Sunday, December 17, 2006

I can rent a car for less money now

Random photos from a small gathering on my 25th birthday.

I take credit for introducing Sarah B. to cider. Too bad she'll grow tired of it within five months, as is the case with everyone.


I on the other hand was drinking something from Belgium that came in a freakin' goblet. Sarah S. looks... yeah I don't know.


Shannon und Lisa


Willa (she blinks a lot in photos), Dominique (was sick but still came, the trooper), and Cathy


Will, one of the few cool male employees at work, and his fiance, Lacey


What? It's beer from El Salvador. Piss off.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Why have I ever given a dollar to this business

From back when the Burger King was actually a scary human being, as opposed to a scary human being in a scary mask.

I apologize for the nightmares.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Jonn updated his; I'd better fall in line

Nothing has happened of note since October 11.

Alright, here's some Halloween photos (I was in Austin with Tenspeed).

I really wanted to find one of those goofy Euro-ties that are like a scarf you wear inside a shirt, but I was unsuccessful in that venture - and believe me, I tried.

So my first idea was to utilize my own supplies and go as, um, one of THESE guys:



But that seemed kind of weak, so ultimately I decided to use Justin's costume from last year - A Team Zissou crewman:


I wanted a clear shot of Justin's neck - he wrote on it with pen in an attempt to be that guy who was on Project: Runway or whatever. With him is Lincoln expat Matt R., who went as Floyd Landis but kept getting called Lance Armstrong. Philistines.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Dominique Garay



I know this guy through my co-worker Willa, to whom he is engaged. Heck of a poet and an all-around nice guy; not pretentious at all.

He's in the running to appear on an HBO program, so vote for him: http://www.blastro.com/spokenwordbattle

His myspace (some of his other stuff is on there, I highly recommend the YouTube video): http://www.myspace.com/darcpoet

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Biggest highlight of my life since I found the Ghostbusters building in New York



I'm staying at a hotel in a planned community in Irving, Texas (between Dallas and Fort Worth) known as Los Colinas.

As I drove here, I wondered "Where the hell have I heard Los Colinas before... Los Colinas... Los Colinas..."

Got to my hotel and got on wikipedia and found this:

"Many people will recognize Las Colinas as referenced by Lawrence (of Office Space fame), who awoke early in the morning to erect the drywall at the new McDonald's."

Hole-E Shit.

EDIT: I guess the majority of Office Space was filmed in Austin. Still.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

The most relaxing waste of time ever



http://www.trevorvanmeter.com/flyguy/flyGuy.swf

All you do is fly around, escaping copy machines, cell phones, etc. I think the music is what does it.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

The best album of 2006, finally released

Although it leaked back in February, TV on the Radio's second LP, Return to Cookie Mountain, was released in the USA on the 12th.

If you know me, I've been verbally fellating this album for months. It's a bit more accessible than their earlier stuff (although that's great too), but still takes a while to grow on you. Heck, I wasn't much into the band when I first heard 'Staring at the Sun' and now they're up there with Pinback and Radiohead as my favorite bands of all time.

And I'll say it for the 23892nd time: 'Wolf Like Me' is the best single of the last five years.

And although I hate to cite various music critics to back up my opinions, etc...

"The disc might be the most oddly beautiful, psychedlic and ambitious of the year...Consider your mind blown."
-Rolling Stone (4.5 out of 5 stars)

"The latest experiment from TV on the Radio goes horribly right."
-Entertainment Weekly (A-)
"A punk gospel uplift that's often profoundly moving. There's an old saying that agitators play music because they like the noise it makes. TV on the Radio play noise because they like the music it makes."
-Spin

"This album has such an incredible pull: It doesn't make an atmosphere so much as a space to spend time in, and Adebimpe doesn't become a narrator so much as a witness."
-Pitchfork (9.1 out of 10)

"Anyone who spouts the perennial music is dead argument need only look to TV on the Radio for proof otherwise. Give up now, guys, because it rarely gets better than this."
-URB

And my favorite:

"...what might just be the best reason we've had for hope--as far as interesting, arty, progressive, well-executed, and mind-fuckingly good music goes--since OK Computer was lodge deep in the throat of music-listeners."
-Filter (94%)

A couple of links and videos:

http://www.myspace.com/tvotr - Their myspace page (free place to hear 'Wolf Like Me')

The video for 'Wolf Like Me'


They were on Letterman last night. I missed it; thank all that is awesome for YouTube.


If it isn't your cup of tea after one listen, I implore you - listen to it again. And again. And again. Hey, it worked for me with their last album.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

'Tis the Season

In rememberence of the victims of 9/11 and the ridiculous censorship that followed, here's a list of several songs that were "banned" by Clear Channel following the attacks.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_deemed_inappropriate_
by_Clear_Channel_following_the_September_11%2C_2001_attacks

Some highlights:

"Down" - 311
"Walk Like an Egyptian" - The Bangles
"Ticket to Ride" - The Beatles
"Smokin" - Boston
"In the Air Tonight" - Phil Collins (perhaps my favorite)
"Mack the Knife" - Bobby freakin' Darin
"America" - Neil Diamond
"Ironic" - Alanis... yeah

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Failing to draw restraint on Drawing Restraint 9

So with nothing better to do on Labor Day Eve I went to see 'Russian Dolls', the follow-up to 'The Spanish Apartment'. It was quite good, but anyway, prior to the film, the audience of about a dozen and I were treated to a trailer to Bjork's newest film 'Drawing Restraint 9', which I guess is about Bjork and some guy hanging out on a Japanese whaling ship or something.

Here's the trailer:



From the review on IMDb:

"Possibly tedious at some points, I thought it was equally wonderful that Bjork and Matthew and the Captain and crew had so much leisure to be able to tell the story, to act in this way, to live for weeks or months on the ship and its legacy. But then, I'm a full time artist who has no idea what time it is.

What was happening on the screen was only a key meant to unlock what has always been happening within us, within the deeper scar from which we all are naturally and continually emerging our being"

Yeah, ok dude.

So, anyone want to see this at The Ross? Maybe we can inject LSD into our eyeballs first!

Friday, September 01, 2006

And you thought clowns were scary (not that mascots are any different)

Nebraska 45
La Tech 14

With that in mind, here are some photos of past/current mascots.

If you plan on going to sleep soon, don't scroll down.














Thursday, August 31, 2006

I now support the war

This sounds like something people from Maine would think up.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

http://www.boston.com/news/local/maine/articles/2006/08/30/
guard_families_cope_in_two_dimensions/

Guard families cope in two dimensions
`Flat Daddy' cutouts ease longing
By Brian MacQuarrie, Globe Staff | August 30, 2006

Maine National Guard members in Iraq and Afghanistan are never far from the thoughts of their loved ones.

Welcome to the "Flat Daddy" and "Flat Mommy" phenomenon, in which life-size cutouts of deployed service members are given by the Maine National Guard to spouses, children, and relatives back home.

The Flat Daddies ride in cars, sit at the dinner table, visit the dentist, and even are brought to confession, according to their significant others on the home front.

"I prop him up in a chair, or sometimes put him on the couch and cover him up with a blanket," said Kay Judkins of Caribou, whose husband, Jim, is a minesweeper mechanic in Afghanistan. "The cat will curl up on the blanket, and it looks kind of weird. I've tricked several people by that. They think he's home again."

At the request of relatives, about 200 Flat Daddy and Flat Mommy photos have been enlarged and printed at the state National Guard headquarters in Augusta. The families cut out the photos, which show the Guard members from the waist up, and glue them to a $2 piece of foam board.

Sergeant First Class Barbara Claudel, the state family-support director who began the program, said the response from Guard families has been giddily enthusiastic.

"If there's something we can do to make it a little easier on the families, then that's our job and our responsibility. It brings them a little bit closer and might help them somewhere down the line," Claudel said yesterday.

"You know, this is my motto: `Deployment isn't a big thing, it's a million little things.' These families go through a lot."

While most families stay in touch with their guardsmen by e-mail, snapshots, and videophone, the cutouts are unusual.

"It's a novel approach," said John Goheen, spokesman for the National Guard Association of the United States, a Washington-based lobbying group. "It's to remind the kids that this guy and this woman is still part of your life, that this is what they look like, and this is how big they are."

Claudel said she heard about the Flat Daddy idea while attending a national conference for the Guard. In Maine, the initiative began about eight months ago when Flat Daddies were offered as part of the deployment of B Company, Third Battalion, 172d Mountain Infantry, which is based in Brewer.

Now, when units are mobilized, the Guard organizes Flat Daddy parties, in which families can meet one another while receiving instructions on assembling the photos.

Judkins said the cutout has been a comfort since her husband was deployed in January.

"He goes everywhere with me. Every day he comes to work with me," said Judkins, who works in a dentist's office. "I just bought a new table from the Amish community, and he sits at the head of the table. Yes, he does."

In the car, her husband's image sits behind the driver's seat so Judkins can keep an eye on him. A third-grade class writes to him as their ``adopted" guardsman. And Judkins even brought her husband's cutout -- which she calls Slim Jim, because he's not -- to confession at the local church.

When asked what her husband had to confess, Judkins laughed. "That's private," she said.

Jim Judkins had at least one precarious moment as a cutout. When cousins tried to stuff him into a suitcase to take on a cruise, they broke his neck. But instead of expensive surgery, all the cutout needed was a little duct tape, Judkins said.

Cindy Branscom of Hallowell, whose husband, Colonel John Branscom, is in Afghanistan, said spouses of service members in the 240th Engineer Group often bring their Flat Daddies to monthly support meetings and group barbecues. She said one spouse, Mary Holbrook of Hermon, has been seen in the company of her cutout husband, Lieutenant Colonel Randall Holbrook.

"Mary has taken Randy to different events," Branscom said.

But then again, that's almost expected.

"I think it's wonderful," Branscom said. "My Flat Daddy sits in my dining room all the time. He even went to Easter dinner with us at my family's house."

Saturday, August 26, 2006

We've got the power now, motherfuckers, that's where it belongs

Sonic Youth/Flaming Lips after-action report:

SY: Freakin' awesome, although I would've liked a longer set and some stuff off Sonic Nurse and Murray Street. They did the wacky distortion thing between songs, but if any band can get away with that it's Sonic Youth. I also though Kim Gordon sounded better live than on recordings.

Flaming Lips: Ok, now in terms of music I was a bit more jacked for Sonic Youth, not to take anything away from the Lips. But then they started and went right into 'Race for the Prize'; the confetti and ballons started flying and the people started jumping around. It was about as close as one can come to euphoria in such circumstances, and probably the most fun I've ever had at a show.

I meant to bring a camera, so here's the best I could do with my phone.

The famous Wayne Coyne Ball (I TOTALLY TOUCHED IT):



Assorted ballons:

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Some kids are still smart

So this evening I was at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta on a two-hour layover. I found some place that served alcohol that also happened to be showing the MLS All-Star game.

After a while, a gentleman and his son, who was probably 7 or 8, sat down near me.

SON: "Is this the World Cup?"
DAD: "No, this is the Major League Soccer All-Star game. The World Cup has been over for a month."
SON: "How come?"

Give this kid a medal because he has a fucking point.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Inaugural Compound Shindig

A fun time was had by all.

NEWS LINK CREW FRONTIN'



The gentleman here on the right is the man who hired me. I suppose, in a way, he was responsible for this whole thing.



TOTH SHOWED UP



Uh huh.



And your hosts

Saturday, July 22, 2006

"The Tour" OR "You asked for it, Jonn"

I could post several photos of the house, but here's what's particularly important.



The wood-paneled basement, along with the house's feature attraction. Someone built a bar/window into it. If you're wondering what's on the other side, it's some storage room and the furnace. I keep saying we need to hire some guy to be down there 24/7; he'll serve as comic relief and we'll come to him with all our problems. I smell a sit-com!

Monday, July 03, 2006

The News Link Compound

THE DIGS:



CAST OF CHARACTERS:

Thew-



Shannon-



Cathy-



Housewarming gathering TBA. Stay tuned.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

It's been a while.

Haven't posted anything in some time, so I return with one question; Savener, if you're around, feel free to field this one:



How stupid does this guy think Nebraskans are?

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Holy mother of fuck



I don't know what this Stir Cove thing is exactly, but if this isn't the best double act to ever grace the Omaha Metro.

(I checked stircove.com for tickets; they don't have them up yet. They may be on the pricey side, like ~$40, but I'd say that's worth it)

Thursday, May 25, 2006

America (Judicial System), Fuck Yeah



Hahaha. Fuck you both. Have a good time in whatever minimum security resort they stick you in.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Sen. Lloyd Bentsen

Here he is owning Dan Quayle in the 1988 VP Debate.



If only he had been the presidential nomineee and not that robot Dukakis...

I don't know where to start with this one.

Liz, Will, Grady and Cathy simultaneously feeling me up.

Saturday, May 20, 2006

TV on the Radio doing 'Wolf Like Me' at a show in Seattle - May 5

I still contend this is the best single I've heard in recent years.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Hello and welcome to 2001

I took this photo around 3 pm today. Today being May 19, 2005.

(You have to click on it to really see it)



What the hell

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Saturday, May 13, 2006

2006 making up for 2005 musically

I just realized how much goodness has been/will be released this year:

Already out:

Flaming Lips - At War with the Mystics
Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Show Your Bones
Pearl Jam - s/t

I guess I could say Return to Cookie Mountain by TV on the Radio is out, per say, although I don't think it'll be released until June. That having been said, It's amazing.

Still need to hear the new Streets LP too.

For the future -

Zero 7 - The Garden (The 30-second clip of "Futures" on http://www.myspace.com/zero7official sounds pretty good)

The Dears - Gang of Losers

I'm sure there's some other stuff. The Shins are supposed to have a new album sometime soon, but I have a feeling it's going to suck.

Saturday, May 06, 2006

Look what I found

I was thumbing through the photo album of Ned, one of the PCVs over in Zambia, and...



Nice goatee. He seems to be doing ok; heck, he should be - some of those female PCVs are rather attractive.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

He's come so far

I had almost forgotten about this. Think it's from my 22nd birthday gathering (December 2003).



That would be a bottle of cheap vodka into which I pointlessly stuffed about a dozen gummy bears; it gelatinized once I put it into the refridgerator.

And to think, now he's signing 'Bohemian Rhapsody' in a karaoke bar in Lusaka.

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Justin reaches a new low!



Tenspeed wanted a commuter bike, but since the bicycle thieves in Austin are like skilled ninja assassins or something and can remove an OnGuard U-lock in about 3.6 seconds, he got a Trek 7300 an slapped a bunch of stupid Homestarrunner stickers on it.

Jesus.

Oh, and Austin is still 50 times better than anywhere else

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Every now and then, my job kicks ass.

Occasionally, when I lurk around train yards after talking to managers about injury-free streaks, retirees and TRAIN VELOCITY, I find myself randomly asking guys "Do you have any hobbies?"

Now, remember- this is Texas. 99% of anyone in the railroad work force (well... anywhere actually, but especially here) is involved in one or all of the following activities:

1) Hunting
2) Fishing
3) Riding 4-wheelers (which they probably use to go hunting)
4) Boating (which they probably use to go fishing).

But sometimes I get lucky.

So what was I doing today, around 3 pm?

Talking to a conductor named Joey about his comic book collection, and whether Ian McKellen was a good choice for Magneto.

It'll be in the next issue of the Gulf Division newsletter. I'll post a link.

Sure beats the heck out of the time I interviewed a guy whose Rush-esqe band opened for Bon Jovi.

Sunday, April 23, 2006

Red Stick, part 2



The Louisiana capitol building, which beats out Nebraska's by about 30', making it the tallest of the 50. Ours is far more phallic in nature though, so fuck you, Pelican State.

...uh, not literally. Har har.



Huey Long, former governor. He ruled Louisiana with an iron fist yet still managed to get stuff done. Then he became a US Senator. And got shot and killed.

Saturday, April 22, 2006

A Hard Satur-Day's Night

Saturday, April 22 - A timeline:

1:10 am - I, asleep on Savener's couch, am awoken by Savener upon his return from work

1:15-1:45 - I surf the net while Savener takes a few hits and plays Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas

~2:10 - I fall asleep

5:30 am - I awake, shower, depart for Eppley

7:18 - I board my plane, two minutes before scheduled takeoff. And I'm not the only one; Continental has some issues

7:19 - I discover that I somehow got bumped to 1st class

~7:30 - I am given a hot towel by a flight attendent. I'll be. Turned down the free wine though.

12 pm - Arrive at Louis Armstrong Int'l Airport in New Orleans

12:10 - the Avis bus driver calls me "sugar" and tells me I have nice eyes

12:50 - I arrive at Union Pacific's big terminal in area and talk to some managers

1:30 - I ask a couple of locomotive engineers how they mentor the younger guys, and bullshit with them for about a half hour

2:40 - I leave for Baton Rouge, and drive by this... thing. I don't know what the heck it is, but I've seen it every time I've come here and it still freaks me out. Apparently Jughead turned into a lumberjack and decided he preferred the cock



5:30 - After chillaxin' for an hour or so, I realize I haven't eaten anything all day and go to a Whole Foods Grocery, where I purchase some asian noodles, sushi and a bottle of Belgian white ale

6:10 - While on my drive back to my hotel, I realize I really like Baton Rouge for some reason, and it's my second favorite place to stay on my territory after Austin (no-brainer)

8:00 pm - I type this while achieving a bit of a buzz, realizing that working on the weekend isn't all that bad, given the day I've had, the fact that it'll add to my vacation time, and that I can sleep in a while tomorrow, something I've really needed to do since Tuesday's Yeah Yeah Yeahs concert

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Pretty much the only thing yoga is good for



That's my shirt, by the way. I tried but couldn't bend over backwards as well as her

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Ten Speed has fallen to the myspace gods

http://www.myspace.com/romulasprime

Even if you don't know Justin, it's, uh, worth seeing.

My newest cousin is not amused.



Only three months old, and he's already got it figured out. Seriously, Kia and I are going to save the human race someday.

Also, what's with the shoes this furry is wearing?

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Lame. Like this blog post.

George Mason losing to Florida is probably the best evidence there is for the lack of a God.

Oh well, only 2 months and 7 days until the World Cup.

Friday, March 24, 2006

You're goddamned right I am

You Are Boston

Both modern and old school, you never forget your roots.
Well educated and a little snobby, you demand the best.
And quite frankly, you think you are the best.

Famous people from the Boston area: Conan O'Brien, Ben Affleck, New Kids on the Block

Sunday, March 19, 2006

"But I am an artist"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/4822418.stm

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Running tap' artist to try again

An artist's plan to leave six taps running for a year at secret London locations has angered Thames Water.

Performance artist Mark McGowan says it is a protest against private control of water in the UK.

The water company has threatened legal action to stop the "irresponsible" stunt which comes during a prolonged drought in southern England.

Last year McGowan left a tap running in a south London gallery, but bowed to pressure to turn it off after a month.

That stunt used 800,000 litres of water, and angered many Thames Water customers and gallery visitors - some of whom turned off the tap themselves.

This time he intends to keep the taps running at secret London addresses, sending an estimated 100 million litres down the drain.

McGowan said that private water companies made a profit while wasting billions of gallons of water a year through under-investment.

"I understand we are in a drought. But I am an artist so I'm not actually wasting water for nothing."

A Thames Water spokesman said the company planned to take immediate legal action once it knew where the taps had been left running.

Pointing out that London and the South East get less rain per head of population than Istanbul and Dallas, he said: "For the sake of the environment we call on Mr McGowan to abandon this childish game now."

McGowan has previously made a name for himself by rolling a monkey nut across London with his nose to highlight student debt, and pulling a bus with his big toe in protest against bus lanes and mayor Ken Livingstone's "ridiculous traffic strategy".
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

And this is why I hate roughly 95% of all modern day artists, folks

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Put on some old sad bastard music, see if I care.

Out of boredom I have High Fidelity on the TV (it's on that oxygen network), despite the fact I could watch it whenever.

So at the beginning of the film when Jack Black walks into Championship Vinyl and hears Belle & Sebastian, and says "Holy sheeeeet! What the fuck is this?", Oxygen has changed "fuck" to "frog"

So there's my post for the week

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Friday, March 03, 2006

Reason #28294 why TV on the Radio kicks fucking ass



Alex, one of my co-workers, found a leak of their new album. I'm already deeming the first track, "Playhouses," the song of the year.

Rumor is the title of the new album is 'Return to Cookie Mountain'. I know TVotR are avid video gamers.

You may recognize this:



That beige mass in the upper-right, on the "east" side of the bridge? That's Cookie Mountain, a level in Super Mario World.

TV on the Radio is the best band ever. Besides Pinback of course - but their songs, etc., also contain video game references.

Now if you'll excuse me, I'm off to find a girlfriend.