Someone mentioned they wanted to sell for experience also, so anybody wants to
bring stuff by, it is open - just let me know in advance.
–
Joseph Franklyn McElroy
Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
Someone mentioned they wanted to sell for experience also, so anybody wants to
bring stuff by, it is open - just let me know in advance.
–
Joseph Franklyn McElroy
Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
>Is that the best you can do? Your a sweet little man, but so inept
>at sarcasm.
>
>Thanks for the advertising.
ok now i'm curious. (different subject)
what's up?
sure i teased you, but hopefully somebody (besides just me) had fun.
but how come you always reply with something really nasty?
obviously, i'm not TOO heart-broken if you really don't like my
jokes. but it's not at all just me, in fact you bark at most folks
much worse.
just say "I don't like being teased."
no big deal.
or tease back. I don't care.
(if it's a good one though I'll laugh too)
but this ends up sounding like having a tense day every day.
hey everybody! go to Joe's sale!
Ok, more advertising.
I still don't get why that's hurting me though.
But just be nice and you won't end up needing those nintendo karate
chop lessons.
i'll cc a list, so somebody can bawl me out if I'm way off.
judson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PLASMA STUDII
http://plasmastudii.org
223 E 10th Street
PMB 130
New York, NY 10003
So my teasing is not ok, yours is? Perhaps I find yours as nasty as you find
mine. Perhaps the reason I bark is there is no such thing as innocent teasing
in public. Notice your sentence "somebody else (besides just me) had fun" - the
question, at the expense of which person?
If your going to do some innocent teasing, then start out with a compliment and
a disclaimer like:
"Joseph, I think your experience sale is a clever idea, however, I think you
might find a little fun in this ditty I wrote because of all the promotion you
do"
As far as I can tell, you think I am an asshole. And from pretty much most of
your posts, you seem to think you are smarter then everybody. Which in my book,
makes you delusional. So why should I be nice to you?
–
Joseph Franklyn McElroy
Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
She was a spam machine
kept my inbox from clean
she was the fastest poster that I'd
ever seen.
on Art Forum's chat
or with a baseball bat
she'd get make that ad sink in
right through any hat
The lines started shakin
my modem was bacon
dot com's all taken
and hope Thing's rakin in
you! spammed me aaall night long
I stopped counting these at 5
you! spammed me aaall night long
fillin up my hard drive
judson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PLASMA STUDII
http://plasmastudii.org
223 E 10th Street
PMB 130
New York, NY 10003
Is that the best you can do? Your a sweet little man, but so inept at sarcasm.
Thanks for the advertising.
–
Joseph Franklyn McElroy
Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
> sure i teased you, but hopefully somebody (besides just me) had fun.
i did, thanks, because spam art is healthy and fun.
genius squad is excited about their expanding actions.
reading, i delete the ephemerals and duplicates. move the rest. basic.
i flamed joseph in 7-11 a while ago. was pretty productive:
http://mail.ljudmila.org/pipermail/7-11/2002-April/002721.html
flames are good, with maturity the worst is that two people
who hate each other, will ignore each other.
a mind is a terrible sense to avoid speaking to.
> but how come you always reply with something really nasty?
today someone tried this rapid general fallacy on me:
"why do we have to be against ANY attempt .. "
>Notice your sentence "somebody else (besides just me) had fun" - the
>question, at the expense of which person?
nobody. There's no "expense"? people lose what they want to lose.
we can enjoy a joke or not. even if something we do is the subject.
>So why should I be nice to you?
don't like me. I'll just have to live with it. Too bad for me.
But be nice to people you don't like in general. Nothing to win,
nothing to lose. but seeing everything as gain/loss is bad for your
blood pressure. (joke or not, it's true). save barking for actual
threats.
>this ditty I wrote
I didn't write it. Altered some ACDC lyrics.
here's a poster from a documentary somebody made a few years ago when
I thought you still loved me. (oh well) …
judson
In a message dated 6/14/2002 4:09:05 AM Central Daylight Time,
office@plasmastudii.org writes:
> Altered some ACDC lyrics.
>
And then what?
http://wwws.sun.com/software/gridware/
http://www.geocities.com/genius-2000/abadmistake.JPG
Hey Karl! You have great insight.
Flames are not much different that when men (on occasion women, but rarely)
used to get into fistfights (before guns/knives) and became good buddies
afterwards.
Anybody remember that John Wayne movie where he goes back to Ireland and to his
roots, only to have to fight his way to respect and friendship at the end?
I liked that movie.
–
Joseph Franklyn McElroy
Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
Judson, pay attention to the words you use - logic is not the only thing to
communicate with, there is empathy as well.
Jokes are always at somebody's expense. You either take or pay. I like to Pay
(respect).
> But be nice to people you don't like in general. Nothing to win,
> nothing to lose. but seeing everything as gain/loss is bad for your
> blood pressure. (joke or not, it's true). save barking for actual
> threats.
This is a choice, I like to fight to either get to the point of resolving
differences and being friends, or have them leave me alone.
> here's a poster from a documentary somebody made a few years ago when
> I thought you still loved me. (oh well) …
Now this is funny.
–
Joseph Franklyn McElroy
Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
I also like the recent movie "The Fast Runner" - at the end, the hero didn't
kill the community members who killed his brother, but the community did exile
them. So, controlled fighting, without bloody ending - best.
Quoting "Joseph Franklyn McElroy Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]"
<joseph@electrichands.com>:
> Hey Karl! You have great insight.
>
> Flames are not much different that when men (on occasion women, but rarely)
>
> used to get into fistfights (before guns/knives) and became good buddies
> afterwards.
>
> Anybody remember that John Wayne movie where he goes back to Ireland and to
> his
> roots, only to have to fight his way to respect and friendship at the end?
>
> I liked that movie.
>
> –
> Joseph Franklyn McElroy
> Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]
hello and contrariwise,
On Fri, 14 Jun 2002 joseph@electrichands.com wrote:
> I also like the recent movie "The Fast Runner" - at the end, the hero didn't
> kill the community members who killed his brother, but the community did exile
antigone ?
> them. So, controlled fighting, without bloody ending - best.
colonus. stormclouds stormclouds. hammer. nail.
and the films i see, are mostly about amoralists who strive to betray
and out-fantabulate each other. which might by my ideal world, havent
analysed that.
> Quoting "Joseph Franklyn McElroy Cor[porat]e [Per]form[ance] Art[ist]"
> <joseph@electrichands.com>:
>
> > Hey Karl! You have great insight.
> >
> > Flames are not much different that when men (on occasion women, but rarely)
> > used to get into fistfights (before guns/knives) and became good buddies
> > afterwards.
that's right, and now – wish to avoid flaming myself. too many.
> > Anybody remember that John Wayne movie where he goes back to Ireland and to
> > his
> > roots, only to have to fight his way to respect and friendship at the end?
> >
> > I liked that movie.
not begrudged.
but bizarre.
"is father roots or rhizomes ?"