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Madonna

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(thing) by Aeroplane (2.6 wk) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Thu Oct 18 2001 at 3:23:48

A rather difficult skateboarding trick. It is usually performed on vert, without much rotation. The madonna was invented by some guy named Tony Hawk, when he was in the business of inventing some 90 or so tricks. He wanted to give it a name that was new and trendy, so he looked at what was up and coming. Guess who was getting her start at the time? (Hint, look at the writeup above this one, genius)

What a madonna consists of is, after ollieing, you reach down with your trailing hand, and grab the tail of the board, like a tailgrab. Now, take your trailing leg off of the board, and lift the board up with your hand, and your leading leg at the same time. The board should now be held by your hand and your leading leg, and would be rotated about 90 degrees to how it was previously. Thrust your free leg as far away from your shoulders (down) as possible, and you just tweaked it.

If you want to see a demonstration, you can either go to a vert ramp and ask somebody to do one, or else just play some Tony Hawk Pro Skater.


(person) by rahmat (4.6 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Sat Aug 03 2002 at 23:09:53

As Webster says, Madonna is a picture of the Virgin Mary, when she is not depicted as participating in the events of the Bible. Thus, a nativity scene is not a madonna picture, although they are often mistakenly referred as such.

First madonna portraits were painted on the walls of the Roman catacombs during the first century AD. These portrayed a praying Virgin, with her hands raised and palms facing upwards. It was not until 100 years later that pictures of the Virgin with the babe Jesus on her arms started to emerge.

In the year 431 AD St. Mary was finally declared the real mother of Jesus - before that, it was debated whether Jesus had any human ancestry at all, a view which in effect reduced Mary to the status of a mere container for the godly embryo. After the decision, pictures of the Virgin became increasingly popular, even on secular buildings.

During the following centuries, Byzantine artists developed several types of Madonna pictures, which spread into the west through the Russian icon art. Each Byzantine madonna had her own characteristic: there was the gently kissing madonna, madonna suckling Jesus, the pathfinder madonna and several others. Often, Mary was portrayed as sitting on a throne, clothed in blue robes, with the child on her knee. During the Middle Ages, this seated madonna became the model of feminine beauty, an epitome of heavenly virtues.

After the strict formality of the Middle Ages, gothic art brought forth a change in the way the Virgin was depicted. Instead of majestic, strictly formal figures, painters and sculptors started to prefer images of soft gentleness. Madonna started to smile, even stand up. She became much more accessible to mere humans - instead of a queen of heavens, she was now a caring, even a grieving mother.

During the baroque period, madonna was again shrouded in mysticism. Painters often placed her among angels or groups of grim-looking saints. A new type of apocalyptic madonna was created: Saint Mary standing on top of the moon, clothed by the sun. As a matter of fact, this was the last new type of madonna to be created - even today, pictures of the Virgin follow the thousand-year-old Byzantine patterns.


(person) by Excalibur (6.1 min) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Mon Sep 16 2002 at 2:24:45

Madonna is the quintessential celebrity, famous for her fame, and her prominence in the media, so that her actual exploits in the worlds of music and cinema are of secondary importance. Truly she was a pioneer — not in her musical style, or her fashions, but in her ability to attract the attention of a culture. She was the first star to create a celebrity based on image rather than accomplishment.

She ushered in a new era of celebrity, one in which image becomes a commodity, something to be carefully developed and tweaked, and every superstar since has followed her example, for better or for worse. But Madonna did it first and Madonna did it best, attracting attention not only in the realm of celebrity gossip and VH1 specials but from academics, most notably feminists and gender theorists. Indeed, her fame has always been based on shocking portrayals of sexuality and gender.

The Material Girl's success with her image-making is evident in how many people believe it, taking her various roles — sex kitten, dominatrix, indeed almost any variety of whore — as statements of her own life and her true personality. But Madonna's portrayals have always been tongue-in-cheek; she plays these characters to make a point, and to attract media attention, not to depict her own life. Notably, her music videos combine these elements of transgression and humor, but the humor manages to elude many viewers.

She has always been the subject of a great deal of discussion among feminists, who debate her nature — is she a bimbo marketing her sexuality and cheapening women in the process, or is she a woman, outspoken and unafraid of her own sexuality? The question speaks to a bifurcation in the feminist movement, with prudes at one extreme and sex radicals at the other, but that's another node.

What isn't debatable is that from the outset of her career, Madonna has been outspoken to say the least with her sexuality. Her first tour saw her performing while writhing on a bed. Later she began to appropriate religious images as well, most famously in her "Like a Prayer" video, which won the condemnation of the Catholic church. The video seems to portray our heroine kissing a black Jesus, which is obviously controversial on many levels. The video features heavy racial commentary in the form of a black man arrested for the actions of a white gang and the use of burning crosses. While Ms. Ciccone had attracted her share of attention in the past, this video broke new ground in attracting anger from many different groups.

Her transgression reached its peak with her next album, Erotica, timed to coincide with the release of her book, Sex. The book and the album's title video both featured gay sex, lesbianism, S&M, bondage, and group sex — indeed, the title song "Erotica" is sung from the point of view of a dominatrix. The video and book each explore various sexual images, not telling a story but depicting a spectrum of sexualities.

However, shock and provocation are not her sole ambition — she has always transgressed with purpose. As someone young enough to have grown up in the midst of the feminist movement, Madonna has always promoted female sexual liberation — the idea that women have the right to express themselves as sexual beings. Moreover, Madonna promotes the practice of alternate sexualities — her flirtations with lesbianism, her blatant appropration of gay male culture (and vice versa), and her frequent use of black leather and whips all speak to an ideal of sexual freedom.

A fascinating comment on her own transgressivism was her music video "Human Nature", which, naturally, was banned on the major video networks. The video shows Maddy in black cornrows, wearing leather. She's tied to a chair for much of the video, at the mercy of several captors (both male and female). She sings, "Oops, I didn't know I couldn't talk about sex," and humorously appropriates BDSM paraphernalia (including a comical pantomime of the use of a whip on a poodle). The video makes fun of the hypocrisy (and futility) of trying to end discussion of sex (as well as the effort to keep her quiet). It is clearly a commentary to the people who are angered by her work, claiming that what she does in her videos is 'human nature'.

During her entire career, some critics have declared her exploits to be simple attention-getters, and it can't be denied that Madonna has always sought the public's notice: in one oft-repeated quote from the very beginnings of her fame, she declares her intention to "rule the world". But the spotlight isn't her only motivator — she has used her fame to focus on social issues throughout her career. One example is her aforementioned "Like a Prayer" video, with its exploration of racism. Another example is her ballad, "Live to Tell", which was inspired by a friend who was dying of AIDS. This was on her album True Blue from 1986, before AIDS activism was fashionable.

Her statements back this interpretation of her work. She has long been outspoken about acceptance of gays and her hatred of racism. At times her liberality reaches a preachy extent, as in the music video for her cover of "American Pie", which depicts a huge spectrum of Americans of all races and ages, in every possible combination. The message is unmistakable.

Given her outspokenness and her provocative image, critics have paid a lot of attention to the seeming mellowness she's portrayed during the last few years: the new age spirituality of "Ray of Light" and the electronic dance-pop of "Music". Perhaps her video, "What It Feels Like For A Girl", which features a woman going on a killing spree, is a message to the public, warning us to keep watching her. But anyone can see that Mrs. Ritchie herself hasn't changed much — perhaps she is a little less driven to shock audiences, but she never claimed to be a sex kitten or a deviant in reality; her fascination with sex and her portrayal of it aren't reflections of her own life. Madge's newfound domesticity isn't incompatible with her feminism, nor has she ever been the sex goddess she portrays.

Madonna's impact on popular culture is undeniable, and her ability to manipulate the media is unsurpassed. The complexity of her image and herself, however, is something that popular culture has never quite understood, but as with any number of forces, she has turned that to her advantage, easily embracing fame for her own ends. Her role in defining modern celebrity, and her influence on modern feminism, are beyond easy comprehension.

They say you should node what you know . . .

My thanks go out to jpfed, ocelotbob, and Glowing Fish for their consultation. Kisses, everyone.


(definition) by Webster 1913 (print) Wed Dec 22 1999 at 1:00:05

Ma*don"na (?), n. [It. madonna my lady. See Dame, Donna, and cf. Madame, Monkey.]

1.

My lady; -- a term of address in Italian formerly used as the equivalent of Madame, but for which Signora is now substituted. Sometimes introduced into English.

Shak.

2. [pl. Madonnas (n&adot;z).]

A picture of the Virgin Mary (usually with the babe).

The Italian painters are noted for drawing the Madonnas by their own wives or mistresses. Rymer.

 

© Webster 1913.


printable version
chaos

Ray of Light Like a Virgin Music erotica
Jennifer Aniston The Three Men I Admired Most: Manhattan, 9/11/01 American Pie Michael Jackson
sex Like A Prayer Guy Ritchie Something to Remember
clitoris Peter Gabriel Shania Twain Sean Penn
Tony Hawk Aphex Twin The Immaculate Collection Evita
Atari Teenage Riot The Brunching Shuttlecocks Monty Python Unsafe At Any Speed
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