Sunday, November 30, 2008

Week of 25 Nov

Hmm.

Here's my past week: Threatening clouds, a little rain, but all is still as if waiting. I feel that something is just out of sight...something drawing near yet never quite arrives. I'm on the verge -- or, perhaps, the edge. As of a high cliff, my footing unsure.... An adventuer...? This may account -- to some degree -- for the sparse pickings this week.

Hope You Like Jamming, Too. I've got to get one of these.


Ever wonder what an anthill would look like when filled with cement & excavated? Check this out:


Ah, how I do miss the good old days of the Bastard Operator From Hell. Simon is missed.

23

23/6 -- Some of the news, most of the time. It would be considerably better if their damn ads didn't insist on refreshing the page & pulling the reader back to the top...in mid-sentence, though.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Week of 18 Nov


Vegas looks even nicer than I'd thought. Of course, the desert there is even more apealing to me than that round Reno. The Sanoran Desert has always been among my favorite deserts. Ah, well. Wait! Vegas even has a Chinatown. I never knew.... And the can't miss Atomic Testing Museum. Fun stuff!

I remember hearing about this in the late 90's. But we were worried that it was the evil M$ who was going to search all our hard drives for pirated M$ software. Turns out it's the future leaders of the world, China. M$ has other means at their disposal for mind & wallet control.


Duh. Great Pyramid Mystery to Be Solved by Hidden Room?

Top 10 Ways to Discover New Music. Of course, you could also just listen to KEXP, KUSF, WSOU, or any number of other stations at ShoutCast.

Nice! Free Old Time Radio Shows. Yeah, they're before even my time, but some aren't too bad.

You want to stop turning to pharmaceuticals too? Here's a site dedicated to Folk remedies. Ah, if only to settle down with a lovely bruja.

Fire, Water, Earth.
Passion, love & a binding.
Three by three I call -
Supernal Triad of Truth.

As Empress, I seek the power
to endure in the game of two.
As Priestess, I turn the two to one,
the one to none, & the none to a third.
As Goddess, I bring unimaginable joys -
certainty, not faith.

She conjures by day & night -
A cornucopic delight by the slightest turn
of white wrist.
Rose & White Oak, Mandrake & Bay, Orchid &
Mistletoe
mingled in the mortar of emerald
on a base of smoky quartz, adorned with rubies.
Muttering softly the name of her desire,
she rises in the dim light of the chamber.
Concentration held as she moves to the fire
to perform the consummation.
-AF

The things we find on the Interwebs: Got a question concerning Thelema? Why, turn to the Thelemapedia. Acceptance of the Law of Thelema not requisite. What is Thelema? What is the Law of Thelema? Between the Thelemapedia & Wikipedia, ye shall become enlightened. 93, all.

Oh, boy. Third-world here I come. Researchers Make New Electronics -- With A Twist.


Brain Reorganizes to Adjust for Loss of Vision. Oh! That's why I'm so much smarter now than when I had 20-20 vision....

Now, that's dedication!

And just when you thought it was safe to go back to Uganda: New species of Ebola found in Uganda.

Anyone hungry...?

All light up.

A growing body of evidence suggests
that smoking helps delay the progres-
sion of Parkinson's disease, and
potentially other cognitive diseases
as well. These are statistics that
rarely see the light of day; they are
hidden from the public by layers of
anti-smoking campaigns and health
warnings
.
Nicotine: can it save your brain?

10 Sex Festivals Around The World. Anyone up for a road trip...? Hey, not all of these are about the money.


As appealing as Mexico is, the social requirements & niceties, all the formality & emphasis on status kinda bugs me. But things loosen up a bit further down. Have a look at the Latin & South America Expat site. I still like Chile. Let's get while the gettin's good.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Week of 11 Nov

You know, I've been to college & taken a number of trade courses in my life. While in college the only future I could possibly conceive was making a career of wandering poet, busker of strange & disturbing acoustic noise, writer of questionable manuscripts, & as a joyous malcontent. It was no wonder I'd left school for the bright lights & urine filled NYC. No bohemian-leaning, non-violent anarchists could pass up the opportunity to lavish in the cesspool that the city was...or may still be. Along the way, I've picked up a certification in journalism from a school long out of business, I'd studied long & hard to become a bartender (how I passed the tests I cannot guess, as I don't now, nor had I then, known how to mix even the simplest of drinks) Volkswagen mechanic, a Linux Administrator, a Web site Administrator (the latter three never completed because of ridiculous inconsistencies in the curriculum compared to real-life situations). I've spent a life-time studying various forms of mysticism, story telling, & the hypnotic effects of sound & vision (that's more on story telling & musicianship, & maybe a bit of magic thrown in).

I write this to ask a question I really want answers to, & the great Gazoogle ain't helping. Send me comments, send me mail, psychicly link with my feeble mind, if you dare, & help me out, here.

You see, I want to take anther potentially worthless trade course. I've wanted to do so for a few years, but cost & various other things have continually got in the way. I need to learn the technique of teaching. In this case, I want to get certified to teach English as either a second or foreign language. Granted, I expect this might be more obtainable in Reno due to a lower cost of living than here in Seattle.

So, my quetion is are trade courses really worth it? Certainly, I can learn a thing or two about how to do this as I had learned many, many things in the previous couses, but I need some real, as opposed to marketing, information. Besides, do people actually make a living relying on trade certifications?

Tell me your experiences with these. Please.

-----

New title finally published. A collaboration between William S Burroughs & Jack Kerouac. Read about it here: The young generation: Burroughs and Kerouac - an unpublished collaboration.

Can someone explain this to me. Hasn't it run its course yet? Why the hell is there so much stripper emulation? Don't get me wrong, I've met strippers, despite my never having been in a strip club. Fine people, or fine enough. What I don't get is why so many women want to be like them -- particularly when most of those strippers I've known were only doing it till they could do something else. Take the money & run. Sexy? It's business. Maybe I just don't find it all that sexy. Rather, I find it all contrived. Why should sex be so elaborate? Why so deliberate? Seems rather phony to me.

We've lost so much.

Too good to pass up. These videos from the sixties were considered educational. I was round then, but, apparently, too young to have been exposed to these. I imagine I'd have been rolling on the floor, gleefully pissing off my teachers. Oh, wait. I didn't need these specimins to piss off my teachers. They had lots of others when I was in high school. The 6 Most Unintentionally Hilarious Old School PSA's. Of course, I do remember the Duck and Cover movie.

Watch what you leave out in the yard.

Mostly as a bookmark for my own idle times, but the 19th Century British & Irish Authors Archive may serve you well too.

And another related bookmark: Fiction & Classic Reader.

Holy shit. Had I known aspirin was so very bad & that grass was an actual analgesic, I'd be smoking again. Check out this fantastic comparison (& note that aspirin, what we use most for headaches, can actually cause them). Aspirin vs Marijuana.

Finally. Why are the bees disappearing? And here, I'd thought they were bailing on us & returning to their own planet.

"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, (i.e., the "business cycle") the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered."
-Thomas Jefferson


Sweet! Not only do these guys & girls project a massive skull & cross bones onto the Russian Parliament building, they actually climb the gates & run onto the grounds! Get too close to the fence round the US White House, & you'll have Secret Service agents ramming guns up your ass.

And you thought you had a bad day.

Perfect.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Week of 4 Nov

Hey! Last week I'd posed a question on what you'd do if faced with the possibility of time travel. I've yet to hear from any of you -- & I know you're reading my drivel. Come on, folks. Let's have a little interaction, here.


Lately, the lovely & talented Heather has been actively posting poetry to her blogs. Sure, I'm biased, but I'm sure you'll agree, she's fantastic -- oh, & a damn fine poet as well. Go. You won't regret your time with Heather.

Let's face it. While Wikipedia is an interesting resource for, say, pop culture, it stinks when you really want something more scholarly. For that, here are some on-line resources, even Catherine, librarian extraordinaire has mentioned (I think) in her blogs.

She's a witch! Israel Finds Woman Healer's 12,000-Year-Old Skeleton in Cave. Damn cool stuff. I like witches.

I'd watched one of my favorite movies the other day. Excalibur. Guess which character from the Arthurian legend I identify with.

Turn your desktop into a masterpiece! FarOrbit can do it all for you. There are more galleries here.


What do you really know about Gypsies? Here's National Geographic's take: Gypsies: The Outsiders.

Wouldn't it be nice if this weren't yet another pharmaceutical...? The red wine weight loss wonder drug that lets you eat junk food.

Recognize this place? Hint: I used to work at the base of the building in the center foreground.

Ever wonder how one goes about embalming a body? Let Nicole Pasulka explain it in four easy lessons.

Ah, here's one for those of you with unwanted house guests: Why hair bleach is a murderer's best friend. Lay in a good stock of hydrogen peroxide now!

Finally, someone gets it. I'd grown up listening to my grandfather's stories of living through the Great Depression, & I know I've applied some of the lessons he (inadvertently or otherwise) had taught me by speaking freely about how to survive economic crises. Here, is an article from the McClatchy-Tribune Information Services on GMToday entitled Lessons from Great Depression hold their value. Read it. Learn it. Live it.

Coming to the rich near you: Geneticists Discover a Way to Extend Lifespans to 800 Years. Now, if only they could make one's quality of life last longer....

Sunday, November 2, 2008



Alright, folks. Special, this week only. Considering I'd taken three days off this week, my Interweb Travels would have been so short, it would hardly seem to have been worth posting. So, then. Included with a bit the usual, I'll regale you with my impressions of some of the movies I'd watched. Sad to say, there weren't many to impress me, though.

Tideland
I loved this movie. You might guess, & rightly so, that I'm definitely a fan of Terry Gilliam. Sure, he just seemed like a warped animator back in the days of Monty Python's Flying Circus, but as a film director, he's fantastic. Granted, I've only seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Time Bandits, Brazil, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Twelve Monkeys, Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas, &, of course, Tideland. Each ranks high on my list of all time favorites.

This is a strange period of life as seen through the eyes of a young girl, played by Jodelle Ferland -- &, in my opinion, they couldn't have chosen a better actress for this part. The movie addresses a number of subjects which make people nervous, but what Gilliam film hasn't? How Jeliza-Rose -- the part played by Jodelle -- deals with such makes for an although typically weird (Gilliam again), but beautiful experience.

See this one.

Lost In Translation
This rather slowly paced movie was actually very enjoyable. At first, I felt odd watching Bill Murray, of Saturday Night Live & Where the Buffalo Roam, among other titles, in a non-comedic role. But I like him, & I like the looks of Scarlett Johansson -- despite her so-so acting ability. If you're not familiar with this movie, it's set in Tokyo -- well, mostly in a lavish hotel in Tokyo.

Now, I've seen Tokyo in a number of movies before, but never had I seen such a panorama of the city as had been shown many times from the rooms of each of these characters in this hotel. Talk about sprawl! I've forever loved the Japanese, the culture, the girls. But had always expected that the only thing about Japan I wouldn't be so pleased with was the food. Well before I'd developed my allergies to most anything from the sea, & apart from the fact I love most crusteations poor me), I've never been able to get excited about the tiny portions -- particularly of meat -- or the exorbitant prices for sushi. But having seen the expanse of a city that once seemed pretty damn cool, I now know for a fact I would never find a minute's peace in Tokyo.

Oh, the movie? Well worth watching, but don't be expecting much in the way of action, unless you enjoy a few minutes watching a woman dance provocatively on a tiny table.

Some weird set of vampire vignettes
Don't ask me the title, it was perfectly forgettable. If Faustus reads this, as he'd loaned me the dvd, perhaps he can leave the title in the Comments.

Euro Trip
Yes. I lust after the silly, little girl Michelle Trachtenberg, but that's no reason to write this movie off as another fetish of the sillier Angus. Do yourself a favor & get the unrated version. Not only are the added breasts a nice touch, it also comes with lots of extras.

A very, very fun movie.

The Maltese Falcon
Can't go wrong with Bogie.

Syriana
This one has action. No, nothing like the non-stop cavalcade of explosions & fight scenes in the Bourne series (Identity, Supremacy, Ultimatum), but great political & corporate intrigue.

Chinatown
What? You've never seen Chinatown? Get out! Jack Nicholson, a great actor to begin with, playing a private detective in a really well produced movie. You can't go wrong here, either.

I really love all the nice, little touches in the houses. The thirties had some craftsmanship!

The Grudge
Heh. What a waste. Another movie set in Tokyo, but, as I'm sure you've seen this, not really worth the time. The only things I'd liked were the girl playing Yoko, played by Yoko Maki -- she dies early on; Kayoko, Takako Fuji, in the scenes before she was killed, as opposed to the part she'd played as the as the scary grudge. Oh, while I wasn't wild about the house itself, I really loved the little things: The tinny wind chime, the gate outside, the odd touches of decoration round windows in doors (which seemed odd -- little windows in bedroom doors too?), & I love the Japanese, sliding, rice paper doors & walls between rooms.

Oh, Sarah Michelle Gellar & Jason Behr, the guy who played Max in Roswell just seemed like pointless additions. Anyone could have played those parts, & unknowns would likely have made The Grudge a better movie, though still nothing special.

Beyond the Poseidon Adventure
Yeah. It's really, really bad. But, for me, it's not pointless. Why? Well, I think because I'm a sucker for cute, pathological liars whose lies are so bad, you can't take them seriously. Besides, since the days of Sister Bertrille in The Flying Nun, I've also been a sucker for Sally Field. To say she's the only worth while feature of this movie is an understatement. The movie stinks worse than The Poseidon Adventure...& then some.

Really, unless you find Sally of interest, you shouldn't bother. But if you like her, you'll at least find her adorable. There just wasn't enough of her to make this movie anything more than a huge waste of time.

More on the stupidity of humans: The Goody Parsons Witchcraft Case.

Whoo-hoo! Lots of myth stuff at World Mythology.

Finally! Instead of the usual ho-hum, some cool images from space.


"I hate reality but it's still the best place to get a good steak."
"Why does man kill? He kills for food. And not only food: Frequently there must be a beverage."
-Woody Allen

I Would Live in Your Love

I would live in your love as the sea-grasses
live in the sea,
Borne up by each wave as it passes, drawn
down by each wave that recedes;
I would empty my soul of the dreams that
have gathered in me,
I would beat with your heart as it beats, I
would follow your soul as it leads.


The Rose and the Bee

IF I were a bee and you were a rose,
Would you let me in when the gray wind
blows?
Would you hold your petals wide apart,
Would you let me in to find your heart,
If you were a rose?

"If I were a rose and you were a bee,
You should never go when you came to
me,
I should hold my love on my heart at
last,
I should close my leaves and keep you
fast,
If you were a bee."

-Sarah Teasdale




                                VIII

Casting dispersions of the wondrous Rite
from beneath her brow, high-arched -
she wonders that I could say that.
Advance of simple proposition
by the contradictory man;
her expression rebels her affected disbelief.
The Priestess dances round young Magister,
stepping lightly as she go -
Magister laughing before elicit Curse of
Magus.


Smiling & beguiling
spelling out the Magus' name;
sweet Priestess fearing potentiality's issue
Swooning Magister keeps his place,
straining at her call.
He pursues her trance of rapture.
Advancement in her act of drawing back;
Priestess in apprehensive departure,
And the Magister's wry expression
of sweet covenant's approach.
-That's mine. Testing the waters...and yes.
You know it's for you;-).