During God Help Me on the Emilie Autumn Fight Like a Girl Tour, Chicago.
Captain Maggots is the perfect crowd surfer.
During God Help Me on the Emilie Autumn Fight Like a Girl Tour, Chicago.
Captain Maggots is the perfect crowd surfer.
....and kisses her. Not in that particular order. Like you didn't see that coming. The Rat Game at the House of Blues Chicago, Fight Like a Girl 2012. 3+ minutes.
I was going through pics on my hard drive and found this cute photo of a friend of mine. You might like her music. She's got a new album coming out soon. And a tour. See you at the Chicago show.
Thank you Erasure. 30 minutes in and we're lurving it. Is that a rat claw? See here @emilieautumntout.com/v1myyf
— fLee, Queen of Tarts (@QueenfLee) September 18, 2011
Chicago, March 2011, post-show
Chicago has cute alleys, yo.
I am constantly seeking fact upon fact on why I am in love with my city, my home. Not because I feel insecure about where I live, but because I am a believer. As I hear the news that Chicago is one of the top four (4!) cities in the running for the 2016 Olympics, I smile. I think back to the pleasant shock I felt while discovering that in the year 1893, beating out New York City and Washington DC, Chicago trumped the location for the largest, most awe-inspiring World's Fair. I refer to the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition, aka, the Chicago World's Fair of 1893.
This fascinating event spanned 600 acres (2.4km), took in nearly 27 million people (the automobile was not even invented yet!) and featured the birth of the Ferris Wheel, named after George Washington Gale Ferris. Ferris was brought in to design a useful (money-making) machine that was as post-card friendly as the Eiffel Tower. The 1889 Paris World's Fair was the one to beat, and in grand scale, Chicago surpassed all expectations. As the "White City", named after it's temporary bright white stucco buildings and a magically new technology of electric street lights, it inspired many. Poet Katherine Lee Bates was so taken by the illumination of the fair grounds that she penned "Thine alabaster cities gleam..." This passage, and the entire poem was put to music as the United States 2nd (unofficial) anthem, "America the Beautiful."