Table Of ContentContents:Turning on the Groove Tube"Clarabell was the First Yippie": The Television Generation from Howdy Doody to McLuhanPlastic Hippies: The Counterculture on TV"Every Revolutionary Needs a Color TV": The Yippies, Media Manipulation and talk ShowsSmothering Dissent: The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour and the Crisis of Authority in Entertainment TelevisionNegotiating the Mod: How The Mod Squad Played the Ideological Balancing Act in Prime-TimeMake it Relevant: How Youth Rebellion Captured Prime-Time in 1970/71LegaciesAppendix: A Groove Tube selective chronology of the years 1966 to 1971Bibliography
SynopsisAlberto Pinto is among the most celebrated interior designers at work today. Here he turns his eye to the wonders of the East and a series of interiors inspired by the colors and textures of Morocco, Byzantium, India, and beyond.Included in this book are interiors in Europe, North America, and North Africa belonging to the jet set and modern elite. Each interior celebrates opulence, whether with fine damasks and silks, intricate tilework, or glittering objets d'art. Included are other visual stage sets for living that are as breathtaking as they are original-vast terraces over sumptuous gardens, shimmering swimming pools open to the sea and sky, filtered light bouncing off floor-to-ceiling mirrors reflecting an infinity of precious woods in an exquisite parquet floor. Pinto designs spaces to delight the senses, and the publication of Orientalism will usher in a new era of sensuality in interior design.