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Archive for June, 2007


eBay iPhone Auctions: GOOGLE YAHOO MSN

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For a product that’s famously unavailable until June 29th, the iPhone has launched an incredible cottage industry on eBay–as I blog this, there are 365 auctions with the word “iPhone” in their names.

True, the vast majority of auctions that come up when you search for iPhone are for cases, screen protectors, and the like. Yup, the iPhone-protection market is hopping even though nobody has an iPhone to protect yet.

Me, I’d be a little cautious about buying a no-name iPhone case that was presumably designed and manufactured by a company that hasn’t actually touched an iPhone.

Before you buy your iPhone case, you could use…an iPhone. And eBay has them. Maybe. Sort of. Well, not really.

Some auctions claim to be for unlocked 8GB iPhones preloaded with songs and available now. Which, unless the seller is Steve Jobs, sound awfully suspicious. eBay seems to be shutting these down–this one was live when I began writing this post, and is gone now:

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Others are for iPhones to be delivered on or after June 29th. This one has reached $760, but hasn’t met the reserve. Presumably at least some of the sellers offering these will come through, but I’d still worry about the possibility of them failing to acquire the iPhone they’re selling you, even if their intentions are nothing but honorable.

Not ready to pay an obscene premium for your iPhone? For $5–a mere 1 percent of what Apple wants–you can buy a paper iPhone that, at least in this photo, looks pretty cool:

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The tantalizing “Amazing 2 iPhones Mystery Auction” seems to be some sort of pseudoraffle in which everyone gets a prize. Some may get as little as a penny in an envelope, but two fortunate souls will win…iPhones!

Quite a few auctions are entirely virtual–listings like this offer packages of iPhone-related domain names. When I checked, winners such as these were still up for grabs:

PreorderAniPhone.com
I-Phone-Games.com
iPhoneUSA.mobi
EasyiPhoneUnlock.com
CheapiPhone4You.com
…and the particularly alluring BeckhamsiPhone.com.

And hey, if you can afford the $29,9999 starting bid, one seller is offering a bundle of 18 names, including the impressive SwarovskiiPhone.com.

Even if you don’t need an iPhone-related domain name, you may be hankering for an iPhone-related free Webmail account. (Yup, free–the folks offering these are trying to make money on an investment of $0.00). Here are a few up for bid:

thebestiphone@bk.ru
all-for-iphones@gmail.com
apple.iphone.06.29.07@gmail.com
iPhone.pre_order@yahoo.com
used-apple-iphones@hotmail.com
iPhone-Palace@hotmail.com

(Hey, I just registered MyiPhoneIsCute@gmail.com–anyone wanna make me an offer? It’s priceless!)

But my favorite iPhone-related auction? It’s for Apple’s L-Phone–a product that’s apparently so top-secret that Steve Jobs hasn’t told us about it. Dig the description:

“You are looking to buy a Brand New Apple L-phone. It is LIKE the apple iphone, Not original. This phone is very amazing and attractive, It has almost all the features of the Apple iphone, Best of all, it comes with a 2 MegaPixel Camera! The thing that I like about this phone is that it has a very Loud Speaker. But this Phone may not work in the U.S.– Make sure your provider uses 900/1800 Frequency. All phones turn on and work with full english, full touch screen, full functions, AN AWESOME PHONE!”

And the sexy photo:

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As of June 29th, a new sort of eBay iPhone auction will debut–ones that are for real iPhones that are actually available. I wonder how much they’ll go for?

iPHONE HTC Touch aims to be iPhone rival

Come the end of June, come the day of smartphone reckoning, come the dawn of the Apple iPhone media and consumer backlash? Indeed, despite the obvious trend-defined lure of the iPod-compatible iPhone, there is certainly no cast-iron guarantee that critic and consumer alike will embrace Apple’s latest technological offering. So, bearing that in mind, why not consider the sudden left-field appearance of HTC’s tactile alternative, the HTC Touch?

Given this week’s furore surrounding the official release date of the iPhone, High Tech Computer (HTC), the “world’s leading provider of Microsoft Windows Mobile-based smart devices” has cleverly chosen to announce the worldwide launch of its new HTC Touch, a handy portable device the Taiwan-based company describes as a “deceptively small and stylish” mobile phone that introduces a brand new concept “in intuitive touch screen navigation.” Sound familiar at all?”

All talk of corporate thunder stealing set firmly to one side for a moment, if you’re a consumer who demands a powerful and feature-rich experience from your mobile devices, then HTC believes that its new Touch is just what you’re looking for. Designed to integrate new levels of simplicity, the Touch offers “a new and unique way of controlling touch screen-based devices” through recognition and response tied into finger sweeps – with HTC claiming its device is “intelligent enough” to distinguish between both finger and stylus control, and respond accordingly.

”With the HTC Touch, access to your most commonly used content, contacts and features is only a simple finger flick away,” enthuses Peter Chou, chief executive officer of High Tech Computer. “Mobile phone makers have done a great job of cramming ever-more exciting features into ever-smaller phones. But the way in which one accesses these increasingly sophisticated features has not kept pace. That ends today with the HTC Touch.”

Offered up as delivering its users access to a balanced blend of communication, entertainment, and professional functions, HTC’s new sweeping and fully controllable TouchFLO technology provides one-touch entry to general features such as e-mail, text messages, calendar appointments, contacts, and current weather conditions and forecasts (should you require them) for literally hundreds of cities across the globe.

More probing features and details also at ‘the fingertip’ of the user include intuitive control of Web pages and related finger-led browsing and scrolling while online, as well as the HTC Touch utilising the functionality of its Windows Mobile 6 Professional OS to deliver Outlook Mobile, Office Mobile, Windows Live, and also provide access to thousands of compatible third-party applications.

Further technical stats attributed to the new HTC Touch include: a 2.8-inch LCD touch screen with backlight displaying a resolution of 240 x 320 with 65,536 colours; a 2.0 megapixel CMOS camera; 1GB microSD storage included / 64MB RAM, 128MB ROM; a rechargeable Lithium Ion battery that stows up to 200 hours of standby time and 5 hours of talk time (operational); and wireless connectivity provided by GSM/GPRS/EDGE Tri-band: 900, 1800, 1900, Wi-Fi: 802.11 b/g and Bluetooth 2.0.

Sized at 99,9mm x 58mm x 13.9mm (L x W x D) and weighing a mere 112grams, the HTC Touch (which perhaps similarly suffering, much like the iPhone, by opting for GSM in favour of the increased speed of 3G networks) will arrive in soft black or wasabi green when it arrives in late June in Asia and mainland Europe. The Americas version of the HTC Touch is expected to arrive in the latter half of 2007.

Prices are expected to be around €449 (approx. $600 USD), which is ‘just’ in range of the $599 USD 8GB iPhone

Intel Talks 45-nm Asustek Talks $199 Notebook

Intel used the Computex Taipei exhibition on Tuesday to introduce new chipsets and discuss its push to make computing truly mobile.

And to illustrate that push, Sean Maloney, Intel executive vice president, brought in two notables for help: Jonney Shih, chairman and CEO of Asustek, who unveiled what he called the world’s first $199 notebook PC, and Marty Cooper, the former director of research and development for Motorola and the man credited with the invention of the cellular phone in 1973.

Intel’s Sean Maloney holds a wafer with 45nm processors in one hand and the world’s first cell phone in another to show how far the industry must go before computing can become totally mobile.
Maloney used his keynote to unveil the Intel 3 Series chipsets, formerly code-named “Bearlake.” The chipsets, aimed an consumer electronics-like video and sound quality along with new data security and manageability features, are the foundation for Intel’s next-generation “Salt Creek” Intel Viiv processor and “Weybridge” Intel vPro processor technologies, Maloney said.

The chipsets support dual-core and quad-core Intel processors, in addition to DDR2 up to 800MHz, or DDR3 memory with data transfer speeds up to 1,333MHz, as well as PCI Express 2.0 for increased graphics performance.

Included in the family are versions with integrated graphics called the Intel G33 and G35 Express chipsets, which support the High Definition Media Interface (HDMI), as well as HD DVD and Blu-ray disc playback. The G35 also supports Microsoft’s MS DX10 for 3D graphics applications. The pair also support the Windows Vista Home Premium and Windows Aero interfaces, and can connect up to six external hard drives to a PC. There are also P33 and P35 versions of the chipsets for high-performance desktop PCs.

During his keynote, Maloney held up a motherboard based on the G33 chipset. “This is a thing of beauty,” he said. “The only thing more beautiful would be to see 100 more.”

With that cue, stagehands opened two sliding doors on the front of the platform from where Maloney delivered his keynote, revealing about 100 similar motherboards from numerous manufactures, mainly Taiwan-based companies.

“Hopefully it will stimulate new demand in the future,” said James Huang, product marketing specialist at Amax Information Systems, a Fremont, Calif.-based system builder. “New products always help push the market.”

However, Huang said it is both good and bad to see the number of G33-based motherboards displayed all together.

“It’s good to have so many choices,” he said. “But it only drives down the cost and confuses the customer about which one to buy.”

Maloney also said Intel is ready to ramp up with 45-nm technology for producing its next-generation dual-core and quad-core processors. He said that the second half of 2007 will see new 45-nm chip production technology in place in Oregon and Arizona, followed by similar technology ready in Israel in the first half of 2008 and in New Mexico in the second half of 2008.

Maloney then looked at the huge number of computing devices that users are using that he said are not truly mobile, and the huge number of mobile phones with limited compute power. He said Intel’s plan is to get mobile devices that are as common as cell phones.

“People have had impossible dreams before,” he said.

Then, to illustrate one of those impossible dreams becoming reality, Maloney brought Cooper on stage.

Cooper reminisced that the concept of cellular communication was invented by AT&T, which had earlier announced it had the concept of cellular communication via a “car telephone.”

“Can you imagine?” Cooper said. “AT&T locked us to our desks for 100 years. Now they want to lock us into our cars. We decided to be truly mobile.”

Asustek CEO Jonney Shih sits alongside a working model of the EasyPC notebook, which he said will launch in August at starting price of $199.
Cooper said that even though it has been nearly 35 years since the invention of the cellular phone, he felt as if his job was unfinished.

“Users want freedom to communicate wherever they are…But when they want to communicate with their computers, they’re locked to their desktops. They get a taste of freedom, but they need to use WiFi, and they need to find a hotspot. So we are developing WiMax. Broadband, mobile, very low cost. That is what’s going to drive this.”

Another big future drive is the ability to increase processor performance while cutting down size and power use — and pricing, Maloney said. That, he said, is why Intel on Tuesday introduced its new Core 2 Duo Extreme Edition, the first mobile processor to be built using 45-nm technology.

The new processor, expected to be released in the third quarter of 2007, is targeted at high-performance mobile dual-core applications with energy-saving features, making them suitable for notebook PCs.

To illustrate the new processors, Maloney brought Asustek’s Shih on stage, where Shih unveiled the EasyPC, a small ultramobile form factor notebook PC that weighs less than 2 pounds. The EasyPC includes a solid-state hard drive instead of a hard drive, and comes with 512 Kbytes of memory and a 2-Gbyte cache. During his demonstration, Shih showed how it could be booted up in about 15 seconds.

The EasyPC is expected to start shipping in August, and will be targeted to such demographic groups as students and the elderly in developing and developed markets, Shih said.

“We want to expand the mobile PC market to the next 1 billion people,” he said

Critical Reception: Tomb Raider: Anniversary

This week’s edition of the regular Critical Reception column examines online reaction to Tomb Raider: Anniversary, a remake of the original 1996 Tomb Raider that critics laud as “one of the stand-out games of the year so far.”

Released in 1996, Tomb Raider for the Sony PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and PC platforms won acclaim from critics for its unique exploration-based gameplay, and spawned numerous sequels following its retail success. Many reviewers feel that these sequels suffered a gradual decline in quality with each new entry, however, and the series found itself in a difficult spot with the 2003 release of the widely panned Tomb Raider: Angel of Darkness for the PlayStation 2.

Last year’s Tomb Raider: Legend marked a new beginning for the series, earning high marks from a majority of critics, despite many noting previous disillusionment with the Tomb Raider franchise. Tomb Raider: Legend’s success appears to continue with the Tomb Raider remake Tomb Raider: Anniversary, which currently averages a review score of 82 out of 100 at Metacritic.com.

Eurogamer’s Kristan Reed is almost wholly pleased with Tomb Raider: Anniversary in his review, scored at 9 out of 10. “By re-energising and revitalising what people loved about Tomb Raider in the first place, Anniversary is, in all respects, the best Lara Croft adventure to date,” he asserts. “It feels like its own game again despite ‘only’ being a remake of the celebrated 1996 original. But it’s also a ‘celebratory remake’, and one that manages to improve on almost every aspect of the original by rebuilding the game from the ground up without taking anything away from what made it so special in the beginning.”

Reed claims that much of the game has been substantially reimagined. “Large chunks of entire levels are exactly how you remember them - or at least how you think you remember them,” he says. “In truth, though, it’s really only the shell that’s the same.

Reed continues: “While most of the basic geometry is admittedly very similar, the way Crystal Dynamics has shaped the game design to take advantage of the enhanced control and move set used in Legend turns it into a very different, and far more enjoyable game.”

Reed feels that Anniversary’s new approach to combat is particularly effective, thanks to the new “rage attack” present in enemies. “It’s not the usual lazy bullet time crap,” he says, “but a genuinely tense, exciting way of capping a determined enemy just as they’re about to pounce.”

“But less thrilling is the reliance on Simon-says Quick Time Events, in a tiresome concession to modern day action adventures,” Reed criticizes. “Just like all the other games around currently using this technique, it does give a more interactive feel to what might otherwise be plain cut scenes, but they’re so easy to pull off that you feel like they might as well not bothered.”

Despite small complaints like these, however, Reed describes Anniversary as a satisfyingly thorough remake. “Far from being a tired, cynical cash-in exercise of a brand past its prime, Tomb Raider Anniversary goes back to its roots and shows how remakes should be done,” he concludes. “As such, it has ended up being one of the stand-out games of the year so far, and also one of Eidos’ best ever. It’s a must buy for any Lara fan, simple as that.”

“World of Forms” at GamePro is also impressed, and awards Tomb Raider: Anniversary a rating of 4.25 out of 5 in Fun Factor. “Most of the memorable moments [of the original Tomb Raider] are left untouched, while plenty of new surprises await Raider vets,” says GamePro’s writer. “If you remember certain puzzles or encounters, be prepared to have your expectations thrown off in clever, amusing, and spectacular ways.”

“Changes have also been made to the game’s controls,” the review continues, “and here we faced an odd dilemma. The movement controls are now dependent on the positioning of the camera, which is far more intuitive.”

This does not always work out for the best, however. One resulting situation is described in detail: “Tying the movement to the camera is fine but it does lead to major problems: for instance, in one area you must swing by grappling hook, then jump away from a wall to catch a ledge. Yet the camera angle changes while you swing, which means that the controls suddenly change as well. Let’s just say we spent literally two hours trying to get past this particular puzzle; Anniversary is obviously not for the impatient.”

“There are other niggles, such as the A.I., which hasn’t smartened up any in the intervening years, but if you are willing to deal with some frustrations, you will be rewarded with a great game experience and gorgeous, is-this-really-PS2 visuals,” writes GamePro’s “World of Forms.” “You’ll experience the wonder and awe of feeling like you are discovering lost tombs, which is what made the original so compelling in the first place.”

IGN’s Greg Miller feels that these various issues end up detracting from the final product in a big way, though much of Anniversary is fun enough to warrant a score of 7.8 out of 10. “I distinctly remember trudging through the original Tomb Raider on my PC at a snail’s pace and cursing the tank controls for our voluptuous heroine as she fell to her death for the umpteenth time,” Miller reminisces. “Now, Lara moves swiftly and nimbly across ancient temples, which are updated versions of the original levels, and sprawls out to grasp at whatever ledge she can while airborne.”

Miller claims that a friendlier control scheme is one of Anniversary’s greatest additions. “Even when you fail — and you will — most of the time you feel like Lara’s trying just as hard as you are,” he writes. “You’re a team this time as opposed to when you were just guiding Lara’s brain-dead body in ‘96. She’ll grab edges with her fingertips, and you’ll need to tap a button to help her regain her composure, and improvements like that — taken from Legend — make moving through Anniversary much easier than the original.”

As mentioned in GamePro’s review, however, numerous control issues sometimes sap away a good amount of potential fun. “These flubs only get worse when the camera gets involved,” Miller says. “Plenty of times you’ll be faced with a seemingly easy leap from a ledge to a landing, but the camera — which is almost always in too tight — will restrict you from being able to take in the whole scene. Most of the time it’s just a nuisance, but sometimes it’s going to be the motivator behind Lara’s grisly demise.”

“In the end, this is Tomb Raider for better or worse,” Miller notes in conclusion. “The controls are light-years better than the original but still aren’t solid like Prince of Persia’s; the graphics are beyond anything the original could muster but still not up to today’s standards; and the puzzles are just as tough as the original, but the enemies are just as lame.”

“Still,” he admits, “it’s hard to find a videogame feeling as good as solving a Tomb Raider puzzle that’s stumped you for the past half-hour.”

Critics claim that Tomb Raider: Anniversary cleans up a lot of the problems present in the original Tomb Raider while introducing an entirely new set of gameplay issues. Judging by the high marks it’s earned thus far, however, none of these quirks appear to be damaging enough to make a difference, and Tomb Raider: Anniversary, from most accounts, remains a worthy remake that will appeal to both series fans and newcomers alike

Yogurt CAN Be Obscene Nude MODEL

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The South Korean Supreme Court today upheld the appellate court’s conviction of a dairy executive and three nude models for a marketing stunt in January 2003. The naked ladies were covered in flour and men in the crowd then sprayed them with yogurt, removing the flour and exposing their “naughty bits.”

The executive was charge US$5,000, the models were charged between US$500 and US$2000.

Man, what prudes.

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18,000 to 20,000 people lined up naked in Mexico City

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An estimated 18,000 to 20,000 people lined up naked in Mexico City’s Zocalo Square in response to a call from U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick. Photo by Claudio Cruz Associated Press

In a time such as this and in a world such as ours, amid all the insanity, the madness, the violence and greed, the struggles and wars for domination and control of wealth and resources there appeared yesterday a brief shining moment of sanity and humor, of trust and beauty and just possibly an enormous expression of plain, simple, human love and freedom.

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La Ciudad de Mexico may have proven herself to be the most civilized place on this free falling old blob as 18000 of her people exposed themselves to the world as the most beautiful, urbane, orderly, and for awhile at least, the most scantily clad group of folks ever assembled anywhere.

I have absolutely no idea what it means (if anything) when 18,000 people disrobe in public, thereby exposing 36,000 buns (the math stops here) to the rest of the solar system and the entire universe at large but I think that it may just be a sign that humankind is reaching adulthood at long last and that along the way we have somehow managed to hold on to a bit of our collective innocence and exuberant youthful joy.

If it is true, as some have said, that the glut of UFO sightings during the last half of the twentieth century began after World War 2 and the advent of A Bomb testing which was witnessed by alien civilizations, who then began to send squadrons of flying saucers to investigate, I think that we should prepare ourselves. If those same civilizations have anything akin to the Hubble telescope, and I’m sure that they must, they have to be thoroughly intrigued by yesterday’s “Greatest Peepshow On Earth” which took place in Mexico City’s Zocalo Square in yet another mass nude-in (by far the largest) organized by American photographer Spencer Tunick. Expect more UFO sightings soon, they’re coming with long lenses looking for more detail, I’m sure of it.

Everyone has covered this story by now (who could dare resist) and I’ve read several versions, but I most enjoyed Getting Bare In the Square For Art’s Sake by Manuel Roig-Franzia who treated it with mild amusement and a sense of fun.

I expect that the bluenoses of every respective religious stripe will be all over this story as well, wringing their hands and beating their breasts, decrying our state of moral decay and the abject decadence of modern mankind. This somehow lovely and I think, important event will be offered as a sure sign that we are rapidly hurling ourselves into the dark pit of someone or another’s version of Hell.

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I don’t know, I’m not a religious person. What I believe, if anything is hard to define. Of this though, I am certain, God, whom I have read has always possessed the most advanced version of the Hubble telescope, is at this moment sending an enormous cosmic belly laugh across the infinite reaches of the universe.

It may cause some radio interference and a few minor navigation problems but I strongly suggest that we all share in God’s enjoyment of us, just this once.

Mexcanos, muchas gracias mi amigos.

Thousands gather for nude in Amsterdam

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Dozens of women posed nude on their bicycles overlooking one of Amsterdam’s most historic canals for the latest work by U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick.

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The women were among 2,000 people who shed their clothes for a series of four group photos taken in the city during the early morning hours on Sunday.

Tunick’s photographs rely on thousands of volunteers to help him stage massive shoots in public places around the world, including London, Vienna, Buenos Aires and Buffalo.

Photographer Spencer Tunick speaks during a news conference in Mexico City, March 21, 2007. Tunick’s most recent shoot included 2,000 people and was shot in various locations around Amsterdam.Photographer Spencer Tunick speaks during a news conference in Mexico City, March 21, 2007. Tunick’s most recent shoot included 2,000 people and was shot in various locations around Amsterdam.
(AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)

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The women on bikes were selected from a larger group that participated in various shoots on Sunday.

The first shoot was the largest composition and took place in a parking garage just outside Amsterdam.

Participants lined the railings of the garage’s twin circular towers, creating a pattern of multicolour stripes against the white building.
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Other shoots included a group of men posing together near the parking garage and a mixed group of men and women on another bridge.

Photos from Sunday’s session were to be exhibited at an Amsterdam club later in the day.

Tunick has become famous for his nude shoots and set a record for naked photography last year when he took a shot of 18,000 people in Mexico City.

The Brooklyn native previously set a record in 2003, when approximately 7,000 volunteers were photographed nude in Barcelona.

Tunick began photographing nude figures in public in the early 1990s and has since staged more than 65 public compositions.

Since 1992, he has been arrested five times in New York for his photo shoots.

Tunick is the subject of three documentaries entitled Naked State, Naked World and Positively Naked.

Naked Boys Singing’ in Zaandam, the Netherlands

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“Your mission, Kathy, should you choose to accept it, is an unusual one. And fraught with hidden dangers.” I heard my Dutch Horizons boss, Bertine Krol, pronounce these words with mounting unease. My mouth went dry. I gulped.

“There are naked boys out there, Kathy. And they’re singing. The world needs to know. And you are the one who must tell them.” I perked up immediately.

This, I thought, THIS is a real job.

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naked boys poster I arranged to interview three of the Naked Boys before they went on stage for their sellout show in Zaandam (about 9 km outside Amsterdam). I was slightly concerned that they might already be naked when I arrived, and if so, would I be able to keep my eyes where they should be?

But I needn’t have worried. Iwan Dam, Michael Kroegman and Jürgen Theuns turned out to be friendly, funny and fully dressed.

Naked Boys Singing began life in Greenwich Village, New York in 1999, and was an instant hit, spawning productions all over the USA and in 11 countries worldwide, of which the Netherlands is the most recent.

It’s an old-style musical revue - the 16 songs just happen to be about the male body and performed in the nude. Each song was translated into Dutch by a different translator; they and the cast worked hard to get the clever lyrics and double entendres of the original just right.

The end product is what you might call ’saucy’: there are songs about circumcision, the unpredictable nature of the male member, and the joys of - how shall I put this? - solitary love-making. But there are also songs about love and loss and the sheer pleasure of being naked and unashamed.
Screams
Audiences during the month-long tour of the Netherlands and Belgium were generally around 80 percent female, and could at times get a little overexcited.

“The audience screams because they really don’t expect to see eight naked men,” explains Iwan. “They expect to see it during the last song or something, but not right away. So it really is a big shock.”

Jürgen points out that the show’s intention is to be entertaining rather than shocking, but that the audience’s reaction depends on where they are:

“In the big cities like Amsterdam and Rotterdam you get more gay men in the audience, and they are quieter, more interested in the theatrical element of the whole thing.”

The Dutch naked boys “It’s always the women who are hysterical”, laughs Michael.

Running, jumping and dancing
So how do the boys feel about being completely naked for an entire 90-minute show, complete with running, jumping and dancing (because let’s face it, things wobble when you dance)?

“It took a bit of getting used to,” says Iwan. “We were a bit fragile around each other at the start, but now we don’t even notice we’re naked.”

“My girlfriend found it a bit strange at first”, says Michael,” but she soon forgot about it and just enjoyed the show.”

Jürgen remembers the very first performance:

“We didn’t know what to expect, but the audience went wild. They respected the fact that we were the ones who were naked. They were saying ´Yeah, that’s brave.’”

No Chippendales
Soon it was time for me to go and let the boys prepare (whatever that entailed). I emerged into a noisy foyer thronging with hundreds of women and a handful of men. The atmosphere was distinctly giddy.

(Left to right) Iwan Dam, Michael Kroegman and Jürgen Theuns, friendly, funny and fully dressed.
Within the first minute of the curtain rising, our boys had revealed themselves to us in all their full frontal, naked glory. It was immediately apparent these were no Chippendales - there wasn’t an over-pumped, oiled muscle in sight - but that didn’t seem to matter. Hysteria ensued.

Poignant moments
Strangely, after a couple of numbers, I practically forgot that these wonderful singers hadn’t actually got any clothes on.

The songs and slapstick routines had the audience in stitches, but there were poignant moments too: one man sang about the loss of his lover to AIDS, while another sang a sweet love song to a mystery person glimpsed at a window. You could have heard a pin drop - that is, until a woman at the back decided to loudly declare her admiration for the singer, which slightly ruined the moment.

Naked Boys Singing may not be everybody’s cup of tea. But whether or not you are interested in their physical ‘assets’, there’s no doubting the boys’ musical talents. So if you find the show playing at a theatre near you - in the US, Japan, Spain, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, South Africa or Norway - I recommend a visit. And bring your Mum along too.

2,000 men and women NUDE Amsterdam

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They were among 2,000 men and women who participated in a series of four nude group photos in Amsterdam in the early hours of the morning as part of the latest project of U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick.
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Dozens of women posed naked on their bicycles on a bridge over one of Amsterdam’s historic canals Sunday - a unique sight even in a city famed for its relaxed attitude toward nudity and sex.

They were among 2,000 men and women who participated in a series of four nude group photos in the city in the early hours of the morning as part of the latest project of U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick.

The first and largest composition was in a decidedly prosaic location: a parking garage on the outer ring of the city. But what the location lacked in romance, it made up for in style.

Participants lined the railings of the garage’s twin circular towers, creating a pattern of multicolor stripes against the white building and an overcast sky. The women on bikes were selected from the larger group and posed with their chins pointed triumphantly upward toward the sky.

Other compositions included a group of men posing together near the parking garage and a mixed group of men and women on another bridge.

Spencer Tunick Amsterdam nude photos

They were among 2,000 men and women who participated in a series of four nude group photos in Amsterdam in the early hours of the morning as part of the latest project of U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick.
nude3.jpg

Dozens of women posed naked on their bicycles on a bridge over one of Amsterdam’s historic canals Sunday - a unique sight even in a city famed for its relaxed attitude toward nudity and sex.

They were among 2,000 men and women who participated in a series of four nude group photos in the city in the early hours of the morning as part of the latest project of U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick.

The first and largest composition was in a decidedly prosaic location: a parking garage on the outer ring of the city. But what the location lacked in romance, it made up for in style.

Participants lined the railings of the garage’s twin circular towers, creating a pattern of multicolor stripes against the white building and an overcast sky. The women on bikes were selected from the larger group and posed with their chins pointed triumphantly upward toward the sky.

Other compositions included a group of men posing together near the parking garage and a mixed group of men and women on another bridge.

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Topless Visit Gurlzon

Nursing bras can be sexy

Yogurt CAN Be Obscene Nude MODEL

18,000 to 20,000 people lined up naked in Mexico City

Thousands gather for nude in Amsterdam

Naked Boys Singing’ in Zaandam, the Netherlands

2,000 men and women NUDE Amsterdam

Spencer Tunick Amsterdam nude photos

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TRUE 2,000 Gather For Amsterdam Nude Photo

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