TasteKid | Recommends music, movies, books, games Category:Psychedelic songs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This is a category for Psychedelic rock, Psychedelic pop, Acid rock, and Neo-psychedelia songs. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. Pages in category "Psychedelic songs" The following 66 pages are in this category, out of 66 total. Salvia Se SALVIA è usata stupidamente, potrebbe rivoltarsi contro di voi. Imparando quello che è scritto qui potrete evitare i pericoli. Questa guida è stata scritta sia per divulgare informazioni di cui avevate bisogno per usare la SALVIA con sicurezza, che per insegnare a crescere le vostre piante. È gratuita. Nessuno deve pagare per questa guida. Dovrebbe essere data alla gente gratuitamente ogniqualvolta piante o foglie sono vendute o date via. La SALVIA divinorum è una tra le molte SPECIE di Salvia. né la SALVIA, né la sostanza SALVINORIN-A che essa contiene, sono sostanze proibite La SALVIA è legale da crescere, comprare, e vendere. Gli effetti di SALVIA sono molto differenti da quelli dell’alcool; ma come l'alcool pregiudica l'abilità di guidare, e decresce la coordinazione. E’ importante capire questo. SALVIA Trips (I viaggi con la SALVIA) Che cosa può accadere I trip di SALVIA possono essere sia forti sia deboli. SALVIA ha molti vantaggi rispetto alle altre erbe Visionarie : 1. 2. 3.
Sensory deprivation Short-term sessions of sensory deprivation are described as relaxing and conducive to meditation; however, extended or forced sensory deprivation can result in extreme anxiety, hallucinations,[2] bizarre thoughts, and depression.[3] A related phenomenon is perceptual deprivation, also called the ganzfeld effect. In this case a constant uniform stimulus is used instead of attempting to remove the stimuli, this leads to effects which has similarities to sensory deprivation.[4] Sensory deprivation techniques were developed by some of the armed forces within NATO, as a means of interrogating prisoners within international treaty obligations.[5] The European Court of Human Rights ruled that the use of the five techniques by British security forces in Northern Ireland amounted to a practice of inhuman and degrading treatment. Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST)[edit] Chamber REST[edit] Flotation REST[edit] Main article: Isolation tank Flotation tank with flip top lid opened [edit]
Tank Girl The strip was initially set in a stylized post-apocalyptic Australia,[1] although it drew heavily from contemporary British pop culture. Publication history[edit] The image was published in the fanzine as a one-page ad (with a caption that read: "SHE'LL BREAK YOUR BACK AND YOUR BALLS!"), but the Tank Girl series first appeared in the debut issue of Deadline (1988),[3] a UK magazine intended as a forum for new comic talent, or as its publishers Brett Ewins and Tom Astor put it, "a forum for the wild, wacky and hitherto unpublishable," and it continued until the end of the magazine in 1995. Tank Girl became quite popular in the politicized indie counterculture zeitgeist as a cartoon mirror of the growing empowerment of women in punk rock culture. Characters[edit] Camp Koala: A stitchy, brown, gay, koala-shaped stuffed toy described as "the Jeremy Thorpe of comics", whom TG sodomizes with a hot banana. Stevie: A wild-haired blond Aborigine who owns a convenience store and chain-smokes.
Kill Your Boyfriend Publication history[edit] Synopsis[edit] The story is a darkly comic satire of British youth culture (with hints towards such films as Natural Born Killers[3]) which revolves round a bookish middle class schoolgirl, who has a bland unexciting life until she meets a strange young boy who convinces her to kill her boyfriend. They then go on the run together for a series of anarchic adventures across Britain. Meeting up with a group of travellers in a double-decker bus, the pair indulge in more crime and sexual experimentation before making their way to Blackpool to meet their final fate. Morrison notes in the afterword of the second edition that the story is inspired in part by the myth of Dionysus. Notes[edit] References[edit] External links[edit] Before All Star - Grant Morrison on Kill Your Boyfriend, Newsarama, November 6, 2008 Reviews[edit]
Chloë Sevigny From 2006 to 2011, Sevigny played a leading role in the HBO television series Big Love, for which she received a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress in 2010. She has also played leading roles in the series Hit & Miss (2012) and American Horror Story: Asylum (2012–2013). Additionally, Sevigny has two Off-Broadway theatre credits, and has starred in several music videos. She has also designed several wardrobe collections, most recently with Manhattan's Opening Ceremony boutique.[7] Early life and education[edit] "I was pretty much like a loner, I guess, although I hate to use that word." Sevigny reflecting on her high school years.[8] Chloë Stevens Sevigny was born in Springfield, Massachusetts[1][9][10] and raised in the wealthy upperclass township of Darien, Connecticut by her mother, Janine (née Malinowski)—who is a Polish American[9]—and father, H. During her teenager years, Sevigny became something of a rebel: "I was very well-mannered, and my mother was very strict. Career[edit]
Whit Stillman Early life[edit] Whit Stillman was born in 1952 in Washington, D.C.,[2][3] to Margaret Drinker (née Riley), from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a Democratic politician, John Sterling Stillman, an assistant secretary of commerce under President John F. Kennedy (a classmate of Stillman's father at Harvard), from Washington, D.C.[4][5] He grew up in Cornwall, New York. His godfather is academic E. Digby Baltzell.[6] [note 2] He attended Harvard University, where he was a member of the Fly Club and wrote for The Harvard Crimson.[7][8] Career before filmmaking[edit] He was introduced to some film producers from Madrid and persuaded them that he could sell their films to Spanish-language television in the U.S. Filmmaking[edit] Metropolitan[edit] Stillman won Best First Feature at the 6th Independent Spirit Awards and was nominated for an Academy Award in 1991 for Best Original Screenplay.[22] Metropolitan was also nominated for the Grand Jury Prize (Drama) at the 1990 Sundance Film Festival.
Joy Ride (2000 film) Joy Ride (in Swiss German: Usfahrt[1]) is a 2000 Swiss drama film written and directed by Martin Rengel that followed Lars von Trier's Dogme 95 manifesto. It is classified as the 14th dogme movie.[2] Joy Ride employs a very realistic, near-documentary style, with a story based on the homicide of a 19-year-old girl in Zürich, Switzerland in 1992.[3][4][5] The incident attracted a great deal of media coverage in Switzerland. The magazine Beobachter reported on the incident which gave rise to the "Joy Ride" story. According to the report, the clique no longer tolerated the murdered girl and they had assaulted her by singeing her hair and bending her fingers back. As the clique drove back from an evening at a local pub, Patrick took his belt off and tied it around Andrea's neck. The police report stated that Roman now placed his hand on Andrea's belly and shouted "Die ist ja tot!" They then drove to Thomas' home, spent the night together and bragged about the incident to a friend.