Sunday, February 24, 2008

You're Gonna Lose

Now, I'm not talking bad about you, no. I'm just begging you to give me a subscription to The Journal of Popular Noise. I'll go meek and say, "Lord, I'm talking to you." Hint, hint... I'm waiting... waiting... well... nothing. I tried in the super/un/psudonatural anyway and came up a tad short! Well, I shall punish my ears with the Kings of Convience and their eerie sounding song, Failure (R-click, save as, open with, blah-bliddy-blah). They look like nerds, but they don't sound like them. And they are coming. Well not to Colorado, but the PRB on the 14th of March. And speaking of coming...

DeVotchKa are coming, DeVotchKa are coming! And for free. Appearing for nothing at Twist and Shout on March 18th. I'll be thirty-three and one day as old, as well. Yippee for me who made too much to claim Earned Income Credits, but not enough to warrant a refund. Har, har.


The Soft Boys being bit and nibbled on by N.E.R.D, "no way" I thought. But this video makes me scritchy-scratch my head.


And I hate Jason Lee, but I love his girl. Jerk.


Saturday, February 23, 2008

Yawn....

I always liked this song (Right-click and "save as"). It rocks with just enough force to reckon that of... say... this song (Right-click again), just not as scary. I mean ghosts are a scary subject, but getting killed always out frightens imaginary things, for me anyway.

What really keeps me up late in the night are statements from Karl Sabbagh. He said, "Our brains may never be well enough equipped to understand the universe, and we are fooling ourselves if we think they will.

Now, this man wrote about the Riemann Hypothesis, and I cannot begin to scratch the surface of its intent, nor dumb it down enough to satisfy my weak realm of knowledge. But my futile mind can accept and respect the idea that humans may not understand the universe. I understand that the more I learn, the less I know, but that is a cliché phrase and just cements Mr. Sabbagh's suggestion of how (in)capable our minds are. It's like Franz Ferdinand covering (you know the drill, right-click...) LCD Soundsystem, it should not be, but it does sound nice.

I guess I'm just suffering from the Lewis Thomas Syndrome, which I read about in an Outland cartoon. Sad, huh?

Friday, February 22, 2008

Grievance

I'm filing a grievance on this fucking insomnia. I can't keep checking out sites like this all night, no. I need some sleep. I need to search for sleep techniques, or to cut back my caffeine intake. There must be a way to induce disambiguation with no effort or serious thought, right? I mean, I can't fall asleep to Guy Chadwick's (What a terrible and minuscule description)You've Really Got A Hold On Me or Screaming Trees Grey Diamond Desert, nope. Maybe it was my dinner of a salad with Greek dressing, that contained a copious amount of pepper that sucked the moisture out from the pepperchinis I had to accent my somewhat healthy meal, sure. I mean, what is life with not but a cool, cool image as this? Alas, thank jeebus for this.... "Suck, suck, suck" Yay!

This what I look like currently

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Random

Been a long time, just thought this was funny.

And since my life is dull, I'll post random things from here on out. Like this cool/rare comic from Bill Watterson:
Or this comic too:

Thursday, January 3, 2008

My Review of Shure N70EJ Replacement Phono Cartridge Stylus

Originally submitted at Radio Shack

This Shure N70EJ replacement stylus will restore your phono cartridge to its originally specified performance levels.


I will buy this product again

By Terrence from Denver, CO on 1/3/2008

 

4out of 5

Pros: Great Sound

Best Uses: Basic Systems

Describe Yourself: Musically Inclined, Practical

This is a replacement stylus for the M72EJ cartridge, or has it says, the M70EJ cartridge. Heavy bass, all-right sound.

(legalese)

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Huh? There's something about Mary?

As of 12/20/2007 3:57:15 AM EST: I am 32 years old. I am 393 months old. I am 1,709 weeks old. I am 11,966 days old. I am 287,187 hours old. I am 17,231,277 minutes old. I am 1,033,876,635 seconds old... and yet... I am nothing else.




I have watched and read this movie and book, but not in that order. It is not like I am too, too cool and above and beyond everyone else, no. It's because a Perry Weissman (yeah, they named a shitty jazz band after he) made me "watch and read" (thanks dick)for expository writing in high school. I failed the class miserably yet learned so much that my quaint and remorse writing style is a casuistic reflection of him.

Yusaf Islam/Cat Stevens wrote the soundtrack, or better, he allowed music from Tea for the Tillerman to be used in the movie. I fucking hate that fact. I hate Cat's ideas: (sorry. I'd normally link the article, but the NY Times wants you to register, which you can, and read the article there, or just skim down here)

Cat Stevens Gives Support To Call for Death of Rushdie
By CRAIG R. WHITNEY
LONDON, May 22 -- The musician known as Cat Stevens said in a British television program to be broadcast next week that rather than go to a demonstration to burn an effigy of the author Salman Rushdie, ''I would have hoped that it'd be the real thing.''
The singer, who adopted the name Yusuf Islam when he converted to Islam, made the remark during a panel discussion of British reactions to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's call for Mr. Rushdie to be killed for allegedly blaspheming Islam in his best-selling novel ''The Satanic Verses.'' He also said that if Mr. Rushdie turned up at his doorstep looking for help, ''I might ring somebody who might do more damage to him than he would like.''
''I'd try to phone the Ayatollah Khomeini and tell him exactly where this man is,'' said Mr. Islam, who watched a preview of the program today and said in an interview that he stood by his comments.
The statements by Mr. Islam and several other participants in the discussion demonstrate how divided British liberal intellectuals remain over the affair. British writers and publishers have signed petitions backing Mr. Rushdie's freedom to write what he wishes, but there have been no public readings of his works. 'Not a Pacifist Religion'
Several of the participants defended Mr. Rushdie. The writer Fay Weldon, for example, said, ''Burn the book today, kill the writer tomorrow.'' She said she was offended by Mr. Islam's remarks, which she said incited people to violence.
Also on the show was Dr. Kalim Siddiqui, director of the Muslim Institute in London and one of the organizers of a nationwide demonstration against ''Satanic Verses'' that is scheduled for Hyde Park on Saturday. He said: ''I wouldn't kill him, but I'm sure that there are very many people in this country prepared at the moment. If they could lay their hands on Rushdie, he would be dead.
''As a British citizen, I have a duty, if you like, a social contract with the British state, not to break British law. We are not a pacifist religion. We don't turn the other cheek. We hit back.''
A British bookseller, Tim Waterstone, chairman of the chain bearing his name, said that intimidation by opponents of the book ''at the end of the day probably will work.''
''I don't want to see my staff in peril of their life and health,'' he said, ''and I don't want to see my customers in peril.''
And the Bishop of Manchester in the Church of England, the Rev. Stanley Booth-Clibborn, said the British blasphemy law is indefensible because it protects only the established Christian church. Other clerics have suggested that the law be extended to other faiths so Muslim objectors could stop offensive books through court order. Government Defenders
In the end, Mr. Rushdie's most stalwart protectors have been those he often said he most dislikes - Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Government, which has given him police protection at a secret location since the Ayatollah's death threat last February. Iran broke diplomatic relations over the affair, and though Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe expressed distaste for the book, he defended Mr. Rushdie's right under British law and custom to write it.
Muslims in Britain have been divided by the affair. They demonstrated against the book in several cities late last year, but they say British news organizations began paying attention to their objections only after the book was publicly burned. Dr. Siddiqui said book-burning was not on the program for Saturday's demonstration.
He and other Muslims who participated in the 53-minute courtroom-style program, ''A Satanic Scenario,'' to be broadcast on Britain's Independent Television Network next Tuesday night, objected to cuts in the three-hour taping session, held April 15, that omitted the Muslim justification for punishment of blasphemy.

What a dick, huh? "If you want to speak out, speak out. If you want to be free, be free." Not against his ideas, though. Such is life. But I'm like him— Just a bitter person. You know that I am.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

134,564 People


Interesting, I guess. ↑

I have been a busy, busy man: Trying to vide for time and space, beginning to move to more affordable accommodations, all the while keeping my head above water and into soccer.

I save money with music by using this little code:
intitle:"index.of"(mp3mp4avi)
I place it inside the Google engine. It works, and it works well. You like The Aliens? Well type "the.aliens" after …of” and you can have their whole album free. Then, if you do like the music, go and see them live, because that is where bands make proper income. It is unfair to the industry, but so what. I never did go see Warner Bros. live. Or the Sire tour, or Interscopeapalooza, no. Of course, the Sire record tour would be kick-ass, it just won't happen and my feeble brain can not create a false-enough reality to conjure up such an event.

The Aliens