HOR Sticker Contest Winner and Photo Submissions

Huge shout out to everyone in the HOR republic who absolutely killed it in the HOR sticker contest which just furthers the point that HOR has funniest and creative readers on the internet.  I had to go through tons of photo’s from all over the world and would like to share some of the best ones.

HOR in San Diego, California (via DJ LiL Elle)  On a Cable Car high above Gatlinburg Tennessee (Via James)  On top of the wall at Chez Gladines in Paris, France (via Amanda)  One thing that I learned from this contest is that not only do HOR readers love weed, but HOR stickers make a great Bong decoration. Probably won’t mention names here but y’all heads know who you are and thanks for submitting!

 Did you know that HOR is the #1 blog site for Texas Truckers?  It’s a part of their daily life. Trucker Breakfast (Via Trololol me some Moore)  So many great photo’s turned in it’s a shame only one can win.  Good news is that the contest winner went ABOVE & BEYOND to take home the trophy.  This like one of thse 55-10 blowout Superbowl’s.  The winner comes from Texas, who came up with the genius idea of having an artistic photo shoot to represent the “emotion” and spirit that is HOR.  Here are the photos of your contest winner:

Love how this pic captures emotion and passion.  Art.  This piece I like to call “Classy Casual” Bow tie, hat to the side.  Straight chillin. So there it is, another contest in the books.  Winner will receive a HOR Schiavo & Ziplok shirt.  Look out for a new contest coming soon!

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Time for some Action: Q&A with Juche Strong Documentary creator Rob Montz

In furthering my obsession with North Korea over the last two years, I’ve seen countless videos from various news organizations, Vice, and youtubes of tourists who’ve visited the isolated Country.  I came across a dope trailer for a upcoming documentary that will be released this year called “Juche Strong”.

The documentary is about the 2010 North Korean soccer team that for the first time in 40 years, competed in the World Cup.  It also goes in depth with policy experts discussing the Countries ideology.  The only thing more exciting about it’s release later this year, is that the creator of the doc lives right here in DC.  Rob Montz, a film maker, soccer lover, and Action Bronson fan took time to do a Q&A session with me which has to one of my favorite interviews to date.

HOR: What was the creative spark or idea that started everything in making “Juche Strong”? Was your trip to the DPRK to enhance the film or for the overall cultural experience?

Rob: The spark was really two separate impulses fused together. I’d want to make a documentary film for a long, long time. And I’d wanted a project that could basically serve as self made film school for me — i think graduate education generally is a massive tumor on the American economy and film school in particular is a masturbatory unhelpful waste of money and time. Secondly, I’d wanted to make a documentary about North Korea. It’s fascinating for a bunch of obvious reasons. But I didn’t have a hook. Then the 2010 world cup happened — NK was participating for the first time in over 40 years. A bunch of crazy things happened to the team. And I finally had my story to tell about the country. Later that summer after the Games ended I applied for the first fellowship that financed the film and with Juche Strong coming out this winter it will be about two years total for the whole production.

About the trip itself — it came at the end of the production process. I wanted to take footage of the country myself — the economics of licensing b-roll are such that it was significantly cheaper for me just to go out there and shoot then shell out insane quantities to freelancers and major media outlets for footage that’s generally sub-par quality anyway.

But also, I really wanted to smell the country — I wanted to experience it in a concrete way, not purely in theory and from a distance. I’m saying some very specific, slightly controversial things about the North Korean people in my film and before I pushed those ideas out into the world I needed to test them against reality. There’s just only so much you can know about a place from blog posts and tweets.

HOR: With all the things going on in North Korea, what made you decide to do a documentary about the 2010 World up the team?

Rob: I love soccer. And NK’s World Cup campaign itself is a really interesting story. About half of my film is kind of high-minded super analytical theorizing about the country — it’s nice to be able to balance that against a more visceral and visual sports story. My inclinations are such that if left to my own devices my documentaries would just be visual versions of like a ponderous sophomore-year term paper. I really like presenting big ideas through film. But that’s not enough to sustain a good doc — the audience needs a story too. There needs to be some narrative hook in there, some specific characters they can emotionally connect to. And the World Cup just happened to present a really good hook.

HOR: Most people who research the DPRK before traveling there get a pretty good understanding of what will happen as far as the guides escorting you and the pro-government tours, what did the first couple hours feel like once you arrived?

Rob: Surreal of course. Very much that feeling of “I’ve seen this building or this mural 100 times on video and now it’s right in front of me.” Most surprising was the guide though — you have two. But one is the main talker. And in my mind the guide was going to be much more stir and controlling and unfriendly that he ended up being. Ours was basically the north korean version of a kindly midwestern Presbyterian youth minister — kind, earnest, curious. I spent the first night there drinking heavily with a couple people from another group and a few guides and that just felt like a Tuesday in DC.

HOR: There is a lot of anti-American sentiment in North Korea and the government propaganda machine helps fuel that but do you feel that it’s kind of a double edged sword in relation to how Western media depicts North Korea?

Rob: I wouldn’t say double edge sword exactly but i do think the American media’s coverage of NK is so bad it borders on a war crime. You just saw it in the press about North Korea’s olympians (who did surprisingly well at london). The stories were either a) north koreans are mindless, brainwashed automatons or b)some outlandish, unsourced story about the latest evils from the North Korean regimes. For a), the most poignant moment for me was when the male North korean weighlifter won a gold medal and thanked the spirit of Kim Jong Il for propelling him to victory. There was an avalanche of mockery from a couple of big time American blogs that covered it. But how is that any different than an American athlete thanking, say, jesus after winning a gold in gymnastics?

And on b) there were these ubiquitous reports about north korean olympians that don’t medal getting thrown into labor camps once they get home. Now, the north korean regime is certainly capable of some gangster shit — there are 100-200,000 people in the country living in labor camps. This regime certainly commits some vicious human rights abuses. But that labor camp story has zero sources — it’s not clear where it originated from, there’s no evidence to support it, etc. But the western press uses NK’s reputation as an excuse to pass along as gospel any gossip about NK’s latest nefarious doings. And that’s particularly irksome to me because stories like that uniformly ignore the equally — if not more — important roll that ideology plays in keeping the country running (and that of course is the chief focus of my film)

HOR: I noticed you used Action Bronson for the trailer music. Does the film have a hip hop influence music wise or is that just a favorite of yours?

Rob: The fact that you recognized the artist for that song quadruples the likelihood we’ll become best friends. My corgi puppy’s name is Bronson. AB is one of my top 5 living humans on the planet. And yes the soundtrack for the film itself is deeply influence by hip hop — there is an original song in the film hand-crafted by a very talented composer friend of mine that sounds like some combination of Def Jux-era RJD2 and the not-bad albums from DJ shadow

HOR: In the preview, you have a policy expert talk about America’s underestimation of North Korea, what do you think after doing this film that the U.S. needs to do to better understand North Korea?

Rob: My pretentious response is that if I could tell you precisely in words I wouldn’t have made a film about it. My non douchey response is — recognize that North Koreans are flesh and blood people just like the rest of us. They aren’t aliens. But they are under the influence of an intoxicating, specifically designed and careful dispatched state ideology. And the key compelling elements of that ideology share 98 percent of their DNA with political and religious rhetoric as practiced in the united states.

HOR:  What is the most important thing you want people to take away from watching your film?

Rob: My answer here is basically the same one to the last question — recognize the important of ideology and propaganda in North Korea’s “success.” International experts have been predicting the imminent collapse of this country for nearly two decades. And it’s still here. And in many ways it’s stronger than it was just a couple years ago. And that’s in large part because the ruling elites have gotten most of the population to buy into a grad national project via propaganda — it’s given them purpose, and purpose will help retain loyalty even when your country has been suffering severe famines on-and-off since the mid 90s

HOR: Since we also cover food on the site, we have to ask… How was the food like? Any meal that stood out to you. Also, do they eat bacon over there?

Rob: All our meals — save one pizza lunch — were pre-planned by the touring company. About 85 percent is just thoroughly mediocre version of Korea, Japanese and American cuisine. 10 percent is truly awful — every fish dish I ate was disgusting and i suffered the greatest of all abuses by being forced to drink exclusively instant coffee the whole time i was there. And 5 percent of the food was genuinely delicious. Our second to last night in Pyongyang we had korean bbq — you cook the meat at your table just like you would at a south korean place out in Reston. Pack it in with some rice and a lettuce wrap and cover with sauces. And it was goddamn delicious. And I definitely ate pork but I don’t think it was ever in bacon form

We hope to do a follow up later this year with Rob once the doc is released.  For more info, check out the Juche Strong page here

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Song Byeok exhibit in DC

Last Sunday marked the 100th birthday of the founder of North Korea, Kim il Sung. This was two days after their failed missile launch that had the world wondering just what the hell North Korea also referred to as DPRK, was up to.  Since following the hermit kingdom for about a year now I was excited about getting the news that one of their former propaganda artist, Song Byeok was coming to the district to show off his work.  Knowing the backstory of Song (PLEASE WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE, THANK YA), I knew that it wasn’t going to be the traditional style DPRK propaganda art, each piece is North Korean related but with Songs own individual, creative expressions to symbolize and pay homage to the freedoms he has today.

The exhibit is going until April 30th The Dunes in Columbia Heights. The Hours vary – check the venue calendar for specific dates and times. Recommended donation of $5. The Dunes is located at 1402 Meridian Place NW, Washington, DC 20009. Closest Metro: Columbia Heights (Yellow/Green line). For more information call 202-436-9118.  Here are a few photos I took.

 And the grand finale.  This painting can be yours for only $22,000 

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Video Scratching With Projection Mapping Onto Turntables

The homies over at E.N.S. sent over a new video of their projection mapping progress and have taken things further by scratching video of themselves onto the turntable. Can’t imagine where it goes from here. Porno scratching? Let’s hope so.

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Juggalo’s! Accept me into your inner circle

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American Juggalo, posted with vodpod

Think I’ve finally found a group of fun loving, kind, down to party individuals known as Juggalo’s. Wooo Wooooo!! After watching this video in the HOR group, I watched it several times and I’m going to go with my instinct on this one and say Y-E-S to the Juggalo life. I don’t see any red flags. Their like the cool renegade kids you would run with back in school but without the school Wooo Woooo! So if you don’t see me post for a while, don’t worry because I’m not dead. I just slipped out of the normal grind an inserted myself into the Juggalo Gauntlet. One big family Woooooo Woooooo!

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The magic of Ghana film

The greatest thing to come into my life this year is the majesty of cinema from Ghana. The first feature film is a action Sci-Fi with breathtaking special effects, a Alien invasion, and cutting edge dramatic dialogue that will leave you on the edge of your seat. 2016 puts on a clinic as to what American films should follow in making an action movie. Oh yeah, and a baby gets kicked.

Ghallywood doesn’t stop there, look at these upcoming features.


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HOR Stickers going FAST

Sent in by Bryant RX


I still have some HOR stickers left to give away if you want some. FREE of charge. Just email me your mailing address to DJREEDROTHCHILD@GMAIL.COM

Flamingo Cantina 6th st Austin TX sent in by Kristen

HOR reppin Cincinnati OH! Sent in by Alex

Snowboard Swag sent in by Firtag

Did I mention that I will also throw in a free gift?

Sent in by Nathan Slater

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“Crush the Enemy” in the name of H.O.R.

This amazing piece was done by our very own DENMAN it says “Crush the enemy” at least we hope it does. We just ran it through google translator hoping it matched up. Look for more pieces like this because we fear no one in this city and will crush anyone who gets in our way. Ask Ziplok, Silver G, Alan Urban, and the countless Shitty Myspace rappers who were once in our crosshairs.

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