I wouldn't mistake disinterest for silent observation.

I just don't have anything to add of a substantial nature, and would rather
give people space to do their thing. People ought to be able to express
themselves one way or another, unencumbered of what I think.

Plus a bit of a lightness with the heaviness never hurt anything, did it?





On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 12:56 PM Denise Dalphond <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Does this mean that you lack interest in the email conversations that some
> people have been having? Is that what yr saying.
>
> It’s how I feel a lot of the time when promoters are taking.
>
>
> Denise Dalphond
>
> On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 12:54 PM Rob Theakston <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> It's the topic everyone is talking about: who has the best logo on the
>> Movement 2020 poster? Here's my hottest of takes. Get those oven mitts
>> ready.
>>
>> I do appreciate the throwback simplicity of the 999999999 logo, but
>> appreciate the Blade Runner nod from Adam Beyer. God love the Swedes for
>> making Michigan a better place (Lidstrom, Ikea, Swedish Club of Farmington
>> Hills)
>>
>> Enrico Polazzo's logo looks like something you'd see from a
>> pharmaceutical company or third rate lawfirm, and Loco Dice's looks like
>> something for a vague startup company that has twee ukelele music in their
>> commercials. Walker & Royce screams "craft beer for men with neckbeards"
>> and MK's logo is WAY too close to Michael Kors' logo for my liking. Boris
>> Brejcha is obviously a juggalo.
>>
>> This concludes my wrap up of the logos on the Movement of 2020 poster.
>> Tune in next week when I propose Seth Troxler play nothing but renaissance
>> music and vuvuzela during his allotted time spot.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
> Denise Dalphond, Ph. D.
> ethnomusicologist
> schoolcraftwax.work
>

Reply via email to