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Updates from Organizations - Government agencies - Advertise Various Artists

Thursday, July 26, 2018 - 10:30am

PICTURESQUE

Announces Upcoming Tour with
Slaves & Escape The Fate

 

Lexington, KY - July 26, 2018 - Alternative band Picturesque has announced that they will be joining Slaves and Escape The Fate this fall for the "Beautiful Human Tour." The run kicks off in Pomona on September 7th and wraps up in San Diego on October 14th. For a full list of dates, please see below or visit www.picturesqueband.com.

 

Picturesque recently released "Dead Flowers," the band's first new song since 2017's debut full-length, Back To Beautiful. It was recorded over the course of three months in various studios in California, Michigan, and the band's home state of Kentucky, with mixing and mastering done by Erik Ron and Chris Athens. The video was directed by Daniel Wand (Capsize).

 

Picturesque is Kyle Hollis (vocals), Zach Williamson (guitar), Dylan Forrester (guitar) and Jordan Greenway (bass). The band released their long-awaited debut full-length, Back to Beautiful, on July 14th, 2017 via Equal Vision Records. The album was recorded in Los Angeles, CA with producer Erik Ron (Saosin, Panic! At The Disco).

 

On Back to Beautiful, Hollis says, "The title Back to Beautiful is referring to the early days of the band where we had all relocated to Houston and I went through a rough break up. We were engaged, and I thought I had life from there on out figured out, but I didn't. It hit me hard mentally and physically. I wasn't my normal self. I wasn't sleeping enough because I kept having the same nightmares over and over and when I was awake I was lost in my own thoughts of why things were the way they were."

 

He continues: "I felt like I wasn't good enough for anyone, I felt like I was a burden on everyone around me because I was in this rut and I was afraid I would drag everyone around me down into it. This feeling lasted until around the time we finished the record. It was as if I had gotten whatever was making me ill out of my system and my entire demeanor began to reflect the change."

 

Picturesque is led by the truly stunning vocal range and power of Hollis and is supported by equally notable instrumentations that blend rock, post-hardcore and pop influences. The band has toured and shared stages with the likes of I the Mighty, blessthefall, Like Moths To Flames, Our Last Night, SECRETS, SYLAR, and more.

 

Back To Beautiful can be purchased now at evr.lnk.to/backtobeautiful.

 

For More Information, please visit:

Website: www.picturesqueband.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/picturesque

Twitter: www.twitter.com/picturesqueband

Instagram: www.instagram.com/picturesqueband

 

Upcoming Tour Dates:

9/7 - Pomona, CA @ The Glasshouse

9/8 - Fresno, CA @ Strummers

9/9 - Sacramento, CA @ Holy Diver

9/11 - Salt Lake City, UT @ The Complex

9/12 - Denver, CO @ The Marquis Theater

9/13 - Merriam, KS @ Aftershock

9/14 - Indianapolis, IN @ Emerson Theatre

9/15 - Grand Rapids, MI @ The Stache

9/16 - Joliet, IL @ The Forge

9/18 - Columbus, OH @ Skully's

9/19 - Cleveland, OH @ The Foundry

9/20 - Erie, PA @ Basement Transmissions

9/21 - Ottawa, CAN @ Mavericks

9/22 - Quebec City, CAN @ Salle Multi

9/23 - Albany, NY @ Upstate Concert Hall

9/24 - Portland, ME @ Port City Music Hall

9/26 - Hartford, CT @ The Underground

9/27 - Virginia Beach, VA @ Shaka's

9/28 - Jacksonville, NC @ The Tarheel

9/29 - Richmond, VA @ Canal Club

9/30 - Spartanburg, SC @ Ground Zero

10/3 - Orlando, FL @ Soundbar

10/4 - Tampa, FL @ The Orpheum

10/5 - Miami, FL @ The Ground

10/6 - Birmingham, AL @ Workplay

10/7 - Memphis, TN @ Growlers

10/8 - New Orleans, LA @ House of Blues

10/10 - Laredo, TX @ Ethos Live

10/11 - El Paso, TX @ Tricky Falls

10/12 - Albuquerque, NM @ El Rey

10/14 - San Diego, CA @ Soma

=====================

With Education being the sixth fastest adopter of drones by industry (32% increase this year), I'm writing to suggest a story idea for Weber Sentinel News on why the most important tool teachers need in the classroom isn't a laptop or whiteboard, it's a drone.

That's according to data from DroneDeploy [www.dronedeploy.com]—a drone mapping software with the largest drone data platform in the world—which says drones have manifold uses as teaching aids.

Here are three of the ways teachers are using drones in the classroom:

>> TRAINING A NEW GENERATION OF DRONE PROFESSIONALS
Drone adoption is skyrocketing across almost every industry, meaning drones are tools students will very likely use in their future careers. Schools are developing new programs that teach students all about drone operations—preparing them with tangible, marketable skills.

>> "FAST AND THE FURIOUS": DRONE RACING TO TEACH STEM SKILLS
School clubs across the country are banding together to race drones—and students are applying STEM skills to fix mechanical problems and win races.

>> CHANGING PERSPECTIVE TO INCREASE ENGAGEMENT
Teachers are giving a technological twist to standard subjects to keep students interested—from creating giant graphs on the playground to teaching students how to code.

===================

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Eat this before bed to burn your unwanted belly fat

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​Joel

=====================

A WORLD DESIGNED BY PLAYGROUND BULLIES

By Robert C. Koehler

892 Words

As the week’s news slaps against my consciousness like road slush, some fragments sting more than others. For instance: 

“According to the DOJ’s court filing, parents who are not currently in the U.S. may not be eligible for reunification with their children.”

I can’t quite move on with my life after reading a sentence like this. A gouge of incredulity lingers. How is such a cruelly stupid rule possible? What kind of long-term ramification will it have on the entirety of the human race?

The Common Dreams story goes on: “The ACLU and other immigrant rights advocates have argued that many of the parents who have been deported were pressured to agree to deportation without understanding their rights, following the traumatizing ordeal of family separation—many after fleeing violence and unrest in their home countries.”

Oh, to be a desperate human being, caught between “interests.” 

And then there’s this: 

“If they would just confirm to us that my brother is alive, if they would just let us see him, that’s all we want. But we can’t get anyone to give us any confirmation. My mother dies a hundred times every day. They don’t know what that is like.” 

This is not more news from the Mexican border. This is from a recently released Amnesty International report on the U.S.-backed war in Yemen, being waged by a Saudi Arabian coalition that has visited famine, a cholera epidemic and mass bombings on the Yemeni people. 

Also, as Kathy Kelly notes: Human Rights Watch and the Associated Press have exposed “a network of clandestine prisons” in Yemen, operated by coalition partner the United Arab Emirates. The reports, Kelly writes, “described ghastly torture inflicted on prisoners and noted that senior U.S. military leaders knew about torture allegations. Yet, a year later, there has been no investigation of these allegations by the Yemeni government, by the UAE, or by the UAE’s most powerful ally in the Yemen war, the United States.”

This of course is all marginal news, mostly kept in the shadows by the corporate media, which focuses on Russiagate and the Trump Follies, that is to say, on political entertainment, us vs. them, neatly packaged and fed to American news consumers as though it were their unending World Cup tournament. And Hillary Clinton tweets: “Great World Cup. Question for President Trump as he meets Putin: Do you know which team you play for?”

And another gouge of incredulity lingers. Global politics is reduced to winning and losing, our team vs. their team, which makes life a lot more convenient for the powerful because it jettisons the hellish consequences of the game from public awareness: the cholera and torture and such, which are the regrettable side effects of confrontational politics.

Or rather, the hellish consequences are reported selectively — only when “they” do it. The point of the reporting is not to expose the suffering and focus public attention on the need to eliminate its complex causes, but rather to score a point for “our” side (we’re not like that) and quietly justify whatever harsh actions we must undertake in order to (eventually) prevail. What matters is the game, not the human consequences.

All of which adds up to a con game much, much bigger than Donald Trump, who is basically a malfunctioning cog in the machine. The “machine” is sometimes called the Deep State, which Mike Lofgren, the former Republican congressional aide who coined the term, described as “a hybrid entity of public and private institutions ruling the country” — that is to say, Wall Street and Silicon Valley in league with the departments of Defense, State and Homeland Security, along with the Justice and Treasury departments, the CIA and much more. It’s America’s quiet, unofficial government, the military-industrial complex holding hands with the prison-industrial complex. The money just isn’t there for most social programs, but it’s there for war, surveillance and incarceration.

And Donald Trump, malfunctioning cog or not, has contributed to the Deep State’s invisibility simply by accusing it of being the cause of his troubles, thus making it possible for the president’s opponents — almost two-thirds of the country — to dismiss the whole thing as a conspiracy theory and maintain the feel-good assumption that the United States is still a darn-good democracy.

The reality, however, as Benjamin Page and Martin Gilens point out in their book Democracy in America? (as quoted by Paul Street), is that government policy “reflects the wishes of those with money, not the wishes of the millions of ordinary citizens who turn out every two years to choose among the preapproved, money-vetted candidates for federal office.”

Back to the border, then. Back to Yemen and all our other ongoing wars. Back to the 800-plus U.S. military bases located around the world. Back to our militarized police departments. Back to every political and bureaucratic cruelty “our team” commits in defiance of the likely wishes of a true democratic majority. 

One consequence of this game is to keep humanity on the surface of what’s possible. We’re living, I fear, in a world designed by playground bullies, with institutions focused primarily on self-perpetuation and indifferent to the harm they create. Rules matter. Values don’t. 

Life is sacred? Not at the border. Not across the ocean and “over there.” And if life is only sacred for some, it is, in fact, sacred for no one.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~end~~~~~~~~~~

 

Robert Koehler, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a Chicago award-winning journalist and editor. His book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound is available. Contact him at koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at commonwonders.com.