Utah’s (Holi) festival of colors in the Sri Sri Radha Krishna temple in Spanish Fork is the biggest in the western Hemishere. Brian Thomson turned this colorful festival into a breathtakingly beautiful film.
Optimist – Brian Thomson
21 Apr- Comments 1 Comment
- Categories psychedelic partying, Psychedelic Visuals
- Author Ido Hartogsohn
The Freakers
19 NovI first learned about the freaker team last September. I was crossing Dolores Park in San Francisco, when I noticed a group of people huddled around a boxtruck parked at the side of the park. The boxbody of the truck opened in the front, exposing a colorful room which looked like a magical chamber .
As I came closer I encountered the freaksters. Dressed in a freaskish yet hip style, glowing with smiles, and exuding an air of adventure and pranks, they were giving out sandwiches to random by-passers, promoting a peculiar product called “A Freaker”, which turned out to be some kind of ingenious garment for bottles of all kinds, invented and designed by Zach, one of the freaksters, to keep bottles warm, cold and cool (as well as to relentlessly fight against bottlesweat and moist handshakes) .
They told me that 2 months ago they have set out on a cross country tour, aimed at freaking the world, making stops in towns and cities to bring the news of the freakers to people all over. Looking at this traveling carnival of madness and good vibes, I could not help but be reminded of the pranksters, the legendary freakish-psychedelic pack which traveled the US in 1964 led by author Ken Kesey, and became immortalized in Tom Wolfe’s book “The Kool-Aid Acid Test”, which told the story of that magical bus-trip, and the acid tests that followed .
Like the pranksters, the freaksters used a distinctly patriotic-american aesthetic, often flashing the american flag around on their products and clips. As I watched some of their stylish self-promotion clips, which were shown on the LCD screens featured on the trailer, I could not help but think about the pranksters film, shot by the merry pranksters in the 1960s during their cross country tour, and finally edited and brought to cinema 50 years later this summer. (See trailer below)
The freaksters seemed like a modern day variation of the pranksters. Meeting them, was for me, a long time admirer of the pranksters, like surfing through a strange time-space glitch and meeting the cousins of my cultural heroes: a 21st century updated version of the pranksters. When I told Lauren, the magic-girl freaker, about my associations she told me that it’s not their intention, but that they’ve heard it before.
So I bought a couple of freakers to bring back home toIsrael. Then, when I got home, I started watching the rest of the freaker videos online, which triggered even greater excitement in me. The videos had the rare quality of looking both effortlessly creative and fun, as well as meticulously stylish and professional. In fact, they were so well done that I actually found it hard to believe that the freakers created them themselves.
Turns out that the videos were indeed all done by Oliver, the film-freaker who directs, films and edits them all by himself “low budget, low maintenance, and extremely independet”. And the freakers have an incredibly delightful YouTube channel. Most of their videos aren’t explicitly psychedelic in style, but they always have some kind of playful and pranksterish spirit which I find highly psychedelic. However, what I like most of all about the freaksters is that they just live out their life in a highly psychedelic fashion.
The Freasters original Kickstarter video
The freaksters present us not only with a way to do truly-hip psychedelic advertisements. They also present us with a kind of psychedelic entrepreneurialism. Psychedelic not only in style, but also in spirit. I mean, how many people do you know who came up with an idea, used it to launch a whacked off cross country tour, while shooting films about it, making art and starting their own business – all at the same time?
Making entrepreneurialism psychedelic, in the best sense of the word, the freaksters have a radical way of dissolving the boundaries between work and fun, something which fits beautifully with the situationistic revolutionary ideas of the 1960s and the psychedelic revolution of that time – but fulfills them in ways which even the 1960s revolutionaries hardly ever accomplished. I mean, the pranksters didn’t manage to get any work done during their bus trip, and they never managed to finish their film by themselves.
“We all love what we’re doing so much that most time “work” doesn’t feel like ‘work’” says Lauren. “From the beginning, we knew that our product would be a hard thing to market so we decided just to do what we loved and interlace Freakers in everything that we do… so I guess we are marketing our personalities and lifestyle and from this, we hoped that people would start asking questions about Freakers. So in a way, our business IS pleasure. And pleasure is business.“
Like Lady Gaga, another one of my psychedelic heroes, what I find to be most alluring about the freakers, is that they take their lifestyle of freakerdom and turn it into a form of art from which everyone can be inspired. Watching them and their videos gives me inspiration for alternative ways of living and making your dreams and hallucinations come true. And that, my friends, is truly psychedelic. So I say Amen to that, and freak on!
NYC Freaker
HolidayFreaks
Mary’s Dilema
Tags: freaker team, freakers, freaksters, oliver mellan
- Comments Leave a Comment
- Categories psychedelic ideas and philosophy, psychedelic partying, Psychedelic Web Clips
- Author Ido Hartogsohn
PsychoMediaParty (2007)
18 Oct- Comments Leave a Comment
- Categories psychedelic animation, psychedelic partying
- Author Holographic Elf
The best zoo in the world
29 SepI don’t go to zoos. A zoo is a sad place invented by animals that have lost contact with their animalistic parts. You have to loose contact with your animalistic part in order to think of such a twisted concept as a zoo. But this video is from one of the most beautiful zoos in the world. I love being a part of a zoo, all I need is some music to go bananas to.
- Comments Leave a Comment
- Categories psychedelic partying
- Author Boaz Yaniv
Everyday Psychedelia: Balloons!
17 Jul- Comments Leave a Comment
- Categories Home Made Psychedelia, psychedelic partying, Psychedelic Visuals
- Author 7eit
1990s X Rave – Amazing footage
17 JunWatching other people on drugs is fun and interesting even when you are totally sober. Sometimes, it can bring you back to the way it felt for you when you were buzzing. At other times it is just plain funny and weird to watch.
This 15 minutes movie is taken from a security camera from installed in a 1992 rave where most of the people must haven going on incredibly high doses of ecstasy (Check out the incredible jaw movement of the dude at 2:10).
Ecstasy, incidentally, is not really a psychedelic, only a semi-psychedelic, and is linked to many adverse affects, so it’s best to learn about it before thinking of giving it a try.
The 1990s D.J. who uploaded this video writes some pretty moving words on YouTube, reminiscing about the times:
“In this video which is actually 4 hour long cut down, you will see how some of the people enjoyed the best music in rave culture. Some people will never see these days and some will have lived them so I dedicate this to you and the friends gained and lost through good and bad times. enjoy…
If you was there say your shout outs as you would have wanted…
If you have lost friends maybe you can add a tribute.
If you want to put a bad comment have some respect and keep it for your self..
This video is surely about the good times… Its about Peace & Love”
Tags: 90's psychedelia, ecstasy, psychedelic, rave, XTC
- Comments Leave a Comment
- Categories Amateur Psychedelia, Psychedelic Humor, psychedelic partying
- Author Ido Hartogsohn
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