- Surprise, it's exhaust! - so stupid...so funny...
- Scotsman cashes in with fake Ginger Discount card - Ah, I miss the Granite City.
- Small Business - Wait, were those really synthesized or just proposed?
August 30, 2014
The weekend, brought to you by organized labor
Tags:
links
August 27, 2014
My favorite book trilogies
I'm shocked at how few trilogies there are out there, at least when I type in things like best book trilogies into Google.
There are a whole bunch of book series, but not just neat, tidy, three-book runs.
So, let's go with book series - and define that as at least three books (that I've read) in a connected story and by the same author (or at least published under the same author's name) - instead.
So, in no particular order...
If I were forced to choose from among the ones I've read as an adult, I would probably but Vonnegut up top followed by Dark Tower, Harry Potter, and Discworld...then Hunger Games & Hitchhiker's...then MaddAddam.
There are a whole bunch of book series, but not just neat, tidy, three-book runs.
So, let's go with book series - and define that as at least three books (that I've read) in a connected story and by the same author (or at least published under the same author's name) - instead.
So, in no particular order...
- Hunger Games - quite popular right now for some reason...I read them when I was laid up with a back injury a few years back...good series for both young men and women because there's a ton of action and strong, female lead
- Harry Potter - I'm surprised if I find a book reader who hasn't read this in its entirety, so no big explanation is necessary...wonderfully helped spawn a continuing re-explosion in children's reading (now young adult reading, too)
- Incarnations of Immortality - read the seven books in this series when I was in high school and enjoyed the heck out of them...nice fantasy series exploring the immortals (war, death, time, god, devil, nature, fate) as offices held by mortals...interesting concept made more interesting by the family relationships that connect the series's current office holders
- Wrinkle in Time - loved it as a child, read the four books...re-read the first book as an adult and absolutely loathed it...fantasy premises that become more Christian as the series moved along...
- Discworld - funny stuff in fantasy form...the quality is routinely high, and you can drop in and out at any place in the series...hilarious books with thoroughly entertaining characters
- The Dark Tower - the linchpin around which Stephen King's career has ended up turning...encompasses so many genres (Western, sci-fi, fantasy, historical) and so many of his other tales (some intended, some connected after the fact)...
- MaddAddam - just finished the second book (accidentally read after the third) and found it redundant because I knew where the characters were eventually going...good read, though...
- Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - it's been a long time since I read these four, but they're another humorous series...fun sci-fi with a good sense of humor
- all of Kurt Vonnegut's world - my favorite author...not technically a series, but so many of his books have interconnected characters (sometimes in slightly different forms and with different details) that it's almost okay to call them of a single piece...wonderful writing...
- Dragons of... by Weis/Hickman - read these in high school, too, and was never satisfied with the non-Weis/Hickman books that followed...high fantasy with world building being done throughout...great D&D action and themes...
If I were forced to choose from among the ones I've read as an adult, I would probably but Vonnegut up top followed by Dark Tower, Harry Potter, and Discworld...then Hunger Games & Hitchhiker's...then MaddAddam.
Tags:
books
August 25, 2014
My favorite movie trilogies
Here are the rules:
- I have to have seen all three movies.
- The series can't have more than or fewer than three movies in the series.
- The movies have to share a common group of characters and plots.
- James Bond, Rocky, Clerks etc, X-Men, Indiana Jones, Bourne, Batman (Michael Keaten, etc), Star Trek, - too many movies
- Aliens, Pirates of the Caribbean, Back to the Future, Star Wars (prequels), Before Sunrise etc, Beverly Hills Cop, The Hangover, Predator, Men in Black, - I've not seen all of the films in each trilogy though I have seen at least one.
- Cornetto trilogy (Shaun of the Dead, etc), The Red Curtain (Strictly Ballroom, etc), the Qatsi trilogy, - They have similar actors or director-themes but not related characters and plots.
- Batman (Christopher Nolan) - nearly perfect execution, brilliant arc, and it's about comic books
- Dollars (Fistful of Dollars, etc) - Clint Eastwood's first masterpieces...sort of a single plot (so that third rule is close to not fitting) but certainly of a theme and a piece...marvelous...
- Toy Story - few movies have wrecked me as did TS3...note perfect every step of the way
- Godfather - the third one is notoriously weak, but it's really not an awful film...it just pales in comparison to the first two which are as masterful as any films made...
- Mariachi trilogy - this one isn't nearly as high quality as a few of the others, but it's a heck of a lot of fun...interesting to see the filmmakers progress between the first and the second flicks and then go entirely over the top for the third...fun, fun, fun...
- Lord of the Rings - at some point it just becomes about endurance...it's rare that I'm ever going to watch any one of these all the way through after I first saw them in the theater because they're desperately long, but they are, admittedly, really high quality...
- Iron Man - is they'd stayed as strong as the first one, they'd be higher on the list, but the second and third progressed slightly downward from excellent to pretty good territory...Marvel's only entry on this list so far, but there are more trilogies from their cinematic universe that are sure to make the list in a couple of years' time
- Oceans 11-13 - the first is one of the films that I can't seem to turn off when I happen upon it on cable, right there with Road House and a few others...it's one of the most fun movies out there...the second is kinda painful to watch even though there's even more charisma on screen, it feels like the actors are having way more fun than we are...the third isn't the first's equal, but it's close...
- Harold & Kumar - fun, fun, fun...stupid, dumb, fun...
- Star Wars (original) - I really don't enjoy Star Wars even though I recognize that they're of excellent quality...they're just not my favorites out there
- Spider-Man (Toby McGuire)- first one really good, second one even better, third kinda stinks, especially the emo Peter Parker...keep your hair out of your eyes, dorkbutt
- The Matrix - if somehow they'd manage to keep up the same quality as the first film, this would probably be in the top three or four...I remember being absolutely stunned watching the first film in the theater, jaw agape, shocked...the special effects, the look, the whole package...then came the second film and the orgy in Zion...then the horrible, multiple Agent Smiths in the finale...yuck-oh
- Austin Powers - fun but without much staying power...they aren't nearly as much fun upon second viewing, and that makes me wonder if the third film would be any good at all...
- Naked Gun - it's fun, but it's nothing that I have to sit still and watch for more than a couple of minutes at a time
Tags:
movies
August 24, 2014
Welcome, noobs
It's that time of year when I invite my new students to join the blog - or at least have an assignment that requires them to visit the blog once.
So, hey, there new folks...
A basic bit about the blog...I tend to post three or four times a week, usually on a M-W-F schedule plus a list of links on Saturday morning. Sometimes a post will be a lengthy rambling on a topic; sometimes a music playlist; sometimes reviews of music, restaurants, movies, and books - often comic books - that I've read lately; sometimes just a quick listing of some of my favorite things.
This week, for example, I'll have some thoughts on my favorite trilogies - books and movies.
Suggestions for where to start - other than just looking chronologically backwards through the posts...
So, hey, there new folks...
A basic bit about the blog...I tend to post three or four times a week, usually on a M-W-F schedule plus a list of links on Saturday morning. Sometimes a post will be a lengthy rambling on a topic; sometimes a music playlist; sometimes reviews of music, restaurants, movies, and books - often comic books - that I've read lately; sometimes just a quick listing of some of my favorite things.
This week, for example, I'll have some thoughts on my favorite trilogies - books and movies.
Suggestions for where to start - other than just looking chronologically backwards through the posts...
- Advice posts...particularly check out the series of one-word advice topics
- Batman's dead parents...Batman just wouldn't be Batman without his parents being dead
- Comic book recommendations...Everybody should be reading more comic books. There are some great ones out there, and these are my best recommendations - both for beginers and for more advanced students of the genre.
- Commentary...longer thoughts about things
- IDTMI...these are columns that I wrote for my college newspaper when I was a senior...they're naive and insulting at times, but the beliefs are somewhat still my own
- Lonnieburger Baskets...my reviews of the best burger places around Cincinnati
- Our Year of Living Steakishly...my reviews of the best steakhouses in Cincinnati (though I never actually wrote up the best one: Jeff Ruby's downtown)
Tags:
narcissism
August 21, 2014
Tired
- One true pairing - chucklesome
- The American Band Championship Belt - The methodology is flawed. Bands should be able to regain the belt.
Tags:
links
August 20, 2014
The radar is open again
Media of which I have partaken of late...
Seconds by Bryan Lee O'Malley - O'Malley's follow-up to Scott Pilgrim takes a slightly older protagonist, Katie, still struggling with the fact that things in her life aren't working out exactly as she had planned.
In this case, the protagonist isn't, however, dwelling in a fantasy world as was Mr Pilgrim. Here Katie is a successful chef who is in the middle of putting together her first restaurant of her own while still trying to work at the titular Seconds as the head chef. As things don't go quite as planned at Seconds, Katie finds herself being visited by a house spirit that offers her a chance to change the day's events so that a friendly waitress won't be hurt by an accident in the kitchen. Katie takes advantage of the opportunity and then begins to spend every day living half a life, knowing that - in spite of the spirit's insistence that Katie only gets the singular second chance - she can cheat her way to redoing every single day.
Each morning, however, Katie wakes up in a world that has been changed in very unexpected ways. Her actions begin to have more and more drastic consequences: poisoning the house spirit; growing a second, evil house spirit; and changing her restaurant into something entirely not what she wanted.
O'Malley continues to mine the theme of revisionist history, of living in the now rather than in the past to great effect. This isn't the lengthy tale that Pilgrim is, but it's a far tighter story for that. It doesn't have the same emotional weight, but it's tighter, and it's still really good. Check it out.
Tucker & Dale vs Evil - See, most horror movies have the innocent (or trampy and drunk) college kids killed by the evil, murderous rednecks in the woods. This time, however, the rednecks are really nice people, unsure of themselves, just looking for a nice vacation home in the country, trying to help the nice neighbor kids.
When the kids misunderstand every single sentence from the eponymous Tucker and Dale, the kids end up killing themselves via accidents that continue to make Tucker and Dale look more and more sadistic.
It's not a horror classic, but it's a fun twist with likeable enough characters. Worth a look
Deadpool: Soul Hunter - Funny stuff from the merc with a mouth...
I particularly enjoyed the initial 'filler issue' that happened to lead directly into the second issue. Great use of the silver-age-style with Deadpool filling in for a drunken-no-more-until-Deadpool-comes-along Tony Stark in the Iron Man suit leading to trouble with a demon. Funny stuff...
All-New X-Men: Out of Their Depth & All-New X-Men: Here to Stay - I dig the concept of having the original X-Men, the teen mutants, show up in the present to find themselves terrifically changed - and in ways that horrify their younger selves. The idealism of youth coming up against the phenomenally hard truths of wizened age - especially when you're a comic book hero who sees just about everybody you care about die, change allegiances, nearly die, and fight each other all the times.
The dichotomy between young and old Scott Summers, the horror of young Jean Grey knowing that she will become the Phoenix and be killed, Hank McCoy seeing the blue mess that he will become...it all works really well.
Baseball Myths Debunked - This book doesn't. It's boring.
Punk Rock Jesus - and this one is dumb...don't read it. Read the same author's Joe the Barbarian instead...much better.
Sheezus by Lily Allen - I'll admit that I have a big soft spot for Lily Allen's first CD, Alright, Still. That is a brilliant, fun, witty bit of modern Brit pop, and encapsulation of an era, a rebirth of soul filtered through a very English sensibility. Her second disk, It's Not You, It's Me was a lot more polished and a lot less fun. I didn't dig the high-fashion turn that Allen was taking.
This third disk is somewhere in the middle, full of mocking - but with a bit too much bite and self-defensiveness at times. Not a bad disk at all, but not a great one, either. Worth a listen...
A Letter Home by Neil Young - ultimate in lo-fi...recorded in a straight-to-vinyl booth in Jack White's Nashville record store, Neil YOung has put out an album of covers, songs that he says influenced him. There's some pretty stuff here, but it's full of so many scratches, pops, hisses, and every other artifact of old that it's tough to listen to.
Here's the full album. Check out "Girl From the North Country" at 6:06 for the best track. (By the nature of the length of the disks the booth produces, the songs are no longer than about 3:00 each.)
Seconds by Bryan Lee O'Malley - O'Malley's follow-up to Scott Pilgrim takes a slightly older protagonist, Katie, still struggling with the fact that things in her life aren't working out exactly as she had planned.
In this case, the protagonist isn't, however, dwelling in a fantasy world as was Mr Pilgrim. Here Katie is a successful chef who is in the middle of putting together her first restaurant of her own while still trying to work at the titular Seconds as the head chef. As things don't go quite as planned at Seconds, Katie finds herself being visited by a house spirit that offers her a chance to change the day's events so that a friendly waitress won't be hurt by an accident in the kitchen. Katie takes advantage of the opportunity and then begins to spend every day living half a life, knowing that - in spite of the spirit's insistence that Katie only gets the singular second chance - she can cheat her way to redoing every single day.
Each morning, however, Katie wakes up in a world that has been changed in very unexpected ways. Her actions begin to have more and more drastic consequences: poisoning the house spirit; growing a second, evil house spirit; and changing her restaurant into something entirely not what she wanted.
O'Malley continues to mine the theme of revisionist history, of living in the now rather than in the past to great effect. This isn't the lengthy tale that Pilgrim is, but it's a far tighter story for that. It doesn't have the same emotional weight, but it's tighter, and it's still really good. Check it out.
Tucker & Dale vs Evil - See, most horror movies have the innocent (or trampy and drunk) college kids killed by the evil, murderous rednecks in the woods. This time, however, the rednecks are really nice people, unsure of themselves, just looking for a nice vacation home in the country, trying to help the nice neighbor kids.
When the kids misunderstand every single sentence from the eponymous Tucker and Dale, the kids end up killing themselves via accidents that continue to make Tucker and Dale look more and more sadistic.
It's not a horror classic, but it's a fun twist with likeable enough characters. Worth a look
Deadpool: Soul Hunter - Funny stuff from the merc with a mouth...
I particularly enjoyed the initial 'filler issue' that happened to lead directly into the second issue. Great use of the silver-age-style with Deadpool filling in for a drunken-no-more-until-Deadpool-comes-along Tony Stark in the Iron Man suit leading to trouble with a demon. Funny stuff...
All-New X-Men: Out of Their Depth & All-New X-Men: Here to Stay - I dig the concept of having the original X-Men, the teen mutants, show up in the present to find themselves terrifically changed - and in ways that horrify their younger selves. The idealism of youth coming up against the phenomenally hard truths of wizened age - especially when you're a comic book hero who sees just about everybody you care about die, change allegiances, nearly die, and fight each other all the times.
The dichotomy between young and old Scott Summers, the horror of young Jean Grey knowing that she will become the Phoenix and be killed, Hank McCoy seeing the blue mess that he will become...it all works really well.
Baseball Myths Debunked - This book doesn't. It's boring.
Punk Rock Jesus - and this one is dumb...don't read it. Read the same author's Joe the Barbarian instead...much better.
Sheezus by Lily Allen - I'll admit that I have a big soft spot for Lily Allen's first CD, Alright, Still. That is a brilliant, fun, witty bit of modern Brit pop, and encapsulation of an era, a rebirth of soul filtered through a very English sensibility. Her second disk, It's Not You, It's Me was a lot more polished and a lot less fun. I didn't dig the high-fashion turn that Allen was taking.
This third disk is somewhere in the middle, full of mocking - but with a bit too much bite and self-defensiveness at times. Not a bad disk at all, but not a great one, either. Worth a listen...
A Letter Home by Neil Young - ultimate in lo-fi...recorded in a straight-to-vinyl booth in Jack White's Nashville record store, Neil YOung has put out an album of covers, songs that he says influenced him. There's some pretty stuff here, but it's full of so many scratches, pops, hisses, and every other artifact of old that it's tough to listen to.
Here's the full album. Check out "Girl From the North Country" at 6:06 for the best track. (By the nature of the length of the disks the booth produces, the songs are no longer than about 3:00 each.)
August 18, 2014
What's all the Hoopla about?
The Cincinnati Library (PLCH) has a streaming movie site to which they subscribe and to which all card-holders have full access. It's called Hoopla, and you should check out some of these movies soon.
I'm very pleasantly surprised at how many good movies there are - admittedly amidst a whole lot of dreck.
- Charade
- Baseketball
- ET
- Harvey
- Hud
- Endless Summer
- Gung Ho
- Sullivan's Travels
- Igby Goes Down
- Lars and the Real Girl
- 39 Steps
- Man on the Moon
- Four Lions
- Where the Buffalo Roam
- The Court Jester
- The Nutty Professor
- Mulholland Dr
- Midnight Cowboy
- The King's Speech
- The Sting
- The Iron Lady
- Legend
- Let Me In
- Bernie
- Brokeback Mountain
- We Need to Talk About Kevin
- Small Soldiers
- Lock, Stock, & Two Smoking Barrels
- Double Indemnity
- The Serpent & the Rainbow
- Holiday Inn
- The Last Waltz
- October Sky
- Let Me In
- The Evil Dead
- Touch of Evil
- Blown Away
- Killer Klowns from Outer Space
- Of Mice & Men
- Mo' Better Blues
- Shane
- Ain't in it for My Health
- Cloak & Dagger
- The Woman in Green
I'm very pleasantly surprised at how many good movies there are - admittedly amidst a whole lot of dreck.
August 16, 2014
Happy summer's end,everybody
- Watching Antiques Roadshow appraise this 2008 Toshiba TV is fantastic - I checked over and over to see if it was a parody, and it seems not to be.
Tags:
links
August 15, 2014
Community Power Study
At least week's OEA (Ohio Education Association, doncha know) summer training, we went through an activity in which we tried to map out some basic knowledge about our various local school districts so that we could more successfully organize our members. I'm embarrassed to admit how much trouble I had in filling out the form about Princeton.
So I turn to you guys, many of whom are Princeton folks, to see if you can help me with some of the answers. I'll put my early answers in italics.
So I turn to you guys, many of whom are Princeton folks, to see if you can help me with some of the answers. I'll put my early answers in italics.
- What are the major celebrations and festivals in your community?
- Sharonville - St John's Fest, SharonFest
- Lincoln Heights - Heritage Days
- Evendale - ???
- Springdale - ???
- Woodlawn - ???
- Glendale - Black Squirrel 5K
- What are the community's slogans and mascots? Who are the best known members of your community?
- Slogans?
- Mascots - Princeton Vikings, all the elementary schools are Little Vikes, I think
- Best known - Isley Brothers, Roger Troutman, ??
- Does your community value its history? How so?
- Each community is very protective of their own identity, their own history.
- How so? ???
- What are the core values of your community?
- Family...survival (sometimes short-term)...
- What is the main economic source of the community (e.g., light manufacturing, farming, heavy industry, service industries, etc.)
- GE aircraft engines, Ford transmission, light industry, service
- What is the economic structure of the community served by the school district? (rough percentages)
- $32K & below, $32K-$60K, $60K-$120K, $120K & above
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- Percentage of residents who work in the community (rough percentages)
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- Age (rough percentages)
- 0-18, 18-30, 30-65, 65+
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- Education (rough percentages)
- less than high school, high school graduate, some college, BA/BS, advanced
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- Political party index (rough percentages)
- democratic, republican, independent
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- Are there specific political organizations that have power in your community?
- ???
- What is the ethnic breakdown of the community served by the school district?
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- I can make some guesses based on the breakdown of the high school, but I don't know that it's entirely representative of the district population as a whole.
- What is the approximate number of households in the community?
- ??????????? Where the heck could I even look this up?
- What are the main retail business centers (and locations) of the community? Where are intersections with high vehicle traffic?
- Tri County area, Fields Ertel area, Glendale-Milford & Reading Rd intersection...???
- Where do people congregate? Where would be an appropriate place for flyer distribution or bannering?
- ???
Tags:
princeton
August 13, 2014
Update: My favorites
I first posted this in December, 2005, my first year blogging. We're not more than eight and a half years since then, and I think it a decent enough time to see what's changed since then.
In case you were ever wondering...
In case you were ever wondering...
- My Favorite Decently Nice Restaurant in the Cincy Area
- Knotty Pine on the Bayou - I don't get down there nearly as much as I would like, but it's still a fine treat when I do. Let's go with Troy's Cafe much closer to my house.
- My Favorite Much Cheaper Restaurant Near My House
- Waffle House on Cincy-Dayton Rd - no doubt at all
- My Favorite Fall Flavor
- Pumpkin - hands down, easily my favorite flavor pretty much year round - no doubt at all
- My Favorite Summer Fruit Flavor
- Peach - no doubt at all
- My Favorite Flavor Combo
- Peanut Butter & Chocolate - I still like it, but I don't know that it still holds the sway it once did for me.
- My Favorite Candybar Snack
- Take 5 - the original flavor only, the rest of the flavors stink - I guess so, but I haven't had one in probably a couple of years. Don't know that I've had a candy bar in a while.
- My Favorite Game of the Moment
- Volley Pollo - It's fun and all, but I haven't played it in a long while. I'll go with QuizUp the app on my phone.
- My Favorite Movie to Watch Over and Over
- tough call - O Brother, Where Art Thou and Hoosiers probably - Scott Pilgrim maybe...
- My Favorite Fast Food Milkshake Place
- White Castle - but the hometown one only serves chocolate now, blech - Haven't had any White Castle in a while. If I want a milkshake in the summer, I go to The Cone. In the winter I go to UDF.
- My Favorite Milkshake (non-fast food division)
- Pumpkin malt at the Cone - It's tough to remember this flavor exactly as it's a late, late summer only thing. The rest of the year, I go for the peanut butter malt.
- My Favorite Cartoon (phenomenally vulgar division)
- South Park - This one has changed to probably Archer.
- My Favorite Cartoon (superhero division)
- Justice League Unlimited - new entry here, used to be the 90's Batman - Now it's Bob's Burgers. I watch it pretty much every week via Hulu.com.
- My Favorite Movie Theater
- Rave - edging out The Esquire based on recent more-commercial fare at the Esquire - Sadly the Rave closed. I have become more mercenary, shifting from The Rave in Milford to AMC in West Chester to wherever we happen to be. I still see most things in West Chester at what used to be the Rave but is now the AMC. I don't care for the price increases or the crumbling area around the theater itself, but it's the closest to my house.
- My Favorite Candle Scent
- Any spice-ish thing...pumpkin, cookie, vanilla, harvest, apple pie...nothing with flowers - absolutely still true
- My Favorite Ultimate Series
- Ultimate Fantastic Four - I'm surprised I picked that one. In general, I enjoyed Ultimate Spider-Man more, even through the change to Miles Morales.
- My Favorite Season
- summer - no school - no doubt, no doubt
- My Favorite Sport to Play
- Tennis - I haven't picked up a racket in probably five years. The lack of playing has been far worse for my health, and I miss it terribly. Of course, with my commitments to ASM and OEA, I'm not sure leisure time is something I have a lot of.
- Favorite Sport to Watch
- Tennis, again, though high school basketball is a near second - still true
- My Favorite TV Series (current)
- The Office or Scrubs, probably The Office - Neither is still on the air in original form (though Scrubs seems to be constantly on somewhere in syndication). The shows I watch regularly are The Goldbergs, Community (in whatever form it is on Yahoo now), Parks and Rec, Modern Family, The Middle, The Daily Show, Colbert Report, and Bob's Burgers). Let's make this Favorite Live-Action, Scripted Sit-Com and say my favorite is Parks and Recreation, but it's close.
- My Favorite Basketball Player
- The Basketball Jesus - Either him or Steph Curry or Kelsey Mitchell.
- My Favorite Joke
- The Thor Joke - It's still that one, yes.
- My Favorite Web Comic
- Order of the Stick - It's XKCD instead.
- My Favorite Food
- steak - nothing fancy, just a very nicely grilled, medium-rare steak with olive oil, salt, and pepper (or Montreal Steak seasoning) - Yeah, probably so, but this was well before the Year of Living Steakishly, so that taste in steak has changed dramatically. I can't deal with a home-cooked steak anymore as compared to the best in Cincy.
- My Favorite Color
- What am I, like four years old? - I'm still immature, but I don't have a favorite color.
- My Favorite Movie
- The Muppet Movie - It's certainly in the running.
- My Favorite Country (non-US division)
- Scotland - yup...haven't really been to another one other than a very quick visit to Canada from Niagara Falls.
- My Favorite Friend That I've Recently Reconnected With
- Kristin Butler ne Reichow - I'm not still in contact with Kristin, but I am digging having more Facebook friends of late.
- My Favorite Temptation (today division)
- chicken fried bacon - meh...that might be tasty, but I don't want to try it
- My Favorite Thing to Do This Time of the Year
- Sit on the couch, late at night, snuggled with the dog, watching the Christmas tree with my glasses off - It's summer now, so I'll go with playing a round of frisbee golf first thing in the morning.
- My Favorite Park
- Turkey Run State Park - I miss it terribly. Wanted to get there this summer, but it looks like I won't do that.
- My Favorite Dessert (non-Pumpkin Pie division)
- Tiramisu - possibly tiramisu gelato - still a good choice...might include a great ice cream sandwich, chocolate chip cookie variety...really want one of those tonight as I type this...
- My Favorite Band
- Wilco - Yeah, good choice still.
- My Favorite Guitarist
- Richard Thompson - yup...and he's coming to Middletown in a couple of months
- My Favorite Pudgy Comic Book Geek Turned Famous Movie Director
- Kevin Smith - I got very, very bored with Smith and have just been annoyed with him for the past few years...pretty much since I read (I think) My Boring-A$$ Life.
- My Favorite Cooking Magazine
- Cook's Illustrated - I've been preferring Cooks Illustrated, honestly.
- My Favorite Sunday Morning Breakfast
- Cook's Illustrated's french toast - That is outstanding, though it's been a while since I made it.
- My Favorite Book
- I'd like to say Electric Brae but I haven't read it in a few years...so I'll go with one I read about once a year: Slaughterhouse 5 - Still that one
- My Favorite Side Dish
- Cook's Illustrated's roast potatoes - those are outstanding
- My Favorite Cookbook
- The Best Recipe - I haven't been doing a lot of cooking lately, so this one hasn't had much of a chance to change
- My Favorite Single Issue Comic Book Story
- Action Comics #775 - Still pretty outstanding
- My Favorite Graphic Novel
- either Watchmen or Superman: Secret Identity - Yeah, Watchmen is still phenomenal.
- My Favorite Taco Bell Item
- Carmel Apple Empanada - Yup
- My Favorite Gift Ever
- my pepper mill - I use it all the time.
- My Favorite Online Service
- gmail and google calendar - Sure
- My Favorite School Cartoon from Chilhood
- Donald Duck in Mathmagic Land - Love it
- My Favorite Use of Tax Money
- The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (PLCH) - Yup
- My Favorite Taste of Scotland
- McVitie's Dark Chocolate Homewheats - Love 'em...love 'em...love 'em...best s'mores ever
- My Favorite Author
- Chuck Palahniuk - Probably true, though I haven't read anything by him in a while. If not him, then Kurt Vonnegut. Actually, Vonnegut is above Palahniuk.
- My Favorite Sit-Com (no longer on the air division)
- Mad About You - Scrubs also deserves a mention here.
- Favorite video game (Wii)
- Wii Sports Resort
- Favorite cd
- My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy by Kanye West (seriously, though this changes from time to time)
- Favorite snack food not available in Cincy area
- Flamin' Hot Cheetos Limon
- Favorite burger in Cincinnati
- Terry's Turf Club
- Favorite barbeque in Cincinnati
- Eli's BBQ
- Favorite Mexican restaurant in Cincinnati
- Taqueria Mercado on Route 4
- Favorite soft drink
- Cherry Coke Zero
- Favorite YouTube subscription
- either Smarter Every Day or Veritasium
- Favorite workshop destination of the past few summers
- probably Provo, UT...maybe Salt Lake City, UT
Tags:
narcissism,
update
August 11, 2014
My to see list...long term
I keep a mental, long-term, to-see list in my head at all times. Things that are on it that I want to check off but over which I really have almost no control at all...
- Clown driving a car (full make-up/wig required)
- Person I know in an airport other than Cincinnati or Dayton
- Woman riding motorcycle, man holding on behind her
- Volkswagon Beetle with flowers painted on it
- Bus with Further in the destination spot
- Adult in a superhero costume (not at Comic-Con or amusement park)
- Proposal at a restaurant
- Lonnie on a mug or pencil or something at a gift shop
- Book on bookshelves of bookstore signed by author but not marked as such
Tags:
oddities
August 9, 2014
You know, someday, Reemer, someday I'm gonna be a big sports star!
- These commuters free a trapped passenger using their combined strength to tip a train and save a life - nice job, folks...
- A breakdown of the first footage from "The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story" - I'd watch that.
Tags:
links
August 8, 2014
Open the Incredibox
I'm certainly not a musician, but with Incredibox, I can easily feel like one whenever I want to.
It's simple, see, just drag any of the colored objects from the bottom bar onto the animated people who appear on screen. There are five beats, five effects, five voices, and five melodies (each group is color coded) - and they've all been designed to work together.
Have fun...
It's simple, see, just drag any of the colored objects from the bottom bar onto the animated people who appear on screen. There are five beats, five effects, five voices, and five melodies (each group is color coded) - and they've all been designed to work together.
Have fun...
August 6, 2014
Sci-ence is dead, long live sci-ence
I was saddened when Sci-ence.org closed up shop. Maki Naro shuttered sci-ence.org nearly a year ago and posted that he had begun a project as a blogger for Popular Science, a post that they've used to great effect off and on for a few years, taking in a cartoonist (webcartoonist, sometimes) to great effect, posting science-themed cartoons.
I'd kind of forgotten about Maki's transition until a few weeks ago when I dropped in on Boxplot, the Popular Science blog that Maki's putting out. Let's check out some of the webcomics posted there...each of which was posted with a somewhat in-depth analysis/explanation of the issue at hand...
I'd kind of forgotten about Maki's transition until a few weeks ago when I dropped in on Boxplot, the Popular Science blog that Maki's putting out. Let's check out some of the webcomics posted there...each of which was posted with a somewhat in-depth analysis/explanation of the issue at hand...
August 5, 2014
August 4, 2014
I Love LA...Music
I've actually only been to LA twice. Once was for a wedding, and I had a great time. The second time was for a two-week vacation that turned into a thirty-six-hour vacation when we had to fly home after our home was ransacked and our dog was hit by a car.
Good time...good times...
August 2, 2014
Would you rather fix the economy or travel the globe? Point, HIlary.
- International trailer for Birdman - still looks good to me
- Do it yourself doodler - I needs to get me some of those doodler pads.
- Every single Pokemon arranged by color - Katydid, this one is for you.
- Forgotten Children's TV Shows That Will Give You Nightmares - I remember Letter People, Mark Twain, and The New Zoo Review. All are very creepy.
- The case against Cards Against Humanity - A little troublesome - the allegations - and the implications.
- Why poor schools can't win at standardized testing - That's a pretty honest article from an outside perspective.
- The easiest solution to Batman vs Superman - Can we all agree that the Superman 2 fly-around-the-Earth-backwards time travel thing was wrong and stop mentioning it now? Please?
- Lori Loughlin BMX Dancing Prom Scene in Rad - How have I never known that this movie existed until now.
- Giant Spirograph - Nice craft there
- The 9 Most Calorie-Filled Chain Restaurant Meals of 2014 - I've eaten a small size of the Red Robin burger there. It's decently tasty.
- Eat a peach - slightly nsfw, I guess
- If every fictional company held a job fair - I'd work for Wayne Corp in a heartbeat.
- China cuts corners building this rectangular race track - The outer lanes aren't the same length as the inner, either, but nobody mentions that.
- Staples sells items for a penny, New York buys them - and buys them and buys them...costing Staples a lot of pennies.
- Marvel brought the goods from Avengers: Age of Ultron to Comic Con - They continue to rule the movie landscape. Go, Charlie.
- Confiserie Milot (part 1/2) - so pretty to watch (as is part 2)
- Never let your teammates provide facts about you - rook...
- The blood harvest - Fascinating to know that we use horseshoe crabs like that and in that number.
- A bird holds its breath - He's a jerk of a bird.
- Mobstr, London - That's a one-sided conversation.
- Even pit bull owner likes vicious dog law proposed for Cincinnati - Punish the action not the breed
- New God's Firework, celebrating childhood joys of summer - The song snippets in the story sound great.
- We experiment on human beings - OKCupid comes clean and interestingly so.
- Run schools like a business? Flip the script to see flaws - That would not be a successful business model.
- Son as Lando - great cosplay
- Inglorious fruits and vegetables - ugly fruits are still tasty fruits
Tags:
batman,
batman's dead parents,
links
August 1, 2014
Branding the Vikings
I noticed last week that the Princeton High School Facebook page has gone through a bit of rebranding, switching the profile pic from being a Viking to being a PCSD logo and changing the name of the page from PHS to PCSD. The banner pic also changed, though I'll admit I have no idea what it was before it became the image of the new school.
There was also a story posted on the page linking to an Enquirer story announcing that the Board of Ed had decided - after Shawn McMullen's presentation - that the Viking's horns should be white. That isn't, admittedly, Earth-shaking decision making - especially in light of a year when 25% of the high school's certified staff left the building over the summer. It is, however, something that I'm somewhat happy about.
See, I've been noticing the lack of coherent branding in the district for a few years now. Below the jump you'll see some pictures that I had a couple of my student aides take in 2007 and 2009 showing how many different ways the Princeton Viking was being represented around the building, a building that now is going to be plowed under within the next year.
I'm curious to see font choices, manual, colors, and letters that Shawn has chosen...
Shawn McMullen, media and tech specialist for Princeton City Schools, gathered the district’s logos and narrowed the fonts and colors, and designed letterhead to reflect a consistent use of design to identify the school district.
The district’s logos include a flying letter P, a youth version of a Little Vike, and a single horn. Each has a purpose, and McMullen outlined the use for each in a manual that he is compiling.
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