Tuesday, December 9, 2008

IRON RAIL FILM NIGHTS: Tuesdays, 8:00PM

There's a whole Hellesponte's worth of free filmic firepower directed right at YOUR EYEBALLS, every Tuesday at 8 p.m., at the Iron Rail! Free? Free.
Here's what's on tap...

DEC 9: Made in Secret: The Story of the East Van Porn Collective (2005)

Intrigued by the subject of porn after seeing Boogie Nights, a group of young Vancouverites did some research. Rather than complain about the plasticized mammaries, gyno-cam shots and bad perms that dominate mainstream porn, they did something about it.

In action since 1998, the friends and lovers who formed the East Van Porn Collective create alternative forms of erotica based on anarchist politics, queer and feminist fundamentals and a whole other set of ideas about what makes people horny. Add a DIY attitude toward controlling the means of production and you've got, as one member quips, "the Fugazi of porn."

DEC 16: The Wind that Shakes the Barley (2006)

What an inspiring model of sustained anti-occupation struggle is provided us by the indomitable Irish! Resisting what was the world's major superpower by any means necessary for centuries, fiercely maintaining their own culture and traditions, and in the meantime turning out the best writing in the English language. Joke's on you, pommy fuckers! This movie apparently shows the violent imperial occupiers in a bad light. Recommended literary followup: Brendan Behan's Borstal Boy.

DEC 23: Nine to Five (1980)

Dolly Parton, Lily Tomlin, and Jane Fonda seize the means of production from their repulsive sexist pig employer, and discover "The boss needs you / You don't need him." In an ideal world they would also torture him to death, but the limited research I've done indicates that may not be a narrative element. Still a very good film by all accounts, and recommended for anyone who's ever had a sexist work environment, meaning, everyone who's ever been in the workforce at all. Also recommended for people who listen to "Jolene" over and over and over.

DEC 30: Newsies (1992)

How about a Disney Musical, at the Iron Rail? How about that shit? I dunno, guess there's a pro-labor message or something. Scrappy singin' dancin' newsboys in turn-of-the-previous-century New York put on a show of union resistance to hideous media-baron world-eater Walt Disney Joseph Pulitzer.

JAN 6: Downfall (2004)

I've heard of this 'Hilter' guy, in some class or something. It rings a bell. 156 minutes of the Third Reich crumbling? Lauded for its "grim realism?" Directed by some relentlessly solemn teutonic filmmenkrafftenspielenmacher I've never heard of? Oh, baby, how soon is now?? Roll on, January 6!

JAN 13: War, Inc. (2008)

"A funny, silly ride," according to an internet reviewer, this last year-y flick stars Hillary Duff, and takes place in a fictional middle-eastern nation-- they're all the same pretty much, go ahead and make up a generic one-- occupied by an American private corporation. Wait, what? And there's an assassin with a heart of gold, and that guy who ruined the movie version of The Grifters, and even "a sexy left wing reporter," aka Heterosexual Male Anarchist's Kryptonite.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

90s ROMANTIC COMEDY MOVIE MONTH JUGGERNAUT ROLLING FORWARD GRINDING YOU INTO BONE MEAL

It's Tuesday! That means there must be a movie at the Iron Rail Library and Bookstore. It's at eight p.m. tonight, and it's the 90s romantic comedy film "She's All That."

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Monday, October 6, 2008

90s ROMANTIC COMEDY MOVIE MONTH

Some may think I'm joking, some may wish I was, and some are wiggling in their chairs with glee at the prospect: The Iron Rail is showing romantic comedy films from the 1990s throughout October. This bold and refreshing filmic initiative first manifests itself on

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7th, at EIGHT P.M.:
A screening of "Ten Things I Hate about You."


Next week will likely be "She's All That," but we'll keep ya posted. Regardless,

THE FUNDAMENTALS OF MOVIE NIGHT ARE STRONG

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Change of film tonight

The DVD of Cache (Hidden) which arrived today was cracked in half. So, instead we will be showing the 2003 Hungarian film Kontroll. I have not seen it, but it recied a lot of acclaim.

Here's a summary:

Ghost trains and ghostly characters, figuratively speaking of course, are what run through the perpetual night of this fictitious underground (metro) system. Bulcsú's (Sándor Csányi) life that once was, on the surface, where the real people go home after work, who go to the movies or a fine restaurant is now replaced by the dark, cold and solitude arena of his new dwellings. Him, and his motley crew of ragtag metro ticket Kontrollers must patrol the trains that run these City dwellers back and forth and with daily ritual, check that no one dare come down into their world for a free ride. With indifferent passengers, a possible love interest, a regime set on competition and to top it all a mysterious serial killer at large, Kontroll is a dark and bleak comedy of the world of the ticket inspector, who, in the end must keep this Metro system running. If not, what would be the worst that could happen, if they ever lost control? Dare you ride here for free, too?

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0373981/

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Friday, September 12, 2008

September Films at the Iron Rail

Tuesday, September 23, 8:00PM
CACHE (2005)

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387898/
In Paris, Georges Laurent is a famous host of a literary talk show on TV, who lives in a comfortable house with his wife Anne and their teenaged son Pierrot. When Georges and Anne receive videotapes of surveillance of their private life and weird and gory childlike drawings, they go to the police, but they do not get any protection since there is not a clear menace to the Laurent family. When Georges follows a clue in one of the tapes that shows his childhood home, he meets his former adopted brother, the Algerian Majid and accuses him of sending the tapes. Meanwhile, through glimpses of Georges' nightmares, his lies due to his jealous relationship with his foster brother are disclosed.

Tuesday, September 30, 8:00PM

BABY DOLL (1956)

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048973/
Tennessee Williams' Baby Doll tells the story of Baby Doll Meighan (Carol Baker), a pretty, vacuous Southern 'white trash' gal who at 19 still sleeps in a crib and sucks her thumb. Married for two years to the middle aged, ineffectual and impossibly bigoted Archie Lee (Karl Malden), the couple have not yet consummated their marriage because Archie Lee promised Baby Doll's dying father that he would not touch his daughter until she said she was "ready for marriage." He is frustrated by this strain and obliged to peek at his squirmy half-dressed child-bride through a hole in her bedroom wall, among other things. Archie Lee is further humiliated ind incensed by a flashy Sicilian business rival (Eli Wallach) who has recently managed to force Archie Lee's decrepit cotton gin out of business. One night in a fit of desperation and frustration, Archie Lee burns down his rival's cotton gin. The rest of the story describes the Sicilian's revenge as he blatantly pursues and seduces a distraught but sensually aroused Baby Doll, and attempts to terrorize her into revealing Archie Lee's crime. Amazing performances from Carol Baker, Karl Malden and Eli Wallach in this sordid tale of a decrepit and decaying South in a film adaptation from Elia Kazan.

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

RNC Riot Porn & Prisoner Support Tour

9/13/08
7pm
@ Iron Rail

This Saturday, September 13, there will be a report-back from NOLA anarchists who went up to St. Paul, MN to protest the RNC with thousands of other like-minded individuals. Videos taken at the RNC protests will also be shown. There will be free PBR to encourage cheering in the crowd during cool parts of the videos.

9/16/08
6pm
@Iron Rail
There will be a presentation by people from Eric McDavid's support crew about his crazy case involving government informants, entrapment, and lies. This is a presentation not to be missed! Eric was recently sentenced to almost 20 years in prison for thinking about committing an eco-defense crime, and being pushed along by a government agent. Come see this presentation and support Eric!

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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Quick Update

-Some of us are going to the RNC! Ours hours may be sporadic this week due to that. Call our phone at 504-944-0366 just to make sure we are open.

-We are showing RNC/DNC news footage, youtube, and Indymedia videos at the Iron Rail for the next movie night, September 2nd, the day after the big action day at the RNC. If you can't make it to Minneapolis for the RNC, come watch what is going down on a big screen with some friends and cheer and clap!

-If Gustav comes, our plans will be changed, but yours no doubt will be, also. You understand.

-All Iron Rail September Movie Nights:
*RNC Videos
*Where's Poppa?
*No Movie: Auburn 3/Eric McDavid Speaking Tour will have a presentation about Eric's case.
*Cache
*Baby Doll
Movies are shown on Tuesday nights at 8pm.

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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

August Movies and Iron Rail Events!

Lots of great stuff in this August email, coming as it is in the midst of our building excitement for the re-emergence of anarchists as a visible national presence in the streets, with the DNC and RNC protests looking to be off the hook at the end of the month.

- August "Long, Hot Summer Survival SALE"
- Iron Rail Supports Anarchist Injured by Police
- August 11th workshop: Self-Defense and Hold-Breaking 4pm
- Shut Down the RNC with us!
- August Movies
- End Notes and Quibbets

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The very first Iron Rail sale EVER!
It has a taken us four long years to get this great idea, but our blossoms have finally borne their succulent fruits in the form of a sale!!! We must take a moment to pay homage to our heroes of sales, Frankie & Johnny! Let em haveit! Here's the terms of our "insane" idea:

-All pamphlets are buy one, get one free (almost all are priced at $1)
-All $1 used books are buy one, get one free. (These books can be found in the large "used fiction" section, as well as scattered through all of the for sale books, in every section.
-All books with "Bush" in the title are 50% off, because the bastard's almost history! Woo!
-Our large size 2008 Slingshot organizers are down from $10 to $6 because the year is half over.
-We have some books on permanent sale to reduce overstock. Another World is Possible, Get Your War On, SchQuall Yearbook 2001 are all $5.

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The Iron Rail recently sent $50 to an IWW member in Providence, RI who got her leg broken a year ago at an IWW demonstration. She has undergone surgeries and physical therapy because of her extensive injuries. We also signed letters asking the DA to drop her charges. More on her case: http://www.iww.org/en/taxonomy/term/679/all

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Self-Defense and Hold Breaking Workshop
August 11th, 4pm, Iron Rail Books
Come learn self-defense and hold-breaking techniques from a knowledgeable Kung Fu practitioner. This is a useful skill for: getting away from cops, defending yourself from an attacker on the street or in your home, staying safe and out of jail at protests (such as the RNC: see below), and more! This will be super fun, there will be cold drinks like lemonade and a comfortable atmosphere for all. Come!

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Shut Down the RNC with the Iron Rail!
Some of us will be headed north to the Republican National Convention at the end of August to join with tens of thousands of others in shutting down the RNC. We are trying to co-ordinate interested people from New Orleans into a car caravan to ride up ttogether and fill every car that goes to St. Paul, MN from here. PLEASE, email us if you want to go or help with gas money or in any way.

The dates are flexibly from August 29-September 4. If enough volunteers end up going, we may close for a few days during this time. Email nolabookcollective@hotmail.com to get hooked in. RNC Protest info:
http://www.nornc.org
http://www.unconventionalaction.org
We also have papers about the protests available free at the Iron Rail.

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August Movies - All start at 8pm on Tuesday nights

August 5: The Triplets of Belleville
When her grandson is kidnapped during the Tour de France, Madame Souza and her beloved pooch Bruno team up with the Belleville Sisters--an aged song-and-dance team from the days of Fred Astaire--to rescue him. Fun animated movie.

August 12: The Gits
The story of the promising, underground Seattle band, The Gits. Fronted by charismatic vocalist, Mia Zapata, and poised to explode onto the national music scene, a stranger came in and took it all away. A decade later, the legacy lives on. 'The Gits' party included, as they are one collective member's favorite band of all time. WOO!

August 19: Breaking the Spell
Anarchists make a documentary about the WTO protests in Seattle, telling their story and getting us pumped up before we head to Minnesota to shut down a spectacle of capitalism ourselves!

August 26: Fourth World War
From the front-lines of conflicts in Mexico, Argentina, South Africa, Palestine, Korea, 'the North' from Seattle to Genova, and the 'War on Terror' in New York, Afghanistan, and Iraq. It is the story of men and women around the world who resist being annihilated in this war. It is the story of a global movement for justice, against the corporate tyranny swallowing the world. Another film to get us pumped up before the RNC protests, and to remind us of the millions of people who would be there with us if they could, whose lives are devastated by the policies of the US empire.

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-Bring us your textbooks, they help keep us open and buy awesome books for the library.
-What the hell is a quibbet?

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

July Films @ the Iron Rail Book Collective

all films Tuesdays at 8:00PM
511 Marigny Street, corner Marigny and Decataur

July 1: THE TRAP: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom, Pt. 1 (Adam Cutis, UK, 2007, 60 min.)
Individual freedom is the dream of our age. It's what our leaders promise to give us, it defines how we think of ourselves and, repeatedly, we have gone to war to impose freedom around the world. But if you step back and look at what freedom actually means for us today, it's a strange and limited kind of freedom.

Politicians promised to liberate us from the old dead hand of bureaucracy, but they have created an evermore controlling system of social management, driven by targets and numbers. Governments committed to freedom of choice have presided over a rise in inequality and a dramatic collapse in social mobility. And abroad, in Iraq and Afghanistan, the attempt to enforce freedom has led to bloody mayhem and the rise of an authoritarian anti-democratic Islamism. This, in turn, has helped inspire terrorist attacks in Britain. In response, the Government has dismantled long-standing laws designed to protect our freedom.

The Trap is a series of three films by Bafta-winning producer Adam Curtis that explains the origins of our contemporary, narrow idea of freedom.

It shows how a simplistic model of human beings as self-seeking, almost robotic, creatures led to today's idea of freedom. This model was derived from ideas and techniques developed by nuclear strategists during the Cold War to control the behaviour of the Soviet enemy.

Mathematicians such as John Nash developed paranoid game theories whose equations required people to be seen as selfish and isolated creatures, constantly monitoring each other suspiciously always intent on their own advantage.

This model was then developed by genetic biologists, anthropologists, radical psychiatrists and free market economists, and has come to dominate both political thinking since the Seventies and the way people think about themselves as human beings.

However, within this simplistic idea lay the seeds of new forms of control. And what people have forgotten is that there are other ideas of freedom. We are, says Curtis, in a trap of our own making that controls us, deprives us of meaning, and causes death and chaos abroad. (summary from IMDB)

Join us on Tuesdays for each one hour episode of this fabulous series from the same filmaker who brought you Century of the Self and The Power of Nightmares!


July 8: THE TRAP: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom, Pt. 2

July 15: THE TRAP: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom, Pt. 3

July 22: La Haine (Mathieu Kassovitz, France, 1995)
French director Mathieu Kassovitz's jolting drama traces a fateful day in the lives of alienated ghetto youths Vinz (Vincent Cassel), Saïd (Saïd Taghmaoui) and Hubert (Hubert Koundé) -- a Jew, an Arab and an African, respectively. When their friend Abdel ends up comatose after a police beating, Vinz -- who's come into possession of a gun -- vows to dispense rough justice, sealing the destiny of all three. Benoît Magimel also stars.


July 29: Breathless (Jim McBride, USA, 1983)
This underrated corker of early-eighties action cinema stars Richard Gere as a gangster with a heart of gold, trying to pull one last big score before he mends his law-breaking ways. From the chase scenes through the casinos of Vegas to the glitzy poolside parties in Los Angeles, this movie was shot largely on location, in actual casinos and next to actual pools. Gere has big poofy hair, the ladies have big poofy hair, all the cars look the same, and Ronald Reagan has declared it "The Year of the Bible". That actually happened in 1983, look it up. Anyway, one IMDB commenter said that Gere for this movie "seems to model himself on The Silver Surfer." Baffling. In brilliant color with a soundtrack featuring Dexy's Midnight Runners.

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Monday, June 2, 2008

June Films @ the Iron Rail

ALL FILMS TUESDAYS @ 8:00PM

June 3: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975)
McMurphy, a man with several assault convictions to his name, finds himself in jail once again. This time, the charge is statutory rape when it turns out that his girlfriend had lied about being eighteen, and was, in fact, fifteen (or, as McMurphy puts it, "fifteen going on thirty-five"). Rather than spend his time in jail, he convinces the guards that he's crazy enough to need psychiatric care and is sent to a hospital. He fits in frighteningly well, and his different point of view actually begins to cause some of the patients to progress. Nurse Ratched becomes his personal cross to bear as his resistance to the hospital routine gets on her nerves.

June 10: La Voie Lactée (The Milky Way) (1969)
In this satiric French comedy, two men (Paul Frankeur and Laurent Terzieff) on a time tripping spiritual pilgrimage find their faith put to the test by the zealots and apostates they meet along the way, including God, the Devil, an insane priest, the police, prostitutes, and a group of revolutionary anarchists who execute the Pope. Bernard Verley and Edith Scob provide first-rate support as director Luis Buñuel -- with his trademark absurdist touches on full display -- lampoons his favorite targets: organized religion in general and Catholicism in particular.

June 17: Orwell Rolls in his Grave (2003)
Documentary filmmaker Robert Kane Pappas presents a riveting argument for his theory that America is under an Orwellian watch with the rise to prominence of the radical, right-wing Republican party, an ascent aided, unwittingly or not, by the mainstream media. Here, Pappas interviews an impressive roster, including Center for Public Integrity director Charles Lewis, legal analyst Vincent Bugliosi and liberal filmmaker Michael Moore.


June 24: Was Tun, wenn's brennt? (2001)
What To Do In Case of Fire? tells the humorous and touching story of six former creative anarchists who lived as house squatters in Berlin during its heyday in the 80s when Berlin was still an island in the middle of the former eastern Germany. At the end of the 80s they went their separate ways with the exception of Tim and Hotte, who have remained true to their ideals and continue to fight the issues they did as a group. In 2000, with Berlin as Germany's new capital, an event happens forcing the group out of existential reason to reunite and, ultimately, come to grips with the reason they separated 12 years ago.

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Bill O'Reilly Flip Out Tributes

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

May Films @ the Iron Rail

*** ALL FILMS TUESDAYS AT 8:00 PM ***

May 6: Birth Videos

Come see Birth Videos next Tuesday May 6th, 8pm at the Iron Rail.
These are the real thing, so be prepared. Bring a loving attitude.

May 13: Le Fantôme de la liberté (The Phantom of Liberty) 1974

Lacking linear narration and a traditional plot, surrealist filmmaker Luis Buñuel's scathing send-up of bourgeois convention is presented as a series of loosely linked episodes. In this comedy of the absurd, poker-playing monks use religious medals as chips; police search for a "missing" child who's right at hand; and at an elegant dinner party, guests are seated on toilets and occasionally excuse themselves to retire and eat in private stalls.

May 20: Love and Anarchy (1973)

In pre-World War II Italy, the employees of a popular bordello realize that a new arrival (Giancarlo Giannini, who won a Best Actor award at Cannes for his portrayal) is planning to assassinate Mussolini. When one of the girls falls in love with the man, she's torn between saving him and saving her country. This is the film that put Italian director Lina Wertmueller on the map of world cinema.

May 27: Land and Freedom (1995)

British director Ken Loach made a film that finally attempts an anarchist's view of anarchists in Spain during the civil war against the fascists. The victors write history, so as losers of that war, their history has for too long remained untold. But this 1995 film, "Land & Freedom" shows what they were fighting for and what they were fighting against. One of the best aspects here is that the film also shows how the communists aggressively destroyed the anarchists more than their supposed common enemy.

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Friday, April 4, 2008

New Books, and the N.O. Human Rights FilmFest!

We recently got in:
-The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein
-
The Cunt Coloring Book
-Gender Trouble
-ANSWER Me!: The First Three
-Dishwasher
-As The World Burns by Derrick Jensen

All at or below cover price! Read, and give good books to people you love. Do it!

And please check out the AMAZING movies being shown in the 5th Annual New Orleans Human Rights Film Festival!

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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Paris 1968

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Next weeks film night

Next weeks film is Koyaanisqatsi, Tuesday Feb. 26.

If you haven't seen it, please come by to check it out. This review from IMDB sums it up fairly well ...

"This movie was designed to have no plot. Meaning is to be created by the viewer, and only the viewer can give value to the images and music. That said, there is a central idea behind the movie, and according to the director it is this: The greatest event in the history of mankind has occurred recently, and has been largely missed by both the media and academia. Beyond the headlines and every day crises of international events, a deeper shift in human affairs has occurred: Humanity no longer exists in the natural world, we are no longer connected to it. It is not that we are now users of technology, but rather that we exist within technology, we are part of it and it is part of us. The natural world now exists only to support the artificial one in which we live."

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

dainty doo-dads for the despondent

Movie Nights
Tonight, as I'm writing this entry, the folks are over at Iron Rail for movie night enjoying Harlan County USA. If you've fucked up like I have and wish you could somehow redeem yourself from the great fuckup that is missing this week's Iron Rail movie night, be still, dear readers, your chance at redemption comes next week:
Tuesday, February 26, 2008: Iron Rail Movie Night presents
Koyaanisqatsi: Life Out of Balance.

Iron Rail Shows.
March 1 - Blair Gimma & Jon Crocker blast your ears with sonic sounds rivaling the best coming out of tin pan alley.
March 10 - Madeline Adams & Nana Grizol turn those frowns upside down.
March 17 - Peter Young (recently released political prisoner) spoken word.

March 26 - Chris Clavin shall masquarade as Captain Chaos (with Eric Ayoyye and The Let Down).


Suggestion.
Spend your next birthday listening to Phil Ochs and reading Dostoevsky. Become Raskolnikov.
Phil Ochs - Love Me I'm a Liberal

<3-coach

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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

sinus affliction double feature

Bubba Hotep
Those who came to see Bubba Hotep last night were treated to 89 minutes of a funny 90 minute movie as the DVD ceased to function with 1 minute left in the feature.

Next Week's Movie: Harlan County USA - Follow the plight and solidarity of miners in Kentucky as they unionize and strike. The miners are faced with gun tottin' thugs, pig cops and families struggling to remain strong for them.

New Coffee Machine
I brought my FEMA coffee machine. Its a Mr Coffee. Its never been used for coffee its only been used to keep spaghetti sauce warm at a pop-punk show.


Meeting Tonight
Our weekly meeting is tonight. Join us as we discuss our stolen coins, telephone and why the store opened late today (the blog).

I've Got Lots of Bruises and Cuts from Falling Off My Bike Yesterday
I've got lots of bruises and cuts from falling off my bike yesterday.
Queen Bicycle Race

-Coach.

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Friday, February 8, 2008

solid waste aftertaste

Hey all!
Since most of the people reading this are people who just happen to open the internet at Iron Rail, let me let you know something. We Love You. Its true. We, the people who take the time out of our lives to open, staff, restock, take care of the books for, sweep the floors of and attend weekly meetings at Iron Rail love you and we love doing what we do for Iron Rail.

Please keep that in mind while you use the space.

Comments & Blog Use!
I've changed the blog's settings so anyone can comment. Even anonymously. So I think you should do that. Especially if you use the computers in the Library Space and want to contribute to the discussion. Its an easy way to let us know what you think without having to be confrontational or any awkward feeling. Sweet!
If you're a collective member or would like to contribute to to blog with your gmail account send me an email and I'll invite you or you can invite yourself. This way you'll never have to sign out of your gmail account!


Bubba Hotep!
We couldn't find a copy of The Dancing Outlaw to show on Tuesday so we'll be watching MY copy of Bubba Hotep, an awesome movie about Elvis' life in a West Texas old-folks home. The King teams up with John F. Kennedy and battles a Mummy bent on consuming the invalid souls of the residents.

Sounds sweet? It is. Bring a friend.

Random Music.
Here are a couple songs I've found in the past week and like.
The Polyphonic Spree - Lithium **Nirvana Cover**
Lil Wayne - Lightin' up my LALA

See ya around! Now why not comment on these issues!?
-Coach

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Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Movies, Books, Music

Movies on Tuesdays at Iron Rail.
Last night a good sized crowd came and watched Mardi Gras made in China and learned about the factory where Mardi Gras beads are made.
Next week we're showing By Invitation Only, another local film documenting the exclusivity of the Old School, Uptown Mardi Gras crews. We're hoping for another large crowd and asking those who do come to please bring donations for the filmmaker.
Feb. 5 - No Movie [Mardi Gras]
Feb.12- Dancing Outlaw
Feb.19- Harlan Co. USA
Feb.26-Koyaanisquatsi


New Books At Iron Rail
A People's History of the US (Howard Zinn)
Expect Resistance (Crimethinc)
Coming Out The Door for the 9th ward
...and the rest of The Neighborhood Story Project series
Endgame (volumes I&II; Derrick Jensen)
Feminism is for Everybody (Bell Hooks)
Open Veins of Latin America (Eduardo Galeamo)
The Bonnot Gang (French anarcho criminalists)
Slingshot 2008 Organizers, Large and Small

New Records At Iron Rail
Fugazi LPs and 7"s (every release)
Chain of Strength, What Still Holds True LP
Youth of Today (both LPs)
Dillinger Four (all the LPs)
Earth Crisis (All Out War/Firestorm LP)
Pygmy Lush, Bitter River LP
Ghastly City Sleep, s/t LP
Braid, Lucky to Be Alive LPx2

Drop in!
-Coach


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