Quote: John Waters, On Books

John Samuel Waters, Jr. (born April 22, 1946)
American Filmmaker, Actor, Stand-up Comedian, Writer, Journalist, Visual Artist,
Art Collector, Openly Gay Man, Avid Supporter of Gay Rights and Gay Pride

We need to make books cool again. If you go home with somebody and they don’t have books, don’t fuck them.

Tebowie: Jimmy Fallon’s Ultimate David Bowie/Tim Tebow Mash-Up (VIDEO)

It’s no secret that Jimmy Fallon knows his way around an unexpected musical performance. Between his Jim Morrison singing “Reading Rainbow” bit and his Neil Young covering “Pants on the Ground,” it’s safe to say that he’s got the older-male-solo-artist-plus-hip-pop-culture-topic formula down to an art.

Thursday night’s “Late Night” brought another magical installment in what we hope continues to be a series of performances, this time with Fallon dressed as David Bowie and singing “Space Oddity,” but with some reworked, Tim Tebow-themed lyrics.

The Denver Broncos starting quarterback has madequite a name for himself this season, but most web kids probably know him because of Tebowing.

No matter your sports know-how, though, there’s always room for Fallon with a silver lightning bolt painted on his face as far as we’re concerned.

Watch video here . . . 

Jon Stewart Rips GOPs Hypocritical ‘Class Warfare’ With Mitt Romney (VIDEO)

While there has been much infighting among the six remaining candidates, Jon Stewart realized Monday night that there’s one thing they pretty much can all agree on: “Class warfare” against the rich — excuse me, job creators — is wrong, unless we’re talking about Mitt Romney.

Watch video here . . . 

Salman Rushdie: Christopher Hitchens (Vanity Fair, Feb 2012)

Laughter and Hitchens were inseparable companions, and comedy was one of the most powerful weapons in his arsenal. . .

Behind the laughter was what his friend Ian McEwan called “his Rolls-Royce mind,” that organ of improbable erudition and frequently brilliant, though occasionally flawed, perception. The Hitch mind was indeed a sleek and purring machine trimmed with elegant fittings, but his was not a rarefied sensibility. He was an intellectual with the instincts of a street brawler, never happier than when engaged in moral or political fisticuffs. . .

On his sixty-second birthday – his last birthday, a painful phrase to write – I had been with him and Carol and other comrades at the Houston home of his friend Michael Zilkha, and we had been photographed standing on either side of a bust of Voltaire. That photograph is now one of my most treasured possessions; me and the two Voltaires, one of stone and one still very much alive. Now they are both gone, and one can only try to believe, as the philosopher Pangloss insisted to Candide in the elder Voltaire’s masterpiece, that “everything is for the best in this best of all possible worlds.”

It doesn’t feel like that today.

Read more . . .