Friday, February 24, 2006

Keanu to the future? Nooooooooo!!!!!!!

Is it just me, or is the United States turning more and more into the dystopian America invisioned in '80s movies such as Robocop? How did you know, Hollywood?

It's hard to believe that bad B-movies were able to predict the future...Maybe James Cameron is really a cyborg from the year 2010?

I just hope that the future does not involve a "data courier, carrying a data package literally inside his head too large to hold for long, [who] must deliver it before he dies".

Whoa.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Do we really want to go down that road?


Some highlights from a Toronto Star article on Harper's public hearing for Canada's next Supreme Court nominee...

Yesterday, Harper talked about seeking the "judicial temperament" in a Supreme Court nominee, and expressed his preference for jurists who are "prepared to apply the law rather than make it" and avoid being "inventive" in their rulings.

"The mere fact that a public hearing will take place represents an unprecedented step forward," Harper told reporters yesterday, adding the nomination will be "the least partisan process in history."

Harper pointed to the recent confirmations of U.S. Supreme Court Justices John Roberts and Samuel Alito as examples that public hearings need not become a partisan circus.
Oh yeah, Mr. Ethics? Well, listen to this advice from someone who's been there:
"My problem has always been that in the U.S. it's a charade. The nominees rehearse, they go through mock hearings. ... You then end up with a very close vote, so I wonder what the public thinks about the quality of judge they're getting when half the committee votes against them." – John Major, outgoing Supreme Court Justice
Funny, last time I checked calling the "recent confirmations" of John Roberts and Samuel Alito a partisan circus is an understatement. These two hearings created a complete mockery of the so-called impartiality of the US Supreme Court by making the whole process inherently political by the vary partisan nature of the questioning and final votes.

I really don't see how public hearings, in effect mock-hearings really, are in any way a "step forward" as Prime Minister Pinocchio seems to claim.

Monday, February 20, 2006

This bass note's for you, Derek Smalls


Best bassist ever?

I honestly cannot believe somebody chose Sting as their favourite bassist. That's a little like choosing Roger Waters as your favourite vocalist. I mean, I am probably one of the biggest Pink Floyd fans you'll ever meet, but even I admit that's just plain wrong LOL

Here's my top 10. (In no apparent order...)

Top 10 rock bassists ever:
1. John Entwistle
2. Phil Lesh
3. John Paul Jones
4.Jack Bruce
5. Chris Squire
6. Cliff Burton
7. Billy Sheehan
8. Tony Levin
9. Geddy Lee
10.Les Claypool

* honourable mention goes to Derek Albion Smalls of Spinal Tap. His playing on "Big Bottom" gives a whole new meaning to the term "bottom end".

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Greatest album cover? Try smelling the glove!


"Smell The Glove" by Spinal Tap

Monday, February 13, 2006

No Respect! No respect, I tell you!

Why I'm writing annoying top ten lists is anyone's guess :)

I now present for all you music die hards out there...

Top 10 greatest albums that in my opinion get no respect:

1. Roger Waters – Amused To Death
2.Unicorn – Blue Pine Trees
3. Porcupine Tree – Stupid Dream
4. The Jam – All Mod Cons
5. The Pretty Things – Parachute
6. Unicorn – Too Many Crooks
7. The Jam – In The City
8. Bob Dylan (w/ The Band) – Planet Waves
9. Wilco – Summer Teeth
10. Every Richard Thompson CD

Sunday, February 12, 2006

I hate Frampton Comes Alives

Am I the only one who really just doesn't get why Frampton Comes Alives is one of the biggest selling albums of all-time? I just really don't understand Frampton's appeal. Oh, wow, he's using a talk box in one of his songs! ooooh...I don't know...Maybe you just had to be there. The '70s I mean. I was only there for a few months.

All of that is my really sad lead-in to the top ten live albums of all-time (rock albums that is, I think I'll leave jazz/blues for when I have a few hundred hours to figure out a way to condense hundreds of worthy contenders down to 10).

Here's my top 10 live albums and in no apparent order:

1. Jimi Hendrix – Band Of Gypsies Live At The Fillmore East
2.The Who – Live At Leeds
3.Pink Floyd – Pulse
4.U2- Under A Blood Red Sky
5. Rolling Stones – unreleased live sbd recordings from 72/73 (while not an official live album, if you listen to the countless bootlegs out there, you're really hard pressed to figure out why the f***** a live album was never released). In the mean time, I guess Get Yer Ya Ya's Out, certainly no slouch itself, will have to due.
6. Stevie Ray Vaughan – Live At Montreux
7. Jethro Tull – Bursting Out Live
8. Neil Young – Weld
9. Jimi Hendrix – Live At Winterland (sadly, inexplicably OUT OF PRINT? Why? Why? Why did they have to go and do that? At least I managed to snag a copy for myself though...)
10. The Band – Rock Of Ages

Did I leave anything important out? I must have. I probably left a lot of important stuff out. And please don't say I left out KISS Alive LOL That whole album was recorded in a studio (and if you don't want to take my word for it, take Gene's – he's said so in countless interviews). About the only "live" part is the crowd – although, for all I know they could have been canned as well.

In Turin, they tested my urine

I've finally come up with the perfect Winter Olympic sport: the Nonathlon.

This grueling high-endurance sport combines nine exciting events that only the most physically fit (and probably mentally unfit) athletes would seek to train in all at once.

The cool thing is that it combines so much together, that it really removes the need to have multiple sports at the Olympics. One Nonathlon could replace them all.

The Nonathlon, which takes 45 minutes from start to finish, is as follows.

First, participants do the board-jump to start things off. That's a ski jump on a snowboard.

Second, it's ice fishing time.

Third, there's sharp shooting (you can't have an "athlon" even without sniper rifles, obviously).

Fourth, is the 4km speed skating event.

Fifth, tug of war on ice, with a huge pit of frozen lake water in the middle.

Sixth, figure skating.

Seventh, cross-country snowboarding (cross-country skiing on snowboards).

Eighth, hurling (a sport that combines curling with the log toss – use your imagination).

And finally, the ultimate finally, the two-person Skeleton. Yes, this is the same Skeleton that looks like upside down luging, but with two idiots crunched on top of each other, careening headfirst recklessly down a mountain slope at speeds in excess of 90 km/h.

Oddly, enough, I have a feeling the gold medal would go to any athlete who actually finishes the Nonathlon in one piece.

Friday, February 10, 2006

The Borino in Torino

I really cannot get into the Winter Olympics.

I'm not sure why but I think it has a lot to do with all the weird hybrid events, like the biathlon, triathlon, septathlon etc... that seem more like pseudo-made-up sports than feats of physical endurance that extraordinarily talented athletes spend years training for. Before you get angry (if you are one of those althletes who's sport combines sharp-shooting/skiing/scubadiving/NASCAR driving), I realize that those participating probably do spend years training for these events. It just strikes me as odd that the winter games are filled with sports that, outside Olympic competition, do not seem to exist.

Seriously, have you ever heard anyone say: "Gee, I can't believe my luck. Losing at the biathalon today at the community centre. Can you believe that I slipped on the wet floor tiles – they really should put up signs for that, you know – and my rifle accidentally went off while I was running toward the finish line? I sure hope that old woman is ok."

Don't they teach little kids from about the age of 2 or 3 that running with scissors is a bad idea? Shouldn't the same philosophy then, likewise, apply to RIFLES? Just a thought.

So, in honour of the Winter Borelympics, here are some sports that should be obvious choices if you ask me, but for some un-obvious reason (at least to myself), have not been included this year. The following would definitely add some much needed punch and excitement for the TV viewer:

1. Ice Fishing – Hey, it's more interesting than watching curling. First person to catch a fish who isn't passed out cold from boredom wins the gold!
2. Sharp Skating – A combination of figure skating and sharp shooting.
3. **Tug Of War
4. Blindfold Ski Jump – This one is self-explanatory.
5. Urine tests – As long as they aired this one late at night, I see no reason why they couldn't show athletes failing their random drug checks. And it would be much more suspenseful than any of the actual sports, especially when they test the snowboarding team. Trust me.
6. Tackle Curling – Uh, I'll leave this one up to the imagination.
7. Dog sled – I've always wondered why this sport is never included. Yes, there is the little problem that it takes several weeks to get from the starting line to the finish but I'm not suggesting broadcasting it live or anything. You could just show the highlights from the second week or so.
8. Speed Skating With Obscales – Speed Skating has always appeared too easy to my eyes, so why not add something challenging to the mix? Like, say, an angry bull or maybe cracking ice if it's done on a frozen pond. Or how about giving the speed skaters paintball guns? That might be fun.

Also, I think that the games should be done naked, like they used to do in Ancient Greece. What could be better than a bunch of athletes competing in sub-zero temperatures in their birthday suites, freezing their muscled bodies off? Ahhh, the best part for the audience would be watching the naked ski jump.

The worst part for the nude athletes? Besides growing icicles on their extremities? The two-person luge obviously. Or maybe the four-member bobsled. Talk about tight quarters...

**"Tug of war" was actually an olympic sport in the early 1900s. Seriously, I'm not joking. Although, I use the term "sport" loosely in this case. I'm also not sure if this was tug of war pitting one team against another, or if this was one team against a horse. Or what was in the pit. It could have been mud. Or creamed corn. And the athletes could have been naked. Well, probably not. But they could have been. No one watched the Olympics in 1912 because broadcasting did not exist yet, so we'll never know.

(Aside: Ok, now, no offense, but this sport is just idiotic. You have to have a major death wish to try this one. No wonder it's called "Skeleton".)

Ricker Mercer Photo challenge




My entries for the Ricker Mercer Photo Challenge didn't get chosen :(
I send 5 photoshopped picks of Gille Duceppe...here are three of 'em.

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Danger, danger, Preston Manning!

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Hasta la vista, Liberals



Wednesday, February 01, 2006

America's First Family just got a little brainier