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The Green Movement – 30 Years of real Change and unnecessary Panic

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The Green Movement – digging up dirt on the industrial lifestyle for 30 years …

The Green Movement started to flex it’s political muscles about 30 years ago here in Europe and became a serious power for change.

Alternative ideas have been around since the early 1960’s (like the Gaia hypothesis) and developed into a serious, but tiny political idea in the early 1970’s like the Club of Rome. 1968 saw worldwide student protests, but it took another ten years to transform these ideas and many splinter groups into a (more or less) coherent political movement called the Greens.

Strangely enough it was Germany, were the Green Movement had it’s first major impact – a country hardly known for revolutions and a big hunger for change.

The Green Party (Die Grünen) was the last big political Grassroots movement here in Germany (no, I don’t count the Re-Unification as such).

It was born out of a mixture of the strong peace movement (fuelled by the rage against stationing the Pershing II missiles in Germany), the 1968-Student-Protesters turned activists in the 1970’s  and the new alternative green culture (who fought for example for years in huge battles against the Police to stop a new terminal for the airport in Frankfurt).

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Damn Hippies … oh wait – these are real politicians and they actually achieved something.

Compared to traditional parties the Greens really cared about pollution, saving the planet and new global social ideas. They were the first to advance the ideas to protect nature as well as the consumers on the table and later into law.

The Greens were part of a bigger cultural change in Germany (and later worldwide) – that was quite different from the extreme Left (like the Baader-Meinhof-Group) and re-emerging Neo-Nazis from the right.

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We are not the old mainstream – we are going to be the new green mainstream …

Even "normal" people saw the need to fight pollution and simply get better food for their families.

The 1970’s and 1980’s showed us that Science and it’s industrial application were far from perfect.

Scandals like Pesticides in Mother’s Milk and most of all Chernobyl disaster showed us that these dangers were real and could no longer be ignored.

The Green Movement also introduced new and not so new esoteric ideas and thinking to the mainstream.

Slowly, but surely things like crystals for improving your health, your very own homeopathic emergency kit or working with "energy" became acceptable even to "non-hippies".

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Are there any crystals that can heal stupidity?

Suddenly "old & ancient" ideas made a big comeback – often with a huge commercial campaigns behind them. We saw an explosion of things like Yoga Studios, Feng Shui Consultants and Ayurveda Shampoos.

The Green movement had always a pagan and slightly naive and childish "connection to mother nature", but smart old fashioned and new alternative companies made huge amounts of money with the people’s desire to be "greener" and less "violent" to nature (and save some cute animals on the way).

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The Media always loved Green Protests, because they sell and make everybody feel good.

Although the Green movement (often in cooperation with activists from groups like Green Peace) presented hard scientific facts to underline their arguments, the Green Mainstream also cultivated a new form of pseudo-religious Green Guilt or Doomsday panic.

Like the Catholic Church (and many other religious institutions) the Green Movement as well as Green Companies have exploited the Green Guilt and Fear for the Environment.

The Mass Media also loves to exploit the Green Doomsday Fears.

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One of the most overused images of green campaigns.

It’s easy to make fun of the Green Guilt and some of the stupider fringes of the Green Movement. Overall it was and still is a great political power that changed a lot!

Just walk in any Western Supermarket and you find many green / organic products that are usually way better than processed food.

Also environmental laws to protect nature have vastly improved in the last 30 years – thanks to the Green Movement and many crazy Green Campaigns. Conserving our Bio Diversity has become a mainstream agenda.

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The Sunflower – symbol for Green Politics.

Globalization (and the protest against it) and Fair Trade are important topics thanks to the Green Movement (and no thanks to many so called Socialist Parties, who were slow to spot that "trend").

The whole topic of sustainable growth (LOHAS) is also born out of Green Ideas.

The Green Revolution has still a long way to go. There is still a lack of strong Green Parties in big countries like US or UK. Countries like China or Russia hardly care about Green Ideas, although they slowly adapt some measures to fight climate change.

Let’s see how much the Green Movement can achieve till 2030? The first 30 years were pretty impressive …

orangeguru (02-02 9:40) | No Comments | Permalink
When Advertising turns into pure Irony

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Reality has the nasty habit of crashing with advertising and turning it into a perverse new insight.

orangeguru (01-22 10:31) | No Comments | Permalink
Trading Places – the best Christmas Fable ever!

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Most Christmas movies reek of sweetness and kindness – and are terrible morale fantasies. I despise such brain sugar.

Sure Trading Places is also fiction – but it is a moral fable with a nasty sting and big bowl of satire. It illustrates many nasty aspects of real life: poverty, injustice and arbitrariness …

But it conquers these obstacles with wit and brains – and not stupid trust in the kindness of people.

orangeguru (12-27 12:00) | 1 Comment | Permalink
Why we hated tapes

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Thank the Digital Gods for iPods, hard drives and flash memory. Tapes were a great and cheap medium. Remember when we taped Top of Pops from radio or made great mix tapes for our beloved girlfriends?

But tape sucked: finding the right track was hard by winding it all forward and backward. All that winding drained your Walkmans batteries and wasted precious time. Some weaker Walkmans couldn’t "pull" long C120 tapes …

The sound of tapes wasn’t that bad – because radio and records weren’t that great either. But when the CD appeared you could hear the difference, which sucked.

And tapes could simply tear or the cheap plastic parts inside could brake. So you had to know how to repair a precious tapes.

Good bye tape – you won’t be missed … ever!

orangeguru (10-20 20:23) | No Comments | Permalink
Carl Sagan on Cosmology and Myths

Still one of my greatest heroes: he was smart, kind and fiercely curious. We need more people like him so we can progress as a species and see the cosmos like it is without the fog of myths and religion.

orangeguru (07-13 23:59) | No Comments | Permalink
We are still recovering from Maggie’s and Ronnie’s bad ideas of New Capitalism

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After the first great depression all western nations tried to protect themselves from such horrible busts by creating checks and oversight for financial markets.

After World War II it was the consensus of western nations to share the wealth between workers and companies, because both Fascisms and Communism were popular with the "small people" because they promised more rights and equality for workers.

After just forty years of prosperity in the western nations regulations and social systems were discarded in favour of so called "free markets". The lessons of effective government were as much forgotten as the lessons of the great depression.

After just 25 year of new greed and globalization the next horrible bust exploded in all our faces – thanks to the "free markets", Maggie and Ronnie.

History will repeat itself, because every generation loves to play with fire and ignore the wisdom of their forefathers.

orangeguru (06-04 16:08) | No Comments | Permalink
Mapplethorpe – Derrick 1982

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What I always love about Mapplethorpe is his clarity and respect for the viewer. He simply selects a view and leaves it to the viewer to make up his / her own mind. No flashy moments, no spectacular angles.

Therefore her proves to be a great artist and patient enough with his audience to "dig deeper" – and not pushing them ahead.

orangeguru (05-25 21:54) | No Comments | Permalink
Clothes in Neon Colours (1980s)

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Some Fashion choices are just wrong, but at least they kept us safe in the dark.

orangeguru (05-09 19:33) | No Comments | Permalink
Sinclair QL – what a great and underappreciated machine

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When I was a kid and heard about the Sinclair QL I was on fire! Great processor, stylish design and powerful graphics. But Sinclair blew the product launch and sold the machine before it was ready for the market. The rest is history as they say.

I still think this is a great machine.

orangeguru (04-14 21:10) | No Comments | Permalink
Talk Talk – Life’s what you make it

This so is so 1980’s – and so true …

orangeguru (03-19 20:41) | No Comments | Permalink
The amazing Annie Lennox

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Click image for a larger Annie.

Her style, her voice and her artistic expression are highly impressive and electrifying. Madame Lennox also was a great (new) role model since her huge impact with Eurythmics "Sweet Dreams" video and album.

Although she made many pop songs, that range from silly to raunchy she was never a consumerist blow up doll like Madonna.

orangeguru (03-14 11:37) | No Comments | Permalink
1981 Newspaper via Home Computer

Yeah, the future is upon us – including pictures and comic strips (watch the video and you know what I am talking about).

Too bad that newspapers hardly profit from feeding so much information into the internet today.

PS: I feel very old right now.

orangeguru (01-29 3:19) | No Comments | Permalink
Trans X – Living on a video

This is so 1980’s it hurts.

orangeguru (01-11 21:27) | No Comments | Permalink
Sinistar – Game Video

Boy, that game was stressful and I never really mastered it. But it was worth every "Pfennig" I put into the arcade machine.

orangeguru (01-10 0:22) | No Comments | Permalink
Anne Clark – Our Darkness

A blast from the 80’s from the no future generation. Aside from the consumerist crowd of Thatcherism and Reaganomics there was an alternative scene, quite worried about the clash of humanity and technology.

Sometimes I wonder if they were right about the times we live in now?

orangeguru (01-07 18:30) | No Comments | Permalink
The Rock Steady Crew – Hey You (1983)

Once I thought this is cool. I was such a moron.

But at least I can boast that I bought my first Beethoven record the same year I went bonker over break dancing.

orangeguru (10-10 17:37) | No Comments | Permalink
Helmut Newton – Grace Jones and Dolph Lundgren

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Click image for more 80’s hotness.

One of the most iconic images of the 80’s – and one of the few cross racial sex icons.

orangeguru (09-03 11:56) | 1 Comment | Permalink
Let’s get physical! 80’s retro fitness crap for the young and well connected

Before there was the Internet – there was hardly any porn. So we watched aerobic and fitness videos like the one above to get excited. Today the kids get more exciting stuff like that in their SPAM mail. So I guess only youngsters interested in fitness watch this. It’s still pretty stupid to jump up and down in front of your computer …

orangeguru (08-02 23:01) | No Comments | Permalink
The Hunger – a Tribute to a great 80’s classic

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The Hunger is for me one of the quintessential 80’s movie: stylish, erotic and an unusual love story. But any movie featuring Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie and a very yummy Susan Sarandon can only be that way.

The movie’s soundtrack was also revelation to me: a weird, but intriguing mixture of classical music and electronic effects. Alluring, shocking and stylish.

The movie is mostly eye candy – hardly a complicated or long story. Although it has some twists and turns. If you haven’t seen it – go out and rent or buy it …

orangeguru (07-21 0:53) | No Comments | Permalink
Atari 2600 – The Empire strikes back

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This looks extremely lame compared to today’s amazing visuals. But I can assure you that it kept me nailed to the screen for months. It’s not important what you see – it’s important what your imagination makes out of it.

I felt like Luke Skywalker saving the universe every day.

orangeguru (06-30 22:49) | No Comments | Permalink
Ideal – Monotonie (1982)

Some nostalgic summer music – I think only Germans can make a depressing reggae summer song with loads of Weltschmerz.

Ideal was part of the so called Neue Deutsche Welle (New German Wave) – but was never as popular like Nena or Trio (remember Da Da Da?).

orangeguru (06-10 12:21) | No Comments | Permalink
Robert Mapplethorpe – Lisa Lyon

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Click image for a stronger woman.

Another brilliant Mapplethorpe moment – with all the power, beauty and grace almost all his snaps posses. For me it’s also a perfect expression of the 80’s – and a new feminine strength showing in art that is neither weak nor overdone.

orangeguru (05-27 20:08) | No Comments | Permalink
Philip Glass – Mishima

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Philip Glass is one of the few soundtrack composers that is famous for his movie and classical work as well.

His style is hypnotic, often a bit weird and unusual compared to music from great soundtrack composers like John Williams or classical ones like Beethoven. But he certainly is unique – and therefore not for everybody.

I personally love his hypnotic violin waves and delicate themes. It’s an almost surreal music – I guess that is why it was chosen for Koyaanisqatsi (1983) and later for Mishima (1985).

The Mishima soundtrack is a permanent item on my play lists for now over twenty year – and I am still loving it.


Click to play “November 25: The Last Day” (which is very similar to the Main Title):


Click to play “1937: Saint Sebastian”:


Click to play “Kyoko’s House (“Stage Blood Is Not Enough”)”:


Once again this music is not “easy listening”, but it’s well worth exploring. If you only want to buy one Philip Glass CD ever – than I recommend “Mishima”.

More? Philip Glass @ Wikipedia and Philip Glass @ Amazon.com

orangeguru (04-14 0:37) | 1 Comment | Permalink
Sting – Russians

Still one of the quintessential 80’s pop songs in style and content. Although it seems neither the Russians nor the Americans have learned any lessons from this?

orangeguru (03-21 3:13) | No Comments | Permalink
Disc of Tron

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What an amazing and unusual game! Disc of Tron used a two different controllers: one to aim your light disk at the red (pink?) player and one to control your blue avatar. It was pretty hard to play, because you needed some serious hand & eye coordination …

orangeguru (03-21 2:39) | No Comments | Permalink
Godley & Creme – An English Man in New York 1979

There are not many pop songs in my life that I have admired and liked since my childhood. It is a weird sounding arrangements – not the usual 80’s candy pop – the piece has some twists and turns as well. Plus the lyrics raise well above the usual ‘I love you’ moaning of pop music.

The video above was pretty innovative back then – and once again pretty weird. But like I said – pretty much impressed me almost 30 years ago and I think it’s still something worth remembering today.

More? Godley & Creme @ Wikipedia

orangeguru (01-28 19:30) | No Comments | Permalink
Apricot F1

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Back in the 80’s I adored these modern looking Apricot computers. Too bad they were not so successful like the IBM machines. Their design and technology were pretty cool and innovative.

More? Apricot @ Wikipedia

orangeguru (01-08 17:22) | 1 Comment | Permalink
Donkey Kong 1981

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Fighting against a Gorilla was never my passion. I prefer killing aliens. Donkey Kong was actually the first video game that actually had something like a story ("You player rescue girlfriend!") – and it also introduced to us the great Mario.

This was the first game of the amazing Shigeru Miyamoto – who never had written a line of code or designed a video game before this one.

In the end the Gorilla might have eaten all your money, but Nintendo and Mario were the real winner.

More? Play Donkey online for free

orangeguru (12-03 11:49) | 2 Comments | Permalink
The short Return of Max Headroom

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The older Max.

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The younger one back in the good old days …

Well, it’s only for a very amusing TV spot. But at least they used the original actor (Matt Frewer).and setup. Great Homage to one of the greatest pop icons of the 80’s. Remember that cool song from Art of Noise with Max?

Once more thanks to Edosan for keeping me updated on my childhood heroes.

orangeguru (12-01 20:30) | 1 Comment | Permalink
Walking Memories

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I still remember trying to see Walkman for the first at a local department store (Karstadt). They were on display – but all chained to the counter. Bastards. Compared to today’s iPods or discmans they were pretty bulky and heavy. Most of all VERY expensive.

A few weeks later some privileged kids and youngsters had one of these. You could simply spot them by those glowing orange ‘rubber ears’ and their almost absent style of walking. These days it was VERY unusual for anyone to run around with headphones on.

I also liked the Walkman speech phenomena – people who talked while listening to their precious music always screamed – just like some people do today with their cell phones. Oh, what joy – made them always behave like idiots.

Similar the Walkman gaze – some people seemed to dream or stare at distant realms while listening to their music. Somewhere, some other sound planet …

digital_old_walkman With the Walkman also arrived the tape mixing frenzy. It was not enough to record any old record and just listen to it. You needed special remixes for special moments: one cool mix for jogging (another 80’s craze), one for video gaming (rush tapes) and of course for waking up in the morning on your way to work or school. Some of these tapes are burned so deeply into my memories that I still expect certain song combinations – just the way I banned them once on tape and listened to them a thousand times.

And the shitloads of batteries we consumed to keep those little buggers running. Plus the never ending quest how to transport it. The early ones were to big and heavy for your jacket – so you needed a special belt case, which was uncool. If you put your Walkman in your rucksack you might entangle yourself somewhere. Today we are used to have cables and electronic devices all around us – but in the 80’s hardly anyone carried anything ‘cable’ with them.

Also the world was a much quieter place then. The music anywhere revolution was just about to begin: MTV had to be invented yet and most stores didn’t feature roaring TV sets with ads or fast music videos. Hey, even McDonalds was a quiet place to crunch your burgers!

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One thing I very much enjoyed was tape swapping with friends. You listen to mine and I check out yours dude. A few models had two headphone plugins – wow – that was cool to listen to great music together. Especially for couples …

Another rather uncool thing was reliability. I literally glued and taped some of these machines until they fell apart. And there was no way of fixing these broken jukeboxes. It was always cheaper to buy a new and smaller one.

Walkmans really made the phrase ‘My life is a Soundtrack’ possible and I still can remember certain moments in my life plus the tracks that I played that very instant. Crazy?!

What are your Walkman memories … drop a comment please …

orangeguru (11-30 15:11) | 2 Comments | Permalink
Starflight

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Ah, another classic! I remember endless nights in front of my first PC exploring the universe. This was so cool. Click here for a great fan page.

orangeguru (11-29 7:38) | No Comments | Permalink
Clash of the Titans

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This was the last big Adventure movie made with Stop-Motion puppets. If you watch it today it’s cheesy and childish compared to all these computer generated action flicks. Even a decent episode of Xena or Hercules is better.

The list of actors is rather impressive: Laurence Olivier, Maggie Smith and Ursula Andress. But even their greatness can’t help the bad script and usual Hollywood distortion of an old Greek myth (a norse Kraken has nothing to do with the Greek Titans).

I am still waiting for some TV show or movie series that tries to portrait Greek mythology in a good and serious manner! There are so many great stories waiting to be retold. But movies like ‘Troy’ or the above mentioned crappy Xena and Hercules certainly DON’T do these great tales ANY justice.

More? Wikipedia entry and watch the whole movie online.

orangeguru (11-26 13:09) | 2 Comments | Permalink
The Black Hole

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It is amazing how many bad movies Disney has made since the early 80’s. One of them is the SciFi flick ‘The Black Hole’. It coincided with the first Star Wars movie – and was pretty lame compared to Like Skywalker and the most nerve wrecking space battle ever.

The movies production was actually started way before Star Wars, which explains the old school special effects using wires and models – instead of computer animation and computer controlled space ships.

I can only recommend the movie if you really really really don’t find anything else to watch – or you want to bore some kids. ;-)

More? Wikipedia entry and watch the whole movie online.

orangeguru (11-25 23:28) | No Comments | Permalink
24th November 1991 – Freddy Mercury dies

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What a guy! He had magic! He had power! He had an incredible voice! He rocked the audience! Queen’s performance for Live Aid shows you all you need to know about the power that was known as Freddy Mercury:

[Part 1] [Part 2] [Part 3] [Part 4] [Part 5]

Aids killed Freddy way too soon. Why do we also loose the good people first?

More? his last last appearance and a tribute to Freddy Mercury. Plus his detailed Wikipedia entry.

orangeguru (11-24 23:02) | No Comments | Permalink
Laurie Anderson – Big Science (1982)

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I still remember my utter surprise when I listened to this album for the very first time.  It was pure avantgarde at that time: minimalist electronic sounds and voice arrangements, intellectual lyrics and themes. A harsh contrast to the candy pop of the 80’s.

Also her performances (like in this song ‘O, Superman‘) were most amazing and unusual: video performance art, using computers on stage, special instruments and projections. Laurie Anderson certainly greatly influenced pop and was one of the rare creature ahead of her time.

More? Wikipedia and her official website

orangeguru (11-24 22:03) | No Comments | Permalink
The amazing Art of Herb Ritts

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If there is one photographer that has shaped the 80’s visual landscape it’s Herb Ritts (together with Robert Mapplethorpe and . His strong black and white portraits and composition lead to a new cool and extremely pleasing aesthetic style.

When I flip thru some of his books or online galleries it’s amazing how many pictures you will recognize, either from magazine covers, pop albums or videos: Herb Ritts at Stanly Wise or a small biography.

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Too bad he already died in 2002. Another sad loss.

Images: by the groundbreaking Herb Ritts

orangeguru (11-13 21:25) | No Comments | Permalink
Twin Peaks – Albert rulez!

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Just recently watched my Twin Peaks collectors edition – and all I can say ‘YES!’. Hardly anything on since then can compare with it. I just love David Lynch’s work. But also so many of Twin Peaks are so memorable – like Albert Rosenfeld. He just rocks!

orangeguru (10-24 17:10) | No Comments | Permalink
Robert Mapplethorpe – Lara Harris

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Ahhh. Uhhhh. Yay. Perfect 80’s styling.

orangeguru (10-04 19:36) | No Comments | Permalink
80’s Video Arcade Lifestyle

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Brilliant photo set on Flickr. Thank god Petromyzon saved these images from the trash. Sure it brings back many memories – but also gives some historic insights in the craziness of the video game revolution. I mean it’s crazy – you spent huge amount of money in a dark, beeping and blinking cave – for nothing but FUN.

orangeguru (10-04 17:03) | No Comments | Permalink
Moon Patrol

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The title melody still rings in my ears … so cool … another classic game! Read all about it here on Gamespy – and even download the MAME cartridge. Or simply play it here.

orangeguru (10-01 11:08) | No Comments | Permalink



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