Archive for June, 2007

For those who care: I love this shit.

Friday, June 29th, 2007

Free Friday Flicks at the Hatch Shell

July 6th: Join a big green ogre and his gang of friends once again, as they travel to Far Far Away and fall under the influence of a bottle of magic potion.

July 13th: When a group of forest creatures find out their home has been turned into a housing development, it takes a raccoon con artist to convince the creatures to invade the development and take back from the humans…

July 20th: Everyone’s favorite wizard is back once again as he competes against the best wizards from other schools and is then encountered by the returning evil lord.

July 27th: A rag tag group of animals finds out they only have a short time to escape the wrath of the melting ice caps, or they may be washed away!

August 3rd: When his nuclear powered DeLorean reaches 88 Miles per hour, this teenage slacker is transported from 1985 to 1955 in the blink of an eye, now he just has to figure out how to get back…

August 10th: “The King of Rock and Roll” falls in love in the entertainment capitol of the world!

August 17th: This young girl finds out very quickly that there is “no place like home” after encountering a wicked witch.

August 24th: This tap dancing penguin may be a social outcast, but his unique talent in the end may just end up keeping his species “happy.”

August 31st: This plump pig needs the help of a spider to make sure he doesn’t end up on someone’s dinner table, and can remain on the farm.

Beep, is that you under the white sheet?

Friday, June 29th, 2007


What Could Sink the iPhone
Friday, Jun. 29, 2007 By JEREMY CAPLAN

Expectations come at a price. Dubbed the “Jesus Phone,” the iPhone has raised the bar of consumer anticipation so high that regardless of how well IT actually works, some will be disappointed. Steve Jobs hopes to sell 10 million of his newest toy by the end of next year, but there are several factors that may spoil the iPhone party.
Business
The iPhone Dials Up the Competition

Cost
At $500 a pop and $60 a month for the cheapest flavor of service, plus various taxes and fees, the iPhone will cost at least $2,000 over the course of a two-year contract. Those who don’t want a data plan of the sort the iPhone comes automatically bundled with, may stick with other companies’ free phones and cheaper plans. The iPhone’s data plan actually adds less to the total price than similar offerings from Verizon, for instance, but because there is no way to opt out of the data plan, those who don’t want to use the iPhone’s Web capability may find the fee superfluous.

Battery
Steve Jobs and Co. proudly boosted the device’s promised battery life recently, claiming it will offer 24 hours of audio playback or 8 hours of talk time. Early reviews score the iphone’s battery high compared to many competing phones’. But when consumers use the device as an iPod for hours at a time, watching videos from YouTube and listening to their favorite songs, they might be surprised to find the gadget drooping when they’re expecting an important call. There’s a precedent for problems with Apple batteries, as many who owned an early iPod model know all too well.

Carrier
AT&T has been bulking up, spending billions in recent years to speed up its EDGE data network, its call capabilities and its 3G, high-speed data system. But the iPhone won’t work on AT&T’s 3G network, and early reviews question whether at&t’s slower edge network will hurt the speed of the iphone’s web browsing. AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel says connection speeds can vary widely depending on where and how the phone is used. Some info, like maps, stock quotes and weather updates can load in seconds. But if sites regularly crawl for a full minute before loading, memories of the old days of screeching dial-up may burst the iPhone bubble.

Features
With a decade of experience in the market, Motorola, Nokia, Samsung, Sanyo, Palm and Blackberry, have all been developing iPhone alternatives. Apple left its rivals competitive room by omitting some bells and whistles on the iPhone.

There is no instant messaging program on the phone, just text messaging; the camera lacks zoom, flash and video; some of these features may be added later through software updates; and you won’t be able to use it on any U.S. network other than AT&T’s for at least two years. That might be time enough for a more broadly accessible phone, available across multiple carriers, to steal some of the iPhone’s thunder.

Keyboard
After spending years learning to master Blackberry thumb typing and Palm’s Graffiti data entry, some business users may be reluctant to switch over to finger typing on a glass screen. Jobs says it’s actually easier to type fast on an iPhone than on a Blackberry, but the test will be whether millions of fingers: fat, flat and stumpy: can navigate the screen as smoothly as veteran techies. If the learning curve proves too steep for early adopters, the early buzz might shift slightly, tempering the enthusiasm of those waiting out the first model’s release.

hmm

Thursday, June 28th, 2007

Now don’t get me wrong, the loss of a young life is always tragic, but you have to wonder, why is the death of a cheerleader more tragic than the death of their colleagues who prefer, say D + D?
When teens die locally, it gets local coverage. But when CHEERLEADERS die locally, CNN picks up the story.

Town mourns 5 cheerleaders killed in fiery crash

[story equipped with smiley, perky faced pictures.]

Helen Reincarnate.

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

Crazy Aunt Helen, you may be long dead but you can rest easy knowing that there are people just as crazy as you were, suing whomever they can for whatever stupid shit they can think of. Your spirit lives on, my Aunt, your spirit lives on.

Michigan Woman Claims Starburst Candies Are Dangerously Chewy in Lawsuit

Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Starburst Fruit Chews are exactly as their name would indicate: chewy. But one Michigan woman says the candies are so chewy, they should come with a warning label.

Victoria McArthur, of Romero, Mich., is suing Starbursts’ parent company, Mars Inc., for more than $25,000 for “permanent personal injuries” she claims she sustained after biting into one of their yellow candy in 2005.

“I don’t know, maybe about 3 chews and it literally locked my jaw … and it just literally pulled my jaw out of joint,” she told MyFoxDetroit.com.

McArthur’s lawyer, Brian Muawad, says the candies caused her to develop a condition known as temporal mandibular joint dysfunction. McArthur says she has had trouble chewing, talking and sleeping since the incident.

Muawad says McArthur offered to negotiate a settlement with Starburst’s insurer to pay for her rehabilitation, but the company said no way. A spokesman for Mars refused to comment.

McArthur says she just wants to make sure nobody else meets the same end she did when she decided to indulge her sweetooth.

“I don’t want to see anybody else have to go through what I have gone through from eating a piece of candy that was supposed to be soft chew,” she said.

question of the day: would YOU bang any of these hos?

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

No? That’s what I thought. I mean, me neither.

Tampa prostitution sting nets arrests
Using funds from Edward Byrne Memorial Grant, The Tampa Police Department has been decreasing the spike in summer crime. Police have been saturating the neighborhoods with a strong police presence, arming the citizens with information on police services and targeting known repeat offenders.

Mugshots will be updated as they become available.

WEBER,MARY ELIZABETH
UNLAWFUL ACTS AS A PRECURSOR TO PROSTITUTION

WRIGHT,DERREN CHRISTOPHER
PROSTITUTION

AUSTIN,LOUIS KENNETH JR
PROSTITUTION

SANCHEZ,MARIA L
PROSTITUTION

poor spartacus

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

how can the city of NY, the so-called town of awesome, be so keen on snipping poor sparticus’ testes?


come now….the pup needs his…well, puppies…

Sometimes, I wish I still lived in LA

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

This bar ENTIRELY VALIDATES those longing feelings.

Going Stag at Seven Grand

Whiskey and Wry
By LINDA IMMEDIATO
Wednesday, June 6, 2007 - 2:00 pm
Seven Grand is a manly man sort of place. The kind of bar that would pay a chick to sit in the window dressed in 1950s pinup garb, pretending to be a cigarette girl on an Esquire cover, but instead looking trapped like a June bug in a Mason jar, or like a red-light-district Amsterdam whore. The eternally vacant stares of long-dead 17-point stags and elks, the prize conquests of better men, gaze on you from above. And looming overhead is a towering wall of Maker’s Mark — drippy red wax as far as the eye can see.


(Photo by Anthony Rich)

My host, who leads me up the kilt-plaid carpeted steps, laughs as he shares a quip that the bourbondisplay makes the place look like “Mark Twain’s dorm room.” I think Hunter S. Thompson or maybe even Tom Wolfe might have been a better choice, but these literary mind games are interrupted by the museumlike diorama of a hunting scene — one more manly man in full hunting plaids, hunting hat, hunting rifle. Freudian penis substitutes abound. Speaking of which, Seven Grand sells cigars — Romeo y Julieta, Macanudo, Torpedo, Churchill — which you can smoke on the outdoor patio that faces an obscenely large vacant building.

Upstairs there are more bucks — in the lighting fixture, on the wallpaper, and stuffed and mounted. There’s more studded leather here than in the Castro District — on seats, benches and tables. It’s opening night and the bartenders look prerequisitely Irish — handsome devils, their smirks daring you to try to drink them under the table. But instead of taking up the challenge, I order a mint julep from the bourbon, Scotch and whiskey list, feeling like Daisy Buchanan. There is definitely a bookish, masculine vibe to the place, a glossy version of the kind of joint you’d find in Fitzgerald, Hemingway or Miller (Henry, not Arthur).

For the next round, to take on the bartender’s silent dare, I order a Maker’s. Neat, of course. With a black and tan back. While we wait for the B&T to settle, the bartender shows me his tattoo of the Seven Grand logo — an impressive buck— on his forearm.

“That’s fake,” I say, as my friend Miss Gullible tugs on his arm.

“It is not,” the bartender protests. “Go on, tug on it. Try and rub it off. You can’t. It’s real.”

I’m not sure if he’s trying to have a laugh, so I smile and say most disbelievingly, “I believe you.”

To be honest, it looks authentic, but who would do that? He tries to scrape it off; it doesn’t budge.

“Do you own stock in the bar?” I finally ask, bewildered.

He doesn’t answer; he’s been called away to pour a drink for one of the cocktail waitresses whose uniform is of the male-fantasy Catholic-schoolgirl variety — short plaid skirt, tight white button-up top and knee socks. The crowd, mostly men, is mixed — hipster boys with moppish hair playing pool and well-dressed older gentlemen ogling the Playboy contingent, a few surgically enhanced trophy-wives-in-waiting who have trickled in.

At one point we introduce ourselves to Cedd Moses, part owner and successful venture capitalist. He’s tall and handsome in a crisp pinstriped suit, looking very distinguished. He brags about the bar’s beer-delivery system, The Nitrogenator NX — it keeps the temperature consistent from the keg to the spout and prevents bubbles from entering the line, making, he claims, the best pint of Guinness in the city. Seven Grand is the first bar in L.A. to have one.

But we can’t hold his attention long enough; a woman with a pair of double-Ds approaches, and he is understandably distracted. My friend and I exchange glances and excuse ourselves. We want to catch the 12-member Pogues-esque Celtic rock band that is about to start, anyway. The mysterious presence of moppy-headed indie boys is explained when we discover that all live music acts are handpicked by Spaceland Productions.

Is Seven Grand an escapist testosterone-plumped joint? Sure. But even with the dead animals, the naughtily dressed waitresses and the too-polished man-by-numbers design, it’s a great place to drink bourbon, puff on a cigar and pretend to be in an imaginary boys club. Even if you’re a girl.

Seven Grand, 515 W. Seventh St., Second Floor, downtown, (213) 614-0737; Mon.-Fri. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sat. 8 p.m.-2 a.m., closed Sun.

Reason I love Perez #472

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Headline Of The Week Weak


“PETA Calls Michael Moore Fat!

Snap! Click here to read the article accompanying this headline.

Dear Mike,

Congratulations from PETA on the reviews for SiCKO. Although we think
that your film could actually help reform America’s sorely inadequate
health care system, there’s an elephant in the room, and it is you. With all
due respect, no one can help but notice that a weighty health issue is
affecting you personally. We’d like to help you fix that. Going vegetarian
is an easy and life-saving step that people of all economic backgrounds
can take in order to become less reliant on the government’s shoddy
healthcare system, and it’s something that you and all Americans can
benefit from personally. Vegetarians weigh, on average, up to 20 percent
less than their meat-eating counterparts—meaning less weight-related
problems like heart attacks and strokes—and live about eight years longer.
I’m sure that your fans would appreciate having you around longer! By
going vegetarian, you would also provide a powerful message of personal
responsibility for one’s health, allowing others to become less reliant on a
system that doesn’t care about them. As they say at Nike (sorry!): “Just do
it.” We can help, but first, here are some facts:

• Vegetarians suffer far fewer heart attacks than meat-eaters.
Cholesterol, the principal culprit in clotted arteries, is found only in
animal products. Thus, those of us who forgo the flesh, milk, and eggs
of animals have a heart disease mortality rate one-tenth the rate of our
flesh-eating counterparts. In fact, a healthy vegan diet has been shown
to reverse heart disease.
• Vegetarians have far lower rates of cancer than meat-eaters.
Ninety-five percent of the toxic chemicals that humans are exposed to
come from meat. Thus, women who eat meat daily have 3.8 times the
breast cancer rate of women who don’t. Men who eat meat daily get
fatal prostate cancer at 3.6 times the rate of vegetarian men.
• Vegetarians are not as likely to be obese as meat-eaters. Obesity
kills about 112,000 people per year in the U.S., according to The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and makes many
more people sick. It can also lead to serious diseases like diabetes. The
CDC also reported that overweight and obesity accounted for nearly
10 percent of all American medical expenses in a recent year. On
average, vegetarians weigh up to 20 percent less than meat-eaters.
• Vegetarians don’t run the risk of getting sick from contaminated
meat. Sure, they may get sick when animal waste is sprayed on
vegetables and fruit, but meat is the big hazard. Just as dead humans
rot and attract maggots and bacteria, so do other dead animals.

Millions of people in the U.S. get sick—and thousands die—each year
from eating meat contaminated with salmonella, campylobacter, E.
coli, or one of the many other bacterium found on animal flesh—even
after it’s been cooked.

Yes, America’s health care system needs to be fixed, but personal
responsibility is a big part of why people look and feel as ill as they do.
We hope that you will focus your personal lens on the benefits of
vegetarianism—which can satisfy you easily—stop turning a blind eye to
meat’s impact on America’s health, and lead the charge for a healthier
America by taking our 30-Day Veg Pledge. You can find tips on going
vegetarian and recipes for meatless meals like faux fried chicken at
GoVeg.com.

Very truly yours,

Ingrid E. Newkirk
President and Founder

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

So, my first thought was…

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CNN AND MSNBC:

CNN: Immigration reform faces big test in senate today (following a very serious story about Iraq)

MSNBC: Heiress released after 23-day stint in the Slammer

But then CNN cut to the Paris stor, and I realized that it’s not an MSNBC problem, it’s an America problem.