Union Pacific's Great Excursion Adventure

” ‘We’ve got Mars on the horizon,’ says the National Midnight Star… (It’s true!) What you believe is what you are.”

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Thursday
I had lunch with today. I hadn’t seen her in about two months, so there was a decent amount of catching up to do. And we did.

After lunch, I made a fly-by to see for a little general BS-ing and insanity.

Tonight, , and I watched CSI “together.” Via AIM. It was nice to see the more junior members of the team… um, “teams”… not only get more face time, but also show them “thinking outside the box” in a manner that had previously been Grissom’s domain. Also, Wil Wheaton was one of tonight’s guest stars; he played a homeless person who was a murder suspect. He played the whole “wild-eyed, not-all-there” bit pretty well.

News
Morning Edition: Senate Tackles ID Theft
Morning Edition: Benefits of Arts Funding Questioned
Morning Edition: Dining in the Dark
Talk of the Nation: AIDS and Personal Responsibility
All Things Considered: American Stages – Women at the Creative Helm
All Things Considered: A Conversation with Barack Obama
All Things Considered: Yundi Li’s Passion for Chopin

BBC News: Madrid remembers train bombings
BBC News: Edmonton streets turn red as Mounties mourn fallen constables

Stray Toasters

  • The Incredibles comes out on DVD Tuesday. And it has special features… including the Boundin’ short that showed before the movie! Jackalope! I want it.
  • A few days ago, Jess was talking with her mother, who asked if she had heard anything about the spaceship that crashed in Utah. *boggle* Um.. no. Sandi then went on to say that there was a story in the Weekly World News about it. Naturally, this elicited hails of derisive laughter (“Australia, Australia, Australia, we love you! AMEN!”) from both of us.

    Fast forward twenty-four hours. We are shopping for groceries. All thoughts of Utah’s imitation of Roswell, New Mexico had vanished from our heads.

    Until we got to the checkout line. There it was. Big as day and twice as bright.


    Of course, I had to have a copy of it. I mean… maybe Barry Sonnenfeld was on to something in Men in Black:

    KAY and JAY are at a downtown newsstand. Kay is furiously searching through the tabs; Jay is standing behind him, a little embarrassed.

    JAY: These are the hot sheets?

    Kay pulls a copy of the Weekly World News from the stand and gives the guy a buck.

    KAY: Best damn investigative reporting on the planet. But hey, go ahead, read the New York Times if you want. They get lucky sometimes.

    JAY: You’re actually looking for tips in a supermarket tabloid?

    KAY: Not looking for. Found.

    He SMACKS the paper down on the hood in front of Jay, the pages turned open to a headline in typeface so large one would think it reserved for the Second Coming:

    Farm wife says “ALIEN STOLE MY HUSBAND’S SKIN!”

    It was like a trainwreck. A beautiful, black-and-white trainwreck. Not only was there a story about the so-called “Space Ark,” but… there were also pictures of some of the creatures that were being transported. (Astute observers might actually recognize some of the “alien” critters.) From there, I couldn’t stop reading. And gawking. Two other items that caught my eye were: The South Won the Civil War – NOT the North! (You have to read this one!) and Condoleezza Rice Makeover Miracle!

    Damn and a half! I might have to check this paper out from time to time now.

  • “Hey Alice, you remember that game we used to play in the supermarket?”

  • Joanne Ellen Mutch’s great commentary: Place Your Ad Here!
  • Excerpts from Orson Scott Card’s post about race and Hollywood.
  • They are showing an encore presentation of The Late Show with David Letterman; Will Smith is one of the guests. He and Dave interact well.
  • I just found out that Kris (middle member of the sibko) is going to Miami for Spring Break. Tomorrow. Color me a wee bit jealous.
  • : Take a look at this – Bedtime for Gonzo
  • After the Weekly World News-related ‘Toaster above, there was no way that I could pass this up:
  • New Line Cinema is reviving the Phantasm franchise. Hm…
  • X-Men Legends. ‘Nuff said.

Namaste.

“A is for adult, which is what I’ll never be…”

everyday glory No Comments »

Wednesday
Happy Hump Day.

I spent a couple of hours perusing Monster.com. Again.
Madness.
I’ll probably spend a commensurate amount of time on Careerbuilder tomorrow.
Woo.

I read about 80 – 90 pages of my A+ Certification book, too.
Yay for productivity.

This evening, I watched the last half of Smallville, The West Wing and Law & Order. I know that I’ve made this analogy before, but Law & Order is becoming the Star Trek of the 00’s, with the way that it’s branched out into different series.

Star Trek (The Original Series) Law & Order (The Original Series)
Star Trek: The Next Generation Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
Star Trek: Deep Space 9 Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Star Trek: Voyager Law & Order: Trial By Jury


And we’ll just ignore the whole ST: Enterprise thing. *averts eyes*

News
Morning Edition: Who’s Luckier?
Talk of the Nation: In Egypt, Comics Laud Arabic Heroes
Day to Day: The Status of the U.S. White Supremacist Movement
     
All Things Considered: SAT’s New Writing Component Worries Disadvantaged Students
All Things Considered: Movie Rental Pioneer George Atkinson Dies
All Things Considered: A Return to Black Cuisine, via the Rabbi’s Wife

Stray Toasters

  • While chatting with Maddox earlier this evening, I ventured over to his site. He has a new post: “Orbitz Blows”. In it, he recounts a problem that he had while dealing with the online travel agency and their lack of willingness to accommodate him for an “impossible” itinerary. And, a LOT of his readers have had a few choice things to say about it, too.
  • was on a roll this afternoon; she sent me a slew of video amusement. And now, I share it with you:
  • : When were you going to tell me about ?
  • Form feet and legs!
    Form arms and body!
    And, I’ll form… the head!

    You know, after the first time or two that he said that, I was surprised that the rest of the Voltron Force to tell him to “Shut up and transform your damn lion! We know the drill!”

  • “Her bedroom is like a Google image search with safe-mode turned off.”

  • From the “Shades of Avril Lavigne” file: The Screen Savers‘ Sarah Lane was talking with a caller from Shreveport, LA. She asked him how things were in “Shrev-eh-port.” And I don’t think that she was being sarcastic when she mispronounced it. And, besides that, I always thought that the pronunciation of “Shreveport” was fairly well-known. Maybe it’s just the East Coaster in me. *shrug*
  • Because I know that can relate to this:

  • A commercial for Robots just came on. “The best action ever put on film” was one of the critic’s comments that they used in the commercial. That reminded me of something that I vaguely recall from the release of Batman Fever… um… I meant “Batman Forever. In a “Making of…”-style preview, they were showing a scene, near the beginning of the movie, where Batman dives head-first from the top of a building, flips in mid-air and then lands, feet-first, on the roof near Commissioner Gordon and Dr. Chase Meridian.

    That scene – from dive until landing – was entirely digital.

    In the commentary of the preview, someone made the comment that it would only be a matter of time before digital actors and stuntpeople would be used to perform actions/stunts that humans could not do. Or even “acted” in entire films.

    Given the success of The Incredibles and other animated films, I would say that digital actors’ time is at hand.

  • Cast in the name of God: Ye not guilty.
    Yep. The Big O is back.

  • And, for a different look at the Fantastic Four…

  • For : Vote for Me. Or I’ll Kill You!

Quote of the Day
Peter and Lois walk into the bathroom and find Brian… in a compromising position.

Lois: Was he…? Mastur–
Peter: Yes.
*both look around, uneasily*
Lois: So…
Peter: Do we… rub his nose in it?

Namaste.

“Don’t ask me, I’m just improvising my illusion of careless flight…”

everyday glory No Comments »

Tuesday
I finished Christopher’s computer today.
Next on the agenda is to get Enterprise up and running again.

came over for coffee. Never ones for dull conversation, our topics ranged from Sunday’s chemical spill (1, 2, 3, 4) in South Salt Lake to pornography. All this while eating homemade cookies. Somehow, I can’t picture the Brady Bunch doing that.

I also had a cup of coffee with this evening, but our conversation wasn’t quite as colorful. It was also the first time that I got to see her new living room set. It was very nice. It completely changed the character of the room.

News
Morning Edition: Kits Turn SUVs into Snowmobiles.
Morning Edition: Three Generations of American Singers: Sarah Lee Guthrie
Day to Day: British Airways Flights Continue After Engine Failures
Day to Day: Slate’s Jurisprudence: Leno’s Jackson Trial Gag Order
Day to Day: Fighting to End ‘Darkie Day’ in Cornwall, England
Day to Day: Preview: Growing White Supremacist Movement in U.S.

Random Access

But if I think like you think
It don’t make my load much lighter

     – “In The End” by Rush (from the CD “Fly by Night”)

I learned a new word, by way of the NPR article on ‘Darkie Day’: “wog”

Then I looked up what it means.

I wish that I could say that knowing that made me feel more intelligent.

Stray Toasters

  • I have a script, a cast and a location. The next episode of Heroclix® Theatre can’t be far behind…
  • sent me this clip (Nutrigrain) around lunch time.
    Despite that, I still love her.

  • By way of : Exclusive Connections and Kung Fu Hustle Trailer
  • And, from : Das Flssige Kokainnippelexeriment
  • LEGO® bricks are not “quiet” toys. Not when they are in a plastic bin and you are rummaging through one thousand pieces trying to find a piece of a specific size and color.
  • New pictures of the twins: 1, 2
  • “Don’t you ever knock, Bumblebee? I could have been changing.”
    “Robots don’t change.”
    “Yeah we do, into cars.”

  • Drawn!: “Inspiration is Everywhere”

    Drawn! site is a multi-author blog devoted to illustration, art, cartooning and drawing. Its purpose is to inspire creativity by sharing links and resources.

    Albert Einstein said, “The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources,” but what the hell did he know anyway?

    The site was conceived by John, like all good ideas, while goofing off at work.

  • Keanu Reeves is going to play… Sinbad? The mythic figure, not the actor/comedian, that is. Details here.
  • When the Greeks set up their agora I doubt that any of them ever dreamed that it would someday metamorphose into an… entity… like Super Wal-Mart.
  • “Hey! Can I get some freaking clothes, huh? I don’t want anybody staring lustfully at my nude body.”
    “Requesting permission to beat prisoner into pain-filled supor, sir.”

  • Stickshifts and safety belts
    And bucket seats have all got to go…

  • What’s in Popeye’s Pipe?
    “Popeye the Stoner Man” just doesn’t have the same ring to it. But, if it’s true, it’s not too big a stretch to see him all bling’ed out on his pimped-out boat sharing a fat spliff with Snoop Dogg and Afroman and pouring out his 40oz. for Bob Marley.

  • BABIES! (See the Nutrigrain link, above, for details.)

Namaste.

“He knows that the spades are the swords of a soldier, he knows that the clubs are weapons of war…”

everyday glory No Comments »

Monday
Today was a lazy, do-things-around-the-house day. The closest that I have come to leaving home was going to get the mail and watching the cats play in the backyard. Sissy always seems rather nonplussed about being outdoors. The twins, however, love it. They run through the grass, play under the deck, chase bugs. They seem to have a lot of fun. Lightning was chasing a bug, a flying bug, when the bug decided to get above ground level and leave him behind. Lightning jumped. Impressively. He must have gotten at least 18″ (45 cm) off the ground. Twice. I don’t think that he got the bug, but it was a worthy effort.

Dave and Jamie came over and we played poker tonight – for the first time in roughly three weeks. Jamie is new to Texas Hold ‘Em, but she did well. The final standings were:

  1. Dave
  2. Me
  3. Jamie
  4. Jess

I also loaned Dave my copies of Justice League: Secret Origins and Justice League: Starcrossed. I was going to loan him my copy of Batman: Mask of the Phantasm, but I must have let someone else borrow it. I need to find out who has it. I also need to figure out whom I loaned my copy of Smoke and Mirrors, by Neil Gaiman. I wanted to read it a few nights ago… only to discover that it isn’t here.

I’ve been having “issues” with the hard drives for the media PC and the one that I have been working on for a friend. Not totally insurmountable issues, but annoying ones. That has caused me to find “distractions” from working on them. But, I want to get them finished. I need to get them finished. I off-loaded all of my media files onto ‘Nine, and I would like to recover that space. Soon. So that I can put fun things (like GAMES!) on it.

News
Morning Edition: Artist Captures Wonder of Natural Phenomena
     Check out Kahn’s website, too.

  • Morning Edition: Social Security Satire
  • Morning Edition: African Film Shines at Festival
  • All Things Considered: Revisiting a Civil Rights-Era Shooting
  • All Things Considered: Gangs Reach Out of Prison to Commit Crimes
  • Fresh Air: Rapper, Producer Composer: The RZA

    Stray Toasters

    • I haven’t played X-Men: Legends today.
    • We are considering dropping Sprint Broadband as our ISP. Soon. At this point, we’re looking at going with Comcast. For those of you who currently use Comcast (or have used it in the recent past), how has your experience with them been?
    • From the DCG: Little Bloody Riding Hood
    • Who are the people in your neighborhood?
      In your neighborhood?
      In your neigh-bor-hood?
      Oh, who are the people in your neighborhood?
      They’re the people that you meet
      When you’re walking down the street
      They’re the people that you meet… each….day!

      (And if you’re in Utah: “No,” the ad people from Harmon’s did not write this.)

    • So what does a Fate get paid these days?
    • I still find it curiously amusing that Animal Planet is airing a program called “Dragons.”
    • The art work of Alex Miranda
    • Jess made chocolate chip cookies tonight. w00t!
    • For : Kitty and Lockheed
    • Curious as to who has been adding/removing you as a friend? Take a look at Joule; it will tell you. Thanks to for this.
    • Leo Laporte, formerly seen on TechTV’s The Screen Savers, has his own website: Leoville. It’s chock full of information and goodies.
    • I saw the cover for Rogue #9 this afternoon and thought: “I’ve seen this before…” I thought about it for a while and remembered seeing an issue of Uncanny X-Men with a similar cover. So, I turned to An Uncanny History to search for information about the issue. I remembered that it featured the X-Men in Japan and that Wolverine and Rogue were on the cover. Other than that, I didn’t remember much. But, remembering that much helped me to narrow the range of issues that I needed to check: I knew that it was within a handful of issues of #180. I found the synopsis of the story that I had been thinking of: Issue #173 – “To Have and Have Not.” From there, I went to Google and AllTheWeb for an X-Men cover search. I found it: Uncanny X-Men #173. And not only is it “similar,” but it has the characters in the same poses… right down to the locations of their extremities. Not bad recall for an issue that I haven’t read in 19½ years.
    • “You can’t mess with the snowy knolls wolves!”

    Namaste.

  • “They shoot without shame…”

    everyday glory No Comments »

    Sunday
    I had all of the intentions of waking up this morning, going to Borders, drawing and/or reading and having a quiet, leisurely start to the day.

    But you know what they say about good intentions and the road to Hell.

    I woke up at 11:45. I didn’t get to bed until after 5:00, so sleeping that late was not a completely unexpected thing. So, having wasted more of the morning than I had planned… I wasted more of it. But this time, I spent it at the computer. And, I did look at a few different news websites, so I wasn’t completely lax. Just “mostly.”

    and I headed to the grocery store to pick up a few things for cooking out. Kate, Perry, Max and Bill came over. The grill was fired up. Meat and vegetables were cooked. A good time was had.

    It was a quiet and restful day.
    Selah.

    Random Access

    He’s got a problem with is power
    With weapons on patrol
    He’s got to walk a fine line
    And keep his self-control.

         “New World Man,” Rush (from the CD “Signals”)

    Maddox sent me a link to an article, an interview with Jack Thompson about videogame violence. (I also found the first follow-up article, an interview with Ctrl+Alt+Del‘s Tim Buckley.)

    I have avoided going into this before because it basically boils down to the same thing as other topics I’ve covered before: It’s about parents and parenting. But, I think that I have a couple of particular points against this article that I want to make.


    I’ll be among the first to admit that videogames have become more violent as they have evolved. Of course, it’s hard to be “violent” with two rectangles and a square “ball.” But, let’s go back and take a look at some early games and see how violence appears in them:

    • Pac-Man – What could be less violent than a character running around a maze eating dots and fruit? But, wait… There are four ghosts pursuing Pac-Man. Their goal is to tag him… causing Pac-Man to die. In his defense, there are four “Power Pellets” scattered throughout the maze that give Pac-Man the chance to turn the tables and eat the ghosts, instead. Hello, can you say ‘cannibalism,’ boys and girls? But, the ghosts’ deaths are transitory. They return to their base, are regenerated and rejoin the chase.
    • Joust (One of my all-time favorites!) – Fly on your ostrich (Yes, I know that they don’t fly, but I didn’t make the game.) and joust (actually, when it’s person-to-person, it’s called “Tilting.” And I only know this because jousting – for rings – is Maryland’s official state sport.) with evil knights in a cavern with magma for a floor. There are also pterodactyls and an evil hand of flame against which you must battle.
    • Donkey Kong – Plumber meets girl. Ape steals girl. Plumber saves girl. And so, the Nintendo Empire was born. I don’t know many Generation X’ers – and a few ‘Boomers – who didn’t drop quarters in this game. On the surface, the game sounds simple. But what I, to this point, have left out are: Donkey Kong hurls barrels at Mario. Mario removes supporting rivets from the structure on which the ape stands. Fireballs chase Mario around the board. Donkey Kong, showing unusual intelligence for an ape, uses high-tension springs and bins of cement – both of which cause Mario to die, upon touching them – to impede the plumber’s progress.
    • Jungle Hunt – You control the actions of a Tarzan-like character as he fights his way through the jungle, warding off different animals with only his trusty knife.
    • Punch-Out – You’re a boxer trying to work your way up the ranks to World Champion. If I have to spell this one out for you, you should just stop reading now.
    • Rush ‘N’ Attack – Kill the Commies! Use a knife, flamethrower, even your bare fists… but make sure that you stop the Reds!
    • Burgertime – Help the chef construct artery-clogging beefy sandwiches. Piece of cake. Well, not really, but you know what I mean. And while you’re putting together the burgers, beware of the wandering hot dogs, eggs and pickles… whose tough means instant death. In your defense, you have pepper which you can throw on the enemy foods and stop them in their tracks. Whomever came up with this idea must have been hitting the bong pretty hard.
    • Paperboy – This game seemed innocuous enough: You’re a kid on a bicycle delivering papers. At face value, this is fairly tame. But, you could also lob papers at neighbors’ houses and shatter their windows. You could also use them against their barking dogs, if I remember correctly. Mmm. Gotta love a game with a little vandalism and cruelty to animals in it…
    • Frogger – Cross the road. Simple. Avoid becoming roadkill. That made things a little more “interesting.” And, if you get across the road, you still have to navigate a river. Complete with hungry crocodiles.
    • Gauntlet – I’m sure that many of you will remember this: “Warrior needs food quickly! In this game, you chose a fantasy persona (Warrior, Valkyrie, Elf, Wizard) and roamed through dungeons in search of treasure. Oh, and you fought. A lot. Against all manners of creatures who sought nothing more than to gnaw on your fleshy hide. If you made it through one level of the dungeon, your proceeded to the next… complete with more creatures.
    • Choplifter – Rescue the hostages (that’s right: “Hostages”) and fly them to safety. And do it without getting shot down.
    • …and I don’t think that I need to elaborate on the straight-up “Come over here so I can beat on you” games like the Tekken and SoulCalibur series.

    I think that shows that violence is hardly new to videogames. Even in the most “innocent” of games, it’s been there for decades. It will be there, in whatever forms later generations of games take, for decades to come.

    To simplify the argument down to “Person X did Horrible Action Y because they played Violent Videogame Z” is an asinine as saying that I am going to tie a cape around my neck and try to save the world because I play superhero videogames. (The fact that I dressed up as Green Lantern for Hallowe’en doesn’t count.) Or that just because someone studies and becomes highly proficient at a martial art that they are going to wander the face of the earth looking for their next potential victim… just because they can. Most martial arts teachings are about seeking balance and calmness within one’s self. The fact that the person can also whip some ass and defend her-/himself using the more physical aspects of the art is an added bonus.

    Let me use another, more personal, example:

    When I was in college, I played Dungeons & Dragons with my dorm-mates. It was new to me and it was incredibly fun. We would get together on the weekends and spend hours exploring our characters’ world. While my father was fine with it, my mother wasn’t overly keen on it. As a teacher, she had heard different groups speak about the inherent evils of the game. And then, she heard about a group of gamers who had commited murder… because it was something that their characters would do. I think that was the straw that broke the proverbial camel’s back. It wound up leading to a family meeting (read: “Intervention”) when I got back home. My mother, stepfather and a few close family friends had a little chat about the game. They asked questions. I gave them answers. In the end (many hours and another discussion later), they figured that I had my head on straight and that they didn’t have to worry about me hovering over their beds with a +2 battle axe. Besides, I typically played elves; I would have used a bow and arrow…

    Yes, there are some people who “can’t let go.” I don’t just mean the murderous gaming group that I mentioned above. These people exist in all walks of life. There is a ‘Toaster below about science fiction fans not being able to say goodbye to a TV show that they like. There was a woman who sued for the right to wear a Starfleet uniform as her regular clothing… for jury duty. I won’t say that she’s mentally unstable or deny that it is her right to dress as she chooses, but I will say that it’s a bit “odd.” And, let’s not forget: “Jedi” is recognized as an official religion in Australia.

    Tim Buckley put it nicely in his interview:

    “I think that if someone plays a video game, and then goes out and harms another human being, or themselves because of what they just saw in the video game, they were screwed up in the head long before they got their hands on a controller.”

    When I remember that I have two game consoles and three computers – and that’s just in my office – and plenty of games for each, I like playing videogames. As I mentioned, I enjoy a good superhero game. I also like shoot-em-ups. Nothing says “love” like a well-placed sniper rifle shot in HALO/HALO 2 or “death from above” in MechAssault. Yes, I’m going to build a small ‘Mech in the yard (out of wood), but I’m not going to run around town taking potshots at people just because I like those games.

    Games are a tool. Period. They allow you to put aside aspects of your life and escape the world for a bit. And this applies to pretty much any game. Need to satisfy your Napoleonic tendencies? Have at a game of Risk or Civilization. Want to fly around outer space? Try Star Fleet Battles or any of the Star Wars-related titles. Has “The Man” put you down? Get back at him with a red dot between the eyes in Ghost Recon or Splinter Cell. Has City Hall once again proven their ineptitude at managing the local budget and policies? Put in Sim City and show them how it’s done.

    …and when you’re done, fold up the game board or turn off the computer and come back to (what passes for) reality.

    If parents are so worried about Little Johnny and Susie being exposed to violence in Game Q, they should take steps to see to it that the kids don’t play the game. The first way to do so would be to not buy it for them. Additionally, if the kids go to Harry’s house, and Harry has the game, they should ask Harry’s parents to see to it that Johnny and Susie don’t play it. Or do what my parents did: Sit them down and talk about it. Find out what it is that appeals to them about the game and make sure that they understand that it is a game and that the behaviors that they exhibit in the game environment are not generally acceptable in the real world.

    Unfortunately, the television and the videogame and/or computer have become the babysitters of the 21st Century. It’s so much easier to push a button and have the kids out of one’s hair than it is to sit down and develop a relationship with them. If it wasn’t so sad, it would be almost laughable to think that so many parents/guardians wonder “Why don’t I know my kids?”

    It seems to me
    As well make our own few circles ’round the block
    We’ve lost our senses
    For the higher-level static of talk.

         “Dog Years,” Rush (from the CD “Test for Echo”)

    And that’s my 2¢ worth.

    Thanks to Lawrence Gold for providing data about some of the classic videogames referenced above.

    Stray Toasters

    • I almost typed this section header as “Stray Taoists” again.
    • For , by way of Chuck Dixon’s site (Dixonverse) comes: Junior Pirates.
    • In the words of William Shatner: “Get a life!” – Can sci-fi fans face the future?
    • I actually know a few people like this:
    • I’ve been a fan of Mike Wieringo‘s comic art for a few years now. Some would say that his style is “too cartoony.” It’s a comic book, for Pete’s sake. Get over it. I think that it’s “just fine.” But, I digress… Take a gander at his site. Check out the gallery. Enjoy.
    • I am sitting here looking at the collection of PC games that are sitting on my desk. I should install them. Soon. But, I’ve been sucked into the Marvel videogame world of X-Men: Legends. And I am having a grand time. I finally beat Mystique and The Blob. Now, I keep getting killed by a tank. Not fun.
    • DMX. That’s all I’m sayin’.
    • By way of Backwash comes an interesting article from TurnOUT!: Common Arguments of the Radical Right
    • “Do you like anything?”

    • Sometimes, when I intend to type “above,” I type “about.” I don’t know why. But it makes me laugh.
    • Self-deprecating humor. I love it.

    Namaste.

    “When the lights go down in the city…”

    everyday glory No Comments »

    Saturday
    It’s been a pretty decent day. It was nominally warm, too. Warm enough (more or less) for me to wear a short-sleeved shirt. And be fairly comfortable in it.

    I watched Teen Titans tonight, but not JLU. I hadn’t seen the episode of ‘Titans before, but I had seen the Justice League episode. So… I played more X-Men: Legends, instead. After all, why just watch superheroes when you can be a superhero. (I’m sure that understands what I mean by this.)

    Bowling was… not too bad. Even though I bowled alone.
    147 – 157 – 135 – 181 – 112 – 160 – 113 – 129 – 166 – 176 – 173
    I alternated lanes tonight, starting on the right-hand lane (which is usually my “best” lane); I bowled six games on it and five games on the left-hand lane. Overall, I bowled better and more consistently on the left lane. I’ll have to see if this pattern holds true.

    We were entertained by a cavalcade of “Fashion Don’ts” at breakfast. It was a veritable bevy of bellies. Our entire table was of a consensus that some people can effectively wear low-rise pants and midriff-exposing shirts. Some. Not all. And not most of the ones whom we saw tonight.

    But, it takes all kinds to make the world go ’round.

    Stray Toasters

    • I’ve only been playing X-Men: Legends for a couple days, but I am really having a ball with it. They lined up a lot of good – and in some cases, “unexpected” – talent for the voice actors, including:
      • Patrick Stewart, once again reprising his role as Professor X.
      • Cree Summer, formerly of A Different World and multiple animated projects, as Magma.
      • Ed Asner
      • Steven Blum as Wolverine; he who also did the voice of Spike Spiegel on Cowboy Bebop, Roger Smith on The Big O and provides the voice of Tom on Cartoon Network’s Toonami
      • Dorian Harewood, whom I hadn’t heard about in years.
      • Danica McKellar, from The Wonder Years and Static Shock, and
      • Lou Diamond Phillips (Young Guns, La Bamba, Courage Under Fire)
    • : I think that you’ll appreciate this thread from Slashdot: Fun Tabletop Games
    • : The proto-house looks nice. The shot that you took of the Don and Thomas walking down the steps was cute. Thomas is getting BIG! I’m going to have to get home soon so that I can see him before he gets too big to roughhouse. 🙂
    • For : Lot’s of Catwoman
    • “In brightest day
      In blackest night…”

    • Somebody woke up on the wrong side of the bed…
    • Found by :

    • I like 99 Luftballons and its English counterpart, 99 Red Balloons. I found this side-by-side comparison of the two versions. After reading this, I was struck with the thought that I think I prefer the German lyrics – or their English translation – to the version that innundated the American airwaves.

    I’m reasonably sure that there was more that I wanted to add, but it will have to keep until tomorrow. I’m tired. I’m going to bed.

    Or, in the immortal words of Eric Cartman:

    “Screw you guys, I’m going home.”

    Namaste.

    “Everything is possible, but nothing is real…”

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    Friday
    It’s been a good day.
    It’s been a kite-flying day. (Two times, in the name of James Brown!)
    It’s been a double coffee day, too. (Two more times for the Soul Brother Number One!)
    I even had two kinds of chicken wings for dinner. (Give it up for the Godfather of Soul!)

    Perry, Max and I got together this afternoon to do some kite-flying. I took my fav’rit parafoil and a new kite, given to me by . I hadn’t really opened it until today; it’s a parafoil of the same design as my old kite, but in different colors and with a three-streamer tail, instead of the older kite’s two-streamers. It flies pretty much the same as the older one, but there are a couple of subtle differences – I’ll need to get some more flight time with it to get its proper feel. For a while, I was flying both kites at the same time. It was fun. There were a couple of kids, Paige and Dillon, in the area of the park where we were flying. Max played with them on the jungle gym for a while and then the three of them came over to fly kites.

    I met for coffee at Jitterbug. We chatted as we sipped our caffeinated beverages. I like that place. If you’re in the SLC Metro area, check it out – it’s located at 1865 South 700 East.

    From there, it was on to get from work and head to Friday Night Coffee. We had a good turn-out for coffee tonight. I think that there were eleven or twelve of us, at full strength. Conversations were eclectic. As usual. I think that we may have even run off a few people with some of the topics. Oh, well. Their loss. Although, the thought of them trying to scour some of the mental imagery of our conversations from their memories will keep a smile on my face. We adjourned from coffee to Cheers: North where the revelry continued.

    News
    Morning Edition: Experts Debate Whether ‘Hobbits’ Were Human
    Morning Edition: Blind Ambition: Woman Set for Ititarod Sled Race
    Morning Edition: The Club from Nowhere: Cooking for Civil Rights
    All Things Considered: ‘Bring Out Your Dead’ : Monty Python Hits Broadway
    Fresh Air: Interviews with John Travolta and Elmore Leonard, from Be Cool.

    Stray Toasters

    • I managed to catch on the phone this afternoon. She was about an hour from home and the trip, to that point, had been good and relatively uneventful. She said to tell the usual suspects “Hello” for her. “Hello.”
    • I finally got around to playing X-Men: Legends today. I like it. I like it, indeed. Although, I still have to figure out a way to kick Mystique’s smurfy blue butt eight ways from Sunday.
    • Girl Scout cookies have been added to the list of tasty confections in the house.
    • “Planetary Beanstalk”
    • I saw an article on Slashdot about “Windows Cluster Edition.” In my head, that read as “Windows Clusterfuck Edition.”
    • I like this picture of Jennifer Walters, the Avenger known as She-Hulk.
    • The JLU will be visiting the Batman Beyond timeline again.
    • The Rocklopedia Fakebandica – The Ultimate Fake Band List
    • For :
    • For : Paper Magazine’s interview with Portia De Rossi
    • Who invented the ‘devil horns’ sign?

    Namaste.

    “Dearly beloved… we are gathered here today to get through this thing called ‘Life.’ Electric word, ‘life,’ it means “forever,” and that’s a mighty long time.

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    Thursday
    I went to Chris’ this afternoon and sated my plastic crack addiction. We played a 300-point game; it was only the second time that I’ve played the actual game. And he cleaned my clock. Handily. But I had fun. We also wound up trading a few pieces; he gave me an Invisible Woman (veteran) figure from the “Clobbering Time” release… which is no longer in production. (Her rookie and experienced figures.)

    Then it was off to pick up , run a couple of errands, and back home for dinner and CSI. Tonight was an “encore presentation” of the episode where the classic CSI team was broken up; I hadn’t seen it before. It explains a lot. Then I watched the new Law & Order: Trial By Jury. I like the concept; it was decidedly different than the other L&O shows.

    News
    Morning Edition: San Francisco Considers Cable Car Price Hike
        (Not what I want to hear three weeks before I go there…)
    Morning Edition: Amputee Wounded in Iraq to Return to Active Duty
    Morning Edition: Senate Ponders Increase in Minimum Wage
    Morning Edition: Reconsidering the ‘Broken Windows’ Theory
    Day to Day: How Death Valley Got Its Name
    Day to Day: Is There Life After Reality TV?
    All Things Considered: Performing Arts: How We Got Here

    Stray Toasters

    • We saw a flying Green Lantern toy while we were out this evening. It was oddly fascinating. It’s not quite a “covet,” but it would make a nice addition to the collection.
    • : Waid and Kitson’s Dream Girl… and Cinescape’s review of LSH #3
    • Speaking of Waid, Kitson and Issue #3, they have managed to bring together two of my favorite things: The Legion and Schoolhouse Rock!
    • I stumbled across this afternoon. I’m wasn’t sure whether to laugh, cry or both… but I couldn’t stop looking. It was like a bizarre trainweck.
    • Atari Force. It started as an insert in … I can’t remember which game, but I think that it was Yar’s Revenge and subsequent issues of the insert/comic appeared in other games. A couple of years later, Atari Force, the DC comic was released. And I collected it for about 2 years, if I remember correctly.
    • *** COVET ***
    • By way of boingboing.net: The coming crackdown on blogging
    • The Joker’s boner.
      I don’t have a joke here. No. Really, I don’t.
      But, you can find more out-of-context comics panels here.

    • : Click here and here.
    • Humping Robodogs. Um… yeah.
    • To quote : “Sweet zombie Jesus!” The “Legacy” expansion of DC Heroclix is out… and there are more Legionnaires in it: Kid Quantum and Wildfire. I still need to get a Saturn Girl from “Cosmic Justice” to go with my other Legionnaires.
    • What happens when you cross George W. Bush, Tony Blair, Diana Ross and Lionel Richie? Other than “a mess,” you get something that looks like this. Broadband recommended. You can thank (or blame) for this one.
    • : Click here. I don’t think that you’ll need much, if any, direction past that.

    Namaste.

    “Fortune is random, fate shoots from the hip…”

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    Wednesday
    I went to ‘s this morning to help reconnect the trailer to her truck. We disconnected it yesterday so that she didn’t have to drive around town last night/this morning with a trailer full o’ stuff.

    We went to Mimi’s Cafe for lunch and some casual chat before she took off. When we got back to the house, it only took a few minutes to get the truck into position and crank down the trailer. Shortly after that, I left. About forty-five minutes later, I received a call from saying that she and the dogs were on the road and under way.

    >> fast forward >>

    Tonight was Game Night. I was able to make it for the first time in at least three sessions. It was fun. I think that we accomplished a few things to move the story along. After the game broke up, , , Chris and I sat around and talked. Chris and I may feed our plastic crack addiction tomorrow afternoon and play a game or two of Heroclix.

    News
    Morning Edition: Company to Offer Classical Music Ring Tones
         (This story has ‘s name all over it.)
    Morning Edition: How Bach and Brahms Made a Living
    All Things Considered: In-Car Cameras Keep Tabs on Teen Drivers
    All Things Considered: A Teen’s Tobacco Ploy: Close, but No Cigar
    All Things Considered: Lessons from Jazz Legend Wayne Shorter
    Fresh Air: Food: Levine on Pizza in America

    Legal Affairs:Insult to Injury

    Servicemen and women disabled in the line of duty trust the government will provide for them. But many return home to find themselves facing a new enemy: the Department of Veterans Affairs.

    Stray Toasters

    • For the past week or so, when I’ve gotten into the shower in the morning, I’ve had part of the chorus of The Presidents of the United States of America’s Bath of Fire running through my head. It didn’t dawn on me until I was sitting at Nyx and Nox’ this evening and the song came up in the mp3 rotation.
    • , I know that you don’t need more ‘bright and shiny objects,’ but I think that you might enjoy a few of these.
    • …and I think that you might like this, too.
    • Power Pack is 20 years old. Wow. I remember when it first hit the stands. I think that I still have Issue #1 in my collection back home.
    • : Bent Comics is sponsoring a webcomic contest.
    • Eldritch Press – Free, accessible books in the public domain.
    • I really used to like Bobby Brown’s My Prerogative; it was my unofficial theme song back in 1987/1988. Oh the joys of being a college freshman… I’ve heard Britney Spears’ cover of it. It really doesn’t do much for me. But, then again, not a lot of her work does. *shrug*
    • “This isn’t how I wanted to go!! I’m not rich, I’m not drunk, I’m not naked, and I’m certainly not all three simultaneously!”

    Yep. Definitely time to call it a night.

    Namaste.

    “You can carry that weight with an iron will…”

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    Tuesday
    I spent most of the day with . Apparently, helping her load her things into a U-Haul trailer is an annual event. Even if it doesn’t happen on the same day every year.

    We started the day with a visits to Mary and . , Mary and I went out for lunch. Then GH and I stopped at Dollar Tree. I saw a chocolate and white chocolate crosses in the Easter candy section. As well as a rabbit hutch and a half full of chocolate bunnies. Of all shapes and sizes.

    And then we saw this woman…

    …walking around in her way-too-tight sweatpants. (And, no, that is not a thong line. We weren’t 100% sure, but was rather certain that the woman had opted out of wearing unders. Or an Anti-Panti.) Either way, she didn’t look like a very happy woman. And, she was walking around the store in just her socks.
    While the store was relatively clean, I wouldn’t have done that. *shrug* Maybe it’s just the way I’m wired. But, when we saw her license plate not her license plate frame , it explained everything: It said that she was “a princess,” in a variant spelling. and I chuckled as we watched her strike a match and light a cigarette (obviously to calm her nerves after a harrying shopping experience) and drive off.

    I also found a couple of products that caught my eye:

    and

    There was just something about a bathroom cleaner called “Bang” that amused me. And the red bits in the bag are “Pina con Chile.” Chili-flavored pineapple chunks. I don’t know what frightens me most about that: The fact that someone actually pitched this as “a good idea,” that someone agreed to it or that someone, somewhere, might actually like this. *shiver*

    After that, we visited The Cartoon Factory. Forty-five minutes later, we headed to one of the local U-Haul centers to pick up a trailer. We took it back to ‘s house and I started playing real-life Tetris. I had the trailer packed and pretty much ready-to-go in about an hour; there are a few things that she will need to throw in before she leaves, but otherwise, it’s done.

    Then it was a quiet evening at home with , and . We had pizza and hung out. And that’s not a bad way to end the day.

    News
    Morning Edition: Addressing the Rising Costs of Long-Term Health Care
    Morning Edition: A $10,000 Martini at the Algonquin Hotel
    Morning Edition: California Teachers Take Action on Homework
    Talk of the Nation: Shifting Consumer Bankruptcy Rules
    Talk of the Nation: Interview – Former POW Army Specialist Shoshona Johnson
    Day to Day: Tips for Wise Spending
    All Things Considered: Doctors Race to Complete First Face Transplant

    Stray Toasters

    • I finally installed the Remote Access Interface on Defiant.
      I mean “the wireless network card.”
      It works well. I am happy.

    • I neglected to include and in yesterday’s birthday well-wishes. It would seem as though my Information Resources Officer has been remiss. I believe that calls for swift and severe punitive measures.
    • “Sharpest knife.”
    • sent me this. I watched. I laughed. Loudly. More than once. (Broadband recommended; work safe)
    • What do you get when you mix Fatboy Slim, Steve Miller, The Joker and animals?
      (Yes, I know that it sounds like an odd mix. Bear with me; no pun intended.)
      You get this.

    • Big Mac, Filet o’ Fish…
      Quarter Pounder, French Fries…
      Thick shakes, icy Cokes…
      Sundaes and apple pies!

      (It’s amazing what things from our childhood get stuck in our heads…)

    • …and on that note: While I was loading the trailer this afternoon, I had a song get stuck in my head: Truly Scrumptious, from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang I have no idea “how” or “why,” but it did. And, just as oddly: It stopped as soon as I was done loading. Bizarre.
    • As evidenced by the top portion of this post, I have discovered the joys (and nominal addiction) of having a camera phone. It’s evil. Pure, unadulterated evil. I love it.
    • Catwoman.  Black Cat.  Catfight!  It was bound to happen.
    • …and here’s a little something for , as well: Batman vs. Joker
    • or : Have either of you heard anything about an anime called Porco Rosso?
    • While I originally had no desire to see Elf, I willingly concede that it was a fun movie. However, I think that they are going to the well once too often now: New Line is in talks with Will Ferrell to reprise his role as Buddy in Elf 2.
    • Bollywood for the Skeptical I’m pretty sure that will find something of interest here.
    • : What was the name of that artist whose work you have as a screen saver?
    • Cameltoe (Work safe. No, really, it is.)

    Namaste.

    “You can go out, you can take a drive…”

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    Monday
    “Grey” and “drab” have become the watchwords of describing days here in the valley.
    In an effort to break out of the routine, just a little, Jess and I went for a drive on the west side of the Salt Lake Valley. We were looking for a new development that I had heard was going to be built in the shadow of the Kennecott Copper Mine. We didn’t find it. What we did find was the community (town?) of Bingham Canyon. 84006. It was like stepping back into early 20th Century America. It was a community that was built for the workers of the Kennecott mines. On the far side of town is a historical marker, but it is set behind a chain link fence, making it difficult to read. A few feet from the marker is this sign for this bar. That made me chuckle. I had to have a picture of it.

    Tonight’s episode of 24 was good. I was surprised to see the twist that they threw at CTU Director Erin Driscoll. Didn’t see that one coming. I had almost forgotten how much of a hardball player Jack could be to get information that he needed.

    I’m fighting with Enterprise again. I’m trying to install its OS and it’s balking at the idea. Earlier, I was pretty close to finding a bulk magnetizer and seeing how well it liked a strong, opposing B-field. Fortunately, it never got to that point.

    As it’s now the wee hours of Tuesday morning (01 March 05), I’d like to wish a “Happy March Birthday” to:

    News
    Morning Edition: High Court Considers Disability Access on Cruise Ships
    Morning Edition: Indian Teenager Caught in Space Caper
    Talk of the Nation: Other Cultures, In Other Words
    Day to Day: Slate’s Culturebox: Rappers and Bloggers
    Fresh Air: Downfall from Ganz and Hischbiegel

    Stray Toasters

    • I have added to my cache of Creme Eggs and cotton candy. And M&M’s.
    • I finally got around to watching the now two-week-old JLU episode, “Doomsday Sanction.” Wow. And I do mean “Wow.” The episode started off slowly… for about thirty seconds… and from that point forward, it was a rollercoaster ride. Dwayne McDuffie and Robert Goodman pulled out all the stops on this one. Seriously. They reintroduced characters and concepts that haven’t been heard from since the days of Batman: The Animated Series and Superman: The Animated Series. And they are adding more of a darker edge to the series. The last couple of minutes were very intense. , I believe that you would be very happy with the way that Batman was depicted in this episode.
    • I have been meaning to take a picture of this for the past few months… but I never had my camera ready at the right time. Last week, I did.
      It gives an entirely new meaning to the phrase “tree house.”
    • Thanks to , I have a new webcomic on my reading list: Two Lumps
    • : National Geographic goes Bollywood
    • I took this picture this afternoon.
      It is a California Sea Gull.
      It is Utah’s state bird.
      Utah is a land-locked state.
      Do the math.

    • Thanks to for Science Fiction and Fantasy Art by Frank Wu
    • Nothing says loving like a clean pair o’ drawers. Mm-hm, that’s right!
    • Alien sculpture up for auction
    • In this post‘s Stray Toasters section (‘Toaster #3), I tried to clarify a widespread misconception about Warner Brothers’ upcoming Loonatics animated series.

      I came across another article about Loonatics in the “Lying in the Gutters” column on Comic Book Resources. However, their item about the series (Item #5: “Bugs Bunny? Or Jessica Rabbit”) made me laugh. Hysterically.

    • …and in a semi-related note: : There’s a Catwoman picture on that same page (Item: “Adam’s Zest”), too.
    • “Don’t you smell it?”
      “My nose fell off. Smell what?”

    • By way of ThinkGeek: The Cubes®
    • While I seriously doubt that the original version “Jack and Jill” looked like this, I would be willing to wager that had the rhyme been written today that something like this might have happened…

    And that’s a wrap.
    Now, where did I put that bulk magnetizer…?

    Namaste.

    “Another Pleasant Valley Sunday…”

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    Sunday
    Woke up this morning (which is a good way to start any day) thanks to my handy-dandy alarm. Woke up , our first overnight houseguest, so that she could get under way and take care of some errands today. Instead, we sat in the kitchen and talked about stuff. “Stuff” is really the best way to describe it because we would jump from Topic A to Topic V… and then bounce back to Topic F… and so on. It was a nice way to spend the morning.

    I went to Borders for a couple of hours to draw. I’m not overly enthused with one of the sketches I did. I am trying to move away from drawing mostly faces and move towards working on figures. I need to work on overall anatomy. The fundamentals. Yet another thing to add to the “to do” list…

    Back home. Perry and Max came over and spent the late afternoon/evening with us. I grilled out: Polish sausage and chicken breast filets. (If you’re in the SLC Metro Area, I highly recommend going to Colosimo’s for your sausage/bratwurst fix.) Max played videogames while Perry, Jess and I hung out.

    Random Access

    He’s got to make his own mistakes
    And learn to mend the mess he makes
    He’s old enough to know what’s right
    But young enough not to choose it…

         – “New World Man,” Rush (from the CD “Signals”)

    As a fan of the four-color print media known colloquially as “comic books” or “graphic novels,” I’m used to seeing the hero swoop in and save the citizen in distress. Cape flapping in the breeze, she or he makes a grand entrance, thwarts the villain and carries the near-victim to a place of safety.

    If only real life mirrored art in this way.

    In the so-called “real world,” people rail against help. Or even the offer of help, in some cases. When they ask for an opinion, they often balk if the response isn’t what they wanted to hear.

    Or they just shut themselves off.
    Or down.
    Or out.

    Then the rest of the us, just like readers of a comic, must sit by and watch as the story unfolds.

    Sometimes, the “victim” has an epiphany. They awaken to find an option available to them that “wasn’t there before.” Even though it had been staring them in the face the entire time. They take steps to become a “hero,” in their own right, and break free from the situation in which they had been mired. They leap to safety, at the last second, to stand tall and laugh at the failed scenario from escaped.

    Unfortunately, far too often, they wallow in doubt or self-pity. They stumble blindly through a maze of uncertainty. Silently cursing The Fates. Their fate. The rest of the world. Either by design or through a haze of rage or fear, they don’t see any options before them. Or a friendly face in the crowd. All that they see is a dark, twisted path ahead of and behind them. And wastelands to the sides.

    And one thing keeps coming to my mind. Wilson Philips’ song Hold On. They were spot-on with the lyric:

    You could sustain
    Or are you comfortable with the pain?
    You’ve got no one to blame for your unhappiness
    You got yourself into your own mess

    I don’t have red lenses, or a utility belt, or a speedy horse and silver bullets. While they would be cool or fun to have, I don’t need them. I was taught to be supportive of my friends in the same manner that my parents were supportive of my siblings and me. If someone needs help, and it’s within your power, do so. Even if it’s something as “small” as listening when a friendly, non-judgmental ear is needed. Or a supportive shoulder. Or just “being around.” I was also taught that when offers of support are shunned or ignored, step back. Don’t force your help onto them. As someone once told me: “You can’t make or force someone into change, but you can love them through changes.”

    I know a number of people who have been in dire straits. (Situations, that is, not the band.) I know some who are currently in the middle of a personal Hell. Almost all of the situations have been difficult to see or hear about. And when they turn down offers of assistance, yet still trudge through the mire, it makes it all the more difficult to be on the outside. To be the reader in a story that’s unfolding before my eyes.

    Yet, all I can do is turn the page and wait to see how the plot unfolds.

    Sure, I still “…wonder what it’s like to be a superhero,” but I try to keep my feet firmly on the ground and do the best that I can to be a decent person. I like to think that most of the time, I’m pretty good at it. When someone comes to me with a problem, the very least that I can do is listen to them. As a friend, they deserve that much. If they ask for an opinion, consider the options and the possible outcomes and give them my thoughts on it. And if any or all of the above, I can be that shoulder. Or friendly face.

    And I don’t need a cape for that.

    Stray Toasters

    • Jamie Foxx won the 2005 Best Actor Academy Award. And then he went on to give what I thought was a great speech.
    • As February – and Black History Month – draws to a close, I found this article, “Blackest Month Ever” on PopCultureShock. It made me smile.
    • A friend pointed out this column, from Backwash. It’s a very interesting subject. And a rather compelling read.
    • , I don’t know if this will help assuage the pain of the celluloid fiasco that was Batman + Robin, but here goes…
    • …and if that doesn’t, give this a shot.
    • Star Trek XI in Development
      I don’t know whether I should laugh or cry.

    • This is a very cool picture. (Borderline work-safe.)
    • Halle Berry won a Razzie for her role in Catwoman. No big surprise there. Not only did she attend the Golden Raspberry Awards, she took her 2002 Oscar with her.

      Berry was named worst actress of 2004 by the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation for her performance in “Catwoman” and she showed up to accept her “Razzie” carrying the Oscar she won in 2002 for “Monster’s Ball.”

      “They can’t take this away from me, it’s got my name on it!” she quipped. A raucous crowd cheered her on as she gave a stirring recreation of her Academy Award acceptance speech, including tears.

      She thanked everyone involved in “Catwoman,” a film she said took her from the top of her profession to the bottom.

      “I want to thank Warner Brothers for casting me in this piece of s—,” she said as she dragged her agent on stage and warned him “next time read the script first.”

      It is rare for a Razzie winner to show up at the spoof awards held on the night before Oscars — but Berry did, saying her mother taught her that to be “a good winner you had to be a good loser first.” She received a standing ovation.

    • I need to replenish my stock of Cadbury Creme Eggs and cotton candy.
    • Indigo Girls’ rendition of Romeo and Juliet is great.
    • , a proposed Babylon 5 feature film has been cancelled. Sorry.
    • I like Bruce Springsteen’s Pink Cadillac, too. The man isn’t the world’s greatest vocalist, but he seems to have a good time at it.
    • By way of Slashdot: “The SciFi channel has made Episode ’33’ (Season 1 Episode 1) of Battlestar Galactica available for free, uncut and commercial free, online at SciFi.com.”

    And with that…

    Namaste.

    “Time stand still…”

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    Saturday
    We’ll make this the Cliff’s Notes recap of the past 48 or so hours.

    Friday was a fairly laid-back day. and came over so that I could help Nox suss out a problem with his computer. We figured it out, made an excursion to LS Micro, fixed the problem and he was good to go.

    I spent a good portion of the rest of the afternoon – and later that night – dealing with a computer that I’m cobbling together for a friend. As I mentioned, it’s not going as smoothly as it could. But, I will prevail.

    Today was also fairly lax. and I had lunch with Nyx. I stopped at Dr. Volt’s (a local comic shop) to feed my paper crack addiction. I’m still only collecting two titles. Does that make them my “gateway titles?” And, I avoided buying any plastic crack. That was a nice achievement. Then it was back home to work on my friend’s computer again. More problems, but I think that I know what I’m going to have to do to get past them. But I’ll deal with that tomorrow.

    Bowling was good; tonight’s top score was a 181, I think. Not only did and Larry go, but Pat and Staci joined us. And, as an added bonus, a couple of friends from IRC dropped in, too; one of them I haven’t seen in five years (but we’ve chatted fairly regularly during the intervening time). After that, it was off to breakfast. As usual, more people joined us there. All-in-all, it was a nice way to cap off a good day.

    Stray Toasters

    • I have cotton candy. knows of my weakness for the spun sugar confection and brought me two bags of cottony candy goodness.
    • Nyx forwarded me the URL for Unusual Uses for Everyday Items. It’s a neat site.
    • Metropolis Citizen: “Thank you, Green Lantern!”
      Booster Gold: “I am not Green Lantern!”

    • , when I mentioned that I needed to keep an eye out for some computer parts suggested that I check University of Utah Surplus and Salvage Department. They seem to have a little bit of everything.
    • What is Aqualad doing with/to this dolphin?!

      No. On second thought, I don’t want to know.

    • From PopCultureShock: Lex Luthor: Man of Steel #1
      I like stories that add to a character’s… character. Something that makes them less of a two-dimensional image with word and thought balloons attached and turns them into “a person.” With motivations. Feelings. Fears. And, from what I’ve seen in this preview, that is exactly what Brian Azzarello has done. The interaction between Lex and LexCorp janitor Stanislaw Levin (page 4, page 5) shows Lex as a person. One in a very high position. One who genuinely seems to care about the people in his employ. And one who has a reason to dislike a certain “strange visitor from another planet.” I might just have to pick up this mini-series.

    • I just messaged my mother. She told me to go to bed. I’m 34 years old and 2000 miles away… yet I’m still “her kid.” That made me smile.

    Hm, Mom may have been onto something, after all…
    I am tired.

    Namaste.

    “Turn around and walk the razor’s edge…”

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    Friday
    I’m having a few issues with a computer that I’m working on for a friend. That’s causing me a bit of irritation.

    Also, in order to do some work on that other computer’s hard drive, I had to install it on DS9. Which means that I had to shut ‘Nine down. Which usually isn’t a big deal. But, I had a 2/3 done post that I neglected to save. And I didn’t think about that until about 4 hours after-the-fact.

    But, other than that, it’s been a pretty decent day. I even managed to transfer all of the media files from Enterprise to DS9. That puts me a big step closer to converting Enterprise from a Linux-based computer (whose Linux functionality I almost never utilize) into a Windows-based media server for the house.

    But, I’m going to bed now. Maybe things will be more copacetic after a good night’s sleep and I’ll be able to get my friend’s computer up and running the way it should.

    Namaste.

    “I’m riding shotgun down the avalanche…”

    everyday glory No Comments »

    Thursday
    and I met and for lunch and an excursion to The Bookshelf. I was very proud of myself – I only bought one box of plastic crack. Unfortunately, all of the figures were duplicates of ones that I already have. On the “up” side, I had a coupon from a previous trip; I only wound up paying a little under $4.00 to feed my addiction.

    I had dinner with , Nyx and Nox. Then I headed to Nyx and Nox’ to try out a new game that Nox had picked up, Twilight Imperium. It was like a cross between Risk and Star Fleet Battles… with a twist of Civilization.

    Stray Toasters

    • I still have five Cadbury Creme Eggs left.
    • I do not, however, have any cotton candy.
    • Saturday Night Fever dance floor up for auction
    • : They didn’t come out and say “chupacabra,” but here’s this anyway.
    • showed me a link for Dresden Dolls’ Coin Operated Boy (scroll down). Cute. And quirkily amusing. And… Oh, Hell… go look for yourself. (Note: Has to be downloaded. Broadband recommended.)
    • Voodoo knife rack
    • For
    • And, taking a page from my childhood: Mirconauts!
    • Friday night.
      Coffee.
      You know who you are.
      You know where to go and when to be there.

    • From the DCG: The Nightmare Before Christmas
    • Battlestar Galactica has been renewed for a second season.
    • I’ve been invited to an Xbox LAN on Saturday morning.
      I want to take a “class” at Home Depot Saturday afternoon.
      I need to figure out the scheduling so that I can do both.

    Quote of the Day
    BBC News has an interview with Oscar nominee Jamie Foxx on its website. In it, Foxx talks about rehearsing with Ray Charles in preparation for his portrayal of the singer in the movie Ray:

    “We got a chance to sing the blues with each other, and I hit the wrong note, and he said, ‘why the hell would you do that’? And I said ‘I don’t know Ray'”.

    “And he said, ‘the notes are right underneath your fingers, and all you gotta do is take time out to find the right note. That’s what life is, we all got notes underneath our fingers and we gotta take time to find the right notes, to come up with our own music’.”

    I just think that’s a great quote.

    Namaste.