Other goodies

31 10 2007


http://www.myspace.com/thespits

good band

http://www.yesbutnobutyes.com/archives/2005/12/ten_great_holly.html

“top 10 hollywood orgasms? thank you.

When Wezzo guested here recently, he showed us the latest TV spot from sex chain Ann Summers, featuring women reaching a yuletide climax (which in turn was probably inspired by Romantic Death by The Sun and THEIR inspiration, Beautiful Agony).

When you look at those clips, it’s clear that the ones from Beautiful Agony have an “authenticity” that the Ann Summers actresses can’t quite muster. Which got me thinking of some of the most outrageous orgasms of mainstream cinema. I bypassed porn, adult movies, Last Tango in Paris and the like, and concentrated more on mainstream films to bring you this countdown. So come with us now, as we build inexorably to a climax with our list of Ten Great Hollywood Orgasms. “

via: http://www.yesbutnobutyes.com/





Today from BoingBoing!!!

31 10 2007


Geez. what a good find today at Boingboing.net

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jumble/sets/72057594055928630/
Findings from a Jail Library. yay! I always want to know more about prison for some reason. prison pete is great. my dad was in prison.
heres what the picture says:
“my name is
i am here
because of an injustice
because a thing
i didn’t do i am inocent
i’m from mexico: puebla
but god will
help me because i believe … in him”

and

Zombie Yoga?
Today’s Boing Boing tv episode:

The invite said “Bring a Yoga Mat – Dress Like a Zombie.” When filmmaker and Boing Boing pal Jason Wishnow set out to create a trailer for Scott Kenemore’s new book “The Zen of Zombie : Better Living Through the Undead” (yes, people make video trailers for books!) a vision came to his brrraiiiiinns. Why not gather 100 people in a Brooklyn park, dress them as zombies, and film them all doing yoga? There’s no inner peace like undead inner peace.

So today on Boing Boing tv, in honor of Halloween, we’ve produced a behind-the-scenes look at the making of Jason’s Zombie Yoga trailer (we’ll share his actual trailer tomorrow!). Oh, and — watch out for flying guts when they do “downward decapitated dog” or “corpse pose.” (Music by T.bias.)

Link to video. Happy Halloween from Boing Boing! Zombies are forever.

and

Schwarzenegger says Marijuana not a drug
Link
Schwarzenegger says Marijuana not a drug
Posted by Mark Frauenfelder, October 31, 2007 2:25 PM | permalink
Dan says: “Here is a great story I found about Arnold Schwarzenegger telling a British journalist that marijuana is not a drug. He was trying to deflect suggestions that he had used drugs in the past by saying weed is ‘not a drug. It’s a leaf.” Then the PR machine began, predictably, to crank into full gear.”

Aaron McLear, Schwarzenegger’s press secretary, said the governor made the comments in a lighthearted context, noting his interviewer was Piers Morgan, one of the judges on “America’s Got Talent.” Morgan is a former British newspaper editor.

“The governor was doing an interview with the host of ‘America’s Got Talent,’ the newest version of the gong show,” McLear said. “I think it’s important to keep that quote in the context of the environment where it was said.”

Link





Misfit among misfits

31 10 2007


Finally get to listen to some misfits – for the holiday spirit. makes me antsy and sing-songy actually. and happy for some reason. the lyrics and bad guitars make me smile. like “last caress”
it’s nothing to smile about – killing babies, and feeling no remorse is awful too. eek.
Today was quite lazy but not really – had caffeine and coffee. tried to expand my knowledge. And even though it was through aim – or gaim, actually (linux distribution of aim) – I had a good talk or two.
I watched House last night. it’s ok. acting seemed a bit over the top. and the disease, although plausible and probable, it wasn’t all that real for me – at least the makeup.
I’ve got the urge to watch horror movies now. weird, because I wasn’t in the spirit until recently. Usually for me, I’d get bored with a holiday days before it arrived. like christmas – watching movies, red and green all over, carol, santas at every corner – even if that’s not possible. without holiday spirit! BS.
So I looked at Times 25 scariest movies. Bambi was on it. odd? older folk have trauma from it. it plays off the gear of abandonment in kids. so I got investation of the body snatchers. and Peeping tom – IMDB that shit! it’s a creepy movie about some photographer who takes photos of his victims before he kills them. and Bambi. Then I thought of getting Pinocchio. Because when talking with Jacki we couldn’t remember a lot of it. Why was he in the whale?
And I can’t remember the Little Mermaid. so movie marathon sometime? yeah! also – Little mermaid is Jacki’s favorite disney princess – Ariel, that is.
And I miss halloween at Nick’s. B-horrors. Tim Burton. Bela Lugosi. and Pizza. Mountain Dew. Connor Cameron and Mike. the Gang.
There was this one Nick’s Birthday/Halloween party. We went to Newtown for a haunted hayride. and it was funny and stoopid. Matt kelso hit some actor. and back at the Terrimani resident – pillow fight led to a fight which ended with some random kid being pulled down a flight of stairs. oh no! oh yeah!
Halloween was my favorite holiday as a kid. Dressing up. Candy. Movies. innocent tricks. Sleepovers at Nicks’. it wasn’t family oriented. I guess that’s what I liked most.
Christmas and Easter and Birthdays. Family oriented. and Church for those formers. I hate church. except for cozy ol’ Mt Carmel in the winters. Where families would huddle for warmth. and happiness was ripe because of anticipation of food, presents and good cheer. But Christmas and Easter were unhappy family-wise. excessive drink.

I’m at that point now, where I have to make a big decision. guess what it is. Write it as a comment. I dare you. right now.

It’s if I should continue to grow my hair out or now.
I wonder what people think when they hear that someone has a big decision to make. like I wonder if people think “oh my god, is he going to move somewhere? quitting his job? divorce?”

Where did I see my tape recorder? I think I’d love to record some things that are funny. You just don’t know when that’ll happen. unpredictable.

Is there a mental theory of changing repression – like personal PA – Psycho-analysis? like a internal way to make repression supression. I don’t believe PA is all that important.

My whorehouse joke worked in Philosophies of Life.
Q: What did the sign of the Whorehouse say?
A: Beat it – we’re closed.

Sitcom episode idea(s) of the day:
“baby switch”
one guy thinks his peer was switched with him at birth – his friend looks and acts like Person A’s family. and Person A is opposite of his family. And these other people in the sitcom actually baby sit and forget who’s baby is who and the parents get upset.
so at the end of the show he asks his family.
Father “you can’t be switched at birth”
Son “why?”
Mother “because, because you were adopted!”
ohhh!

“Stage fright”
don’t have much of a plot

DONATE BLOOD.

Transmission over.
Gotta watch some horror movies. and eat for once.
and Listening to: McRad, From Chimpan-A to Chimpan-Z, CSS, Percee P.
Peace out, girl scout.





and this makes me smile

31 10 2007

Link

Friday, October 19, 2007
Reasons To Be Cheerful: week of 10/19/07

Autumn has fallen, and Winter is in the wind. Dark grey days, with some welcome dampness to the air.
Looking out my window I can see the first light frosting of snow up in the foothills.

But it’s always good weather for relating to you some of the essential nonsense that’s crossed my path this week…

1. This weblog was born on 3/27/07. Just a few days ago it cleared the 50,000 hits mark, and I’m very pleased. As always, you have my thanks for visiting!

2. ‘Forklift Driver Klaus: The First Day on the Job’ – - Have you seen it?
Oh, it’s great fun, though perhaps not for the squeamish.





Here’s my fun for the day

31 10 2007


the funny:
ebony Magazine Ads
Click here to see the latest fashions. of the 70’s? hahaha,I mean the renaissance.
“A few amazing artifacts, culled from pages in a stack of old Ebony Magazines.

Some of these seem like a great value for mail-order fashion, even at mid-’70’s prices.

Why, consider all the material used in the lapels alone…”

and Mayo and Mustard Parody Commercials.
From Mr. Big Comes great commercials.
Link

“Nobody before or since has ever made better advertising parodies than Mr. Show. This series is one of my favorites. For best effect, watch all three from top to bottom. I’ve seen these dozens of times and I still laugh out loud with each viewing. I miss you Mr. Show.”





Furniture.

31 10 2007


Innovative furniture design that makes cubism out of traditional furniture. I love this. it’s modern made straight from the old.

Link

Smansk Design Studio says:

“Today you can find a variety of products with rococo shapes in new materials. But no attempts to modernize the shape itself. This is the concept of Smånsk Neo Rococo. Truly modern products with the visual qualities of an ornamented style like the rococo. The table “Jean Pape” and the commode “Haupt” are derived from pixelated original rococo blueprints. To meet the modern, simplification seemed the right way to go. To achieve this we lowered the resolution, and numbers of polygons in models of authentic rococo furniture.”





Real Mario

31 10 2007


This is a pic that was on badbananablog
Thanks a lot. it’s for a promotion for a computer superstore, I think.





God, I feel so naughty!

31 10 2007


http://www.strictlynophotography.com/

Photographs from places where taking photos are prohibited. I feel naughty just looking at it.

oh! I’m watching Halloween 2 right now. the temperature in the hot tub is getting up above 100 degrees. oh no. oh no! 110! 120! get out get out! this is great directing. really is. the use of focus and what not. phenomenal. innovative.





7 inch laptop

31 10 2007


Asus Eee PC

Share photos of your travels without waiting till you get home. Shop the world wide web without attaching any lines or wires. Learn through the latest technology without a technical manual. Play, relax, and entertain on the go with shock-proof design. Connect with friends and family with just a few clicks.

Mobility & Reliability
• At 7″ and weighing only 0.92kg, you can take the Eee PC anywhere.
• Bumps and shocks are no longer issues. With a dependable solid-state disk, you get unparalleled shock-protection and reliability.
• Power-efficient design provides longer operating time when on the go.

Ease & Technology
• With a rapid start-up time, the Eee PC is always ready to get into action.
• No technical manual required with the specially designed, user-friendly and intuitive graphic interface .

Work & Connectivity
• You’re always connected with built-in WiFi 802.11 b/g that automatically detects and connects to the Internet at any hotspot.
• The Eee PC includes the documents and the e-mails software, and a suite of other productivity software to help keep you on track.
• Upload photos and videos and share them instantly on Flickr or YouTube without waiting till you get home.

Media & Entertainment
• Enjoy music and videos with extensive support for a wide range of digital multimedia.
• Log on to Skype or other network, and you can connect with friends anywhere, anytime.
• Clear up wire clutter with the built-in card reader, camera, speakers, and microphone.





I love trent and saul but…

31 10 2007


Ok read this. and tell me what you think. then I’ll say what I think.
Trent Reznor: Take my music, please
Posted by Greg Sandoval

Rocker Trent Reznor says he doesn’t pretend to know the answers to what ails the music industry.

But that hasn’t stopped the iconoclastic front man for the band Nine Inch Nails from marching to the front lines–in lock step with British band Radiohead–in an assault on the traditional music business.

In an interview Tuesday with CNET News.com, Reznor, who made news earlier this month when he left his record label, bashed the music industry, detailed how he convinced performer Saul Williams to give way his latest album for free, praised Radiohead for distributing music directly to fans via the Web and indicated that instead of fighting the so-called free culture–people who share music online–he plans to embrace it.

“Personally, I would like people to support artists,” Reznor said. “After all, we as artists dedicate our lives to producing the best music we can. It’s been a painful process for me personally (to see the changes in the music industry). But should I be angry at the audience that wants to hear music so much, an audience that is so passionate about hearing it they go online to get it two weeks before the music debuts? No, I want them to be that way.”

Reznor has become a revolutionary figure to the file-sharing community. A video appeared recently at YouTube that showed him during a concert performance lamenting the high prices of CDs. Fans whooped it up when Reznor told them to go ahead and steal his music.

Since then, Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead have become symbols of a growing movement among performers who are trying to use the Web to cut out the traditional middlemen of distribution: record labels.

Radiohead shook the industry earlier this month by releasing a digital version of their latest album and asking fans pay whatever price they believed the album was worth. It was unprecedented move largely because it appeared to address an issue that music industry has largely tried to ignore. Music fans, many of whom obtain songs for free through illegal file sharing, perceive the dollar value of songs as almost nothing. Unless something dramatic occurs, many believe there is a chance a large number of fans will never again be swayed to plunk down money for music.

Reznor, 42, said that the music industry is spinning its wheels trying to fight that perception. He said that in the future songs can be a way to entice fans to buy concert tickets and merchandise and he recognized that this may be how musicians make their living. He has recently produced an album for Williams, a rapper/filmmaker/spoken-word artist, called The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of NiggyTardust, which goes on sale tomorrow on Williams’ site.

Not coincidentally, the digital version of the album, which is free of copy-protection software, is priced at whatever fans think its worth. It was Reznor’s idea to give away Williams’ music just as Radiohead did.
“(The record industry’s) treatment of artists has less sympathy and it’s more like ‘What can we get out of you.’ My only concern has always been that my audience is treated fairly.”
–Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails

“Radiohead is one of my favorite bands,” Reznor said. “When they announced they were releasing that album for free, I got dozens of text messages. It gave me goose bumps? It’s such an exciting way to sell a record.”

Now, here’s the rub. Reznor isn’t the naïve artist who doesn’t understand dollars and cents. He said that he knows giving away music may not make business sense. In addition, such a model could work for marquee bands like Radiohead but not for up-and-coming acts.

“Radiohead has a built-in audience and they have the luxury of being able to experiment with a new distribution model,” Reznor said. “I think there were some serious flaws with how they executed but it was a good idea.”

Reznor addressed some of the questions about whether artists are prepared to become merchants. Who is going to oversee sales, promotion, marketing, site supervision and the countless other chores that record labels historically handled?

But Reznor isn’t afraid to get his hands dirty. He said that he was part of the negotiations with Musicane,the company handling the online distribution of Williams’ upcoming album. Musicane is overseeing fulfillment, payment processing, and customer service.

The beauty of Musicane, according to Reznor is that it provides the backbone for distribution without requiring musicians to invest “hundreds of thousands of dollars.”

“Look, we’re looking for what works and this seemed like it made sense,” Reznor said. “Ask me in a week about how it went and hopefully I’ll be saying the same thing.”

It’s doubtful that even if problems crop up Reznor can be dissuaded from his belief that the Internet is good for artists. He thinks that the Web creates direct links between musicians and their fans. This is beneficial even if sometimes it’s hard for performers to stand out among the countless acts trying to promote themselves online.

“The greatest thing about the Internet is that everybody is their own distributor,” Reznor said. “Being your own distributor is power and the thing that labels once held over artists. The power of getting your message out to an audience is very empowering as an artist. These are exciting times and things are happening that I couldn’t imagine just a few years ago.”

As for the future, well, Reznor fully acknowledges that he like everybody else in music is unsure of how things will turn out. But he says he’s sure of one thing. The old way of doing business is dead.

“I don’t know what the future holds,” he said. “I don’t know what model is going to work. I do know relationships between music labels and artist like myself aren’t going well. These days when digital elements come into play labels have dealt with them generally poorly. It has gotten to a place where it couldn’t be worse. Their treatment of artists has less sympathy and it’s more like ‘What can we get out of you.’ My only concern has always been that my audience is treated fairly.”