Friday, June 23, 2006

Worst Video Game Titles

Last night, I stumbled across a list of the 50 worst video game titles. It's definitely worth reading. Here are some excerpts

  • Iggy's Reckin' Balls
  • Booby Kids
  • Tongue of the Fatman
  • Nuts & Milk
  • If It Moves, Shoot It!
  • Irritating Stick
  • Princess Tomato in Salad Kingdom
  • Sticky Balls
  • Awesome Possum Kicks Dr. Machino's Butt!

Good stuff.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Headache Insomnia/Romantic Chemistry

I was going through some really old email and before clearing one out, I thought I'd post a couple of stories here that a friend sent to me about three years ago.

***

Headache Insomnia
By Jamie R. (July 12, 2003)




I sometimes even see the hideous yellow face of my pain, but not very often. When I do, it is always about the same time, in the same room. I am unsure whether my pain lives there, then, and beckons me to join it, or if it follows me. It doesn’t matter. We are both there, and it shows itself.

My pain’s vehicle, either creator or progeny, is a breed of headache I was unfamiliar with when I was fully sighted. An eyestrain headache, the doctor concludes, advising me to cease the stressful activity and try aspirin for the pain. Since I am legally blind, I view much of the world through one type of magnifying glass or another, so now experience plenty of eyestrain, while I did not when I had normal vision. I believe the diagnosis, but the dullard’s feeble prescription is unrealistic and insulting. It is obvious the activity in question is my economic survival in a visually intensive society, so stopping is impossible. I don’t expect him to know aspirin is worse than useless, but I’m insulted to find he thinks me such a slack-wit that I never thought to pursue that mundane course of treatment. Still, he can’t know the futility of using over-the-counter remedies, as his narrow philosophy only permits the headache to be a medical condition. I know otherwise, because the headache I experience is always the same one. It came with my disability and lives inside me, usually dormant and causing no ill effects. Occasionally, it wakens, grows, and comes to visit, not a recurring malady, but an entity possessing volition and guile. I know this. I am an intimate terms with the being. We live together, and I alone am capable of understanding it. Eyestrain headache, it doesn’t sound so bad. Discussing it rationally, only possible in it’s absence, reduces it to a purely intellectual construction, and enables me to believe it isn’t.

My eyestrain headache differs from other kinds I experience. It resides in a place near the geometric center of my brain. When it arises, it stays up with me for several days, so if I manage to sleep, and cheat it out of part of its due, respite is brief. It waits for me to wake. In the morning, it signals with sharp messages, moderate jabs running up the back of my neck that urge full consciousness. The headache’s most distinctive quality, though, is it is accompanied by a myriad of visual effects. These begin hours before the pain, so serve to foretell the headache’s arrival, as well as to accent and enhance its discomfort for the episode’s duration. Aside from a general deterioration of my already poor sight, further blurring, and slower image-interpretation, the headache is heralded with, and accompanied by, flashing lights. In the beginning, the lights are small and subtle, thousands of tiny dots, like proximate stars, twinkling around me. When I see them, I know the headache is coming and there’s nothing I can do to stop it. As the entity grows, the lights become bigger and brighter, even violent. When the show is at its peak, it seems as if I walk through a dim corridor lined with photographers continuously snapping flash pictures with inappropriately powerful gear. Each flash is a concentrated spotlight aimed directly at my retinas. After each hits its mark, residual light lingers and scatters, adding additional distortion to the disturbances of new flashes. When the being rages and I am out in the city, the world is an only partially existent, dangerous place. Over half of my normally poor vision is occupied with flashes, which erodes my ability to interpret actual objects, such as moving cars. I often experience near collisions, but, immersed in the headache’s unpleasant fog, I don’t care much at the time.

The first day is not too bad. In my cubicle at work, I look up from the computer. A thin trail of lights drags behind my shifting line of sight. They appear as fireworks, incredibly small, intense spheres of brightness that quickly fade and vanish. This is the headache’s announcement of its intended arrival. It never visits without calling first. I look at the clock and feel fear, as it is only one, which means the beast will be with me by the time I head out. Aside from anxiety, there are no other unpleasant effects. The lights are even beautiful and interesting to watch, a private display being shot off for my sole enjoyment. I spend an inordinate amount of time not working, just watching the show.

The infant headache is born by the end of the day. It gets my attention, makes me aware we are together, but doesn’t push it. I walk through the streets and ride the bus home with little difficulty and only minor irritation, a dull throbbing and intermittent dim lights. The pace picks up during the evening, as my wife and I talk and watch television. I am communicative, as the pain is mild, though grows more insistent as the being organizes and consolidates. I feign disinterest in the creature. I believe this annoys it, but have no evidence. I have a hunch. The night passes relatively well, as the headache only manages to deliver a powerful enough stab to wrench me from sleep every hour. I get out of bed and pace, then drift off again, spending the night alternating between hour-long periods of sleep and half-hour periods of wakefulness. This ragged pattern takes a toll, adding the disorienting, will-eroding effects of sleeplessness to the headache’s discomfort, giving the malaise a surreal edge.

The second day begins with the headache nagging, exerting a constant, but not severe, pressure. Each heartbeat creates a throb in the center of my head. It is tolerable, but causes slight dizziness. Out in the town on my way to work, the environment begins to change. Sounds are slightly louder than they ought. Colors appear more vibrant and bleed together, making it difficult to ascertain where one object leaves off and another begins. The flashing is sporadic and weak, creating few problems. Work is transformed into a series of mildly irritating events. Slightly loud or improperly pitched voices bug me. Fluorescent lights emit annoying purplish glare. Why does the phone keep ringing? Through all this, the headache builds, its dull throbbing punctuated with occasional jabs of intense pain. I get through it.

By bedtime, the event is in full swing. I can no longer hide the headache, but I don’t actively whine. I don’t have to. I sit silently while my wife speaks to me a language I am presently unable to understand. Like an incompetent field linguist, I make crude and ineffective attempts to isolate, and attach meaning to, patterns in the noises she makes, but the pounding has long since rendered incoming communications difficult, at best, to interpret. Coherent outgoing messages are also unlikely, as the intense pressure in my head clogs the route between my brain and vocal chords, making transmission of formulated ideas between the two points physically improbable. I gape moronically as she talks, unable to fully comprehend or adequately acknowledge, occasionally contributing a few slurred syllables of partially articulated words, which, she claims, come out as meaningless grunts and hums. In this manner, I whine passively, complaining implicitly with my silence. Because I don’t say anything, she knows the headache is with me. Although I don’t want to spread even a bit of my misery onto her, I can’t care. I refuse to hold myself accountable for communication without intent.

The night is long. Brief bouts of fitful sleep are interrupted by extended periods of wide-awake staring at the ceiling, contemplating various aspects of the headache. I can only imagine how it occurs, and I do. I imagine it so fully, my version becomes true. It becomes truer than fact, better than science, because it is entirely contained in my mind. After countless sleepless headache nights spent in study, a detailed, meticulously constructed, working model of the process is housed in my brain. There, I can examine it, test it, change it until it works. As I conceptualize each mechanism, I feel it occur, verifying my assumptions until they are true.

The eyes constantly gather images. They draw particles of light from objects and suck them in through the pupils in streams, funneling them towards the retina for reassembly and interpretation. The retina’s central area, the macula, is the vortex to which the swirling fragments are drawn. In the retina of the normally sighted, the particles hit the macula and stick, accurately reconstructing the observed image, and the eye’s muscles and nerves relax while they await the next signal.

In my retina, the process operates differently. The particles strike the degenerated macula, and those that hit a good spot stick, while others bounce off diseased points of impact and scatter, reduced to incomprehensible fragments of colored light. They ricochet around on useless tissue for a while, then lay, unused, at the back of the eye. The brain struggles to make sense of the fragments that stuck, forced to work hard at the task of filling in gaps, which often fails. While the nerves and muscles are still trying to diagnose and fix the problem, another cascade of swirling light particles, drawn from a new image, hits the macula. Again, some stick, while others tumble to the back. A heap of wasted light forms at the back of the eyes, growing with each new bombardment. The recesses at the back of the eyes fill to bursting. It has to go somewhere. The pressure from the growing pile forces fragments out through fissures too tiny for them to pass through otherwise. The light seeps out of the back of the eye, directly into the brain cavity serving as the hibernating monster’s lair. The particles of energy touch the sleeping beast, curling around it in a fine mist. The headache grows and takes shape, gathering seeping light particles more and more as each image strikes the macula on the other side of the cracks. The beast becomes itself, again.

It’s happening right now. I’m in bed, staring at the ceiling, testing my model against the feelings I am experiencing. I find them to be consistent, as I can almost hear each discarded particle tinkling onto the swelling heap and feel the minute increase in pressure each new addition causes. Sometime after four, I doze, despite the ruckus. Or maybe, on account of it. Perhaps the continuous hammering knocks me senseless. Either way, I’m grateful for the break. No, an eyestrain headache doesn’t sound so bad, but when it greets me at daybreak with a worse banging pain than the one I fell asleep with, it seems like it is.

As soon as I begin to stir, but still cling to precious unconsciousness, the headache strengthens. The morning birds give it the momentum it needs to obliterate the remaining remnants of sleep. Just before it succeeds, less than half awake, I dream their songs, which are several times louder than necessary and carry disturbing, oddly spaced notes that cause a wave of almost physical revulsion. I ride the sickening wave out of oblivion into headache reality.

The morning is bad. The headache, annoyed with impatience from waiting, pushes me to full alertness with a few rapid, particularly nasty jolts. Now that I’m fully awake, no sharp edges are dulled, and my return to total awareness of every aspect of the headache makes me recall being up nearly all night, dealing with it’s uncomfortable effects. I seriously doubt sleep ever really came. Up for work, I am a zombie shuffling through a hostile haze of pounding pressure and distorted perception, automatically performing the necessary motions without thought. Out into the city at seven presents a dreary, surreal scene. Every sense heightened by the headache and lack of sleep, I am assaulted by brightness and sound. The light hurts my eyes. A quiet noise from a passing car contains a peculiar, high-pitched buzz that wheezes into my ears, bothering me. Work exists to get on my last nerve. People’s voices and office sounds are loud and distorted. Lights are overly bright and flicker terribly. The chair is uncomfortably hard, and pushes relentlessly against my thighs. I’m getting a cramp in my leg. In the cafeteria at lunch, cutlery clanks in faint, but distinct, discordant flats and sharps that tear at my sensibilities. A tremendous rustling noise, like the sound of a brisk wind through an autumn forest, is produced by a man removing the cellophane from a Twinkie. The pop tastes like summer hose-water. I’ve got a stomachache. The colored plastic tendrils decorating the toothpick through the deli sandwich I bought are so little, they’re ticking me off. I need to get out.

I leave work two hours early, overwhelmed by the headache’s constant thudding and no longer able to interpret my computer screen. The city is masked in a harsh bright glare of blending colors. My hypersensitive vision gathers every possible image, but the brain is unable to interpret each fully, so parts of each distinct object are interspersed with parts of other objects, and I perceive one great scramble of visual signals, like there is a finger-painted wall directly in front of me. I use my cane to navigate, ignoring the incomprehensible, and false, appearance of my surroundings. I normally don’t need the cane, as I usually possess enough vision to find my way by sight, but under the beast’s influence, I am functionally blind. It is not a blindness of darkness, like I probably imagined before I became visually impaired, but a bright blindness, brought about by excess, rather than absence, of light. I determine the safety of crossing streets by sound, which is normally pretty efficient, as motor vehicles make substantial noise, and my practiced hearing is adept at estimating distance by ear. In my current state, though, the task is complicated by my headache and insomnia enhanced hearing. Complicated, but safe, as my ability to hear further than usual necessitates greater caution, and I detect, and wait for, cars that sound imminent, but are actually too far away to do me any harm. I wait a long time at each crosswalk, until nothing but silence prowls the street, and feel the way to the bus with the cane. Its vibration as it taps the sidewalk sends tiny shocks up my arm, making it tingle as if asleep. I struggle to remain oblivious to all the useless information coursing through me, and concentrate on the cane’s interpretation, which is the only reliable input I am receiving. This works. I make it home without incident.

I spend the rest of the afternoon and evening vainly trying to decipher the television, as it shoots off thousands of images and words every minute. I get in bed with my wife at the regular time, each movement causing a small, uncomfortable disturbance in the pounding pattern. The sheet feels like sandpaper as I lay back and drag it up over my sensitized skin. The sound of the sheet rubbing against itself and the bed has an underlying, normally inaudible, scraping quality that gives me a dose of the creeps. I don’t understand how I still manage to grasp at the faintest shred of hope for sleep at this point, but I do. This hope is not based on experience, but on probability. Even in the midst of the most frantic, pounding pain, sleep sometimes comes. Why not now, instead of at 3:30? The odds are slightly worse than those for being struck by lightening while placing a winning single-number roulette bet. The pounding exerts itself. I lay on my back, staring at the fireworks hovering above. I hear my wife’s breathing change, the pressure distorting the soft sounds until her breath bellows and booms as she drifts away. I stay like this for an hour, experiencing the headache, continually examining its effects and adjusting my model, which now approaches perfection. The level of pressure escalates, banging through my temples, shaking my whole body with slight twitches. Futility appears. Sleep is totally out of the question, despite need and desire, as mounting pressure renders exhaustion irrelevant. Headache insomnia dominates the evening’s activities.

The beast is everywhere, following or leading me as I pace about. It exaggerates every sense. Normally quiet night sounds are amplified and distorted. I hear every hand dragging across the face of every clock in the house. The air conditioner kicks on with a boom, then produces a high-pitched, grating squeal as it runs. I pace, because the timing of my steps is out of cadence with my heartbeat, distracting me from the incessant throbbing. The floor is too hard. Not content with having my feet lightly tread on it, it pushes up against them, causing me to stumble. I can smell everything we’ve cooked, and cleaned with, for the past several days, all in one nauseating mix of odors. As I pass through dark rooms, walls emit bright flashes, which shoot through my pupils as they are sucked into the diseased vortex. As always, a portion of the particles comprising each flash cannot adhere to the macular surface and are discarded into the back of my head, creating more substance to feed the raging beast.

Eventually, without complete conscious intent, I collapse into the wheeled office chair at my computer and lean back, gripping the arms tightly. There is no sensation but the heartbeat-timed pounding pain. I suddenly understand it is yellow, but the perception is not entirely visual. Although each beat causes an incredible instant of pressure along the veins in my temples that is accompanied by a yellow flash, other senses also perceive the headache pain’s nature. It feels profoundly yellow. It tastes yellow. The air is thick with a yellow smell that makes it difficult to take full breaths, and I hear a roaring, yellow sound. I grip the chair more tightly, lean back, and roll around slightly. I can tell the beast is close to the surface.

“Show yourself,” I scream, without verbalization, willing it to appear.

Nothing happens. I rock back, immersed in my lonely, insomniac world. I slip away, somehow, for several minutes, only realizing I am asleep when I experience waking. A prickling sensation goads the back of my head, running up the base of my neck, resulting in a body shaking shiver that wakes me. From the corner of one eye, I glimpse a yellowish white wisp of fine mist originating somewhere behind me. It passes in front, a continuous stream of bright yellow dots, like the illuminated dust of a comet’s tail, and circles my head. The stream spirals and wraps around my head several times, about six inches away. The spiral grows and twists with dizzying speed until I am looking up into a tornado of yellow flecks. The funnel configuration’s source is an unseen point somewhere at the back of my head, where the headache’s pressure forces accumulated scraps of wasted light to ooze from my skull. Through delirium, I watch a cloud take shape inches from my face. An area is defined where shimmering particles move closer together, forming a shape more yellow than the streams of more widely spaced lights in the funnel. The shape takes form, appearing to be a stocky, flying gnome. It dances before my eyes, jerking in frantic, arrogant, irritating gestures. It’s long, narrow, pointy face emerges, astoundingly yellow. It doesn’t look like a real person, but like an exaggerated painting of a mythical face, the face of a deranged pixie, twisted by misery and spite. The horrid grimace floats, becoming a shade more yellow as each beat of my heart pushes another wave of pain and light out of my brain to nourish it. The pressure is so severe, it conveys the impression I have a high fever. In an insomniac’s desperate boredom, I put my hand on my head every thirteen seconds to check, but detect no heat. With each heartbeat, I grow hotter, the pressure stronger, the pain more nauseating. The demon glows a shade of perfect, fully saturated yellow, so pure and beautiful it is not meant for this world. As I am able to experience the color with all of my senses, the shock of its purity overwhelms me. I pass out.

I wake in the chair, sweating slightly, to a house at normal volume. No throbbing and little pressure remain. It’s over. Eyestrain headache, it doesn’t sound so bad. Perhaps it isn’t. On a day with acceptably obscured vision, average ability in use of my other senses, and the absence of excessive pressure, I don’t think it is.

***

Romantic Chemistry
by Jamie R. (June 21, 2003)



I was nearly an accredited scientist, but my extensive knowledge of medicine and biochemistry were useless at that point. The malady I suffered was real, but its symptoms could not be measured, so no treatment was prescribed. It was an emotional affliction that expressed itself physically. Fluctuations in pulse-rate, associated with my body's adjustments to minor chemical imbalances, caused variation in temperature and waves of manic exhilaration, resulting in pleasant, euphoric disorientation.

That inexplicable reaction some call love.

Schooled in science, I did not entertain the false notion I control my actions. I realized I was merely a sustained chemical reaction, which, although poorly understood, had somewhat predictable results. Somewhat, for I could not foretell whose byproducts would react with mine, or when, but it happened.

My particular composition causes me to react strangely to certain chemical emissions of the female of the species. Since adolescence, I had been assaulted by many such mixtures, and combinations of varying potency had been formed by contacts with nearly every female I crossed compounds with. I resisted, sustained by my love of freedom and fear of rejection, avoiding commitment at all costs. In loneliness, I found independence, unburdened by others’ expectations.

After years of suppressing irrational feeling, I thought I was numb with indifference and immune to entanglement, especially with somebody with whom I had absolutely nothing in common. She was from an elevated social plane, and destined to remain there, so I, an impoverished science student, was no great catch. This was irrelevant at the molecular level, as she emitted reagents that explosively reacted with mine, producing insanity causing substances my body had never contained. I fell. The newly forming solution inside me was reaching saturation, yielding emotional precipitation that compelled me to act, to speak. I had to tell her.

"I really like you."

Getting close.

"I enjoy being with you."

Closer still.

Under the influence of strange chemicals, I longed to confess I thought I would die every time she left, that I felt like I was dead when she was away for a few days, that I smelled like I was dead when I knew I would not see her and neglected my personal hygiene.

"I missed you so much."

How close can you get? Complete saturation was attained, the reaction formed the words and forced them from my mouth.

"I love you. I’m in love with you. I want to spend every second together, and dedicate my life to becoming your ideal husband."

There, I had finally said it, the 'three little words.'

Then, her reply. Would it have been so hard for her to repeat them, like a chant? Three tiny syllables. Not much of a strain, phonologically speaking. Say it, sweetheart, I know you feel the same. But knowing and knowing are two different things.

Apparently, a side-effect of my condition was the clouding of scientific objectivity, leading me to the unsubstantiated assumption a two-way reaction had been taking place. Upon further analysis, however, I concluded her emissions were catalytic in nature, causing a reaction in me while leaving her own composition unchanged. Instead of three small words, I got one little word and one bigger word.

"I'm flattered."

What now? Suicide? Nope. Distance. The reaction intensified, making me unable to respond verbally, forcing adrenalin into my legs and bidding them to carry me homeward.

Inexplicably, at least in my scientific philosophy, the words changed the reaction’s effects, though not the reaction itself. I hypothesize the particular sonic-wave pattern of her chosen words created chemical impulses that altered my perception. The love-induced euphoria was pulverized by the ailment’s overpowering physical manifestations. My racing heart no longer excited, but sent jolts of painful pressure through my head, as if I had a gas-station air hose jammed in my ear. Alterations in body temperature occurred so rapidly, I nearly froze to death from heat exhaustion. Instead of happy intoxication, disequilibria now seemed to produce vile, poisonous materials.

So, I did what any chemist would do when faced with an uncontrollable reaction. I knew it was theoretically impossible to stop it, so I let it run its course. Containment was the only viable solution. I stayed home sweating and vomiting for four days, expelling failed love’s noxious residue. With the removal of the catalyst, the churning reaction eventually subsided. I fell out.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Evolution of Dance

A friend recently forwarded a video clip link - it's of this stand up comic mimicing pretty much every single popular dance move in the past fifty years in under six minutes. If you watch this, be sure to turn on your speakers.

The Evolution of Dance!

Sunday, May 07, 2006

White Rabbit - best damned candy in the world



Outside of chocolate, I'm not a big fan of candy. Hard candy, in particular, is not very appealing to me. Those red and white peppermint hard candies you find at restaurants? Cannot stand them. Caramels? Creates a strange, bitter aftertaste in my mouth.

That was until a friend introduced me to White Rabbits. It's this taffy-like candy from China. Apparently, it's been made there for years and is well known there - kind of like M&Ms in the U.S.

Anyway, it comes individually wrapped - about the same size as the individually wrapped Tootsie Rolls. The exterior is wrapped in wax paper with the White Rabbit logo on it. Each candy is wrapped in a thin piece of rice paper - if you didn't know any better, you'd think it was a piece of waxed paper. Actually, it's rice paper and very edible - in fact, someone from Taiwan told me you eat the rice paper to make the candy chewier faster.

The original White Rabbit is basically a cream flavored Tootsie Roll - kind of. A bit chewier and definitely longer lasting. And DAMNED ADDICTING.

Someone gave me a bag of mango flavored White Rabbits last week - didn't think I'd ever say this but I think the mango flavored White Rabbits taste better than the original flavor.


P.S. I found the following "review" of White Rabbits on Amazon:

Larruping, September 5, 2004

  • "WHITE RABBIT" is one of the most famous brands of Guan Sheng Yuan (Group) Co.,ltd.and belongs to candy product. This product is very larruping that the candy's surface swathe a very very thin velamen made from sticky rice and it can eat.People always are interesting in the sticky rice velamen.This product's sales volume is very hot in USA(Kmart,Walgmart)."
  • Was this review helpful to you?

My answer to the question above is a resounding NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.

Monday, May 01, 2006

Lilacs be a'bloomin' in central Ohio



My dad is a big fan of lilacs. He bought us a bush when we moved into the house - I think we planted the bush in March 2004.



Anyway, it hasn't produced a lot of blooms since then - I see the other lilac bushes in the neighborhood and they stand six to eight feet tall and are full of blooms. But those bushes are much older. So, the way I see it, our little lilac bush has plenty of time to catch up.

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Leprechaun in Alabama!

I heard about this story on the radio and heard the sound clip. It had me in stitches - now this is the video of the story. The story? That some people in Mobile AL claimed to see a leprechaun in a tree. Nuff said.

Monday, March 27, 2006

Dogs playing with dogs



A dog playing with another dog is a blast to watch. Assuming you've got two (or more) well-adjusted non-neurotic and non-aggressive dogs in the play group, inevitably the dogs start running around with each other, teasing and taunting each other and basically goofing off. They are definitely having fun. In addition to boring stuff like the dogs "socializing" and "exercising," the benefits that accrue to the OWNERS of the dogs are simply summarized as ... the dogs in question get DOG TIRED (pun intended) ... so much so that when you get them home, all they want to do is lie around and sleep.

Very cool.

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Helmer is a rock star!

Among the most popular web sites for social connections right now are myspace.com and facebook.com - this is self-evident for anyone who pays attention to popular culture. (I hear "facebook" used as a verb on a regular basis.) Someone had the brilliant idea to develop a similar site for dogs - it's called dogster.com.

Dogster.com - ahh, a great place for dog owners to brag and waste a lot of time. Speaking of wasting time, check out Helmer's site. When you go to his site, give him a bone (upper right corner) - I am not really sure what the purpose is ... but a dog's site can get a lot of bones. They expire after about two weeks - and, again, I'm not sure what the hell the purpose of this virtual bone is ...

Monday, February 20, 2006

Iron Maiden in the Deep South

This is for my buddy, Don, who hails from the formerly great state of California. He's a big Maiden fan - I showed him this video and he cracked up. It apparently was made by a band (The Full Throttle Band), somewhere in the SE U.S. ... specifically, "live at the Dauphin Island Spring Arts Festival April 2003." (I am pretty sure Dauphin Island is part of Alabama.)

Anyway, the cover version of Wrathchild isn't too bad ... what's hilarious is the audience. They're about five people in the 'crowds' and look to be as enthusiastic as my laundry hamper. All I know is that the Dauphin Island Spring Arts Festival organizers should be fired.


Sunday, February 12, 2006

Cartoons Causing Riots? Right.

OK - I prefer to post nonsensical and (what - to me - passes for) humorous things on this site ... but I cannot fathom these riots. On Oct 17, 2005, a well-known Egyptian newspaper published those very same cartoons that are NOW causing riots ... the obvious question is "WHERE WERE THE RIOTERS ON OCT 17, 2005?" What made the Danish publications more insidious than the Egyptian publication 3 1/2 months earlier? There are some great posts out there ... here are some of them:

From the depaulia.com site

From the thereligionofpeace.com site


From the aynrand.org site

Friday, February 10, 2006

Kiss This Guy

A very common occurrence for someone who is raised by parents whose native language is something other than English is to learn how to mispronounce words ... and be blissfully ignorant while doing so. My personal example is for many years, I was convinced that there was a department store chain called K-MARK. Why? Because this is how my dad repeatedly pronounced it.

In a similar vein, have you ever had a song in your head and when you sing it to yourself, you're rather proud of how you really know the lyrics ... and then, sometime time later in your life, you find out you were WAY off base?

Well, there is a web site that is a depository of self-reported messed-up lyrics ... if you feel up to it, go ahead and report your self-delusional lyrics.

Friday, February 03, 2006

The Farting Preacher - a video collection

OK - these are amongst my all-time favorite video clips. Here you go:

Farting Preacher #2



Farting Preacher #3



Farting Preacher #4 (my personal favorite)



Farting Preacher #5a

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Jesus of Nazareth Take Two (a four part series)

OK - here are video posts on a four part series of Jesus of Nazareth ... this is rather amusing, in the mold of MST 3000.

Scene #1




Scene #2




Scene #3




Scene #4

Friday, January 20, 2006

Jesus sings I WILL SURVIVE and the Chinese sings I WANT IT THAT WAY

Google has a new video service - it's at video.google.com - some of the stuff posted there is for sale (e.g. Brady Bunch videos and the like). But there are a lot of free clips.

This one is a video of Jesus lip-synching to I Will Survive. Good scenes include one of him running around in his underwear.



Unlike the other videos above, this video has nothing to do with Jesus.

Friday, December 30, 2005

This year's (2005) Christmas cards

I finally got this year's Christmas cards out ... I was way behind this year. Thank Gawd Columbus has some wacky local scenery ... for those of you who received a card from us, the photo was taken off Riverside Dr in Dubin OH, a NW suburb of Columbus. The statue is supposed to be the head of "OLD LEATHERLIPS" - I kid you not. Click here if you don't believe me.

The story of the demise of Old Leatherlips is rather morbid - if you REALLY want to know, try this link ...

On that happy note, MERRY CHRISTMAS! And feel free to leave a comment or two ...

Friday, December 09, 2005

Extreme weather in central Ohio (or what passes for it)

Well, we got our first significant snowfall of the 2005-06 season this evening. Anywhere from 3-6" are supposed to fall ... which means we'll probably get one or two inches. (The local news tends to yell "The sky is falling!" any time there is a glimpse of snow in the forecast.)

I really don't know what the big deal is - it's just precipitation that's in a slightly frozen form. Woopdee doo.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Getting basic cable

Dammit, the world is ending. I mean, it really looks like I'll be getting cable TV. I know that sounds like "Well crap, welcome to the 20th century" -- but I have never had cable, save for an 18 month period of time in the early 1990s when I had a roomate who insisted on having cable TV. Although it was neat at the time, I've never thought of it as 'required for modern living.'

I don't watch much TV and I don't expect things will change too much. The only thing I look forward to on cable is access to ESPN, an occasional Green Acres re-run on Nick at Night and The Daily Show on Comedy Central. I find everything else I need on local TV (e.g. Seinfeld re-runs, local news, etc.). The main reason to get cable is to improve our reception. In one word - it's crap. With cable, it won't be crap. Or so I certainly hope. Nuff said.

Friday, September 30, 2005

Inconsistency while complaining about the weather

When growing up in southern California, lo these many years ago, I distinctly recall thinking that there were two seasons - i) February and ii) the rest of the year. You see, southern California is pretty dry - and all the rain that falls in SoCal pretty much falls in February. Sure, there are some times where it rains in other parts of the year but it's pretty much concentrated in February.

Anyway, my concept of weather and climate was rather provincial since all I knew was LA weather. I also remember the weather on the local news being very boring - "Well, it's going to be 78 tomorrow, 79 the day after, and 77 the day after that." Of course, I didn't appreciate how good the weather was - it was where I lived and that was that.

Getting back to the topic of local news and the weather - central Ohio is pretty well known in these parts to have weather that is rather schizophrenic, especially in spring and (to a slightly lesser extent) fall. By schizophrenic, I mean that you can go from 81F one day to 62F the next. That's why spring and fall are my favorite seasons around here.

There is a very annoying thing that happens every time it gets warm around here - the talking heads on the news will say something like "When are we going to get relief from the heat?" And of course, when it cools down, they say "When will it warm up again?" Then when it rains, the easy-to-predict comment is "When will we get relief from Mother Nature?" to be followed by (when it's dry, like it was this past summer) "When will we see rain? Any time soon?"

If I had a brick and TVs cost $1 to buy, I'd destroy a TV every time I watch the local news. It is beyond inane.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Hurricane Katrina - soon to be forgotten

Hurricane Katrina has been in the news for quite some time. This is natural and very understandable since this appears to be the worst natural distaster to hit the U.S. ... ever. I won't regurgitate what has already been written but I would like to opine on two items:

1) Why is New Orleans a backwards city? I've always thought that New Orleans should be the defacto capital of 'big oil' for the United States, especially given its geographic monopoly on the majority of oil shipping/refinery lines for the country. Lo and behold, I stumbled across an excellent post by Thomas Lifson. Basically the difference between New Orleans and Houston (the city that became the oil capital of the U.S.) is the difference between an entrepreneurial mindset and one that thrives on (and suffocates from) bureacracy.

2) As much coverage that Katrina is getting, I predict that only one month from now the press coverage will veer from "24/7" to "sometimes and/or rarely mentioned." It never ceases to amaze me that the U.S news media's attention span is typically similar to that of a gnat's.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Whiffleball rules ...

I think we need more whiffleball leagues in this country. For those of you who don't know, whiffleball is as American as apple pie and Chevrolets. In the 1950s, this guy in Connecticut invents a baseball-like game that he can play with his very young son and something that could be played anywhere without fear of breaking windows, etc. After a lot of experimentation, he discovers that the optimal layout and type of holes on a hollow plastic ball are eight oblong shaped holes on one half of the ball's surface. I don't know why but I find this stuff interesting.

Anyway, Helmer has taken to whiffleball quite a bit. He doesn't retrieve nor does he let go of a ball when he brings it to you. However, I learned that if you have three balls in play at one time, he will go after the one you hit ... that leaves you two more to distract him with ... you hit the first ball, he runs to get it, he sees you have another one in your hand, comes running back to you with the original ball in his mouth and drops it when you hit the second ball. This continues until he tires - this usually occurs in 5 to 10 minutes.