Friday, November 14, 2008

Items From My Past (Part 3)



My root beer bottle cap collection. One summer sometime in the early 80's probably, I endeavored to drink a bottle of root beer every single night. I saved all the bottle caps for some reason. In the box with all the caps I found a paper ripped from a notebook that breaks down how may caps I had from each brand and the number of ounces and pints of root beer that it equated to. Most people would probably have thrown this type of thing out long ago. I'm not most people. The Grandpa Graf's brand was a distant second to Dad's.
Small 6-1/2 oz bottle of Coke. I don't remember anything about this. I'm going to keep it and not drink it. Coca-Cola beats Pepsi hands down in my book.
I found a couple of VHS tapes with some Tyson fights. I taped them from HBO. I had Tyson vs. Spinks, Tyson vs. Bruno and a Tyson vs Ruddock. There was a lot of commentary and other garbage along with it about the goings on at the time with Robin Givens and different trainers and all that. These fights were all before Tyson bit off a chunk of Evander Holyfield's ear. What a disgrace to humanity that guy was (is?).



Somewhere around the time I was nine I had a Rubik's Cube. After that for birthdays or Christmas I kept getting other similar puzzles. Left to right these are: Alexander's Star, Pyraminx, Rubik's Revenge, The Missing Link, the snake, and Rubik's Magic. I don't think I ever messed up the Alexander's Star. It looks difficult and it's just as stiff as I remember it was when I first got it. I had to use a book to finish the Rubik's Revenge. Some of the same moves applied to it as to the regular cube but the four center pieces instead of the the one was the thing that made it more challenging. I have a newer Rubik's cube now, so when I found my original I threw it out. It was all loose and rickety anyway. I found my Chex cereal cube. I never tried it but there's something called supercubing and you have to line up the center cube correctly in order to have the cube solved completely. My Chex cube has the bananas and blueberries oriented incorrectly by that standard. I remember too the Rubik's Revenge I got from my Aunt and Uncle at Christmas. The first one I had fell completely into pieces as soon as I started moving it around. There were some counterfeit ones going around so they returned it and got me another one.
An art project from 5th grade Miss Hanrahan's class. It was layers of colored construction paper cut out and glued together. After that we folded sand paper in half and sanded whatever we wanted to, to reveal the layers. For the last step we painted over it with something clear to seal the whole thing up. I opted for the my last initial instead of a simple shape or a letter J. It was more challenging because it required a certain amount of accuracy cutting out all of the holes for the all the layers of B's that I glued together.

Items From My Past (Part 2: Brewers Items)

My 1982 Brewers Baseball. The year they were American Leauge Champions. My photography skills aren't the greatest but I swear that I did not move when I took this. Maybe the focus is on plastic covering outside the ball and that puts the signatures out of focus???
I have the entire set of 6 1982 Brewer McDonald's placemats. Purchasing them at McDonald's benefited the Ronald McDonald House. This one is of infielders Jim Gantner (2B) and Robin Yount (SS). I also found the Robin Yount "3000" book they gave out at a game my Dad went to with my Grandfather. The book lists every one of his first 3000 hits. I'm keeping all this in one storage box with along with some local newspapers from various events or significant dates...Yount 3000, Paul Molitor's 39 game hitting streak, "Allied Jets Pound Iraq" (1991), my birth date in 1972 and so on.

My Brewer hat and a helmet I had. I don't know where the helmet came from but it says RC Cola on the back.

We got this plastic Brewers home plate by collecting and sending in Brewer points. I think we collected them primarily from frozen pizza labels. It has the Milwaukee Brewers logo of that time, the m & b that looks like a glove but without enough fingers.

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Items From My Past (Part 1: The Early Years)

I've had this ongoing project sorting through boxes I took from my parents attic when they moved recently. The project got rolled into a closet organizing project I started earlier in the year and together it's taking me a lot longer than it should to get everything sorted through and into new storage bins and put away. I'm getting accustomed to all the clutter but I'm nearly finished. I'll be able to vacuum again soon!

These are some items from my past I found.
I remember having this belt buckle in 3rd grade. I maybe had it for some years before or after, but 3rd grade sticks with me for some reason. At some point in my life I began to prefer Jim to Jimmy. I stopped wearing it for other reasons than that I'm sure, but that could have been one of them.
This is Super Grover. I got him as an Easter gift. I remember my parents put him riding on a horse we had as a door stop and I found him while we were searching for eggs. I remember going to church and all I could think about was my new Super Grover. Hard to believe I thought it was that cool. Maybe that's why I never got rid of him. I also found an Oscar the Grouch I had.

I was never particularly attached to this tiger in any way. I'm not sure why I kept it. I'm pretty sure it was on a birthday cake of mine one year but that seems odd since it's fabric. You can't see in the photo but it's head is nearly ripped off. I think from a real life cat attacking it.
This sad little boy is me. The suit was green and I absolutely hated wearing it. The backside of the photo says "November 1976". My mom says I wouldn't wear any new clothes at that time because they weren't "mine". I don't know if that's true exactly but that's what she says. It probably had more to do with hating to wear turtle neck shirts and uncomfortable green suits.


I used to have these around my room when I was little. I never knew where they came from. I'm now able to identify these as Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The carved wooden one broke at the ankles one time when it fell but I got him back together.
My half done latch hook Santa. I remember my mother doing several latch hooks around the time that she had cancer. I used to help her on some of them so she got me one of my own. Hers were always much bigger. You could accuse me of being a person that "starts projects but doesn't finish them", and not be incorrect. That's still somewhat true of me today.

My Jesus night lamp. I had this in my room probably around the same time as the Canadian mounted policemen. I don't know when this got put away, but I suppose eventually I wasn't bothered by total darkness at night when I went to sleep. I'd put this in my room now but the cord is a bit dry looking...could be a fire hazard. I can't bring myself to throw it away unless I can get a new one first. The cord is rolled into the metal somehow so the cord couldn't be replaced easily.

Death Star Rebuilt!


Picture of the Day November 6, from a Glenn Beck Insider. Humor like this and the return of Glenn Beck to TV next year (on Fox) will make the next 4 years a little easier to stomach.

Change

We'll all find out soon enough. I don't believe in his recipe for change. I voted McCain-Palin in case it wasn't already obvious.

I believe I said in an earlier post that I believed the cost of energy in America was going to go way, way up. Nothing anyone that isn't living under a rock couldn't tell you. I think the election of Obama is only going to exacerbate the situation we already face.


If Obama is such an environmentalist, then why doesn't he want us to be able to build clean coal plants? Are all of our old "dirty" coal plants any better? What good do you expect to come from taxing an industry that provides nearly 50% our energy? What effects does he think that will have on the economy in general? He does understand that taxing the energy providers is actually a tax on the business (producers) and consumers of of this nation right? How do we compete in a global market when our products cost more because of our "skyrocketing" energy costs? Won't such a punitive tax on energy be more incentive for manufacturing companies to "ship jobs overseas"? I'm not seeing the upside to this plan.


Newt Gingrich makes a lot of sense here. He usually does. I'm with him on this one all the way.

Biden?



Rumored to be an inebriated Joe Biden. I get this stuck in my head sometimes lately. I've seen it a few too many times probably. I think the guy that this really is should step forward. It sure looks and sounds like Jod Biden to me and now he is our VP Elect. People just don't know what they are voting for I guess. I'm not saying that singing talent is a required qualification nor that prior lapses of judgment with regards to alcohol use are necessarily a disqualifier, but this video assuming it is Joe Biden, catches him at acting very unVice-Presidential like.

Palin


What a cool office. Is that a crab?


Too bad she's headed back to it.


Upper Deck's Palin card.

Campaign Carl reporting after the election. I caught this live on FNC. Imagine that. Me watching the news? I was distracted somewhat by the cacti behind him. Turns out the information he was reporting on...Palin didn't know Africa was a continent and not a country etc...was all distortions. Just like most any other attack on Palin throughout the campain this was merely more of the same. Those cacti are awesome.

Monday, November 03, 2008

Dawn of the Democrats


Watch out for these guys when your driving home or to the polls tomorrow night. Since daylight savings time ended this weekend it's lot darker during the evening commute.

It doesn't take ACORN to register dead people in Wisconsin although there is little doubt that they have done it here too. Anyone can do it since there is no requirement for a photo ID to register or more importantly to vote and there are no checks in place to validate the address provided at the time of registration.

We know it's the Democrats and left leaning organizations that participate in this type of election fraud because it is always those organizations that object to it and the Democrats that vote against the sort of legislation that would put an end to it. They have no interest in making the elections fair because they are the benefactors of voter fraud.

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Nice move

From most emailed photos on Yahoo.

In this undated photo released by the South Central Regional Jail, Jose A. Cruz is shown. Cruz, 34, who police said passed gas and fanned it toward a patrolman has been charged with battery on a police officer. Cruz, of Clarksburg, W.Va., was pulled over early Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2008, for driving without headlights, police said.

Edit: To clarify, the title of this post is sarcasm. Seriously. Policemen and women out there bust their behinds everyday, sometimes putting their own safety on the line for our benefit. They don't deserve jerks waving their farts at them. On the other hand, battery of a police officer sounds like a bit of an over-reaction. He must've been on thin ice already with the officer or something.

Knight Rider

Wow does the new Knight Rider show suck. I happened upon it last Wednesday and was curious enough to watch some of it. I was a kid when the original Knight Rider was on TV. It replaced the Dukes of Hazzard as my favorite show at the time. I suppose as TV shows go the original was pretty stupid too but this new version is bad beyond words. I wouldn't even say this is a show meant for kids as there was even some innuendo in there. It's definitely not for adults who watched the original as kids that's for sure. If this show isn't cancelled soon I'll be surprised. Then again it's on NBC so what does that say? If you like poop, then you'll probably like this show too.


Way back when, this was cool.


New version definitely not cool.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Maywood 2008

I did the 50 mile route again this year. They changed the route around quite a bit this year. I think it was a bit more challenging than before, but more scenic. I liked the change. I think I'm in about the same shape as I was last year, but maybe not quite. I'm about the same weight at 180, but 300 miles behind in cumulative miles compared with 2007. Some of the new hills this year really had me sucking wind. It seemed like I was out on my own a lot more this year rather than amongst other riders. There were exceptions and I chit-chatted with some riders along the way, but for the most part the route seemed rather empty. A couple of the hills I climbed entirely by myself, but a few of them I got to blow past other people which was gratifying. I think of biking as an individual sport that I only compete against myself in from one ride to the next, but it's sort of fun when I do rides like this to have others to compare myself with. I never did get a new bike this year and even on my mountain bike I was blowing by people on lighter bikes with thinner tires.

Next year I'm definitely getting that new bike I've wanted and I'm going to do the 65 mile route. When I'm out riding I have time to think about all sort of things. I've it in my head now that I'm going to attempt to reach 1500 miles next summer. I think that's pretty reasonable as long as I start out early enough and in well enough shape, which hasn't been the case these last 2 years. I Googled it and the earth is about 25,000 miles around at the equator. I've gone around 3200 miles in the last 4 summers that I've been keeping records, so I've got a very long way to go before I can say that over time I've ridden my bike a distance that is the equivalent to one trip around the earth. I could maybe say that I've ridden the equivalent of circling the globe, but nearer to the Arctic, but who can't say that? There's some mathematical way to figure out now far south of the pole a circle of 3200 miles would be, but I don't know what it is. It's probably not even as far south as Alaska or even Greenland at this point so it's probably better to say for now that I've gone far enough to cross the continental US.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

9/11 Truth

I found these pages an interesting read a few months back. I may as well post them today. If you have any doubts at all about what happened to the World Trade Center or the Pentagon and that it was indeed done by terrorists with airplanes you shouldn't after reading this stuff.

NIST and the the World Trade Center FAQ

Loose Change Viewer Guide 2nd Edition

Popular Mechanics Debunking 9/11 Myths

If nothing else these are a window into the minds of how conspiracy theorists think. That is they ignore a mountain of evidence and the opinions of people who know what they are talking about in order to believe whatever it is they believe about the 9/11 attacks...though that constantly changes and evolves as each of their theories are debunked.

Patriot Day


Today is Patriot Day. I had the day off from work for completely unrelated reasons. I'd call it R & R, but it wasn't that exactly unless 45 miles of biking with half of that into a stiff 16mph wind is your idea of relaxing. I relaxed some in the morning and then took off around noon. Earlier in the morning I was listening to Vicki McKenna which I normally never do since I'm always working those hours of the day. Among other topics (Obama/Biden gaffes etc) she derided the Madison radio stations and Milwaukee stations who did not observe any of the moments of silence associated with today. In addition she was having listeners phone or email in the names of companies which were or were not appropriately flying the flag at half staff. I did my own survey of this on my bike ride today. I lost count of the residences that had the flag all the way up. I only can recall one that was correctly at half. I could give one of these a pass because there was vegetation nearly all the way up the pole. Getting this wrong today is not really something I can get myself all worked up about, but there is something to be said for those that got it correct. Vicki's list of companies flying the flag correctly at half staff here. From memory this is my list.

Correctly at half staff:
Innoware in Menomonee Falls, WI
Desert Aire in Germantown, WI
D & G Transportation in Germantown
Germantown High School
Ben Franklin Elementary MF
Shady Lane Elementary MF
A fire station in Germantown
Germantown Police station
M&I Bank in MF
Davians in MF
The Odyssey Family Restaurant in MF

Flying a flag, but incorrectly:
Kohls (not the store but the company headquarters in Menomonee Falls)
Wacker Corporation in Germantown industrial park
Menomonee Falls High School (neither the flag at the football field or the one at front of the school)
American Legion Post in Germantown

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Where have I been?

So what have I been doing lately instead of blogging? Blogging doesn't takes up a lot of my time, but obviously my posts are irregular at best. That's just the way it is.

Other than watching cable news on TV, usually Fox or Glenn Beck, my Netflix subscription is the only reason for the TV to be on. Well, that and Modern Marvels, reruns of Future Weapons, or maybe Man vs Wild. I've been getting about 2 rentals a week on my one rental at a time plan. I get one Wednesday then watch it and mail it Thursday to get another back by Saturday, then mail that Monday to start the whole routine over on Wednesday. I usually get a throwaway on Wednesday. Something that I don't have great expectations for, or lately a series disk from a TV show. Anyhow picking up from my last update. Newest at the top again...

Ladron Que Roba a Ladron
Ocean's Thirteen
Dream On Season 1&2 (Discs 3, 4 & 5)
3:10 to Yuma
Dream On Season 1 &2 (Disc 2)
The Transporter 2
Dream On Season 1 &2 (Disc 1)
The White Stripes: Under Blackpool Lights
Guess Who
Casino Royale
Batman Begins
11:14
La Haine
The Breed
The Assassination of Jessie James by the Coward Robert Ford
Batman Returns

Some of these movies I see on TV flipping channels around during commercials. They have them on FX or something and I get interested that way. I have a pet peeve about watching movies when they're all cut up on TV and with commercials wasting my time in-between so instead I just rent them. Two of these above have Bernie Mac in them. He just died not that long after I saw Guess Who. That was kind of a throw away that I got interested in, in the aforementioned manner.

A while back now after I finished reading The Road, I read Lone Survivor. I don't usually finish books in a couple days or a week. Usually I read a bit at time over a month or so and this book was no different. When I'm done with a book, I go to Amazon and read some of the reviews to see what other people think or what they got from a book. With this book you can tell who all the liberal reviewers are. Many of them couldn't bring themselves to finish the book. The book is about Marcus Luttrell, a Navy Seal. The better part of the last half of the book he details the events of a particular mission (Operation Redwing) where he along with 3 other Seals set out over some very unfavorable terrain to capture a Taliban leader. The title of the book should give you some indication how that mission turned out. The first part of the book is Marcus describing his background and a description of his experiences in training to become a Navy Seal. That sort of thing is probably in a lot of books written by a lot of Navy Seals, but I never read anything like it so that was interesting to me anyway. This is a book I would not hesitate to recommend to anyone.



Another project of mine this summer turned my condo living space into a big mess. I started with the intention of organizing a closet in my second bedroom that I just threw everything into when I moved in (4 years ago). This closet was a bit out of hand to begin with and only got worse, so I pulled everything out and started going thru stuff. Then I got the brilliant idea that, "well this stuff goes with that stuff in the hall closet, which goes with that other stuff in that dresser drawer in my bedroom" and the project just expanded like that. It was getting better but then I moved about 6 boxes out of my parents attic that had a lot of old stuff in them. My parents are moving from my childhood home so I'm getting some boxes back which I'm going through now. I've got some new storage bins from Target and slowly it's all going back together or out to the trash, the used bookstore, or elsewhere. In the meantime my place isn't totally safe for guests and all this stuff everywhere makes it difficult to move a vacuum cleaner around. I'm too ashamed to include photos of this. I should've done this in the winter time. I probably would have gotten it all done quicker. Instead...

I've been back on my bike as usual. I started late this year around the 4th of July. I had spent May and June at Snap Fitness mostly. I'm on about the same pace as last year now going about 250 miles/month. I'm never going to be able to catch up with 2007, I just passed up '05 over Labor day weekend despite my late start. My chart below has the years mixed up a bit but if they're in order they obscure one another too much. I put all my stats into an Excel file after each ride. Excel is supposed to be for spreadsheets but I abuse it in other ways when it suits me. Besides the basic stats (time, distance, ave speed, etc.) I usually put some description of my route into one cell and then whatever thoughts I have about the ride in another. I have cells with entire paragraphs in them. I have my stats calculate in this spreadsheet and create a chart form that so I don't know what other program I'd use for this purpose.



On Labor Day I went up to the Interurban trail again. I was up there a couple weeks ago but didn't have the daylight or the water/food to continue any further North than I had already gone. I had already gone further North than I was aware that the trail existed. It seems to end on Demaster Road in Oostburg. On that first trip up, I started in Grafton. My map indicated that the trail ended at "K" somewhere north of Belgium, WI. K wasn't really marked but I did notice the pavement take on a different look at one point. When I went up there this time I started further to the north in Port Washington and where the trail ended last time turns out to actually be the end of the trail. There are points where you have to take streets, and I figured last time this was just one of those points. This trip I headed further north following the "bike route" signs but I never saw the trail again. The last sign was at the north end of Oostburg. It directs you East on KK which I then followed North. I was rather hoping for a park or something for my halfway point rest stop, but I ended up taking a break at a graveyard instead that was just off Sauk Trail Road Near V. There was a stone bench like fixture that suited quite well. It had the name Bemis carved into stone just in front of it. No dates on it, but I figured by the size of the area that the Bemis family will be buried there someday and this stone footing and bench fixture would be at the rear of that area. It was all very magnificent looking. Next time I go up I think I'll follow these directions.

On my rest days I've been spending some time brushing up on my web design skills. I'm working on re-coding the website I put together for the company I work for. I did most of the work in the early part of this decade and only used a cascading style sheet for a few things. Now that web browsers (IE7, Firefox, Opera, etc) have better support for style sheets I'm re-coding my pages using CSS layout and styling rather than a tabular layout. In the process I'm saving on a ton of HTML code and reducing the download size of my pages by as much as 66%. I'm validating all my recoded pages to HTML 4.01 strict as well. It's hard to believe what a mess they were before. This is one of those projects that for the casual observer, there won't be much change to the site at all other than a font here and a heading size there. BUT behind the scenes the page code is a lot more efficient and the pages will render more accurately and consistently across platforms and devices. I'm doing some of this work at home partly because, like I said I'm "brushing up" on my skills using style sheets. It's a learning experience for me to some extent, and I don't like to do my learing at work where I have all sorts of interruptions. I have this belief, rational or not, that I should spend my time making progress on things while at work and that I should do my learning on my own time. Sometimes this learning process involves spinning my wheels trying to figure something out. Sometimes it means starting down one path, then deleting that and starting over on a different path.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

A Couple Interesting Columns

I meant to post this first one a while back. I've heard over and over about how polls are saying people think America is heading in the wrong direction. Which I should think is obvious. I totally agree with that. But what frustrates me is that it always seems to be liberals that refer to these polls and use them as evidence that we need "change".

My beef is that there's never the obvious follow-up question. What is wrong and what is the right direction for change? What changes are favorable to most Americans and what will turn us back in the "right" direction? Starting with this column I've seen more attention to this obvious follow-up question. I read this a while back and thought that it said everything I was thinking.

If On the Wrong Track, Why Go Left? By Denis Prager


Column #2.
I see the cost of energy going way, WAY up in the not so distant future if things don't change and FAST. We haven't seen high gas prices yet. It will be much worse if Obama wins in the fall. We're sitting on all this oil but we don't drill for it. We not building more refineries or coal plants or nuclear plants. AND we're using a large percentage of our corn to make ethanol which is a net loss in terms of fuel consumption. How stupid is all this? And Congress wants to tax the oil companies? Sue OPEC? Put a tax on carbon emissions? That's all just incredibly dumb. Our Democrat controlled Congress has no clue.

Critical Thinking on Energy By Charles Krauthammer

And lastly a 2 parter about Liberal myths spread by the media.

Tackling Five Modern Myths Created by Liberals By John Hawkins
and
Tackling Five Modern Myths Created By Liberals Part 2

...for a total of 10 myths.

Vista

I just replaced each workstation computer we have in our network at work with a new Dell Optiplex that has Vista Business Edition on it. I've spent the last 2 weeks or so plugging in each new machine in turn and adjusting network settings, setting up admin and user accounts, setting up programs, transfering email archives and running updates and all of that stuff. Then Saturday with some help from a co-worker we took the old monitors and towers away and setup the new ones. Everyone will have a nice new 22" flat screen and fresh, brand spanking new computer on Monday. And a dust free desk and fresh vacuumed floor under their desk on top of that. I spent nearly my entire Saturday day doing all this moving around and cleaning up. After I finished my final checklist on each workstation I was ready to go home. I was exhausted and I felt like I didn't want to look at a computer for a long while.


I hadn't seen Vista until we got these computers. It took some getting used to at first. Finding where all the settings are took some getting used to. They seem to have renamed some of the control panel items and I've found I still need to switch from category view to classic few to find everthing. I've found all the stuff I need to in Vista and I'm adjusting to Office 2007. I don't see why Vista is criticized so much. I suppose now that it has been out for more than a year and SP1 is out all the kinks are worked out. I planned ahead to be sure all the software we use can run on Vista and aside from updating a few programs of mine we were good all around. I was due for a couple updated programs anyhow.

Now that I've seen Vista and worked on it, those Apple commercials that I hate that always bash PC's seem even stupider. I think the folks bashing Vista probably need to take a closer look in the mirror or look at who is behind the keyboard before blaming Microsoft or Vista for all their problems. Personal responsibility isn't popular these days.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Photo Dump

On my Yahoo portal they have this section of "Most emailed photos" and "Most Viewed photos".

They must have had a dog show or something a while back and I grabbed these and all the rest.

This one is like the cover of that Beck CD. I always thought that was fake. I didn't know dogs like this actually existed.
The Beck album cover for "Odelay". This dog is ready to dive.
Here's a cat and a mouse together. Looks a lot like my cat except for the black paws. I don't think my cat has ever seen a mouse but I think he definitely would have the sense not to bathe it if he met one. Maybe that's a gerbil or a hamster. I don't know. It's a rodent and cats and rodents aren't supposed to get along like these two are.

Holy carnage at a bike race. Bodies and bikes flying everywhere. I think it said somebody died in the description too. That driver better be in the slammer somewhere for good long time.


If I recall the description it said this beetle was seized from a package coming over the border. I find gigantic beetles interesting and disgusting at the same time. See my Insectaculture link over in my links section.

Snap Fitness

I joined Snap Fitness and I'm going to dump my YMCA membership. A Snap Fitness just opened not long ago that's less then 2 minutes drive from where I live. I even walked there the other day. It's cheaper than the Y even if I pay only month by month. If choose to make the longer commitment I can average down my monthly cost even further, plus I can suspend my membership for up to 3 months of the year if I want to. They're open 24 hours a day so if I feel like it, I can go jump on an elliptical at 3:00 in the morning. I don't know why I would do that but it's good that it's an option. Maybe I'll do it sometime just so I can say that I did.

I've been there for about a month now but before that I probably hadn't been to the Y since sometime in March I think. Those 2 or 3 months time off or whatever weren't real good to me but I'm feeling back on track now. I'm able to do a full hour on the elliptical and then cool off on a stationary bike for 20 minutes after that. I'm working off some weight too. It's not so much the weight as it is my composition really. I could be less soft in the middle and more lean for sure.

Netflix activity update

Updated list of movies I've seen this year or since this post. Most recent at the top of the list this time around.

Jeremiah Johnson
Batman Forever
This is War: Memories of Iraq
Sexy Beast
Before the Devil Knows Your Dead
Batman
Tool: Vicarious
The Punisher
The Brave One
The Cave
Dr Katz: Professional Therapist (Season 2)
American Gangster
No Country for Old Men
Hostel: Part II
V: The Final Battle
V: The Original Miniseries
28 Weeks Later
28 Days Later
Hot Fuzz
Four Rooms
Hills Have Eyes 2
Shooter
Black Sheep (mutant sheep, not the Chris Farley movie)
Sin City
Transformers
The Grudge
A History of Violence
Black Snake Moan
Live Free or Die Hard
Fantastic Four:Rise of the Silver Surfer
Fantastic Four
Stranger than Fiction
1408
Bourne Ultimatum

Right now I'm working my way through some of the old Batman movies. I remember the first one being real big when I was in High School. They even had a Batman ride at Great America which I have been on at least once and probably a few times. I never saw the movie until now and I'm wasn't all that impressed with it. I'm watching the rest of them and I feel like I'm sort of forcing my way through them. I messed up the order though somehow I've seen "Forever" before "Returns". Sometime next I'll make my way through all the Spiderman movies. Maybe those will be better but I doubt it. That newer Ed Norton Incredible Hulk movie they have commercials on TV now looks much better than the last one. I don't know why I'm watching all these comic book to movie, movies but I am.

I remember watching V when it was on TV when I was in 4th grade. This was before we had a VCR. I remember missing the beginning of one of them because I was at school for some sort of sex ed. thing they had. I remember a film of a birth which pretty much grossed us out as kids. We had to rush home when it was over so we could watch part 2 of the final battle I think it was. It's kind of corny to watch it now but it brought back some memories. I was surprised how many of the scenes I remembered as well as I did for not having seen it in 25 years. The special effects weren't as bad as I might've thought. Diana eating a guinea pig was pretty fake looking but other than that it wasn't bad. I'll probably get the TV series sometime but it's spread over 6 DVD's so it'll take some time to get through. Or I might skip it altogether. I have lot of other stuff in my queue I'd rather see before that.

    Thursday, June 12, 2008

    The Road

    Just got done reading this last Sunday while it was storming outside. It was a good read I thought, but I'd say it's not the kind of book everyone would enjoy. A friend of mine from work lent it to me after we had an in-depth discussion about "No Country for Old Men" which was based on another Cormac McCarthy book. This book is about a man and his son who are travelling down a road trying to survive in a world that is dark and gray and cold and destroyed by an unspecified event. The ground is covered in ash, the sun has been blocked out for years, and the air they breath is polluted with ash. Plant and animal life is non-existent. The two of them live off of any canned food they can find. It's pretty grim. They frequently came across dead bodies along their travels and have to be careful to avoid other people for fear they would be killed to be eaten. The event that lead to this grim state of the world is never specified in the book but as I read along I thought it sounded like the aftermath of a big asteroid. There's no mention of radiation anywhere but reading the forums at Amazon there are some folks that are absolutely certain it was a nuclear holocaust. Anyone that says that didn't read very closely I think. The book says, "A long shear of light and then a series of low concussions", and that's as specific as it ever gets. The ash everywhere and the fact that forests and cities are burned seems to match this. How the world came to be how it was in the book is of minor importance, but it seems to be the first thing that everyone says about the book to describe it. It was either a man-made disaster or one brought on by outside forces. It doesn't much matter, but what makes the book interesting is the journey the two of them have.

    I just read now that this is being made into a movie. I'll check that out for sure. I wonder how that will turn out. NY Times article on the move here.