Bass, yea!

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Bstorm from Desert Storm Sound System – Full Interview

This is the full, uncut interview filmed for the documentary “F(r)EE – Behind The Scene of the Free Party Culture” in 2017. Watch the documentary here: https://www.docnrollfestival.com/docn…

An essential in-depth documentary on the European free party tekno scene; from Desert Storm and Spiral Tribe, to tabloid panic and the £200+ entrance fees of the modern day festival circuit, F[R]EE celebrates the global vibrancy and breadth of this counter-culture with international contributors from free parties and clubs across Europe and the UK, including Balter and Boomtown festivals. The film explores the strong bond between Tekno and the concept of the ‘Free Party’, enlisting several key players who were present at the birth of the genre. Featured artists and producers include 69db from Spiral Tribe, Mat Weasel Busters, Chris and Aaron Liberator, photographer Molly Macindoe, Shockraver, Randy909, Narkotek crew, Astrix, and many more. Watch the full documentary here: https://www.docnrollfestival.com/docn…

More info: https://freeparty.carrd.co/

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Vehicles, collected gallery

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Zine :: Castlemorton Common. May 1992

[A5 40 page ]

The annual Avon Free Festival which had been occurring in the area around the May bank holiday for several years, albeit in different locations. [Inglestone, Sodbury Commons etc]. However, 1992 was the year Avon and Somerset Police intended to put a full stop to it. As a result the thousands of people travelling to the area for the expected Festival were shunted into neighbouring counties by Avon and Somerset’s Operation Nomad police manoeuvres.
The end result was the impromptu Castlemorton Common Festival, another pivotal event in the recent history of festival culture. In the event, a staggering 30,000 travellers, ravers and festival goers gathered almost overnight on Castlemorton Common to hold a free festival that flew in the face of the Public Order Act 1986. It was a massive celebration and the biggest of its kind since the bountiful days of the Stonehenge Free Festival. West Mercia Police claimed that due to the speed with which it coalesced, they were powerless to stop it.
The right-wing press published acres of crazed and damning coverage of the event, including the classic front page Daily Telegraph headline: “Hippies fire flares at Police”. The following mornings Daily Telegraph editorial read: “New Age, New Laws” and within two months, government confirmed that new laws against travellers were imminent “in reaction to the increasing level of public dismay and alarm about the behaviour of some of these groups.”
Indeed, the outcry following Castlemorton provided the basis for the most draconian law yet levelled against alternative British culture. Just as the Public Order Act 1986 followed the events at Stonehenge in 1985, so the Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill began its journey in 1992, pumped with the manufactured outrage following Castlemorton.

Pageturner Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOZX10IbttY

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Zine :: Travellers

 [A5 40 Page]

A ‘photo-essay’ describing the lives of what were once called New Age Travellers and the Free Festivals scene.

People looked at the various examples provided by gypsies here and in Europe; to nomadic people across the world.  To try life outside the house in many different ways and to pick and select those means that make life comfortable, easy and meaningful. The ‘bender’, the Indian ‘tipi’, the Moroccan ‘yurt’,  the Romany ‘bow top’, the western two-man tent, the truck and the double decker bus.

Many developed a sense of common purpose and identity.  There was an acceptance that modern life was too fast, expensive and polluting to the environment.  We had discovered Anarchy in action, and it worked!  People began working out and managing relations within ‘our’ communities, without reference to Them.The temperature had been rising for some time.  Assisted by the representation in the press and their invention of the ‘Peace Convoy’,  a moral panic was created.   The papers were full of the shock – horror that we have come to expect.     The Sun’s – “Gun convoy hippies attack police”  (No mention of gun in the article!).  The News of the World contributed –  “The Wild Bunch  –  Sex-mad junkie outlaws make the Hell’s Angels look like little Noddy”.  These were headlines read my millions of people and made modern day `folk-devils’ out of essentially peaceful people.

The Criminal Justice Act at large criminalizes diversity and dissent and thus has implications for the wider population such as say Trade Union activity and local protests about services  (the hospital, the by-pass, the local factory etc.).  Fundamentally, many of its provisions are about land rights.  What one can (and cannot) do on land.  Which is of course, nearly always someone else’s.

‘Pageturner’ video at:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9IewIdGigg

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Fire Service turnout to Winchester Court flats 

Was on alert for evacuation ….. but all was well.

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Iranian Protest, for and against the military situation, Market Square, Nottingham

Golly gosh! A very confusing and dynamic event in the Market Square in Nottingham this afternoon.
‘Our Party’, unions and left called a protest to oppose the American and Israeli military adventures against Iran. Some Iranians agreed that they did not want their country to so be attacked. Other Iranians supported the attacks and would like to ‘Make Iran Great Again’, waving an American flag and saying that they think that the obvious future ruler of the country should be Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. Sporadic arguments broke out all over with a little pushing and shoving.
There was also a Pro-Palestinian rally nearby who then also became involved. Eventually police arrived and stood about trying to understand what was occurring and keeping some folks apart.

Then there was me hobbling about on crutches trying to keep up with it all.

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Love Cabbage

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All Systems No!

Would be nice to see all, the original crew, but don’t know how I’m going to get on with stairs at The Angel etc … on crutches ffs 🙁

With my creakiness. some might still be strong young men amongst us to give a hand!

But those wot know me, say hi xx

‘All Systems No” We originally organised All the sound systems together to raise fund and organise protest against the dreaded Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 CJA …. Repetitive beats etc…. What it was all about, explained here …. >

A Criminal Justice Fact

The people are growing stronger
In truth it is a fact
That the power of the people’s
from
The criminal injustice act
They thought that they could put
us down
Then right before their eyes
All oppressed united
join hands and swiftly rise
The act it seems was drafted
for a chosen few’s convenience
So what’s left for the rest of us
Down right disobedience

Ant, Plumstead

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DiY 30 Years Gallery

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‘The camera is my weapon of choice’: Gordon Parks’ era-defining shots of segregation – and those who defied it

The visionary photographer captured the ugliness of racism in America, as well as the strength and dignity of those who opposed it – from cleaners in the corridors of power to Martin Luther King Jr proclaiming his dream

Oliver Laughland

Wed 4 Mar 2026 05.00 GMTShare

In the summer of 1956, the American news magazine Life dispatched its first Black staff photographer, Gordon Parks, to Alabama, with a brief to document racial segregation in the wake of the Montgomery bus boycott. The trip was a perilous one, but Parks, then in his early 40s, was already on a career trajectory that would mark him out as one of the most consequential artists of his generation. The images he returned with were remarkable: intimate and vivid depictions of the daily disgrace of the Jim Crow south. They still feel prescient today.

The photographs form the backbone of a new survey of Parks’ work, opening this week at the Alison Jacques gallery in London and curated by Bryan Stevenson, the famed civil rights attorney. Stevenson is based in Montgomery where he founded a museum and memorial to commemorate Black victims of lynchings and where some of Parks’ work hangs on permanent display. He selected images taken between 1942 and 1967, the artist’s most active time as a photographer and an acute period of unrest in the American experiment.

Mr and Mrs Albert Thornton, Mobile, Alabama, 1956, by Gordon Parks.
Extended project … Mr and Mrs Albert Thornton, Mobile, Alabama, 1956. Photograph: Courtesy the Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation

For Stevenson, the new show resonates particularly as Donald Trump’s second presidency intensifies a renewed historical revisionism guided by forces of white nationalism and censorship. “We are living at a time where there’s tremendous retreat from the civil rights era,” Stevenson tells me. “In a moment when content is being removed from cultural institutions across the United States, when there is resistance, even contempt, for anyone who tries to talk honestly about this history, this exhibit is both timely and urgent. Because it speaks to the way Parks confronted these very same circumstances at a time when there was no precedent for this kind of art as a weapon for change.”

The images from Parks’ Alabama assignment partly followed a single extended family, the Thorntons, in the segregated coastal city of Mobile. Shot in colour, they capture the family’s dignity in the face of everyday brutality – at water fountains, department stores and restaurants all governed by the “separate but equal” doctrine. At a time when most of America was exposed to news photography in black and white, the striking, bright contrasts and soft pastels lifted the narrative to another level.

Brutal doctrine … At Segregated Drinking Fountain, Mobile, Alabama, 1956.
Brutal doctrine … At Segregated Drinking Fountain, Mobile, Alabama, 1956. Photograph: Courtesy the Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation

“Most people only saw this community fighting segregation in this very two-dimensional way,” Stevenson says. “And I think Parks understood that it was much more dynamic, much more artistic, much more interesting than those images could sometimes capture. The use of colour really animated the harm in ways that had been missed previously.”

One image, titled Outside Looking In, depicts a group of Black children peering through a chain-link fence on to a manicured, whites-only playground in the distance. “It has deep resonance for me because I grew up in a community where there was segregation,” Stevenson says, recalling a childhood trip to South Carolina when he and his sister were racially abused for entering a motel swimming pool frequented by white children. “When I see those children staring, it brings back my own experience. It has a lot of power because it gets to the subtle harm of exclusion that I don’t always think we talk about.”

Outside Looking In, Mobile, Alabama, 1956.
Outside Looking In, Mobile, Alabama, 1956. Photograph: Courtesy the Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation

The new display extends well beyond Alabama, however, taking in work from Parks’ assignments documenting poverty in Harlem in New York, his time spent photographing Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam, his shots of jails across the country, and his images from the March on Washington in 1963. There remains something pertinent about Parks’ photographs from that day: despite the event’s sheer scale and widespread coverage, his images have a unique intimacy. Martin Luther King Jr – who delivered his famous I Have a Dream speech at the event – is captured from a distance standing at the lectern, framed by the outline of a rippling flag. In another shot, an onlooker sits above the crowd shouting out across the masses.

“Because Parks had experience of the bigotry being challenged during that march, he really looked for the human narrative,” Stevenson says. “People weren’t just participants, weren’t just ‘protesters’ or ‘marchers’ – he wanted to show people as mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, as pastors and people who are trying to live their lives. I think he saw in Dr King, yes, an incredible leader, but he also saw a human being just wanting his children to be able to live in a world where they weren’t going to be presumed dangerous or guilty because of their race, where they weren’t going to be burdened in the same way he was.”

Martin Luther King Jr at the March on Washington, 1963.
‘I have a dream’ … Martin Luther King Jr at the March on Washington, 1963. Photograph: Courtesy the Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation

Parks was born in 1912 in Fort Scott, Kansas, in the era of segregation and mass lynchings. The youngest of 15 children, he attended segregated elementary school and recalled, at the age of 11, being attacked by three white boys who threw him into a river believing he could not swim. At the age of 14, after the deaths of his parents, he moved to St Paul in Minnesota (neighbouring Minneapolis) to live with his sister. He did not turn to photography until his late 20s, having taken an array of jobs, from a brothel pianist to a travelling railway waiter. His break came in 1942 when he was hired as a documentary photographer by the Farm Security Administration (FSA) in Washington DC.

It was here that Parks captured perhaps his most noted single image, a portrait of Ella Watson, the part-time cleaner he profiled for months in the nation’s capital as she raised her grandchildren alone in poverty. Watson’s father had been murdered by a lynch mob and her husband was shot dead two days before the birth of their second daughter. The image, titled American Gothic, is of Watson standing in the corridors of power, staring out while holding a broom and a mop in front of the US flag.

Unique intimacy … an onlooker shouts over the crowd at the March on Washington, 1963.
Unique intimacy … an onlooker shouts over the crowd at the March on Washington, 1963. Photograph: Courtesy te Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation

It was deemed too confronting to publish at the time. Stevenson has naturally included it in his curation, describing it as a manifestation of the themes in much of Parks’ canon. It is, he says, “a story of trial and tribulation, but also triumph and dignity”.

Parks would later become the first Black director to lead a major Hollywood production, a dramatisation of his semi-autobiographical novel The Learning Treereleased in 1969. Two years later, he directed the crime thriller Shaft, which helped take the blaxploitation genre into the mainstream. In 2007, a year after his death, a school in St Paul was renamed in his honour. The building is just a few miles from the neighbourhood where Renée Good and Alex Pretti were shot dead by immigration agents earlier this year, and where George Floyd was murdered by a white police officer in 2020.

FBI target … Malcolm X holds up a newspaper aimed at Black Muslims, in Chicago, 1963.
FBI target … Malcolm X holds up a newspaper aimed at Black Muslims, in Chicago, 1963. Photograph: Courtesy the Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation

I ask Stevenson how, if he were alive today, Parks might have wanted to document this moment of violence and repression in the city where he came of age. “I think he would have wanted to remind people that this is not unfamiliar, this is not new,” he says. “He was in urban spaces after Dr King was assassinated. He saw the anger and frustration. He was around people asking all the time: ‘How do we change things? How do we confront a government that is so hostile to us?’ He spent time with members of the Nation of Islam, the Panthers – they were the targets of the FBI and the Justice Department, sometimes lethal victims of that targeting. He had a very keen eye for that. He understood that.”

Parks famously described his camera as his “weapon of choice” against the social injustices he encountered. It is a maxim that holds true in Minneapolis today; the killings of Good, Pretti and Floyd were all captured on camera by citizen observers, which helped propel the issues of extreme immigration enforcement and racially biased policing across the world. But the power of this weapon is being tested like never before. As the ability to manipulate images with AI becomes ubiquitous, used even by the White House to disseminate digitally altered propaganda photos of protesters, does Stevenson believe Parks’ worldview may be under threat?

“I think technology and social media create new challenges for truth telling,” he says. “But I still think a camera can be a powerful weapon – in the hands of a gifted storyteller, which is what I saw Gordon Parks as. He was an artist beyond his skill at taking a photograph. It was his vision – creating a story around the image – that allowed viewers to experience something they may never have experienced before. It will ring true in ways AI stuff won’t. That’s the power of storytelling with art.”

 Gordon Parks: We Shall Not Be Moved is at Alison Jacques, London, 5 March to 11 April

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2026/mar/04/camera-weapon-gordon-parks-shots-segregation-martin-luther-king

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Woodthorpe Meadow Nature Reserve

Gosh! a sunny day, so unusual innit!

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Today at the SpyCop enquiry, on photographers

BLOODY HELL, photographers, did they mean me????

Report by #spycop Carlo ‘Neri’/Soracchi:

“No Platform will try to avoid police, but accept that confrontation with them is almost inevitable. Members will speak to officers when being followed, complying with basic requests, but always trying to determine police tactics and numbers and assess their chances of physically overcoming police or evading them altogether. They will try to discover officers’ names and remember their faces with a view to attacking them at some future suitable event. Photographers are their prime targets and the subject of much discussion. Sympathetic xlw (extreme left wing) photographers will assist by passing on their photographs of police.”

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MAGA influencer thinks headphones are making men gay

stock image of man wearing headphones

Do headphones really make men gay? [stock image] (Getty Images)

A confused MAGA influencer recently misinterpreted a scientific study so badly that he now believes… that headphones are making people gay.

Ian Miles Cheong took to X on 24 February to share research findings from the Netherlands that examine potentially toxic chemicals found in 81 models of European headphones.

The study, titled ‘The Sound of Contamination: A Comprehensive Analysis of Endocrine Disruptors and Hazardous Additives in the Headphones’, detailed the potential long-term health effects of using the headphones.

“While these products do not pose an acute or ‘imminent’ danger, the cumulative and synergistic effects of chronic exposure to these chemical classes pose a long-term risk to public health,” the study states, with the long-term risks including cancers, reproductive issues and chronic diseases.

Cheong, however, took that to mean that headphones are causing men to become homosexual. “Dutch scientists: Your headphones are making you gay,” he wrote.

He posted that the tests found headphones “to possess endocrine-disrupting chemicals, which mimic hormones, that can cause neurodevelopmental problems and the feminisation of males”. At no point in the study does it conclude this.

At the time of writing, Cheong’s post has 4.6 million views on X. Naturally, social media users have been mocking him in the quotes.

“Just found out I’m gay because of my headphones of seven years from Ian Miles Cheong,” wrote one user.

“Insecure men asking which headphones are okay to use in the comments I am DYING,” said another.

https://www.thepinknews.com/2026/02/26/maga-influencer-thinks-headphones-are-making-men-gay

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Round the block at Woodthorpe

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Ukraine Rally, 4 years on. National Anthem

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Ukraine Rally, 4 years on 2

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Ukraine Rally, 4 years on 1

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