Classic photo of Bruce Springsteen

[Playlist of the Week] 10 Songs for America

Beers, burgers and the good ol’ US of A. While it’s obvious these past couple of weeks have been filled with both good news and bad news in our country, last weekend marked the 239th birthday of the United States. Country songs would be a cop-out for an Independence Day playlist, so we’ve compiled 10 songs that don’t involve trucks, tractors or whiskey to commemorate a fantastic 4th of July.


Still from Rihanna's newest music video for

Rihanna's "Bitch Better Have My Money" Video is Bananas

I think I've hit the point where I'm officially tired of Rihanna's career trajectory. Seemingly more and more, her sound is dictated by her record company. Her evolution into this faux "trap princess" is definitely a far cry from the Rihanna that cried out for help in "SOS" all those years ago or the one that claimed she was "so hard" in "Hard." Her last album wasn't as bad - it had the slick production her latest album clearly will not have.

I guess I'll wait to pass further judgment until we see release of her eighth album in full, until then here's the crazy video for her second single "Bitch Better Have My Money." Directed by Megaforce (who also once directed Madonna's weird video for "Gimme All Your Lovin") and Rihanna herself, the video sees a criminally angry Rihanna torture her accountant, kidnap a naked woman, and show off her boobs while covered in money and blood. It's absolutely bonkers. Mads Mikkelson even makes an appearance for some reason. I'd kill to have that money gun he uses.

As for the track itself, it's fine. I prefer "American Oxygen's" sound, however. Check out the video for "Bitch Better Have My Money" below.

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[The Weekly Swarm] 6/29 - 7/5

Happy July, everybody. I hope everybody's 4th of July weekend was filled with family, friends, and fireworks! Despite the shortened week for the holiday, we still had an amazing array of content last week. Some highlights include the ongoing feud between Donald Trump and Univision, a plethora of film and TV trailers (CreedDragon Ball SuperI Am Chris Farley, etc.), a review of Thundercat's mini-album, The Beyond/Where the Giants Roam, a round-up of Q2 2015's best albums, and a review of MTV's Scream pilot. You can find all of this and more below in The Weekly Swarm.

weekly-swarm-culture

Why Univision Dropping Miss USA is a Big Deal
Donald Trump is Suing Univision for $500 Million

The Weekly Swarm Film

Watch a Young Amy Winehouse Sing Happy Birthday
Remember Chris Farley in Trailer for I Am Chris Farley
Chiwetel Ejiofor, Nicole Kidman, and Julia Roberts Star in First Secret in Their Eyes Trailer
Frieza is Back in Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection 'F' Trailer
Michael B. Jordan and Sylvester Stallone Team Up in Trailer for Rocky Sequel, Creed
Alison Brie and Jason Sudeikis Star in Sleeping With Other People Trailer
Watch Michael Fassbender as Steve Jobs in New Trailer
[Weekly Netflix Fix] First July 2015 Update

WeeklyMusic

Watch a Young Amy Winehouse Sing Happy Birthday
[Review] Thundercat: "The Beyond/Where the Giants Roam"
Second Quarter 2015 Album Round-up

weekly-swarm-tv

Why Univision Dropping Miss USA is a Big Deal
Watch the First 8 Minutes of MTV's Scream TV Series
Donald Trump is Suing Univision for $500 Million
[Review] MTV's Scream: Pilot
[Weekly Netflix Fix] First July 2015 Update


Amy Winehouse Documentary

Watch a Young Amy Winehouse Sing Happy Birthday

After receiving rave reviews in May at the Cannes Film Festival, Amy remains one of the most highly anticipated films of 2015. Directed by Asif Kapadia, the film is featuring never-before-seen footage and interviews with her closest friends, ex-lovers, and collaborators, illuminating the Grammy winner’s early struggles with depression and bulimia en route to her surge as an artist.

However, Winehouse's father and former boyfriend have come out with much protest, issuing a statement claiming Amy “is both misleading and contains some basic untruths.” In response to this, the filmmakers have maintained cooperation of the Winehouse estate and confirmed to have "conducted in the region of 100 interviews with people that knew Amy Winehouse; friends, family, former partners and members of the music industry that worked with her." The film is said to be based off of these interviews.

Are there really "untruths" in the film, or was there more to Amy Winehouse than what her family and former boyfriend knew? Regardless, the controversy is adding both mystery and hype for the documentary's much anticipated release. For now, enjoy this special clip featuring the songstress singing "Happy Birthday" as a young 14-year-old. Amy will be in LA and NY theaters on July 3rd with a national release on July 10th.

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Ruby Hornet's The Weekly Swarm

[The Weekly Swarm] 6/22 - 6/28

Welcome to the final June 2015 installment of The Weekly Swarm! Last week was a monumental week for Americans as the Supreme Court finally legalized same-sex marriage, paving the way for a future of better equality and understanding. On the more direct Ruby Hornet path, we released some amazing content last week, such as news that Miles Morales will become the de facto Spider-Man in Marvel Comics, Apple Music's complete 180 on paying royalties to musicians during trial periods (thanks to Taylor Swift), an editorial on whether or not Swift herself is infringing upon photographers' rights, a first-hand experience visiting a Turkish bathhouse, reviews of Inside OutFeltGlass ChinInfinitely Polar BearThe Face of an Angel, Bully's Feels Like, Midwest Ska Fest 2015's return to the Double Door on August 8th, and an obituary of The Avengers' Patrick Macnee.

You can read all of this (and more!) below in this edition of The Weekly Swarm.

weekly-swarm-culture

Miles Morales Replaces Peter Parker as Spider-Man
Is Taylor Swift Really Trying To Rob Photographers?
Hammam Says Relax: A Traveler’s First Time Experience in a Turkish Bathhouse
Supreme Court Legalizes Same-Sex Marriage

The Weekly Swarm Film

[Review] Inside Out
Marvel and Sony Find Their Spider-Man Actor and Director
[Review] Infinitely Polar Bear
[Review] The Face Of An Angel
Watch the English-Subbed Trailer for Boruto: Naruto the Movie
[Playlist of the Week] 10 Blockbuster Hits of the Summer
[Weekly Netflix Fix] Final June 2015 Update
The Decline of Western Civilization: To Live and Die in LA
Amy Schumer is a Trainwreck in Trailer for Judd Apatow's Next Film
[Review] Felt
[Review] Glass Chin

The Weekly Swarm Music

Apple Music Will Pay Artists During Trial Periods Thanks to Taylor Swift
Pitchfork Music Festival 2015 Schedule Revealed
Midwest Ska Fest 2015 Returning to Double Door on August 8th
Is Taylor Swift Really Trying To Rob Photographers?
[Playlist of the Week] 10 Blockbuster Hits of the Summer
The Decline of Western Civilization: To Live and Die in LA
[Review] Bully: "Feels Like"

weekly-swarm-tv

[Review] Silicon Valley Season 2
[Weekly Netflix Fix] Final June 2015 Update
RIP Patrick Macnee, Star of The Avengers TV Show & Role Model For Boys Everywhere


Darby Crash of The Germs

The Decline of Western Civilization: To Live and Die in LA

Penelope Spheeris' The Decline of Western Civilization is one of those seminal music documentaries with a great reputation despite being rarely seen. Ditto its two sequels. Never available on DVD or Blu-ray, The Decline of Western Civilization trilogy is finally being released by Shout Factory at the end of the month. In addition, the first two films of Spheeris' Decline trilogy will screen at The Music Box Theatre in Chicago on Saturday, June 27th, with Spheeris in attendance. (For more information about the Music Box screening, click here.)

Even though I've only seen the first Decline, I'm excited for the trilogy's release in general. Maybe the lack of availability has increased the potency of the material and my desire to see it. (Absence makes the heart of the LA scene grow dismaler.) In the first Decline, Spheeris hung around LA punk bands like Black Flag, The Circle Jerks, X, and The Germs and included live concert footage; she caught the daily grind of music mag Slash; she interviewed kids at punk shows. In the process, her documentary captures the spirit of the scene as a whole: an aggressive sneer looking out over the ugly void of the 80s, the logical conclusion after the disillusionment of the 70s and the dashed hopes of the 60s.

Titling the documentary The Decline of Western Civilization seems cheeky, but it's fitting since the story of the movie is the quintessential American tale of the California bummer.

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Think about it. Before westward expansion was over, the possibilities must have seemed limitless. Land, far as the eye can see, untouched, unspoiled, and with a little genocide, eventually ours. When gold was discovered, the west had riches untold, though only for a few; the rest were ripped off or died trying to eventually get ripped off. With the motion pictures there was the promise of fame rarely achieved, and during the Depression there were jobs that weren't worth the trek. For the generation of love, places like San Francisco seemed utopian, but the promise of the 60s was dashed by political assassinations capped by hippie bloodshed (i.e., the Manson murders, Altamont) that revealed a naive kind of hippie bullshit.

Early in The Decline of Western Civilization, the owner of a punk club stands atop a hill with the LA skyline muggy with haze. Cars on the freeways beneath churn out more and more smog. To paraphrase him, everyone went west expecting paradise, but when they got there, the air sucked.

To put it another way: In Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, the summation of the counterculture's failure was the refrain "We blew it"; the equivalent in The Decline of Western Civilization is a disaffected teenager staring at the camera and sighing "Fuck."

The Decline of Western Civilization

While the punk scene seems like it ought to be about community, the film seems to chronicle a form of punk cannibalization. From interviews with punk show kids, they talk about an aggressive and violent streak. In one particular interview, Pat Smear--then of The Germs and later of Nirvana and Foo Fighters fame--admits to beating up girls just because; in the concert footage, pits open up and swirl, full of punk kids and punchy suburban bros and spit. Adding to the vibe of society's lawless decline, the security at the shows are decked out in leather jackets, like the lawmen from the original Mad Max.

It's not just punk-on-punk cannibalization, but in some cases self-cannibalization. Darby Crash of The Germs embodies the latter. He harms himself at shows, scratching his skin and drawing blood. Spheeris catches him on camera zonked out of his gourd. There's permanent marker smeared all over his face and body like he's part poster-child for disaffected youth and part punk-parody in the form of horse hair pottery. Crash slurs out all of the lyrics in a daze while beneath him are subtitles with the proper lyrics. It's funny and sad all at once, though maybe sadder than funny given Crash's eventual suicide from a heroin overdose.

From the clips I've seen, 1988's The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years is less like the first Decline and more like This Is Spinal Tap or the cult short film Heavy Metal Parking Lot. (Spheeris declined to direct This Is Spinal Tap.) The excesses of the second film are about rock star cliches, which might seem like the high-life or a dream fulfilled, but it seems like a steeper fall given the vapid nature of the rock and roll dream. Maybe the focus of The Metal Years was anticipated by the emptiness delineated in X's "Sex and Dying in High Society." 1998's Decline Part III (never released on home video), is all about the homeless gutterpunks of LA and their daily struggles to get by. It's a continued drop headed into the 21st century, because one of the constants of America is the California bummer.

Though not part of the LA punk scene, Johnny Rotten may have succinctly summed the trajectory of the decline of western civilization back in 1977: "No future." The rudderless world continues into the void of the 21st century. West isn't an option anymore, and the only direction left is down. It's fitting that Spheeris would end The Decline of Western Civilization with footage of the band Fear.


Ted 2

[Playlist of the Week] 10 Blockbuster Hits of the Summer

With summer right around the corner, film buffs everywhere are gearing up for the soundtrack releases. While most people aren’t interested in scores, we’ve found the small light with familiar songs being featured on each film's respective OST. In no particular order, here are 10 songs featured on blockbuster soundtracks of movies being released this summer.


Taylor Swift 1989 Tour Photography

Is Taylor Swift Really Trying To Rob Photographers?

In recent news, Taylor Swift criticized Apple for initially not paying artists during the trial period for Apple Music, their latest music streaming service. The battle went on for one quick day as Apple shortly retreated, granting victory to Swift's team and stamping the rare power she continues to have on music business.

Meanwhile, at the stem of this rebuttal, freelance photographer Jason Sheldon published an open letter on his blog where he argued Swift's recent image-licensing policy, suggesting the hypocrisy to her complaints towards Apple. In her policy, Editorial photographers assigned to shoot her shows must sign away rights to their photos, preventing them from being paid while giving Swift unlimited use of the pictures for publicity and promotion. It gets worse...

One section of the policy that Sheldon doesn't mention is the right to her management company to destroy a photographer's equipment if they break the terms of the contact, one they are obligated to sign before shooing her show. It reads the following:

If you fail to fully comply with this Authorization, authorized agents of FEI, the Artist or the Related Entities may confiscate and/or destroy the technology or devices that contain the master files of the Photographs and other images, including, but not limited to, cell phones and memory cards, and the Photographs and any other images.

Just today, a UK representative for Taylor Swift quickly countered and told Business Insider via email that the standard photography agreement to which Sheldon referred was "misrepresented." To me, this all sounds like "Bad Blood" more than anything.

At this point, we know that Apple changed their course of action but will Taylor Swift? As a photographer, I feel this is indeed quite hypocritical. Especially because it's photos from concert photographers that tend to promote ticket sales, creating a huge monetary benefit for promoters, venues and the Swift team alike. Needless to say, I'll refrain from shooting any Taylor Swift shows any time in the near future. What do you think?