
Click on it and open it, after 10 sec or so the picture changes to black and white, but your tired eyes will see it in color. After you blink, you will see it in its black and white glory.
Over a year ago, after my father’s glowing recommendation, and my new found capability for producing disposable income, I signed up for Netflix. As anyone who is not a first time reader can attest, I love movies. I originally signed up for the modest 2-at-a-time unlimited (no monthly limit) plan for about $14 a month. When my “queue” of movies for which I was waiting reached 200, I upgraded to 3-at-a-time for about $17/ month. Do I watch $18/month worth of movies, you’re god damn right I do. I work those Netflix couriers to the bone, and if I don’t hit my full capacity I make up for it the next month. I have been hanging onto one movie: Isle of Wight Festival 1970: A Message to Love, because I am admittedly addicted to hippie music/culture. In between acts like Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, The Who, Joni Mitchell, Miles Davis, Moody Blues, etc, there is actually a plot involving the appearance of about 550,000 people who came to the festival with absolutely no intention of buying a ticket. Tickets were 3 pounds a pop (which a rough calculation works out to about $30 today) and the festival promoters ended up having to let them all in, for a net loss on the festival of somewhere in the order of, let’s say $10M of today’s dollars. Anyways, the point is, if I hold onto a movie for longer than a couple days, its kind of like I’m back to being on the 2-at-a-time plan. Due to the changeover time, i.e. mail it to
Netflix has a rating system that allows you to rive a number of stars to movies, and it uses your rating to suggest movies to add to your queue. At 320, I need help adding to my queue like I need a hole in the head, but if I only watched movies I’d heard of, then I wouldn’t be able to watch a movie every day, not that I actually watch a movie every day, but if I could, you better believe I would. I’ve rated 1,457 movies. I’ve only watched about 50 since signing up, and one that I watched I didn’t finish because it was too bad. Anyways, that’s an overall average of 3.5 movies per month, which is way below my goal, but for much of that time I was on that 2-at-a-time plan. Since I upgraded about two months ago I’ve seen 20 movies, at an average of ten a month. Let’s do the math, 12 months of $14 a month saw 30 movies (there was a transition period of about a month when I moved, and they sent a bunch of movies to the ghosts that were living at my house, so we’ll just chalk up those $14 to being an idiot and excuse them from the calculations so: ) 11months X $14per = $154, $154/30 movies = about $5 per movie, which (I haven’t been to blockbuster in years so I wouldn’t know but) sounds about average. Now, since I upgraded, 2 months X $18 = $36, $36/20 movies = about $2 per movie, which is a pretty sweet deal unless you live near one of those cheap theaters that plays second run movies, which we, unfortunately, do not have her in New Orleans.
Around the same time I upgraded to the 3-at-a-time plan, I also bought an HD-DVD player, all the better to see Clive Owen’s milky complexion. What I meant to say was Rosario Dawson’s yoo-hoo-ey complexion (Children of Men was the first HD-DVD I got, Clerks II should be in my mail box when I get home.) The difference between DVD and HD-DVD isn’t quite as dramatic as the jump from VHS to DVD, but its close. What I’m not sure of though, is whether the films shot in the 7/80’s that are being released on HD-DVD were shot in high enough def for it to be worth it. It doesn’t really matter, because Netflix sends you HD-DVDs or Blu-Rays at the same price as the regular DVD’s.
I kind of want to get a Blu-Ray player, likely in the incarnation known as the Playstation III, because this business of a format war is killing me. The fact that there are tons of movies I can’t see in HD because the studio is buddy-buddy with Sony instead of Toshiba is absolute horseshit. I’ve heard that the last format war, between VHS and Betamax, was pretty much decided when the pornography industry chose, for some reason unanimously, to use VHS to distribute their wares (thus ending the prominence of the XXX theaters you see in movies.)
This used to be a bad ass movie of Sean Taylor hitting punter Brian Moorman (he was running a fake punt) so hard that his wife shit in her pants. Fucking NFL hates YouTube.
So a friend suggested that I should put my skills to better use and write about a real movie. Her suggestion, Road House, could be summarized and the extent of its message broken down into three simple discreet statements:
I’d like to take this opportunity to announce a new feature: “Things Charlie Sheen Told Me When He Was Shitfaced.” Without further ado:
Things Charlie Sheen Told Me When He Was Shitfaced
From The American President:For the last couple of months, Senator Rumson has suggested that being president of this country was, to a certain extent, about character, and although I have not been willing to engage in his attacks on me, I've been here three years and three days, and I can tell you without hesitation: Being President of this country is entirely about character. For the record: yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU. But the more important question is why aren't you, Bob? Now, this is an organization whose sole purpose is to defend the Bill of Rights, so it naturally begs the question: Why would a senator, his party's most powerful spokesman and a candidate for President, choose to reject upholding the Constitution? If you can answer that question, folks, then you're smarter than I am, because I didn't understand it until a few hours ago. America isn't easy. America is advanced citizenship. You gotta want it bad, 'cause it's
gonna put up a fight. It's gonna say "You want free speech? Let's see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil, who's standing center stage and advocating at the top of his lungs that which you would spend a lifetime opposing at the top of yours. You want to claim this land as the land of the free? Then the symbol of your country can't just be a flag; the symbol also has to be one of its citizens exercising his right to burn that flag in protest. Show me that, defend that, celebrate that in your classrooms. Then, you can stand up and sing about the "land of the free". I've known Bob Rumson for years, and I've been operating under the assumption that the reason Bob devotes so much time and energy to shouting at the rain was that he simply didn't get it. Well, I was wrong. Bob's problem isn't that he doesn't get it. Bob's problem is that he can't sell it! We have serious problems to solve, and we need serious people to solve them. And whatever your particular problem is, I promise you, Bob Rumson is not the least bit interested in solving it. He is interested in two things and two things only: making you afraid of it and telling you who's to blame for it. That, ladies and gentlemen, is how you win elections. You gather a group of middle-aged, middle-class, middle-income voters who remember with longing an easier time, and you talk to them about family and American values and character.
Good morning. In less than an hour, aircraft from here will join others from around the world. And you will be launching the largest aerial battle in the history of mankind. "Mankind." That word should have new meaning for all of us today. We can't be consumed by our petty differences anymore. We will be united in our common interests. Perhaps it's fate that today is the Fourth of July, and you will once again be fighting for our freedom... Not from tyranny, oppression, or persecution... but from annihilation. We are fighting for our right to live. To exist. And should we win the day, the Fourth of July will no longer be known as an American holiday, but as the day the world declared in one voice: "We will not go quietly into the night!" We will not vanish without a fight! We're going to live on! We're going to survive! Today we celebrate our Independence Day!
So I’m watching ER, which as I think I mentioned before is the only primetime hour long I’ve ever watched (aside from a brief flirtation with 24, but it’s like if you miss one episode, then it’s easy to lose the thread), and also stars Uncle “John Stamos” Jesse (?!?), and on comes this commercial for “the greatest love story ever told.” The preview touts (btw one of the characters just said “tmi”, LOL!) “another great performance by (some fellow I don’t recognize named) Javier Bardem” who it turns out is the guy I don’t recognize from the other preview I’ve seen recently (No Country for Old Men), which is presumably what they’re talking about when they say “another”. (In my own defense I only ever started watching ER with my Mom who is a doc and a fan, but probably has watched half as many episodes as I have.) Anyways, I’m immediately skeptical of this preview, touting a name I don’t recognize, rocking 19th century mise, and talking about being the greatest love story ever told. (Bardem receives second billing on IMDB to the Law & Order Det. who was in Clear and Present Danger) When the preview gets around to the title of the movie, the words pop up as the narrator says each line: Love(predictable) in the (ok…) Time of (cliché) Cholera (jaw drops… … …)
Love in the Time of Cholera really is (I can count the number of books I’ve read more than once on one hand, and it’s on the list) The Greatest Love Story Ever Told. Florentino Ariza is a telegraph operator who (cliché alert) falls in love with a girl, Fermina Daza, socially out of his league. He becomes physically ill he loves her so much. With the help of her nanny he proposes to her and pledges his undying love. She excepts, but when her father (Lorenzo Daza is a great character, lets see who plays him… it’s Leguizamo!!!!!!!) finds out he takes her on a trip through Mexico (I think, I’m not really sure where the main action is set, but I always had it mentally pictured as Venezuela) to help her forget about the childish crush. Without his knowledge however Florentino Ariza manages to maintain contact through the fraternity of telegraph operators(!!!!).
Anyways, she ends up with Dr. Juvenal Urbino, who is basically the town (and this is the first time I’ve ever used this word, so forgive me if I’m misusing) milquetoast, but Ariza never fails in his promise of undying love. Other recognizable faces in the cast are Cotton Weary/Raymond Shaw from Scream 1-19 and the Manchurian Remake, and Hector Elizondo who is a great character actor most notable for his (uncredited but golden globe nominate-able) role as the concierge in Pretty Woman (give me IMDB and Wikipedia, and I could write you a book). The director, Mike Newell, has some quality on his resume, including Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Pushing Tin, Donnie Brasco, Four Weddings and a Funeral. (you see what I did there?)
Not to whine, but the reason I’m excited about this move is that it’s the perfect date movie, and I don’t have one. It’s such a great date movie that asking a girl who wasn’t already your girlfriend to go see this would just be corny. I’m almost ashamed to be this excited about this movie, let’s recap:
If this movie shows Bardem or Bratt with their shirt off, this movie is going to out chick flick Thelma & Louise. But I’m probably going to go see it. The title quote by the way is from Newell.
Today’s biggest douchebag is, of course, Barry Bonds. Bonds could’ve gotten a free pass for admitting his steroid use if he’d admitted his use and testified against BALCO in their money laundering Grand Jury. Now he’s getting charged with 4 counts of perjury and 1 count of obstruction of justice. I can’t indict him, but if I could it would be with 18 charges of douchebaggery and another 6 of idiocy. More on this tomorrow, I’m going to bed.
(For the record Baz Luhrman is a genius, and both Moulin Rouge and Romeo + Juliet are fucking awesome movies)
This is one from a few days ago that got messed up somehow:
The above quote by Kurt Herbert Adler, who was a conductor for the San Francisco Opera (not to be confused with Kurt Alder of IGFarben and the Diels-Alder reaction,) applies itself well to the field of engineering. In engineering, time and money are spent researching outcomes to unknown situations, and developing traditions that can be conservatively followed with predictable and safe outcomes.There is no engineering formula that is not the result of countless hours of research, and in some cases, the resulting formu la is simply an efficient but safe guess.
Being efficient but safe is kind of the same thing as being “conservative”, an engineering buzz word. Wrong is okay, if it is conservative. For example, say you’re designing a raod that needs to carry 1000 cars and 1000 trucks a day. You could, conservatively, design it for 2000 trucks, and it would likely never have any problems, but it would be considerably more expensive than it needed to be.
The way you actually solve this problem is to turn the trucks into what’s called “passenger car equivalencies.” I forget what the number used is, but for our purposes, let’s say its 2.5. That is to say, for each 18-wheeler in traffic, it’s the same as if 2.5 cars were in the same space. So in the case of our road, you’d design it 3500 (1000 + 2.5(1000)) cars a day. This versus 5000 c/d-rp (cars per day road price) you would’ve been willing to pay had you not done the research necessary to approximate that one big rig is equal to 2.5 cars.
Approximate (also estimate) is another word kicked around a lot in engineering. Some trucks are heavier than others, some longer. Same for passenger cars, the idea though, is that it’s a best guess based on average car and truck length and weight.
I often say I make up numbers for a living. This is a actually the hardest part of my job. Doing math is easy, I have a calculator and computer programs to the hard stuff for me, it’s when I actually have to pull something out of thin air, that I need to actually put my thinking cap on. Fortunately there is no wrong answer, just varying levels of correctness. Isn’t engineering fun?
The 1911 was the standard issue sidearm for all officers in every branch of the
Glock 22:
Pretty common to find on the hips of Law Enforcement and Military, no frills, all business. This is a .40 caliber, which is relatively new caliber that's rapidly popularizing, because you get a lot more bang than a 9mm, but this one holds 15 rounds, whereas with a .45 you're lucky to fit 12 (the 1911 carries 8.) I also have a laser for this one. I think I might trade this one for a H&K USP, which was designed from the ground up for the .40.
Walther P990:
The new James Bond has one of these, I had one first. Its small, fits in your hand like a dream, and could shoot bulls eyes out if the trigger wasn't so complicated.
Browning Hi-Power:
Designed by John Browning, the same designer of the 1911, popular in
My mom has a deal with my dad, if he gets a handgun, he also gets a divorce. My dad came to visit me a few weeks ago, and I think that the main reason he wanted to come was to shoot my pistols.
It may be kind of an expensive hobby, but I like it. I’m thinking about trading in the Walther for one of these:
I have kind of a thing for the two-tones.
I went to a wedding on Saturday night, the presiding minister was a Roman Catholic priest, and managed to mention celibacy in the context of a vacation to
I know that certain words are changed in different versions of the bible, but is there a reason that Catholics don’t say the last part of the Lord’s Prayer (for thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory, forever and ever? Does anyone besides me think it’s hilarious that the only two prayers I know (lord’s and serenity) I learned from playing high school football, and going to AA meetings?)
The wedding was for a friend from work, in
“Dad, I have an etiquette question”
“Uh… ok.”
“I’m on my way to my buddy’s wedding, it starts in 20 minutes and I’m a half hour away.”
“Keep on going, don’t kill yourself on the drive, be unobtrusive, stand in the back, absolutely, positively, don’t not go.”
This part of the story doesn’t really have a point so much as to point out that I’m way better at estimating how long it’s going to take me to get somewhere than I am at being on time.
As soon as the ceremony was over, I went outside and checked on the LSU-Bama score from my phone (watching the game, by the way, was why I was late in the first place.) They were tied with 3 minutes to play, and Bama had the ball, not looking good. Standing around outside with some coworkers, I checked the score again, and LSU was up a touchdown with a minute to go, “LSU’s gonna win, I wonder how that happened, probably a pick-6” I say. Nothing but raised eyebrows and confused looks, “you know, a pick 6, interception returned for a touchdown…?” (“…?” is how you spell the physical act of confused look and raised eyebrows) I do not understand people that don’t like football. They’re even worse than the (seeming growing number of) people who don’t like baseball. (“It’s sooo boring.” “Eat your peanuts, drink your beer, and shut the fuck up, it’s a full count.”) Even a bad football game is more exciting than a basketball game or a soccer game (too easy and too hard to score resp.) And while I do recognize the brilliance of Tiger Woods I can’t understand watching golf. The only things I can think of that can rival the excitement of football and (important) baseball is high-level tennis, and olympic/playoff hockey. (Cliché alert) But I digress…
The reception was fun (read open bar) and the food was good. I had two pieces of cake. When it was time for the bouquet tossing, only one girl got up catch it, then after some prodding 4 or 5 more joined her. I got tricked into being in front for the girder toss, but it got zoomed right over my head. Let’s just say I didn’t hurt my shoulder reaching for it. More people cranked that soulja boy than did the electric slide.
Did you know:
Sorry, I got a little carried away at the end there. But seriously, yogurt bacteria = health, MRSA bacteria = kiss your sweet ass goodbye. And how about that flesh eating strep? Is that some nasty shit or what?
Anyways, where was I, oh yeah, Plant & Krauss, Knopfler & Harris, four people that are all kind of weird looking. Making collabo’s that come out of the blue and rock me gently to sleep. I forget where I was going with this, something about haw far the divide is between people like Allison Krauss and people like Timberlake. Unfortunately since few people over the age of 18 buy more than a few albums a year, (although this may be changing thanks to iTunes et al.) Timberlake could probably buy Allison Krauss several times over.
I went to Voodoo fest last Friday and saw some pretty solid acts, Galactic w/ Lyrics Born and Chali 2na, Lez Zepplin, Toots and the Maytals, Rage Against the Machine, but my favorite was a guy named Jason Isbell (Actually he was probably tied with Toots for best in show.) Jason Isbell is a weird looking dude. He is one of the three singer/songwriter guitar players from the
I used to go out in a mustang
A 308 Mach 1 in green
Till me and your mama made you in the back
And I sold it to buy her a ring
I don’t really have a point except to say that his second to last song was a cover of Psycho Killer by the Talking Heads, which was awesome, but his last song, called Hurricanes and Hand Grenades, and written about New Orleans, was somewhat soured because people where walking away to go see a band called Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club might be the best name for a shitty band ever. Seriously I was kind of interested to hear a band with a name that bad-ass, but they pretty much ate a fat cock.
Galactic played a pretty good set, but I only got to see a little bit of it. They teased Immigrant Song for a few bars of their closer, but then turned it over to the MC’s for a little off the top session. I have a constantly changing opinion of Galactic, back in the day when they had the Houseman, they were the shit, but he split and they went into a lull. I haven’t heard their new album, but lately I’ve been feeling pretty middle of the road about them, this will be the first year in a while that I haven’t seen them at Tips for New Years (although Kashmir at the Lundi Gras show was ridiculous.) Some of my favorite musical memories are of Raines, Mercurio, and Vogel playing at Le Bon Temps with Simon Lott and Anders Osborne, in the first few months after Katrina, that shit was so awesome.
Lez Zeppelin was fun, in a novelty sort of way. They’re an all female Led Zeppelin cover band, whose sexual orientation was debunked by Chuck Klosterman after interviewing them (for SPIN presumably, I read it in his anthology “IV”.) Anyway, they opened with Immigrant Song, which I think may be a requirement of any Zeppelin tribute act. Even if it is SOP, it’s a fucking badass song to walk out on any stage and rip in to (In case you haven’t noticed I’m a pretty big Zepp fan, I also enjoy a good parenthetical aside.) Jan Bonham and Jan Puala Jones were obviously having the most fun, while Jamie Page was undoubtedly the best musician. Roberta Plant wasn’t quite Robert Plant skinny, but who is? Zeppelin songs lend themselves to a female singer quite well, but I’m almost positive Robert Plant doesn’t have a Long Island/Brooklyn accent (think toned down Fran Drescher trying to casually do a british accent.)
Rage Against the Machine was the headliner, but I couldn’t stay for their entire set. Rage’s first album dropped when I was 9 years old, but they didn’t really hit the big time until ’96-’97, when Evil Empire hit #1 on our charts #4 across the pond, and they won a Grammy for a song celebrating the death of Richard Nixon. In between jumping around the stage and making a fortune, Rage is like the Sean Penn of the music world taking vocal stances on stuff like Mumia, Zapatistas, and I’m pretty sure it was front man Zach De La Rocha who made that ubiquitous Che Guevara t-shirt so popular. Anyways, they opened with their two most poular songs (lame) and the sound/view where we were standing was pretty bad, so I left and went home.
So on Wednesday (Halloween) night, I went down to
Not that I do anything to limit my “carbon footprint,” (and I don’t like that term, so it’s going to stay in quotation marks) but I do believe that we’re in trouble. It’s an economic problem though, and it needs an economic solution. I read something in a Good Magazine the other day, about how the key to solving the Israeli-Palestinian clusterfuck, is to make it financially beneficial for both sides to keep things civil, i.e. they need to strike a deal where Israel shares the tourism money with Palestine, and if they scuffle, that revenue will dry up and both sides will feel the pain in their governmental wallets.
I think that the easiest way to get the ball rolling on this carbon business is to put another $0.10 (was there ever a cents symbol on the keyboard, I feel like there used to be) tax on every gallon of gas that will go straight to advanced fuel/carbon recapturing R&D. This is the immediate double edged sword that’ll generate research grant money and may (or may not, Americans are stubborn, maybe it should be $0.50 a gallon) reduce the amount of consumption.
On the corporate side, (and I’m not the first person to make this argument, but I figure that if I read it long enough ago to forget who I’m plagiarizing, than its not really plagiarism) as long as it is cheaper for factories/plants/whatever to burn carbon into the ozone (currently free) than it is to capture it (wicked expensive,) then there will be no change, because it would be corporately irresponsible to do so.
Here’s my idea, and this is going to be central to the plot of the science fiction novel I’ll probably never write, but what we need are photosynthetic cells. You may or may not have heard of photovoltaic cells, but that’s a fancy word for a solar panel. Photosynthetic cells would be made into green solar panels which, using energy from the sun (or any star really) would create both electricity and convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. I doubt I’m the first person to think of this, everyone learns about photosynthesis in elementary school. Mark my words, synthetic photosynthesis may be the answer to all our problems, it could even allow us to travel long distances through space using energy from stars we passed along the way. Now all we need is the research money to figure out photosynthesis, which must be wicked complicated or else we would already have these. Where’s it going to come from? That’s right, taxing in a way that reduces consumption/pollution, and buys time for the scientists to R&D the solution.
So we went to “Phil’s Grill” (