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Hall of Shame

... search Ghost Exhibit Park Thailand Wang Saen Suk Hell Garden, located in Chon Buri Province, Thailand, is a prominent Buddhist-themed park that vividly illustrates the afterlife punishments for sinners according to Theravāda Buddhist teachings. Built in 1986 adjacent to Wat Saen Suk temple, the park serves as a moral and spiritual educational site, using life-sized, grotesque sculptures to depict the torments of Naraka (Buddhist Hell). Buddhist Hell is considered a temporary realm where souls endure suffering proportional to their accumulated negative karma until it is exhausted. The park’s centerpiece features two towering, skeletal figures—Nai Ngean-Nai Ngean (male) and Nang Thong-Nang Thong (female)—who represent Preta (hungry ghosts) condemned for violating the Five Precepts, particularly through sexual misconduct, habitual drinking, gambling, and immoral behavior. Visitors walk through a series of disturbing dioramas showing sinners being boiled in vats, crushed under boulders...

Artist-Critic Reversed Role Play

...AI, just for fun, re-write the text I wrote in the voice of that profoundest of aesthetes, Oscar Wilde; “I Am Expanding My Painting Repertoire...” — Rewritten in the Voice of Oscar Wilde  I find myself compelled to enlarge the scope of my pictorial endeavours to encompass the streetscape — that most ungainly and deliberately unfashionable subject. The streetscape, you perceive, constitutes a species of landscape painting, yet one wholly divested of Nature's conventional associations. Streets are, by their very essence, sordid and aesthetically repugnant — scarcely the proper domain of the landscape artist of refined sensibility. Yet I have ventured to define my street paintings as landscapes precisely because landscapes, in their truest form, are emptied of humanity — whilst street scenes, in their vulgar profusion, teem with the multitude. My streetscapes, by deliberate artistic choice, are emptied of people entirely. To render this paradox intelligible, I must confess that...

The Impudence

... query a few antonyms of impudent Polite Respectful Modest Humble Courteous Mannerly Retiring Shy Meek Timid These words represent the opposite of impudent, describing someone who shows proper respect, restraint, and humility in behavior and speech.  ... give examples from the provided data of impudent - or impudence - in literature  Examples of Impudence in Literature - In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, the question "Are you being impudent to me, boy?" highlights the social tension and class dynamics when authority figures perceive disrespect from younger or lower-status individuals.  - In The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank writes, "I pour my heart out to you, and the rest of the time I'm as impudent, cheerful and self-confident as possible", using impudent to describe her defiant attitude as a form of emotional armor during hiding.  - In Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, the phrase "the impudent missionaries built their church in the Evil Fo...

Churchill Has Landed

... query: what are the facts of the speech delivered by Harry Truman in which he said that if Russia is winning, we ought to help Germany; Harry Truman made the statement "If we see that Germany is winning we ought to help Russia and if Russia is winning we ought to help Germany, and that way let them kill as many as possible" in June 1941, shortly after Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union during World War II. At the time, Truman was a U.S. Senator from Missouri, not yet president.  The quote reflects a cynical realpolitik perspective rather than an official policy proposal. Truman expressed this view in the context of seeing both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as totalitarian regimes unworthy of full American support. He added, "although I don't want to see Hitler victorious under any circumstances," indicating his opposition to Nazism despite his harsh view of Stalin's regime.  The remark was not part of a formal speech, but rather an off-the-record ...

Join the Club

... synopsis of Fortune magazine article titled The $265 billion private credit meltdown: How Wall Street’s hottest investment craze turned into a panic The $265 billion private credit meltdown: How Wall Street’s hottest investment craze turned into a panic details the dramatic collapse of a once-booming private credit market, which saw over $265 billion in market capitalization erased in a matter of months. From summer 2023 to January 2025, private equity firms like Blackstone, KKR, Apollo, and Blue Owl posted extraordinary returns—KKR led with 103.4%, and Blue Owl surged 80.6%—driven by explosive growth in private debt. However, the sector unraveled starting in September 2024, triggered by the bankruptcies of debt-laden firms Tricolor and First Brands, followed by widespread panic among retail investors fearing AI disruption in software companies. This sparked a “run on a bank”-like rush to redeem investments, with Blackstone’s BCRED facing $3.8 billion in redemption requests (7.9% o...

Last Laugh

Would you rather weep or laugh? That's what I call a false dilemma. It is an inherent contradiction. Both tragedy and comedy are cathartic. The truth is, both are reflexes, not an act. Neither laughter nor weeping can be faked—or they're not true. Both are deeply rooted in the human brain stem, a fact that did not escape Freud. For him, jokes unmasked the repressed, the unconscious—a revealing parapraxis—like a slip of the tongue. Freud's remarks on the Greek tragedy are likewise legendary.  But—beware—the censor is listening. Sex, as Freud discovered, calls for intervention. In tragedy, sexuality is over-expressed, leading to the birth of the tragic hero, born under an unlucky star, fated, pitiable, and a loss for all mankind. In comedy it is the failure, rather, of the sexual response that establishes the dramatic conflict. Do you notice the reflex twinge, at even so banal a reference as this, to the psychology of sex? It's not laugh-out-loud funny. It is humor, or ...

My Fans

The reviews are in for my show, "Home is Where," which was displayed at the Art Gallery of the College of Southern Nevada, between September 26th 2025, and November 22nd, 2025. To the best of my ability, I have here transcribed the gallery log book comments: Maya Scott love it interesting thought-provoking   Jessica C. so cool very powerful artwork  Diana C. beautiful artwork i felt like it really spoke to me   Lennia F. tho' no face in the paintings there is still a "face" that's present an epidemic we "have to face" together -all or nothing  Emilia M. beautiful   Kayla Martinez amazing work colors used perfectly define the feeling the art is supposed to give   Sunni Smith it's sad but it's moving and beautiful   Gavin Daniel this art makes you feel something   Saphira Hernandez beautiful but also meaningful loved  Hannah McKittrick so deep and beautiful   Alicia Carbajal you guys are all great artists beautiful work   Nanako Sawad...