honest it is really good even though the interior feels a little like a cross between a fancy restaurant in 1989 and a Chili's.
El Coyote This is a famous Mexican-American restaurant from the early part of the 20th century, but you shouldn't go there because the food sucks.
Stores I Like This is going to be REAL subjective, but a few stores I like which sell the kinda stuff you'd expect me to want. &etc - A great (small) antique store at 1913 Fremont in Pasadena. The Last Bookstore - A downtown bookstore that is the closest thing to a "destination" book store in LA. Good selection and reasonable prices on used books, and a nice art book room. (Records as well, but they're not very good.) Gimme Gimme Records - I like this record store in Highland Park. You'll pay retail here, but reasonable retail, and the selection (while not immense) is really excellent. Good stuff in all genres.
Secret Headquarters - One time at this small comics store in Silver Lake the lady at the counter asked if I was Jesse from Jordan Jesse Go and they won my business forever in that moment. Don Ville - My friend Raul makes and sells shoes (and repairs them!) in the northern part of Koreatown. If you have the dough, get him to make you some shoes! The Bloke - A really great little menswear store in Pasadena. Sells cool (expensive) trad-ish brands like Drake's and Hilditch & Key and Alden. The Good Liver - A beautiful shop in Little Tokyo specializing in perfect home goods. The perfect scissors, the perfect dish towel and so forth. Some things are expensive, some aren't. H Lorenzo Archive - The "outlet" shop of a designer clothing store on the west side. Discounts aren't huge, but the selection is really interesting, and they have a good collection of one of my favorite brands, Kapital. Sid Mashburn - Excellent classic clothing shop on the west side. Suit Supply & Uniqlo - if you haven't got these where you live, they're the places I usually send people for reasonably-priced tailored clothes (Suit Supply) and cheap basics (Uniqlo). Olvera Street - This is an old-timey tourist attraction, a street of folks selling Mexican handcrafts (and their Chinese-made analogs). Right near Union Station and Philipe's, and a great place to buy factory-made huaraches (the shoes, not the food). They even have sizes big enough for me, which is pretty much impossible to find in Mexico or most Mexican-American shoe stores. Thrift Stores - I go to a lot of thrift stores but if I told you which ones you might buy something I would have bought so I'm not going to tell you which thrift stores.
Flea Markets You may know I am at the flea market every weekend. The good fleas are on Sundays, and there's one every week. First Sunday of the month is Pasadena City College, a big (and free) market with pretty reasonable pricing. PCC has a pretty big record section in addition to the regular flea market stuff. Second weekend is the famous Rose Bowl flea, which is HUGE and has a big new goods section (blech) and vintage clothing area (good!). Third weekend is Long Beach Airport, which is a great overall show. Fourth is Santa Monica airport, which is smaller and a little fancier but very nice. The Valley flea is also fourth Sundays, at Pierce College, and that's not huge but sometimes surprises me. With all of these, the earlier you can arrive, the better you'll do (not least for weather reasons). I usually try to get there around 7:30 or 8:00. The Rose Bowl in particularl is a 4-6 hour operation if you do most of it. There are also a lot of swap meets - I don't know enought to recommend any in particular, but these are much more about tube socks and batteries and bootleg movies than antiques and collectibles. Still can be fun, though, and are certainly a proud SoCal tradition. (The Silverlake Flea and the Melrose Trading Post are garbage, don't go there.)
Going to the Beach I'm not a huge beach goer, but by all means go to the beach if that's your thing. The Annenberg Community Beach House in Santa Monica is a great place to base your operation, though you have to arrive in the morning on busy days to get a parking spot.
Kid Stuff I mentioned Travel Town, that's pretty great. Kidspace in Pasadena is a very good children's museum. The Bob Baker Marionette Theater is a great place to see a marionette show straight out of 1966. There's a good aquarium in Long Beach though it's a bit nutty there on weekends, and the zoo in Griffith Park is a good zoo. I really like Descanso Gardens, a big botanical garden northeast of LA. Huntington Gardens is also very nice, though it's much more expensive and hotter.
Geography Los Angeles is BIG. I'd say try to spend each of your days within about a sixth of it, geographically. It's entirely possible to do west side and east side stuff on the same trip, but don't try to do them on the same day. Look at a map and look at driving times when you're planning. Neighborhoods in LA are BIG, geographically speaking, don't assume two things in the same neighborhood are an easy walk. There aren't a ton of urban neighborhoods suitable for wandering in the way there are in some places. A few manageable general areas for stuff you might like: Silverlake/Los Feliz/Echo Park, Koreatown, Highland Park, downtown, Little Tokyo and the Arts District. (I live in the northeast part of town, and don't spend much time on the west side, which is one reason why this list focuses more on east side stuff. Some folks like West Hollywood and Venice on the west side. Long Beach and Pasadena are both neat towns with their own thing going on that might be worth a visit, too.)
Books & Media The Great Los Angeles Book is probably City of Quartz, a socialist-leaning history of LA. I really loved Susan Orlean's The Library Book, which is about the library as an institution, but also specifically the LA central library and the mysterious fire that nearly destroyed it. And a wild guy named Charles Lummis who was one of the founding fathers of LA culture and was really something else. (You can visit his house - it's right off the 110 near Highland Park.) An LA movie I love is The Long Goodbye, which is sort of a predecessor/inspiration for The Big Lebowski. A shaggy mystery directed by Altman where Elliott Gould just sort of wanders around LA. Another really cool one is Los Angeles Plays Itself, a long (long!) film essay about the ways the real Los Angeles has been used to create fictional worlds in film over the decades.
TV Tapings I'm not an expert in TV tapings. I can say that I've been to a few Conan tapings, and while it takes a LOOOOONG time to get in there, the show is fun to watch live. This is generally true of talk shows and most game shows, which tape more or less as-live. Sitcoms take WAY longer than you were expecting them to. Make sure to try to book tickets early if you have something you want to see. No matter what it's a most-of-the-day thing.
Nightlife Is a word that describes evening activities - especially dance clubs. I am old and don't know about these things.
The Magic Castle I can't get you in, please don't ask me to. I went a couple times. It's fine. If you're not into magic you're not missing too much. If you are, then obviously, it's a priority.
The Walk of Fame and Hollywood Not recommended, not worth it, don't bother.
Disneyland Why would you want my opinion about Disneyland? It's Disneyland. You're in or you're out.
San Diego If you happen to plan a side trip to San Diego, you can take the Amtrak there, and it is a breathtakingly beautiful and exceedingly pleasant trip. I have no San Diego expertise to impart beyond that, however.
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kayawagner · 6 years
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Apocalyptic Megaton Bundle [BUNDLE]
Publisher: Fishwife Games
This special bundle product contains the following titles.
100 Abandoned City Apartment Contents - PDF100 Abandoned City Apartment Contents 2 - PDF100 Abandoned Library Finds - PDF100 Abandoned School Loot Items - PDF100 Abandoned Truck Finds - PDF100 Atomic Trailer Park Finds - PDF100 Atomic Trailer Park Finds 2 - PDF100 Backpack Contents - PDF100 Backpack Contents 2 - PDF100 Backpack Contents 3 - PDF100 Bits of Sidewalk Debris - PDF100 Campground Loot - PDF100 College Dorm Room Items - PDF100 Death Machines Of The Fallen Age - Watermarked PDF100 Drug Store Loot Items - PDF100 Hunting Cabin Items - PDF100 Hunting Cabin Items, Set 2 - PDF100 Iconic NPCs of the Apocalypse Era - Watermarked PDF100 Individuals To Run Into In The Post Apocalypse, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Local Places Of Business - Watermarked PDF100 Looter Cart Items - Watermarked PDF100 Looter Cart Items 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Looter Cart Items 3 - PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 5 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 7 - Watermarked PDF100 More Odd Items To Loot Off Of Bodies In A Post Apocalyptic Setting - Watermarked PDF100 More Things To Discover And Take In A Near Future Wasteland - Watermarked PDF100 Motorcycles - Watermarked PDF100 Nifty Names For Post Apocalyptic Characters - Watermarked PDF100 Odd Items To Loot Off Of Bodies In A Post Apocalyptic Setting - Watermarked PDF100 Pawn Shop Items - PDF100 Pawn Shop Items 2 - PDF100 Pawn Shop Items 3 - PDF100 Places To Stumble Upon In The Post Apocalyptic-Age - Watermarked PDF100 Post Nuclear Urban Survivors - PDF100 Purse Snatcher's Finds - PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 5 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 6 - Watermarked PDF100 Scavenged Food Sources - Watermarked PDF100 Scavenged Food Sources- The Second Looting - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 5 - Watermarked PDF100 Skilled Survivors - Watermarked PDF100 Skilled Survivors 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Skilled Survivors 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb #2 - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb #3 - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb #4 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Discover And Take In A Near Future Wasteland - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse, Set 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To See In The Devastated City - Watermarked PDF100 Thrift Store Items - PDF100 Thrift Store Items, More Crap! - PDF100 Urban Places Of Business - Watermarked PDF100 Urban Places Of Business, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Vehicles To Recover In The Savage Wastes, Set 1 - Watermarked PDF100 Vehicles To Recover In The Savage Wastes, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland "Dungeon Crawl" Spots - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland Arena Fighters - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland Locations - PDF100 Wasteland Locations, Set 2 - PDF100 Wasteland Locations, Set 3 - PDF100 Wasteland Locations, Set 4 - PDF100 Wasteland Roadside Finds - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland Traders, Set 1 - PDF100 Wasteland Urbanites - Watermarked PDF100 Weapons For Bikers, Punkers, & Wasteland Warriors - Watermarked PDF50 Armed Wasteland Encounters - PDF50 Atomic Rural Elements - PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 1 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 4 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 5 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 6 - Watermarked PDF50 Highway Marauder Targets - Watermarked PDF50 Highway Marauder Targets, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Highway Marauder Targets, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF50 Motivators for Wasteland Survivors - PDF50 Post Nuclear Wasteland Encounters - Watermarked PDF50 Post Nuclear Wasteland Encounters, Reactor 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 3 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 4 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 5 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Swap Meet Traders - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Swap Meet Traders, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Swap Meet Traders, Set 3 - Watermarked PDFAbandoned Parking Lot: Lot A - Watermarked PDFAbandoned Parking Lot: Lot B - Watermarked PDFAnother List Of Wasteland Survivors - PDFApocalypse 100: Abandoned Home Loot 1 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 2 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 3 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 4 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 5 - Watermarked PDFApocalyptic Territories: Wasted Americana - Watermarked PDFCity Slice: Strip Mall Paradise - PDFLoot By The Room: 100 Bathroom Items - PDFLoot By The Room: 100 Kitchen Items - PDFLoot By The Room: 100 Master Bedroom Items - PDFLooter's 100: The Corner Store - Watermarked PDFLooter's 100: The Electronics Store - Watermarked PDFLooting The Antique Store - PDFLooting The Antique Store, Set 2 - PDFMicro Maze 03: Ruined City Scavenger (Solo Game) - PDFMicro-Maze 04: Tales of the Atomic Bard - PDFMinco (Deluxe Apocalypse Setting) - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Blessing - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Carburetor City - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Mercy Square - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Scrapper's Bridge - Watermarked PDFPrime Pickings Of The Toxic Vulture - Watermarked PDFPrime Pickings Of The Toxic Vulture, Set 2 - Watermarked PDFPrime Pickings Of The Toxic Vulture, Set 3 - Watermarked PDFRandom Vehicle Flaws - PDFReally Big Island Of Adventure! - ImageRural Apocalypse: Antler Valley - PDFSavage Island Encounters - Watermarked PDFThe Campers: A Post Apocalyptic Group - PDFThe Meat Lover's Guide To The Post Apocalypse - ZIP FileThirty Sider Apocalypse: Industry Loot - Watermarked PDFThirty Sider Apocalypse: Urban Encounters - Watermarked PDFWasteland Gangs: The Termites - Watermarked PDFWasteland Loot Zones, Set 1 - Watermarked PDFWasteland Nomads, Set 1 - Watermarked PDFWasteland Safehouse: Vacation Cabin - Watermarked PDFWreckside District: A Post Apocalypse Setting - PDFYanking The Clothes Off The Dead - PDF
Total value:$162.01Special bundle price:$0.45Savings of:$0.00 (0%)
Price: $162.01 Apocalyptic Megaton Bundle [BUNDLE] published first on https://supergalaxyrom.tumblr.com
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reelbrew · 7 years
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AFI’s Top 100 Greatest Films
There were a lot of cool cars being driven by cool kids in high school; Mustang Mach 1’s, BMW Series 5’s and Mazda MX-5’s. Sure, they weren’t technically their cars, but they became their identity. Popped polo’s and slim-fit khaki’s traced with a fresh iron were just as much their identity, even if they also weren’t technically their clothes. These bi-products of early Brooks Brother’s fashion and Abercrombie & Fitch roughness would work on ingraining themselves in these factors of cool by lingering as long as humanly possible in these symbols that would later assist in inventing the term “Netflix and Chill”.
From behind the windshield of the Dodge Caravan that would unfortunately define me, along with the Incubus ‘Make Yourself’ CD that spun on repeat in an attempt to mask my inherent softness, I would observe these propped up pre-fuck boys and their donated cool. Why couldn’t my parents have sprung a modern day muscle car on me upon realizing I wouldn’t be gifted the powers of Sabrina the Teenage Witch on my sixteenth birthday?
Well, because my image wasn’t something I could run from. My overweight lethargy and transparent nu-metal image, despite baggy khaki’s and an oversized button-down, were something that I couldn’t hide – I had to own up to it despite the suffocating geek I suppressed within. No matter how many times I had my mom bring me to the local mall’s American Eagle, there was no amount of maroon polo’s and pre-faded jeans that could cover up the Cheetos stained fingers and shamefully forlorn look towards the Hot Topic entrance. This was something I had to own.
So I got a job at Blockbuster.
Now mind you, this was before the concept of working at a video store was “interesting” or “cool”; this was an era of subservient cinema slavery, where discussing film wasn’t as universally embraced, at least not in the suburban whiteness of Connecticut. This was a time where the heavy sighs from illegally parked soccer moms were as prevalent as the late fees they accrued. A time where eye-rolls from senior-citizens looking to rent an already-checked-out Cocoon for the eighth time were as blatantly obvious as the over-crowded DVD rack trying to push M. Night Shyamalan’s ‘The Village’.
The dress code for such a highly respected and sought-after position was one that I already had experience attempting to hide behind; a navy polo tucked into khaki’s, my American Eagle façade proving a warm-up to the minimum wage job I hoped to embrace. It wasn’t necessarily egregious attire, as there was minimal flare and not an iota of suspenders in sight, yet it was one that highlighted an already maligned position. There was no blending in, fading back behind the romance of the Frank Capra’s or William Holden’s; this was an empty and exposed prom-floor with me alone in the middle, a fresh piece of toilet paper clinging to the bottom of my father’s loaned dress shoes.
Perhaps the corporate heads of Blockbuster realized this complete lack of concealment from the myriad of high school anguish, as we were given 7-free rentals a week. That’s 28 movies a month, and if it’s February, that’s a movie a night for the entire month! Sure, you could surmise that it was profoundly necessary to know our releases, to understand the sub-genres of film in order to better serve suburbia, but that would be looking at things a little too blankly.
The languid conspiracy theorist in me suggests that it was a corporate take-hold of employee turnover, looking to submerge the high school outcast even further into their new after-school job. That the cinema pariah would be content rising to district manager without noticing that they’re now 38 years old and failing to make payments on their Chrysler Lebaron. However, I took these tepid offerings from the powers that be and I began scaling my own escape ladder, tackling the AFI’s 100 Years 100 Movies; a cinematic structure that has remained unclimbed for almost 15 years.
Now it remained untouched for so long, not because of its daunting nature (yes, ‘Yankee Doodle Dandy’ feels tremendously disconcerting, despite heavyweights such as ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ and ‘The Best Years of Our Lives’) but because I was fired for deleting a $10 late-fee off my dad’s account. Without the free rentals aiding in my quest to become even more American through the lens of film, I was relegated to driving 6 miles out of town to Dial-M-for-Movies, a hip indie store that resided in the corner of a shopping center with a liquor and grocery store.
Something happened though, in between those passing days of observing the cultural shift in ‘Easy Rider’ and ‘Do the Right Thing’; I went off to a tiny liberal arts college in New Hampshire. There, the idea of cool – cool cars, cool clothes and even cool cinema no longer remained prevalent. Cars were replaced with Birkenstock’s, clothes with thrift store trades and cinema with pot-induced discoveries. In between watching David Lynch’s ‘Mulholland Drive’ or Fellini’s ‘8 ½’ over crab Rangoon with an intelligent and film obsessed girlfriend, there were countless viewings of F.W. Murnau’s ‘Nosferatu’ synched to Radiohead’s ‘Kid A’ in a dorm room full of jocks, slackers, geeks and dweebs.
The perception of viewing film and what it meant was completely subverted; no longer were my escapes an alienating process of societal masochism. For once they represented a greater niche that was at once examined and embraced for what it was. Running across the quad to make my Foreign Film class on time might have given me flashbacks to sprinting across the parking lot of my hometowns strip mall, except I had embraced who I was through working at Blockbuster and the American Film Institute’s 100 Greatest Films of All Time; a list that has so far remained unmarked, 39 of the 100 going unseen and unappreciated.
Looking back, I realize that the high school fraternity of popularity and locker room bravado that clung to their cool cars and clothes acted as a nudge, a catalyst for my own cool. Without sitting in my Dodge Caravan and observing this state of existing, Weezer’s ‘Perfect Situation’ oozing 80’s synth pop-sadness from the speakers, I never would have ultimately seen me for what I was. In doing so, I was able to embrace 100 films that further acted as a catalyst of cinema cool, sending me into other countries of exploration, spending most of my paycheck on Criterion’s collection or obscure martial art flicks that did nothing but allow me to think my fists were snacks.
After years of getting to know Ozu, Kurosawa, Wong Kar-Wai, Fassbinder, the Bergman’s (both Ingrid and Ingmar) and Truffaut, I’ve been feeling as if it’s time to go back and finish what I started. I think it’s time to revisit a list of films that helped me shed my heavy exterior; not only introducing me to cinema, but the world that cinema gleamed from. So grab your ragged pair of Birkenstock’s, leave your Trapper Keeper at the door, your Incubus CD spinning, and sprint across your living room to enjoy a little bit of Americana from an ex-Blockbuster employee as I go through the American Film Institute’s 100 Greatest Films of All Time.
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kayawagner · 6 years
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Apocalyptic Megaton Bundle [BUNDLE]
Publisher: Fishwife Games
This special bundle product contains the following titles.
100 Abandoned City Apartment Contents - PDF100 Abandoned City Apartment Contents 2 - PDF100 Abandoned Library Finds - PDF100 Abandoned School Loot Items - PDF100 Abandoned Truck Finds - PDF100 Atomic Trailer Park Finds - PDF100 Atomic Trailer Park Finds 2 - PDF100 Backpack Contents - PDF100 Backpack Contents 2 - PDF100 Backpack Contents 3 - PDF100 Bits of Sidewalk Debris - PDF100 Campground Loot - PDF100 College Dorm Room Items - PDF100 Death Machines Of The Fallen Age - Watermarked PDF100 Drug Store Loot Items - PDF100 Hunting Cabin Items - PDF100 Hunting Cabin Items, Set 2 - PDF100 Iconic NPCs of the Apocalypse Era - Watermarked PDF100 Individuals To Run Into In The Post Apocalypse, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Local Places Of Business - Watermarked PDF100 Looter Cart Items - Watermarked PDF100 Looter Cart Items 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Looter Cart Items 3 - PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 5 - Watermarked PDF100 Modern Storage Building Contents, Set 7 - Watermarked PDF100 More Odd Items To Loot Off Of Bodies In A Post Apocalyptic Setting - Watermarked PDF100 More Things To Discover And Take In A Near Future Wasteland - Watermarked PDF100 Motorcycles - Watermarked PDF100 Nifty Names For Post Apocalyptic Characters - Watermarked PDF100 Odd Items To Loot Off Of Bodies In A Post Apocalyptic Setting - Watermarked PDF100 Pawn Shop Items - PDF100 Pawn Shop Items 2 - PDF100 Pawn Shop Items 3 - PDF100 Places To Stumble Upon In The Post Apocalyptic-Age - Watermarked PDF100 Post Nuclear Urban Survivors - PDF100 Purse Snatcher's Finds - PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 5 - Watermarked PDF100 Rural Homestead Loot 6 - Watermarked PDF100 Scavenged Food Sources - Watermarked PDF100 Scavenged Food Sources- The Second Looting - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Seedy City Business Locations Set 5 - Watermarked PDF100 Skilled Survivors - Watermarked PDF100 Skilled Survivors 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Skilled Survivors 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb #2 - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb #3 - Watermarked PDF100 Survivors Before The Bomb #4 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Discover And Take In A Near Future Wasteland - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To Scavenge Out Of Abandoned Vehicles In The Apocalypse, Set 4 - Watermarked PDF100 Things To See In The Devastated City - Watermarked PDF100 Thrift Store Items - PDF100 Thrift Store Items, More Crap! - PDF100 Urban Places Of Business - Watermarked PDF100 Urban Places Of Business, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Vehicles To Recover In The Savage Wastes, Set 1 - Watermarked PDF100 Vehicles To Recover In The Savage Wastes, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland "Dungeon Crawl" Spots - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland Arena Fighters - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland Locations - PDF100 Wasteland Locations, Set 2 - PDF100 Wasteland Locations, Set 3 - PDF100 Wasteland Locations, Set 4 - PDF100 Wasteland Roadside Finds - Watermarked PDF100 Wasteland Traders, Set 1 - PDF100 Wasteland Urbanites - Watermarked PDF100 Weapons For Bikers, Punkers, & Wasteland Warriors - Watermarked PDF50 Armed Wasteland Encounters - PDF50 Atomic Rural Elements - PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 1 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 4 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 5 - Watermarked PDF50 Crazy Storage Locker Items, Set 6 - Watermarked PDF50 Highway Marauder Targets - Watermarked PDF50 Highway Marauder Targets, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Highway Marauder Targets, Set 3 - Watermarked PDF50 Motivators for Wasteland Survivors - PDF50 Post Nuclear Wasteland Encounters - Watermarked PDF50 Post Nuclear Wasteland Encounters, Reactor 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 3 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 4 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Caravan Haulers Set 5 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Swap Meet Traders - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Swap Meet Traders, Set 2 - Watermarked PDF50 Wasteland Swap Meet Traders, Set 3 - Watermarked PDFAbandoned Parking Lot: Lot A - Watermarked PDFAbandoned Parking Lot: Lot B - Watermarked PDFAnother List Of Wasteland Survivors - PDFApocalypse 100: Abandoned Home Loot 1 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 2 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 3 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 4 - Watermarked PDFApocalypse 100: Grocery Store Loot 5 - Watermarked PDFApocalyptic Territories: Wasted Americana - Watermarked PDFCity Slice: Strip Mall Paradise - PDFLoot By The Room: 100 Bathroom Items - PDFLoot By The Room: 100 Kitchen Items - PDFLoot By The Room: 100 Master Bedroom Items - PDFLooter's 100: The Corner Store - Watermarked PDFLooter's 100: The Electronics Store - Watermarked PDFLooting The Antique Store - PDFLooting The Antique Store, Set 2 - PDFMicro Maze 03: Ruined City Scavenger (Solo Game) - PDFMicro-Maze 04: Tales of the Atomic Bard - PDFMinco (Deluxe Apocalypse Setting) - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Blessing - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Carburetor City - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Mercy Square - Watermarked PDFPost Apocalyptic Town: Scrapper's Bridge - Watermarked PDFPrime Pickings Of The Toxic Vulture - Watermarked PDFPrime Pickings Of The Toxic Vulture, Set 2 - Watermarked PDFPrime Pickings Of The Toxic Vulture, Set 3 - Watermarked PDFRandom Vehicle Flaws - PDFReally Big Island Of Adventure! - ImageRural Apocalypse: Antler Valley - PDFSavage Island Encounters - Watermarked PDFThe Campers: A Post Apocalyptic Group - PDFThe Meat Lover's Guide To The Post Apocalypse - ZIP FileThirty Sider Apocalypse: Industry Loot - Watermarked PDFThirty Sider Apocalypse: Urban Encounters - Watermarked PDFWasteland Gangs: The Termites - Watermarked PDFWasteland Loot Zones, Set 1 - Watermarked PDFWasteland Nomads, Set 1 - Watermarked PDFWasteland Safehouse: Vacation Cabin - Watermarked PDFWreckside District: A Post Apocalypse Setting - PDFYanking The Clothes Off The Dead - PDF
Total value:$162.01Special bundle price:$0.45Savings of:$0.00 (0%)
Price: $162.01 Apocalyptic Megaton Bundle [BUNDLE] published first on https://supergalaxyrom.tumblr.com
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