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Friday, December 30, 2005

Reppin' C-Town To The Fullest.



Finally, C-Town gets their props in the form of Wedding pictures from Doug and Cara's ceremony out in Whistler. Big up, big up. If you'll remember, my camera mysteriously broke and no one else bothered to send me any snaps. Wicked thanks, by the way. Here is a little sample, and there is another one in the gallery here. Doug is a lucky guy. Cara is... um... lovely.

New Year's Eve Ripcord.

My plans were just canceled for me - long story - and I'm pulling the ripcord as I do every year and just going to Sidebar. If you're wandering, lost and alone, without any plans - please join us. I will be attending a little suaree at 80s Katie's beforehand, but will ultimately end up singing Danny Boy somewhere in the Combat Zone and possibly even getting contact burns around my mouth.

The details as I understand them are a $60 fee to get in with champagne and food supplied. There's a DJ I think, and 2 separate groups holding 'parties' - neither of which can manage to fill the place. Sometimes stumbling into a big room full of people you don't know and making some new friends is a lot fun. Sometimes, it leads to social diseases. Regardless - I'm going. I'm pulling the cord and just committing. I will definitely enjoy not seeing you there as you do something far more interesting.

Thursday, December 29, 2005

This Is My Space. That's Your Space Over There.

Because I don't already have my pants down around my ankles in terms of anonymity, I added a MySpace link to my disturbing little profile in the top navigation menu. Feel free to click through and add me if you're a fan of the blog - or just watching in sick fascination like a school bus driving past a car accident. While we're on the subject, here is a list of things I promise you will NOT find on my MySpace profile:

1. A fucking annoying hip hop song that starts five minutes after the page loads and sends your coworkers jumping underneath their desks like Slick Rick just drove past the office.

2. Animated gifs of the Napoleon Dynamite dance (sorry Damaris).

3. Photos of me with my shirt off standing beside a mediocre car. I don't own a car, and my pale, gym-shy chest currently looks like the midsection of a narwhal.

4. A link to my band that sucks monkey cocks. Although, if I had a band, admittedly it would be called Monkey Cocks. MySpace has become this malestrom of mediocre talent that was never meant to see the light of day. "Dude, I did a search and can see that you like the Magnetic Fields. So I think you might like my band, Indifferent Potato. It's actually just a squirrel I found in my backyard being recorded as I rode over it with an electic lawnmower, but I think you'll get the vibe.

5. Pink on black anything.

So click on through and make yourself a new MySpace buddy. Some people wear their MS friends total like a badge on their sleeve. These people also usually spend Friday nights playing Unreal Tournament. Maybe we can join the same clan or something.

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Monday's Quotelet: Hare Today, Hippo Tomorrow.

I don't have the energy for Wadio today, and half of you aren't even working. So let's move up the quotelet we didn't have on Monday, and get right on with our young lives.


Casting issues would eventually shut down Disney's 2007 update of "The Tortoise and the Hare".

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Actually, Matthew Perry Has Always Frightened Me.

Has rap gotten extraordinarily awful, or have I just gotten old? It's a question which has plagued me for years. I've even written about on this very website. There's nothing about bling, oversized baseball hats, expensive cars or beats that sound like they were made on a rusty Speak N Spell that appeal to me. "I'm a player, a smoker, a deadly loan broker!" If a rap song doesn't contain a creative sample I wonder, how much of this is dumb luck or crack debts being repayed? And it kills me - because I used to be a huge hippedy hopper, albeit a subtle one. So where's the real disconnect?

There's still a slim enough chance that some of you haven't seen this that I feel comfortable pointing it out. And I read a great quote written about the silly short that makes me feel a little closer to some answers.

"People aren't forwarding this video because it's a parody of what's bad about rap; they're sending it around because it's an ode to what can be great about it. Instead of aurguring a new day for SNL, maybe it points up what's missing in mainstream rap is an awareness that it's OK to be goofy."

The greatest moment's in rap's golden age were all silly - sometimes intentionally. The first big rap hit of all time featured fairies, keopectate and woody chicken. Phife busted off on your couch and made it Seaman's furniture. Biz Markie picked boogers like it was his job. Is this what I miss so much? Can I not truly enjoy a rap song anymore unless someone rhymes "birthdays" with "worst days"?

Hip hop the hippie to the hippie the hip hip hop, a you dont stop the rock it to the bang bang the boogie say up jumped the boogie to the rhythm of the boogie the beat, indeed.

Monday, December 26, 2005

The Foggy Odyssey.

PITF is back on the air after the regular Christmas foray to the Great White North. My mother, sister and I made it to the Toronto area in record time Friday - about 8 hours. I slept the entire time due to heavy imbibing the night before at the Bruins game. Needless to say I was not popular in that little Outback, but the only person I really hurt was myself. Trust me.

That disgrace of an evening was followed quickly by Friday spent at the Rude Native with Puppa, Billy, Janet, JJV, and Mark. Pictures and more details will follow when Janet dumps her camera - but to be perfectly honest, I may keep it pretty vague. Between trying to encourage a snowball induced donnybrook with kids young enough to be my offspring after the bars closed, and then conking out on Gary's couch while a party carried on around me, I'm not too proud of that whole pm. But you guys made my trip coming out to Burlington last minute like that, and Gaz was a great host. Seriously, thank you all and you're still my boys.

Saturday and Sunday were spent with various groups of family and my always adorable little cousins. Seth schooled me at Monopoly and Thomas massacred me at Madden 2006. I showed up at the Yankee Swap with a Curb Your Enthusiasm DVD box set, and left with some small skinny candles. And what makes all of this even more embarassing is that I can't continue to blame alcohol - as my crippled self happily accepted to be the driver that night.

Today was a nightmare, but it was far worse for a few others. Probably the worst Toronto to Boston drive in memory. And there has been probably 50 of them over the course of my lifetime so far. A late start. 2 hour wait at the border. Stopped at the border and questioned due to Janet's recent greencard replacement. Snowstorm. Really crowded highways full of Steve McQueen clones, appartently. One more load of wash and I can finally sleep. Happy belated holidays to us, everyone. And by happy holidays, I mean someone please come over to the North End immediately and euthanize me.

Thursday, December 22, 2005

I Do So Love The English Newspapers.


Hat tip to Moynihan for this one.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Christmas Comes Early For David.

Q: What's the status of the Pixies? Still enjoying the reunion?
A: We just got back from Japan. That was the last gig on the books. At one point during the last show, I was teasing Kim [Deal] about something, and she flipped me off. She was just fooling around, but I thought she was serious. It was the first time that'd happened the whole time, and I thought, ''Oh, man, she's mad at me. It's over."

Q: You recording a new album?
A: Yeah, but I need to write some good songs. These Pixies have gotten a little uppity. They're like, ''What if it's not as good as the old records?"

Very happy to read this Globe interview with Frank Black today. But I'll believe it when I see it, as will we all. And then, of course, some of you have lives.

Wednesday Wadio: The Pogues "Fairytale Of New York".

"...it’s a gorgeous song no matter why you observe Christmas or even if you celebrate something else... is not only the most beautiful, but the best Christmas song humanity has ever made. May it endure." - Stylus

I am really slammed today but wanted to get this out there. This entire Wadio entry will be comprised completely of quotes and links, and you can enjoy my snide remarks again tomorrow.

"The Pogues re-released their classic Christmas hit ‘Fairytale of New York’ on Warners on 19th December 2005. The song, featuring the late Kirsty McColl was voted the best Christmas song ever in a poll by TV station VH1 last year, beating Band Aid, Wham and Slade to the top spot."

"The band will be donating proceeds from the record to the homeless charity Crisis At Christmas and the Justice For Kirsty Campaign. Set up by the late singer’s mother Jean, the fund has enabled the family to fight the long legal battle for justice following the tragic death of their daughter, killed by a powerboat whilst on holiday with her children. Almost five years on from her untimely death on 18th December 2000, no person has been made accountable to the satisfaction of her family and friends."

"MacGowan and the sadly departed MacColl sing all over each other, slurring words and tossing insults (she’s an “old slut on junk”, he’s a “cheap lousy faggot”). You could easily dismiss it as merely dysfunctional and assume I’m saying it is the greatest Christmas song of all time because I am a cynical bastard and I think Christmas sucks and is all about squabbling with the family and getting loaded. But you’d be wrong."

"This is a couple clearly more comfortable slinging profanity than admitting sentiment. And then they sing “The boys of the NYPD Choir are singing ‘Galway Bay’ / And the bells are ringing out on Christmas Day” again, and it’s still oddly uplifting when you consider how little those two things mean to most of us (but not to them, of course), and then the song goes off into the air."

And I got tickets to the Boston show, bitches.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Painful, Painful Nerdery.

When people want to know about certain things, they talk to me. As if I were Mad Max and they were a desperate villager who needed to find a truck to haul gasoline. But it's not quite as cool as post-apocolyptic gang warfare-related advice - when all they're asking you is to tell them what movies you recently went to by yourself before masturbating yourself to sleep whilst crying.

"I'm greatly looking forward to King Kong and A Scanner Darkly, which is an animated version of a Philip K. Dick book," said Dave Pye, senior account manager with a Boston-based search engine marketing firm. "Blade Runner, Total Recall and Minority Report are all great geek movies based on Dick's work, and I hope the trend continues."

Still, it's very nice to be an authority on something. Maybe I can work my way up to Advanced Dungeons and Dragons.

Fumigating Neverland.

When I moved in to my current apartment, it was September 2000 and I was 26 years old. I had a sweet job, a building which was always full of young girls, a fraternity-esque social life and the interior decorating to match. It was cheesy, but it was OK to be cheesy. It was expected - and I was in good, cheesy company. But as Seamus left in September for new horizons in Hartford, I am now the very last of the old guard.

The years have flown past, and I've never updated my decor. Sitting in my room now, I see the signed flag of St. George I received when I left the Hinds Head in 1998. An original operational 1977 Han Solo blaster. A remote controlled R2D2 which is even older. A map of Northern Ireland printed on Irish linen I got in Belfast in 2001. Goldfinger, Casino, Die Hard 3 and A Bronx Tale (way to go Lillo by the way,) posters. My skydiving certificate. Multiple DeNiro, Sinatra and Frank Black 8x10s. Unframed photographs that are taped to the walls including my football team group shots that are all curled up at the edges and need to be preserved as they may still impress girls. A creative writing award I won in 1991 that definitely never will. A boomerrang I got in Australia and a wooden machete I got in South Africa. And there's a few shitloads more.

Let me just say what you're all thinking - My bedroom looks like the Chinese curio shop in Gremlins, if it were managed by a 12-year-old homosexual.



My Canadian houseguests have been delayed, and I've spent the evening boxing up the majority of this juvenile crap and moving it into the basement. I won't part with it - some of it is actually pretty cool, but it's time to move my epicenter, my bedroom, into 2006. I'm not a pack-ratting hermit by nature, and it's just been a matter of getting to a tipping point to send me over the edge towards serious redecoration. And, dare I say it, adulthood. Thankfully, it just happened.

Yesterday Kyle and I went to a lovely annual Christmas party up in Marblehead that I have not attended in 4 years. Several of the guests were induviduals from the aforementioned job with their little children, and subsequent lives, in tow. Towards the end we met a 63-year-old mortgage broker who proceeded to tell me how nice I was and that she wanted to set me up with a young girl she knows in Beacon Hill. She asked for my business card. On the way home, Kyle told me that the woman was just going to try and sell me property. I realized he was right - because if you didn't know me, all gussied up and being extremely polite at a posh Christmas party, you'd think I really fucking had it together.

The scene switches, and my latest hypothetical lady love is staring up at a magazine cutout of Al Pacino in Serpico as I whisper sweet nothings in her ear. And... scene. I'm framing the autographed Trailer Park Boys glossy and leaving it where it is, and the football photos are also getting framed and can stay, but look out world - Peter Pan is growing up and redecorating.

Incidentally, the Bob and Doug Mackenzie action figures are also staying. And here you thought I'd completely lost my shit.

Monday, December 19, 2005

Monday's Quotelet: From Russia With Cub.


Bogdan's grandmother wondered how he intended to feed the rescued cubs, but was grateful for his Christmas gift - the rare French scent, "L'eau du Catnip".

Friday, December 16, 2005

Friday's Fairytale: Essential Christmas Croonings.

The usual source of the quizzlets is once again sucking hind tit, self-admittedly using "leftover" questions this week - all of which I've answered before here on PITF. So I'm thinking up my own. It's relevant, it's hep, it's seasonal and it's interactive. Although it is late in the day, and many have you have already mentally checked out for the weekend, play along if you please. And if not, go pork a wreath.

Top Five Holiday Songs EVAH.

5. The Chipmunk Song - The Chipmunks: Human counterpart "Dave" encourages Alvin and the rest of his little rodent gang to wish for more peace and love, and less hula hoops, during the holiday season. It's catchy, and ever so frigging creepy at the same time. Here's a Flash parody that will immediately make you want to bathe.

4. Little Drummer Boy - David Bowie and Bing Crosby: On his yearly Christmas special in 1977, Bing asked Bowie, whom he'd never heard of but had been advised was big with 'the kids', to join him for this classic duet. Crosby died a month later, and nobody saw this until after his death which added to the already oozing sentimentality. Personally, I'm glad that Bing got one last chance to prove that he could entertain children just as well as he could beat them. I kid Bing. He was awesome.

3. Christmas in Hollis - Run DMC: During their 80s heyday, the guys put together this yuletide hip-hop single that was the first and last of its kind. Here's the thing - it's surprisingly a very, very good tune. I loved it as a kid, and it holds up well over time. I buy into the fact that Santa visits the hood as regularly as he does any other neighborhood. I don't buy into the fact that collard greens should be served with Christmas dinner or that the pre-religious Run would have returned Santa's wallet.

2. Baby, It's Cold Outside - Dean Martin: If you know me, you know of my eternal love of Dino. That having been prefaced, this song could have easily been called I Know you Don't Want to Fuck me, but it's Really Frigging Cold Outside. Listen to Dean coax his ladyfriend into staying for "one cigarette more" due to the raging elements that await her outside. The raging erection is most definitely inside, and Dean's going to be dammed if he lets his folly leave before there's egg nog all over her green sweater. In all seriousness, this is a cute classic that I always pull out this time of year.

1. Fairytale of New York - The Pogues: I'll say it - This is hands down the best Christmas song that has ever been written. Shane MacGowan and the late Kirsty MacColl trade sentiments and then jabs in a booze-soaked yuletide slugfest. Any song that can bring me to tears every year, which also rhymes 'maggot' with 'faggot', has something just a little special going on. This year marks the 5th anniversary of Kirsty's tragic death, and the single is being re-released with all proceeds going to her charity. There is also a documentary about the strange story behind the song airing on the BBC next week. The best of the best, this song will be featured on Radio Pye next week for the uninitiated.

Thursday, December 15, 2005

It's High Time I Found My Building On Google Earth.

Open the bomb bay doors, Mr. Oppenheimer. We've finally found him.



Without a couple of famous North End landmarks in the vicinity, this satellite photo of my neighborhood would be little more than a messy mess and the get mess crew. on the right you can clearly see the Old North Church. "One if by land..." and all that revolutionary jazz. On the top left, the old Brinks Building, now a hotly contested yuppie parking garage, is in effect.

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Wednesday Wadio: Edo G's 'I Got To Have It'.

"I'm from Roxbury the 'Bury but not the fruit y'all - Don't make me act like where I come from cause it's bru-tal." - Ed OG.

In honor of this senseless scene of local studio slaughter, I was inspired to feature a legendary Boston rap artist on Radio Pye today. As an aside, how many rappers have been shot or otherwise died in their recording studios at this point? 2Pac, Jam Master Jay, ODB... You hit the studio with the intention of laying down a few bizzangin' tracks - and just end up laying down. Update: Here is an MP3 by the now permanently defunct, murdered Boston rap group, Graveside.

Ed OG and da Bulldogs' seminal 1991 release "The Life of a Kid in the Ghetto" is beloved by any hip hop fan who attended high school in the Boston area that year. There's your "Bugaboo", your "I'm Different", but the track everyone remembers, and which made it onto Yo! MTV Raps for a couple of weeks in March of that year, is the classic "I Got to Have it".

Edo's work was a great combination of social commentary, sexual adventure and bootie-shakin ' party jams. There isn't a weak song on "Ghetto", and the rough beats and heavy sampling are a time capsule of early 90s rap - or 'the golden age' as I like to call it. "There were no drug raids and driveby's on "Life of a Kid in the Ghetto," just episodes in the life of a young man who knew his calling."



Edo is still kickin', having recently and quietly released a great album with Pete Rock, and I recently read in a Boston music magazine that he's hard at work recording with another Boston crew. He plays regularly at the Middle East and is even thinking about getting into politics in the future. Perhaps as a member of the Skinny Dip party. Time will tell - but this is a great song that I remember fondly and wanted to reintroduce to my small world.

"These days you have to look long and hard for such a charismatic and original freshman. In 1991, "Life of a Kid in the Ghetto" proved that between NY and LA, there were many places who had their own story to tell. In that regard, Ed repped the 'Bury and Boston to the fullest."

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Happy Birthday, You Filthy Pornography-Ridden Cesspool.

HTTP Protocol was introduced in 1990, making the internet as we know it officially 15 years old. A recent article on CNN lists their personal top ten internet moments - including WiFi, Google, Live8, Skype, Napster and others. There are some glaring omissions, however. Namely, the black sheep of the internet. That of which major media will not speak the name. You know, the good stuff. Like Catster.

In the interests of not making my subversive surfing habits public record, I invite you, the reader, to share some of your more disturbing WWW discoveries in the comments below. I just think that if we're going to mark such an important anniversary, some light should be shone on where the real money is made, and where the real traffic ebbs and flows. Sure, NeoPets is a lot of fun, and has become an enormous success, but it does me absolutely no good when I'm drinking by myself on a Saturday night with a greasy container of coconut oil.

I'll get the ball rolling with a few of my guilty favorites:

- Ogrish.com: People who work in law enforcement in China, Pakistan, Iraq and Brazil send in ridiculous crime scene photographs. Not for the faint of heart.

- RatherGood.com: I hope someone eventually gets this guy the mental help that he so desperately needs. But his Flash movies are absolutely hilarious.

- YouAintNoPicasso.com: Courtesy of Nate, this site is an amazing resource for getting obscure MP3s of 'alternative' bands. The webmaster will be locked away in a dank prison cell at any moment, so enjoy this copyright treachery while you can.

I will add some more later. Have to get going. Please contribute your own, and happy thwapping.

Monday, December 12, 2005

Not Only Do I Hate Mondays, I'm Having Them Killed.

Not even the Park Street Jesus freaks could cheer me up this morning. After a weekend full of horrible movies, a Saturday afternoon at the office, a Christmas Party at which I got intimately acquainted with Mrs. Claus and a bout of insomnia that would have made Rip Van Winkle perky - it was Monday yet again. And I felt like I'd been drinking absinthe and snorting No-Doz for 72 hours. And you know full well you can't get absinthe in this country. Dance with the green fairy, indeed.

I have to break this vicious cycle. It stems from staying up too late and then sleeping in the next day. My homeostasis gets thrown out of whack to the point where I'm as effictive and original on Monday morning as Jayson Blair on sodium pentathol. I'm not sure where I'm going with this. Maybe I do. Bed. For 12 hours.

Monday's Quotelet: A Pryor Engagement.


"Good to see you again, Chis. You are flying me up to Heaven, right motherfucker?"

Friday, December 09, 2005

Friday's Quizzlet: Tales From The Boiler Room.

Appetizer: Name something you'll miss about 2005.
I'll really miss the way the number 5 looks like a little testicle at the end of the two zeros. I look forward to 2007, when I'll get emails and letters sent to me with dates at the top and I'll wonder - is this really a bill from Keyspan, or is James Bond sending me a secret code? Is my gas about to be shut off, or has Blofeld escaped from the underground MI6 volcano prison. It will be exciting to try and figure that out every day.

Salad: What is one thought that went through your mind today?
Sweet Charity am I ever late for work! I got all the way to the Haymarket T stop and had waited for the train a good 10 minutes before I realized I left my laptop in my living room. I had to go all the way back to get it and bounded into the office 10 minutes before a conference call. So I was wicked prepared, covered in snow and still nailed it.

Soup: On a scale of 1-10 how compassionate would you say you are?
If I can quote Duran Duran for a second - City living, heavy trouble. City living rough. We are given angry hearts, but angers' not enough. I think what Simon leBon is saying here is along the lines of living in the city for an extended period of time can make you apathetic, please get me another young cock.

Main Course: If you could invent something, what would it be?
I'm not telling you, you sneaky patent-collecting quizzlet. My supersonic peanut machine gun vibrator will be ready when it's ready. And I've already invented whatever the lifeform is that inhabits the boilers in my building and keeps blowing out the pilots. Not to be confused with criteria for joining the Mile-High Club.

Dessert: Do you prefer salty snacks or sweet treats?
Salty snacks I'd have to say. My friend Mike once pointed out the error in calling someone a saltoholic. And alcoholic is called that because they are addicted to alcohol. So by the same logic, someone addicted to salt should be called a saltlic. So you'll frequently find me hanging out in meadows being tongued by dairy cows. You haven't lived...

Thursday, December 08, 2005

It's All Greek To Me. And My Ass Hurts.

Many thanks to everyone who attended my last minute birthday dinner last night, and to Janet for pulling it all together. The Greek food was great, and the retsina was definitely flowing. I knew a few folks were coming, but I had no idea we'd have a big table of about 10 or so. Well done, everyone. I was allowed to tell inappropriate jokes and speak too loudly with the people I love. And what the hell do those sexually deviant Greeks care anyway? Malakas.



Also, what is it about fried cheese that has me so very fascinated? Take a hunk of sharp aged fromage, soak it in brandy, light it for a few seconds, put the whole thing out with a big hunk of lemon and watch Dave's pants get a little tighter. And not due to a weight gain, if you get my drift. I long for the day when scientists deem Saganaki good for your health. I won't hold my breath. But then - I won't need to as I'll be long since dead from blocked arteries. Opa!

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Thirty Two Problems And A Bitch Ain't One.

Last year on my birthday I made many hilarious references to Pearl Harbor. This year I'll simply reflect on birthdays past, and there's been a lot of them. Last year we all had dinner in the South End. The year before that was the big 3-0, and I organized a huge party for myself (as you do) at Tiernans which was thwarted by the largest snow storm Boston had seen in years. The year before that, Janet organized a party at Harvard Gardens which was a lot of fun - I sang all the way home in the cab, and then made everyone wait until the song was over until we got out.



Prior to that it starts to get fuzzy. I think 28 might have been at Silvertone. 26 or 27 was a surprise party at Janet's old place in Inman square. Before that I was in England, and that year they midread the birthdate on my work papers at the pub (they reverse the month and date when reading it metrically) and shocked me with a cake on the 12th of July. Yesterday, my workmates took me out for lunch, also mistaking the numeral 7 for the square root of "DERRR".

But it's the thought that counts, and I always have fun with good friends around. This year it's subdued - some Greek food in Watertown and then early to bed before an important meeting tomorrow. Thank you all for putting up with me for so long, and here's to another longevitus 32 for all of us.

Wednesday Wadio: Belle And Sebastian's 'Funny Little Frog'.

"The frisky bassline and chunky horn blasts are rewarding enough, but it all sounds too easy, too patronizing for a band in the adulthood of their career." - Pitchfork

Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass go, do not collect $200. Belle and Sebastian's new album, The Life Pursuit, isn't released for over 2 months yet, but I accidentally found it online. Funny Little Frog has been available from their Peel session for almost a year now, but this is the full studio version and I hope you'll enjoy it as much as I'll surely enjoy being buggered in the shower at MCI Concord during my 18 months for piracy.

This is your archetypical 'new' B&S song - piano, horns and mindless optimism. I especially love the sound of the snare drum, and the way Stuart Murdoch pronnounces thro-at so that it rhymes with poet. Cute, Stu. I think Pitchfork was a little hard on this single, and the album in general. I don't honestly think the new album is on par with their best work, but I can't fault them for evolving and changing - "...at least they aren’t pulling a Robert Smith and staying “miserable” ad infinitum". I'm always glad to see them, and we'll always have If You're Feeling Sinister.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Ring A Dong Kong.

I haven't been excited about a movie in a long time. As I wrote to a friend yesterday, who asked me to comment on the movies of 2005 for an article he is writing: "There are so many CGI-powered films these days that special effects hardly seem challenging any more. The real magic of Star Wars back in the 70s was the innovation behind the visuals. No one had ever seen anything like it before. Now, it seems like Sith was sandwiched in somewhere between Chronicles of Riddick and Serenity, and the magic has become mundane." I just quoted myself. About Star Wars. If there's still any uncertainty about whether or not I will die alone, this should put that right to bed.

A King Kong remake seemed like a decent idea to me. Mighty Joe Young didn't quite cut it, and the 1976 version is a snoozer, in spite of Charles Grodin. Add Peter Jackon to the mix, and I might actually go see it in the theatre instead of downloading it whilst counting booty, sharpening a cutlass and feeding a parrott. Walking around on a peg leg whilst making a Frenchman walk the plank and leering at the computer screen with my one good eye. Dammit I'm a pirate!

The preliminary reviews have started to come in, and they are beyond good. I haven't seen the movie, so I can only share some of the snippets I have heard thus far:

- "Grown men around me were crying," says one Hollywood insider.
- "...a wonderful blend - probably the most perfect blend - of escapism and adventure, mystery and romance".
- "could legitimately be described as the most thrilling B-grade movie of all time".
- "Jackson evokes such a sense of empathy for his beast that Kleenex should be sold along with the popcorn."

So we have the action of Jurassic Park (the flick is apparently chock full o dinos once they get to Skull Island,) and the weepiness of Titanic. Something for everyone. A bit chicky, and a lot dudey. An enormously diverse target audience. Time will tell, but I can say that I'd love to see Jack Black, and not Leonardo DiCaprio, as the star of the highest grossing movie of all time. I mean I'd just sleep better.

Monday, December 05, 2005

Monday's Quotelet: Every Waking Moment.


Santa will be good and God-dammned if the children of New Orleans are to go without presents this year.

Friday, December 02, 2005

Friday's Quizzlet: Seascapes Of Violence.

Appetizer: When was the last time you did something courteous?
I've been giving my seat up on the train a lot more frequently. It hurts at first, and it's hard to sit down for a few days afterwards, but it's a good way to make some extra pocket money and there are always generous elderly gentleman cruising public transportation.

Salad: If you were to have a painting done of you, what would background be?
The background would be that I'm enough of a narcissistic twat to comission a painting of himself. So, in other words, a seascape.

Soup: Describe your voice.
It's smooth and deep. I can do a great Dean Martin impersonation. But if we're talking inner-voice, it's a selection of three murderous circus clown brothers bent on violent necrophelia.

Main Course: What is something you would like to do, but are afraid of the risks?
I'd like to move fairly soon. I don't see myself living in Boston forever. But dropping everything is a very scary prospect. Like when you're babysitting an infant. I'm thinking Toronto or Vancouver, but I'd likely have to change my profession a little due to the marketplace. I recently got a book on juggling.

Dessert: What was the last television show you watched?
Last night I watched an old episode of Family Guy - the one where Meg skips Stewie's birthday party to unsuspectingly attend a cult meeting. I was a late adopter of this show, but it's absolutely hilarious and I am so glad I eventually got around to wasting copious amounts of my time with it. Homer who?

Thursday, December 01, 2005

That Thing About The Iron And The Candle Wax.

My new roomate Tom moves in this weekend. Yes, another new roomate. I swear to Christ I'm not going all John Wayne Gacy on them and stuffing them under the water heater. Rest assured, all my former roomates are alive and well attending outpatient therapy somewhere.

The former tenant was nice enough to leave three big gobs of candle wax and chewing gum (I'm not sure which is which) on the carpet, and although I steam cleaned Tuesday night, they are still front and center. Someone at work told me about a neat trick - cover the wax or gum with a paper bag and hit it with a hot iron. The smeg will stick to the bag and come right out of the carpet.

You know what? It works. Amazing. If you don't have similar spots on the rugs in your home, make a mess just so you can try this out. Have a Satanic ritual, seal an envelope, find a pack of Big League Chew and get things started. Best of luck.

My Fickle Friend, December.

Gone are the days when I'd long look forward to December. Driving 8 hours to spend 3 rushed days in Toronto before driving back again isn't quite as much fun as driving 3 hours to Grandma's to spend a whole week there over the holidays used to be. Turning 13 is much more exciting than turning 31. Staying up all night praying for dawn and anticipating the unwrapping of dress shirts, socks and toenail clippers isn't quite as mesmerizing as it was when the packages contained Legos, GI Joes and Star Wars figures. I still instinctively get excited about December - but these days it's more hassle and tension than holly and tinsel.

The dual nature of December couldn't have been reflected any better than on this, the very first day of the month. Joe Thornton got traded to San Jose - but my coworker Alon's wife gave birth to little Maya at 7:31 this morning. I've also, while typing this, been invited to my first Holiday party at a posh location in Marblehead. So I suppose it could be much, much worse. And for the record - it's called Christmas, you over-sensitive frigtards. Donnie Hatt is my hero.

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