Back from the beyond

Month: November 2002 (Page 5 of 5)

Post – November 5, 2002

Sort of hit a wall with “The Game Neverending.” It’s relatively easy at this point to amass wealth and experience, and I’ve pretty much exhausted all the locations in the prototype game. But I think it has tremendous potential – it’s much more community- and people-oriented than other online games I’ve experienced, and it’s simple enough in structure that you don’t wander around for very long having no idea what you’re doing. It’s clever and makes you smile, and the graphics are a 2-D breath of fresh air. Once some of the endless possibilities are opened up when the actual game goes live in the spring, I think it’ll be the first online multiplayer game I’ve ever seriously considered playing.

If you play, let me know your in-game handle so I can say hello. (Mine is “Padre Denny.”)

Post – November 4, 2002

Anyone who thought their vote didn’t matter got an education on that topic two years ago, when literally a handful of votes separated Gore and Bush.

Every. vote. matters.

My friend Susan was saying the other night she remembers how many people were saying in 2000, “There’s no difference between Gore and Bush. They’re two halves of the same bad coin. It doesn’t matter.” Well, I think few people on either side of the political spectrum would agree today that things aren’t fundamentally different because of that outcome.

I just want to encourage everyone out there to vote tomorrow. Take a little time and just do it. The defenders of the status quo want people to be apathetic and stay home, because then they control the agenda. Voting matters. It’s the first and most important step toward taking back a democracy that’s gotten seriously out of hand.

Votes mean things.

Post – November 2, 2002

“Do you really think it’s a good idea to be handing out guns in a bank?”

The funny thing is, Michael Moore’s “Bowling for Columbine” isn’t really about guns at all. It’s about racism, economic inequalities, and a media that whips us all into a froth of constant fear. I can’t say I agree with all of his talking points, but I can say that we need more people like Moore in our society today – rabble-rousers who get people thinking about uncomfortable topics, no matter what their conclusions are.

You know you’re watching something interesting when Marilyn Manson gives the most cogent, insightful interview in the entire film.

Moore left out some stuff that I wish he had included – anything about drugs, and any breakdown of how those 11,000 yearly U.S. gun deaths occurred. But overall, it’s packed with thought-provoking words and images. It’s a much deeper film than “Roger and Me,” and probably worth more than one viewing for anyone interested in the topics it deals with.

One thing the film did for me was reinforce what an epically selfish society we live in – “My Way or the Highway” should be the new national motto. We have little or no sense of community, and most things we come in contact with on a daily basis reinforce what my friend Mike VS calls our “savagely Darwinian” society. And when the underlying ethos is “kill or be killed,” no wonder we have a problem with guns.

Highly recommended.

Post – November 1, 2002

Favorite recent spam e-mail subjects

-80+ Year Old Women Naked
-Increase your penis 3 inches in 22 days (ed: what if I waited 44 days?)
-Women: Have The Best Sex Ever
-Snoring…Heart Attacks! Strokes! Surgeons say YES!!!
-My friend thought I was stupid doing this
-3d teens – fucking teens in 3d format
-Never drive your bamboo tiki torches in the ground again!
-Extreme Torture!

I’m sure posting a lot today.

Post – November 1, 2002

“Spirited Away”

This isn’t my usual fare – I was never much into the Japanese animation scene. I watched Hayao Miyazaki’s “Princess Mononoke” on video after all the buzz it got, and I liked it, although I remember almost nothing about it now.

But John‘s enthusiasm won me over, and it turns out to be a highly entertaining night at the movies. One beautiful fanciful image after another unspools in front of you, and the unfailing good nature of the enterprise carries you past the sometimes stilted dialogue or its rather long 2-hour running time.

Lots of people on IMDB compare it to “Alice in Wonderland,” but I would say it’s more like a Japanese “Wizard of Oz.” There’s even a sort of good witch-bad witch thing going on.

As John mentioned, my favorite part was the somewhat Disneyesque exploits of a bug carrying a mouse (trust me, you just have to see it). “Bug and Mouse” doesn’t have the ring of “Gnat and Rat.” But we can iron those details out later.

Recommended.

Post – November 1, 2002

One of the funniest things about watching Martha Stewart is seeing her when she has kids as guests on her show. Her usual general disdain for all humanity seems to be magnified when she has to deal with the little tykes.

Yesterday, she was making doughnuts, and apparently some mothers won a contest that allowed their children to be on the show with Martha. You could practically see the wisps of steam coming from her ears when the kids didn’t do what she expected.

Particularly funny was when she held up two bottles of food coloring, one red and one yellow, and asked in her best “I love the little darlings” voice, “What color do these two colors make when you mix them together?” She got a succession of good-natured guesses from the two young girls (including “turquoise”), and with each wrong guess, Martha seemed more and more intent on squeezing the right answer out of them. At last, mercifully, the older one “got it” and said timidly, “orange?”

I think if the girl hadn’t come up with the right answer, they would still be there to this day, grimly reciting colors like Christina Crawford contemplating her plate of raw meat.

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