Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Best TV Moments Of 2008

 

The Obama Election
I watched this historic accomplishment with my 8 year old daughter and K. I can help but thinking that more than ever, this election has engaged everyone into looking deep into our selves to see how it would feel living our lives as we feel inside AND as citizens of the world. Sounds like a cliché but what a real opportunity to better our lives, our children's lives, and the lives of everyone in the world. We need to ask our world neighbors to be patient. It is as if we are a new nation once again, carrying all the hopes and aspirations of a fledgling democracy, but saddled with the crushing burden left by a cynical past. There is much opportunity for failure, but there is also renewed reason for hope. We were offered a choice between fear and embrace of the future. We chose well this time…It is a new day, a new generation of voters have spoken.

And to the criminals leaving...it is not about revenge for the past it is about justice for the future.

Lost
The 4th season is arguably the best season since the first. Multiple episodes this past season completely changed my expectations for the series' conclusion but introduced entire concepts such as time travel, etc. They turned the science fiction valve completely open. In the brilliant episode, "The Constant," we saw Desmond travel through time (Did he?) due to an effect of the island, and in the mind-warping season finale, we saw the entire island vanish. The shorter than usual 14-episode season ended up giving more answers than past longer seasons. Cue the Island burp…

The Misadventures Of FlapJack
Flapjack is your typical, wide-eyed kid out looking for adventure. What's not-so-typical about him though, is the fact that he was raised by an overprotective blue whale (her name is Bubbie), and currently journeys through the high seas with a grizzled pirate by the name of Captain K'nuckles. It’s a deluge of nifty watercolor paintings and torn paper textures AND dabbles into the disgusting and sometimes disturbing. Don’t miss episodes: K’nuckles is a filthy rat & Mechanical genie island.

Honorable mention(s)
The Daily Show & The Colbert Report (the best “truthiness” and satire “news” out there), Keith Olbermann's Special Comments, The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade Rick Roll (epic! This was the last thing on my mind while watching the parade) & The Bill O’ Reilly Flips Out Dance Remix (via the You Tube).
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Best Video Games Of 2008

 

I would describe myself as a mild gamer. Keep in mind, I rock the PS3, Xbox 360 and the PSP. So all the games on my list reflect these platforms. Also, I enjoy mostly RPG’s, Platformers, 3rd person action type games. So, while the zombies look better every year I’m not really into splattering BRAINS and strategically dismembering spooky space creatures and basking in the most satisfying gore ever. That doesn’t mean there is anything wrong with just wanting to shoot stuff sometimes, it’s all good…just not my cup o’ tea. The great strength of the business these days is that it is catering to everyone, something I’ve seen both in the games and in the people who play them. The video game industry has never been more reliable in producing high-quality mass entertainment for a variety of audiences with a variety of tastes. Three years into the current generation of game systems, developers are ceding nothing to other entertainment media in terms of high-end production values and overall attention to detail. In these hard economic times there is NO BETTER bang for your buck. (Editors note: I have accepted minor input on these choices from friends and enemies alike and they have given their “two cents” when asked or otherwise).

Little Big Planet
There isn’t anything else like LBP on any system, anywhere. A powerful creative tool that puts unlimited potential in the palm of your hand. This game is lightning in a bottle. It reinvents how video games are played. A gamble that live up to the hype and feels like a birth of a revolution.

MGS4: Guns Of The Patriots
I didn’t play or even own this game (yet!) With that being said I’m told that nothing comes close to this masterpiece. Some have even said that this one will stand through the tests of time and will still be referred to as perhaps the pinnacle of storytelling in videogames. I know, I know…I’m off to the gamestop.

GTA4
Liberty City has never felt so alive. The best “open world’ game yet and the finest title of the series. It's amazing that a sequel that keeps the core gameplay concepts of its prior incarnations can do so much to change itself into something new. If all games were all this good, no one would ever leave the house.

Honorable mention(s)
Fable 2 (epic in scope & sound and completely absorbing), Prince Of Persia (It’s not very long but long enough) & Fallout 3 (think ‘Oblivion’ with guns).
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Best Comics Of 2008

 

I dig the funny books (see previous blog posts) and as you all know there's more to the genre than X-ray vision and billowing capes. These tales seem to resonate and these deeper truths fire our imaginations. They wake us up, if only temporarily and vicariously, to something much greater than ourselves. And on that note…

Lets Go To Utah (www.letsgotoutah.com)
Dave Chisholm is living the dream. He is telling a story with Also, “Lets Go To Utah”. The book stars a young college student named Dave who begins to have horrible nightmares that push him towards Utah, of all places. Eventually, Dave resolves to head to Utah, but since he needs a ride to get there, a friend of a friend of a friend named Lief volunteers to drive, and hilarity ensues… as Lief is not exactly all right in the head, but his vices are not just “speeds” or “won’t chip in for gas” but rather “kills people”. Chisholm handles Dave’s reaction to what is going on quite nicely, especially when Dave escapes, only to find that he might be better off with the devil he knows. The story is very strong and the twists will have you guessing every issue. Also, the handling of the dialogue is top notch with very realistic back and forth between the characters. One of the best things about the art is the dynamic page layout. Each panel contributes to telling the story smoothly and supports the story well. The loose inks and fluid gestures create the atmosphere of a rollercoaster ride and as you turn every page, the ride and worse and worse and worse…until a complete halt at the end of each issue. Independent at it’s very best.

Invincible Iron Man (Marvel Comics/Matt Fraction/Salvador Larroca)
2008 year of the Iron Man! We all survived the summer onslaught of shell head. There were countless comic titles announced, crossovers, merchandise and oh yeah…a movie. We have seen Tony Stark go from beloved savior to pretty much on the bottom rung of the Marvel ladder. His company is in shambles, thanks both to the Skrull invasion and Ezekiel Stane's terror attacks. He's been ousted as Director of S.H.I.E.L.D., and faced with the added indignity of having to hand the keys over to Norman Osborn. And if all that weren't bad enough, his Extremis powers have been eliminated, rendering his one functional suit near useless. “Invincible” seems to have it all…solid story arch’s, characterization, pacing, etc but Larocca can be inconsistent with the art at times (He draws the best looking suits but offers a lot wonky facial work). And…Marvel really needs an editor whose sole job is to monitor Osborn's hair style. It changes wildly from book to book.

What It Is (Lynda Barry)
This book is essential. It is the essence of the creative writing course. The book has a front section that is sort of an artistic, stream of consciousness, diaristic account of Lynda Barry's own creative life. Followed by a workbook…but it’s more like an inspiration guide. It's a great book about creativity, the imagination, self-expression, memoir…authentic and beautiful.
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Monday, December 22, 2008

Dolphins Resurrection

 

By Omar Kelly...

Could there have been a better reversal of emotions for Dolphins fans and the team in one calendar year. From shame and embarrassment in 2007 to pride and joy in 2008.

"Guess who's back. Back again. Miami Dolphins. Tell a friend," Ted Ginn Jr. sang immediately after Sunday's 38-31 win over Kansas City, using Eminem's "Shady's back" song as a blueprint.
Sunday's come-from-behind win over the Chiefs sets up the biggest Dolphins game since 2001.

It puts Miami's most beloved franchise in position to play a winner-take-all game against the New York Jets next Sunday. One that will decide who takes home the AFC East crown and the home playoff game that comes with it, and likely sends the Patriots home for the season.
"It's a testament to how greedy our guys are," said quarterback Chad Pennington. "At the beginning of the year we believed that we could get to this point."

Pennington admitted as the season went on the belief grew more and more with each win. It got to the point where there wasn't a doubt the offense would score when given possession in the fourth quarter with a 31-31 game. And that's exactly what Pennington and crew did when Anthony Fasano carried too defenders into the end zone.

The triumph puts the Dolphins at 10 wins this season. Believe it or not, the Dolphins are at double-digits after winning just one in 2007.

But exactly how did this happen? How did this franchise transform itself from an unfortunate, unlucky batch of scraps to this scrappy unit that never stops clawing?

Can the Chiefs and the Lions bottle this and resurrect their franchises in one season? Maybe Bill Parcells' next book will outline it for us all, becoming a South Florida must-read.

What is it that transforms a roster filled with spare parts and faded stars into one of the NFL's best in 2008.

"Everybody knows and accepts their role," Ronnie Brown said. "That's the biggest part about being a team. And it's clear we've bought in."

Immediate following the game coach Tony Sparano was asked if he's thinking about the Jets game?

His response: "Yes I am."

When did he start thinking about it? "After I shook Herm [Edward's] hand."

It's officially O.K. for you to think about the Jets now, and to bask in the opportunity Chad Pennington has to get his revenge.

"Chad Pennington going back to New York with an opportunity to knock his old team out," Vonnie Holliday said, pointing out the game's Brett Favre-Pennington subplot. "I know every guy is going to rally around him."

It's about time South Florida starts rallying around their Dolphins, win or loss next week, because the coaches and players have certainly given our community something for the nation to talk about.

And who says the talk stops next weekend.
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R2-Dance Off...WHAT?

Scratch Bastard!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

The Pattern

 

It's a feeling of being literally unstuck, well...my consciousness is. I could never tell a story that is in a linear sequence. It requires artistry to create a good story about madness.

-DAG!
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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Living Through Hell On Earth

 

This might have been the best book I have read in the last few years. If you have sometime over the holidays to curl up with a good read I recommend “World War Z”. This GEM is written by son the Mel Brooks (Yes, that Mel Brooks), Max Brooks has carved his own Romero style niche. I dig how Brooks even gives play full nods and jibs at his previous work (Z.S.G.).

If you like zombie lit but are getting bored with viscera and nihilism, this is a great antidote. Brooks has taken his ironically deadpan "Zombie Survival Guide" and made a whole world out of it. Pretending to be an oral history of humanity's struggle against zombie hordes, this book has a cast of dozens, most of whom speak for only a few pages before yielding to other voices. As a result, we get a truly international view of the great crisis, and the situation and responses faced by people in a variety of settings. Each individual vignette is unique and special…from Tibetan smugglers to dirigible pilots to ex-politicians…each 'interview' has its own distinct voice. The feeling of reading the accounts of some of the bravest souls who have ever (never!) walked the earth.

As Brooks envisions it, the zombie plague encompasses the threat of terrorism and global war, natural catastrophes like Hurricane Katrina or the devastating tsunami, and global disease scares like avian flu and SARS.

Some of the best things about "World War Z" to me are the quality writing, the surprises of the plot and scenarios, and also the poignancy of the emotional impact. The experiences of the combat soldiers are deep and moving, and other sections like the struggle of a pilot trapped behind "enemy lines" and best of all, the K-9 handler's tale are brilliantly done and add both pathos and innovation to portrayal of human experience during the Zombie menace.

There is such depth, though, to his imagination that it is almost staggering to question how long Brooks sat in development of his zombie world. The varying responses by governments, the responses by different citizens, or even the effects of weather and climate on zombies are all explored to full, yet sometimes questionable, understanding. One of my personal favorites…The "Lobo"…a combination shovel and battle-axe put to great use throughout the novel. It is one of but many ingenius concepts envisioned by Brooks in his personal post-apocalyptic world…this is a world that everyone should explore.

Peace, DAG!
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Then I guess we'll never know...

Monday, December 15, 2008

SHOE-I-CIDE Bomber!

 

Finally a journalist with integrity and backbone and I think now it’s about time for American journalists to take note of “asking the hard questions”. I’d like to buy this guy a beer…when he gets out of G-BAY.
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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Lost Book Club



A couple of things...

John 316(bible): For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

And the Lamppost...think Narnia. It's the portal the kids find as they enter the world (Narnia) and then they find it again many years later as adults, seem to recognize it, and stumble back into our world. Time passes by faster in Narnia than in our world.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Shock

 

The power of Mythic Fiction is that it can tear down the walls and windows, the artifice and laws by changing the logic, empowering the disenfranchised, or simply by asking. What if? This bold logic is not easy to attain. The destroyer/creator must first be able to imagine a world beyond his prison. The hardest thing to do is to break the chains of reality and go beyond into a world of your own creation.

Realistically speaking, humans aren't special. There are probably other beings out there more creative than we are, smarter than we are, more moral than we are, funnier then we are, etc. But at least on the flip, we won't be unique in our mediocrity either.

Forget this…“I should write something. I'm just smart enough to know how stupid I am...which stops me from creating anything”

And Do This…WRITE!

Shock, DAG!

Ps. I picked up "The Dark Knight" in Blu-Ray & Common "Universal Mind Control" this AM. Ain't that snappy?
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Monday, December 08, 2008

Mythic Fiction

 

Should I event a new genre called Mythic Fiction? Or…Not Real Future Stories?

I’ve been writing down a lot of notes lately and I think I’m starting to see clearer. Maybe the book I’m reading (World War Z) has something to do with it (More on that GEM later)…I like tales that don’t fit nice and neatly into a space. Whether it’s Sci-Fi or Speculative fiction. What is Sci-Fi as a term anyway?

Science is not a thing, science isn't space, it isn't faster than light travel, it isn't lasers, robots, gene splicing...science is a process, a method, a way of looking at the universe, a way of asking questions and thinking about the proposed answers to those questions...and then asking more questions..

I mean…

I stare into the sky and watch a dot move slowly towards me. At some distance I recognize it as a shape I call a plane.

In the same place a french person would label it 'avion'. Someone with more knowledge than I might call it a Boeing 747.

Should the plane change it's name?

Peace, DAG!
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Trouble Man



"Now I'm coming to get your honky ass!"

marvin gaye did the soundtrack as well, you dig?

Thursday, December 04, 2008

The Cloud People

 

How dope is this!

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1091550/Ancient-city-discovered-deep-Amazonian-rainforest-linked-legendary-white-skinned-Cloud-People-Peru.html#

A lost city discovered deep in the Amazon rainforest could unlock the secrets of a legendary tribe. Little is known about the Cloud People of Peru, an ancient, white-skinned civilisation wiped out by disease and war in the 16th century. But now archaeologists have uncovered a fortified citadel in a remote mountainous area of Peru known for its isolated natural beauty. It is thought this settlement may finally help historians unlock the secrets of the 'white warriors of the clouds'. The tribe had white skin and blonde hair - features which intrigue historians, as there is no known European ancestry in the region, where most inhabitants are darker skinned.

The citadel is tucked away in one of the most far-flung areas of the Amazon. It sits at the edge of a chasm which the tribe may have used as a lookout to spy on enemies. The main encampment is made up of circular stone houses overgrown by jungle over 12 acres, according to archaeologist Benedict Goicochea Perez. Rock paintings cover some of the fortifications and next to the dwellings are platforms believed to have been used to grind seeds and plants for food and medicine. The Cloud People once commanded a vast kingdom stretching across the Andes to the fringes of Peru's northern Amazon jungle, before it was conquered by the Incas. Named because they lived in rainforests filled with cloud-like mist, the tribe later sided with the Spanish-colonialists to defeat the Incas. But they were killed by epidemics of European diseases, such as measles and smallpox.

Much of their way of life, dating back to the ninth century, was also destroyed by pillaging, leaving little for archaeologists to examine. Remains have been found before but scientists have high hopes of the latest find, made by an expedition to the Jamalca district in Peru's Utcubamba province, about 500 miles north-east of the capital, Lima. Until recently, much of what was known about the lost civilisation was from Inca legends. Even the name they called themselves is unknown. The term Chachapoyas, or 'Cloud People', was given to them by the Incas. Their culture is best known for the Kuellap fortress on the top of a mountain in Utcubamba, which can only be compared in scale to the Incas' Machu Picchu retreat, built hundreds of years later.

Two years ago, archaeologists found an underground burial vault inside a cave with five mummies, two intact with skin and hair. Chachapoyas chronicler Pedro Cieza de Leon wrote of the tribe: 'They are the whitest and most handsome of all the people that I have seen, and their wives were so beautiful that because of their gentleness, many of them deserved to be the Incas' wives and to also be taken to the Sun Temple. 'The women and their husbands always dressed in woollen clothes and in their heads they wear their llautos [a woollen turban], which are a sign they wear to be known everywhere.'

The Chachapoyas' territory was located in the northern regions of the Andes in present-day Peru. It encompassed the triangular region formed by the confluence of the Maranon and Utcubamba rivers, in the zone of Bagua, up to the basin of the Abiseo river. The Maranon's size and the mountainous terrain meant the region was relatively isolated.

Finds like this have the potential to change the way we see the world and the history that has shaped our reality
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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Ice Pirates

 

More Yo Ho Ho…

Pirates chased and shot at a U.S. cruise ship with more than 1,000 people on board but failed to hijack the vessel as it sailed along a corridor patrolled by international warships, officials said Tuesday.

The captain of the M/S Nautica ordered passengers inside and gunned the engine, allowing the ship to outrun the pirates' speedboats in the Gulf of Aden on Sunday, a company spokesman said.

"It is very fortunate that the liner managed to escape," said Noel Choong, who heads the International Maritime Bureau's piracy reporting center in Malaysia. He urged ships to remain vigilant in the area.

In a statement on its Web site, Oceania Cruises, Inc. said pirates fired eight rifle shots at the liner, but that the ship's captain increased speed and managed to outrun the skiffs.

"When the pirates were sighted, the captain went on the public address system and asked passengers to remain in the interior spaces of the ship and wait until he gave further instructions," said Tim Rubacky, spokesman for Oceania. "Within five minutes, it was over," he said.

December Looks GREAT! (other than my lack of concentration…Huh, What?)

Career, Incomes and Gains
There will be income from various sources comparing to the previous period. Your plans and schemes would be working properly. This is an excellent period for you. Each one of these three planets will render good support to you in all your undertakings. There may be some good news from a foreign land. Help will come from the higher authorities. You will also get opportunity to have good relation with powerful people in society. At the same time, transiting Jupiter shows Increase of knowledge. You will move in the company of saintly people.

Love, Family and Social Life
Some solid improvements in life would be possible. You will want your loving companion to be there for you, to share in your ups and downs, and to show loyalty and commitment to the relationship.

Education and Traveling
A lack of concentration as well as interest may spoil your education prospects. Now you would be much attracted towards other things than education. Even, during this month you would be slightly confused and not able to take a suitable decision according to current circumstances.

Health
An ordinary health would be enjoyed by you.
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The term "Jump The Shark" comes to mind...



...But still, this has to be one of the best things ever. There I was on Thanksgiving Morn. Kelli & myself were about to go on a walk through our neighborhood. We were finishing up our morning coffee and I thought I would see what was poppin on the Macy's parade. I'm an antifan of parades. They do nothing for me. I flipped it on and caught the Sesame Street float. It was EPIC! and to me...S.S. still KILLS most the crap that they feed to kids nowadays. We caught a band, a couple of teenage lip sync phenoms and then there was this...The Fosters Float. I like F.H.F.I.F. ALOT! very DOPE cartoon. And then came the 'Rick Roll". I can't figure out which was better...The idea of this OR the commenators having to explain what a "Rick Roll" is. Classic!!!

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving Eve!

 

...From Elektra and Pinky (live from the Tea House 11/26/08).
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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Sensawunda

 

I don’t want the world to get to jaded for "awe." I think stories, myths and life can be inextricably linked with the understanding of the mind (and culture, society, place in the universe, etc). I still get a thrill out of a new idea, or a new vision of what the universe might be like; but I’ve always preferred to have that universe inhabited by interesting beings whose motives I can understand at least a little. There are some really amazing things in this universe, and some really amazing people trying to understand them. If your sense of wonder dies, that seems like it could ruin travel, and art, and a lot of other things that make life worth living. I still want my Sensawunda. Seeing places I’ve never seen, learning about technologies that don’t yet exist, watching the “curtain open” and being surprised by what appears. Maybe it’s as easy as taking the world we live in, drop in one “different” element, and imagine how people would react. I think we may not be so much jaded as we are “living in the future”. However, I do wish I had a ray gun…

Peace, DAG!
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Monday, November 24, 2008

Existence

 


The truth is that you’re living in a world that no longer exists. A world that never existed in the first place. From wonder into wonder existence opens.
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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Battle Lines

 

About a year and half ago, Roo and myself thought about how dope it would be to do a project (movie?) on modern day pirates. I mean, c’mon, just because this doesn’t run on the local news here in Utah it doesn’t mean that they don’t exist. Well, it just so happens that this week there have been EXPLOSIVE reports about the pirate menace. And it seems that India has taken the “Ready, Aim, Fire” approach…

Indian navy destroys 'pirate ship'

An Indian warship in the Gulf of Aden has fought a battle with Somali pirates just hours after three vessels were hijacked off the coast of Somalia.

The Indian navy said the pirates' "mother ship" was blown up and the pirates fled in two speedboats in the exchange on Tuesday.

The navy said on Wednesday that the INS Tabar approached the pirate ship and asked to search it.

The ship had food, diesel and water on board and had two speedboats in tow.

The navy statement said that they had seen the men on the ship's deck with rocket-propelled grenade launchers and guns. The pirates threatened to blow up the warship, and then opened fire.

The naval statement said: "On repeated calls, the vessel's threatening response was that she would blow up the naval warship. The INS Tabar retaliated in self defense and opened fire on the mother vessel.

"As a result of the firing by INS Tabar, fire broke out on the [Somali] vessel and explosions were heard, possibly due to exploding ammunition that was stored on the vessel."


The blew up the mother effin mother ship?!? It looks like the battle lines have been drawn. It will be interesting to see how this plays out.

I am going to rock “Quantum Of Solace” tonight with K…DOPE!!!

Peace, DAG!

PS. I want Jason Statham to play me in a Mark Dago bio-pic. This guy is EPIC!
http://denofgeek.com/movies/148529/why_jason_statham_is_the_planets_purest_action_star.html
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Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Monday, November 17, 2008

Give The Drummer Sum



I'm liking this one...alot. One thing (Facts?), I can't make out that Utah Jazz looking shirt he's got on? Thoughts?

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

BABYCAKES?



Thanks K!

Paolo Per Uomo

 

http://www.celebitchy.com/21511/sopranos_paulie_walnuts_debuts_new_cologne_for_men/

Paulie Walnuts debuts new colonge for men!

“You could smell me coming"?
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M Theory or Ubiquity?

 

Micro things that act/look the same as macro things.

A few questions/comments on this picture…

-Are we just one small piece of one large brain? Or electrical pulses running through some ones head?
-Do these represent all the universe and all the multiverses beyond it
-Do we live in a brain cell. And people live in ours?
-What if the Universe IS a brain, and our brains are another Universe?
-I can't decide whether this is a better argument for religion or for evolution.
-Did God just got lazy and started Copy/Pasting?
-So can we unlock the secrets of the universe by studying the brain more?
-Do we have a whole universe with solar systems inside us?

Or is it…

Universes inside universes inside universes inside universes, it’s the never ending process of life, the only question is where does it start and where does it end? maybe our universe is what you would call "gods" brain cells, but what if god is just another person in a universe, say that is like a "god" of a "god" and once again you have a never ending process. Universe = You Inverse.

OR is some alien race out there just simply saying…

“Foolish humans! You only think they look the same because you can't see the fourth dimension!”


Peace, DAG!
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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Continuity?

 

I can't help but notice that alternate universes and peripheral, out-of-continuity series are running rampant.

The sheer amount of all these stories begs the question: is continuity quite the cornerstone it sometimes seems to be? I like continuity and canonicity. I don’t care for all of these "multiverses" because, as far as the parent medium is concerned, they didn’t “happen” (Do we really need how many Iron Man titles?). Which I know is ridiculous, because none of these things happened anyway! They’re all fictional stories!

Still, I have to wonder whether continuity itself is soon to be a done deal. You practically need a degree in quantum physics to explain what the DC Universe has done with its continuity, but as we see, even Marvel...the original model of a shared superhero universe...is playing fast and loose with the idea now. Is it because books that take place in their own “universe” are more accessible to casual readers? Or is it because the interlocking nature of continuity actually restricts the storytelling potential of comics, and alternate universes are seen as a way around that? Either way, the signposting is clear: continuity is holding enough people back that they want to work outside it.

So why stick to it at all? Is it purely to keep the “old fans” happy? Perhaps. There’s business logic in it too, that says “buy one Marvel Universe title, and you’ll soon want to buy more.” Certainly, Marvel’s film division think it’s a good idea, as even now they’re weaving together the universes of various big-studio films with the aim of creating an “Avengers” story down the line.

It’s hard to say whether current models of continuity will ever go away. Logically, it’ll only stick around as long as it actually helps sell comics...but if the recent "Alternate Universes" are any indication, it seems like the day when it doesn’t might be closer than we think.
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Thursday, November 06, 2008

Unstuck In Time

 

I watched part of this film last night and plan on finishing it today. I should read the book because I'm sure it is better (However, Vonnegut "loved" the translation onto the silver screen). The film explores fate and free will and the illogical nature of human beings. Protagonist Billy Pilgrim is unstuck in time, randomly experiencing the events of his life, with no idea of what part he next will visit or re-live...so, his life does not end with death; he re-lives his death, before its time, an experience often mingled with his other experiences. Crazy huh? Think Desmond in "Lost".

Speaking of "Lost" it will be starting up in February '09. I always thought a big thread to the show was time travel. I think the "LOST" series revolves around the use of a quasi-conventional time machine. All of the "mysteries" that the show presents can be explained through an understanding of how this time machine is used. While many think that a time machine is a "cheap" answer to the show, I can assure you that once LOST makes the "big reveal," there will be much to think about and reflect upon. It's all about time-loops, alternate time lines and, most importantly, the ability to travel back and forth in time...and becoming "Unstuck".

Peace, DAG!
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Wednesday, November 05, 2008

What last night felt like...



It's a metaphor, get it? And The Emporer isn't Obama...

One of my favorite images from last night:

 

The story is here:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/11/05/us.reaction/

And then there is Paul Krugman (Nobel Prize Winner) had this to say after the election…

"What I mean by that is that for the past 14 years America’s political life has been largely dominated by, well, monsters. Monsters like Tom DeLay, who suggested that the shootings at Columbine happened because schools teach students the theory of evolution. Monsters like Karl Rove, who declared that liberals wanted to offer "therapy and understanding" to terrorists. Monsters like Dick Cheney, who saw 9/11 as an opportunity to start torturing people.

And in our national discourse, we pretended that these monsters were reasonable, respectable people. To point out that the monsters were, in fact, monsters, was "shrill”.

Let’s not forget…these criminals need to be brought to justice. Anything can happen, right?
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Yes We Can! Victory Speech Part 1



Elektra, K and myself partied last night! It was an amazing moment...I wish my father was still alive to see this. Now, it's time to get to work...

Peace, DAG!

Victory Speech Part 2

He saved his best speech for last...



...Props to J.M.! I'm sure he will look back on this and wish that he would have never let his campaign get away from him like it did. He is a patriot and a hero. Joe Lieberman on the other hand....

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Trailer for Orgazmo 2!



Just kidding...but this is PRETTY awesome.

No Currency Left To Buy The Big Lies

 

Posted by John Cusack (Nov 2nd, Huffington Post)...

In the pre-capitalist reality, James Madison said when he put power in the hands of the business elite, he would be entrusting "enlightened statesmen and benevolent philosophers who would devote themselves to the welfare of all."

Clearly, he believed this statement in the way I guess some modern Republicans do. The only problem was that he eventually realized this didn't work and in 1792, disillusioned and worried about the democratic experiment, condemned what he called "the daring depravity of the times." He went on to denounce the business elites who, given ultimate power, "become tools and tyrants of government...they overwhelm government with their powers and combinations and are bribed by its largesse." That's how he perceived the system he had helped design. In 2008, this is an apt description of the Republican relationship to government and power.

Finally, some blue light, tectonic plate shifts, a sea change, we hear... a wave of despair carrying us to a new place. The bastards are finally meeting their grisly ends and will be discarded and abandoned as men come to power who will actually try to govern. I know we're supposed to be civil but I'm not a real believer in this method when dealing with crimes.

What does the sea change mean? How can we help people understand what is happening and help them contextualize it?

First the past: Senator McCain, Governor Palin and assorted surrogates are delusional and breathtakingly corrupt. They disgrace themselves and their country as they lie, smear, slur and write it off as political manner.

Yet the creeping truth must frighten them late at night: there is no currency left to buy the big lies.

There is no more money left to loan or borrow the big lies or to sell them. No more money left to pay off the debt, the wreckage in the wake. The orgy of excess has drained every bottle, smashed the furniture and left the cupboards bare. All that's left is derivative debts -- bets between liars and lies. Trillions of dollars. Turned capitalism into a Ponzi scheme for trading worthless paper. No real value anywhere. No matter how much money Ben Bernanke prints.

We are asked to stand over the abyss and experience our own destruction as another political game show -- just another surreal horse race. We watch millionaires and paid Republican hacks appear on television yelling "Socialist!" at Obama as if the Bolsheviks are coming to rape our daughters. These are the same people who oversaw the greatest upward redistribution of wealth in the history of this country. The same people who, through general lawlessness and a privatization frenzy, succeeded in shredding the Constitution, turning war, illegal domestic spying, security, border patrol, interrogation, and even torture into profitable industries gorging on the state.

So define the big lie: free marketers want free markets. Not so, the facts say. They are the biggest welfare freaks on the planet.

These men and keepers of the faith would lecture us with a straight face on the evil socialists/ communists/terrorists /vampires/space aliens who would dare "redistribute wealth" by amending the tax code. Two wars and the only shared sacrifice they want is more tax cuts for the rich and for the U.S. citizenry to continue shopping. As Sidney Falco said, you gotta give it to them, their gall is gorgeous.

If we stay the course, we are told, we will finally, one day, reach that shining city on a hill, the free market-based fundamentalist utopia. Even though all evidence points the other way, we should listen, reason, step back and watch them as they devour what's left of the government. They will feast on themselves -- the feast of carrion the Book of Revelation tells us -- but I digress, sort of. It's over. This would be a great system if there were no human beings.

Mathematical realism. Eat what you kill. The bottom line. Greed is good. Graphs and flow charts and metrics for success. All social organization is based on profit as the unifying force and engine of the common good and even social justice; worship the market, even as you corrupt it.

Our perfect system will provide for all.

And yet Wall Street cripples America and the world because it won't adhere to the same rules it says we must obey for the good of freedom. Because reality won't be a slave to their machine.

And so this is how we can rationalize privatizing war. At last look, with 630 corporations like Blackwater and Halliburton getting 40% of the $2 billion spent each week in Iraq, no one can doubt the corporatist dominance of the war machine.

Mathematically, the market crash shouldn't have happened according to their system, but human feelings make panic and panic cannot be calculated. I would bet that someday someone will discover that math adheres to a quantum reality: the participants and the observers affect the outcome. I digress again. But not really.

Instead of an international consensus based on trust and global community, the Neocons say trust no one, need no one, ask no one. Rigged, "open" markets are created at the barrel of a gun after bombing a country. We must all bow to the market.

Collapse, chaos, lawlessness. And even the market voted with its feet.

The era of market idolatry is over.

This is the end of Milton Friedman, Reaganomics and supply-side theory. This ideology has never been about free markets but a fundamentalist vision that is a cover for naked aggression and a social contract based on fear and greed. The government's job is to create optimal conditions for corporate profit, to privatize everything in sight and to sell off its own body parts. To literally devour itself.

So we have laws that allow borrowing money against derivatives -- basically a bet between two people who create nothing without collateral. They leveraged the public financial health on something you wouldn't be allowed to do in Vegas. It illustrates the corruption that has become institutionalized through deregulation and a culture of predatory greed. Alan Greenspan testified that he was shocked: business didn't regulate itself. The common good was not achieved by greed.

His testimony was incredible and felt like it was coated in lies or at least standing deeply in their shadows. But one doesn't doubt him as a true believer, absolved of messy feelings of collective responsibility. We made him a high priest even though we saw the suffering and the cruelty of the system.

The final irony of the free-market Darwinist model is instead of the strongest and best surviving, it's really the weakest and the worst. From a moral and spiritual point of view this is hardly in doubt. See George Bush. The gospel he purports to serve tells us this but perhaps he saw Christ as a conqueror. I've always doubted men who call themselves Christians who live by the law of the jungle. The gospels, the Koran and the Torah make no bones about it: wealth is not strength; power often represents not the brightest and the best but the weakest and worst. The beast in the Book of Revelation is not a horn-rimmed devil but Rome. Empire. Any empire. Every empire.

As Bush leaves office, the real truth is this: the new economies of the world disprove everything he ever said. Apparently that doesn't matter.

Neoconservatives will lie in the weeds and gather forces, the same players in a revolving door. They want back in and if history has proved anything, worshiping the markets is not enough. We must actually kill to feed them. A horrible cross-pollination of fundamentalism, dementia and market fever has turned America into a willing enabler of corporate cannibalism. Nothing else to call it when murder is seen as a legitimate extension of economic policy. Preemptive war is not only justified but openly referred to as a market opportunity. The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must. As we look out at the wreckage -- world economies collapsing, nationalized banks and a complete loss of trust -- we can see the hypocrisy as all are revealed as true socialists on the way down, crying in their scotch and Ambien as they run to the state for cover.

Many, like the Financial Times, endorse Obama. But let's remember when the F.T. and the Wall Street Journal talked glowingly and starry-eyed about the "Baghdad Boom" -- as horrifying a moniker as Shock and Awe. It was not the site of a gold rush, it was the sight of massacre and armed robbery. Now these men jump like rats off a death ship but don't be fooled. Francis Fukuyama and company will just lay low, regroup and rebrand. They speak openly about such things, beaten but unbowed, with no moral connection to the fiasco they have fostered. They speak as passing spectators watching the Weather Channel, (see Frum, Kristol, Brooks and all the rest), rather than intellectual architects, defenders, and foot soldiers in an illegal war and the thirty-five year assault on the New Deal.

As we help Obama try to implement another New Deal, I asked Naomi Klein about the parallels to The Shock Doctrine as it's polar opposite. She told me:

"I have been talking about the need for a progressive shock doctrine in speeches a lot. I call it disaster populism and the key difference is democracy. The right has been using shocks to suspend and sidestep democracy, declaring states of emergency and the progressive use of shock to enlarge and deepen the democratic space to bring more people into the political process. This is why it is important to remember that the New Deal did not come only from kindly elites handing it down from on high, but also because those elites were under massive popular pressure from below. We can all use shock and crisis to move the political direction of the country, but the progressive route is a democratic one, the right is an authoritarian one, even if it takes place within an electoral democracy."

The real challenge is to erase the delusion that greed equals freedom and prosperity, let alone the hideous lie that it somehow spreads justice. Amazingly, we are asked to listen to this gibberish in political life no matter how high the bile rises.

Many believe economies must serve humanity and not the other way around. Economies must make a moral connection to the republic. Brace yourselves free marketers: the quality of economic and human transactions will have to take priority over money. Faith and hope have to manifest in the social transactions we make.

A new social contract could be coming based on a real currency my friend Kevin McCabe calls the currency of grace. It is a currency of economic fairness and institutionalizing concepts of shared responsibility; a currency based on the gold standard that every human has value and should be awarded respect and opportunity, the dignity that comes from human beings protecting each other from the values and ideals of a Darwinist world. Its spirit is in Keynesian economics, a mixed economy with regulated markets and social spending. In the new era, we must remove fundamentalist right wing economists as the high priests and kings. Their ideology will stay dead only if we remain vigilant and call things what they are. It's a battle for the idea of America and it's just beginning if Senator Obama becomes president.

We should worship God if we want to, not the markets.

PS. Kenneth (pictured here) says...GET OUT AND VOTE!
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Monday, November 03, 2008

Thursday, October 30, 2008

A PSA from Johnny Utah...

 

Dear friends,

There's has been a phenomena going on lately, due to the incredible success of the move "The Dark Knight," that has plagued the holiday we all know and love; Halloween.

I called it after seeing the movie, that every unoriginal douchebag will dress up as Heath Ledger's (RIP) version of The Joker as their Halloween costume.

I am advising you not to do it. It's not original to the slightest degree and will only upgrade you to the upper echelon of douchebaggery. Plus you'll never get yourself to remotely resemble the sheer awesomeness that was The Joker.

This is much like a few years ago where everyone thought it was cool and unoriginal to dress up as Captain Jack Sparrow. Don't taint (lol) the legacy of a classic villian.

Thanks,
Greg

P.S.
Why so serious?
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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Brokeback Mountain Part 2!

 

Larry Miller's theaters reject 'Zack and Miri Make a Porno'
Chain says film is too sexual; it allows movies with graphic violence


Megaplex Theaters will not screen the comedy "Zack and Miri Make a Porno" when it opens nationwide Friday - once again opening the Utah theater chain to charges of hypocrisy for barring movies with strong sexuality but allowing films with graphic violence.

The movie, which stars Seth Rogen and Elizabeth Banks as roommates who decide to make a sex film to pay off debts, received an R rating after director Kevin Smith successfully appealed an NC-17 ruling.
But Megaplex general manager Cal Gunderson told The New York Post, "we feel it's very close to an NC-17 with its graphic nudity and graphic sex."

The Megaplex circuit - operating 70 screens at five theaters in Salt Lake City, Ogden, Lehi, Sandy and South Jordan - is the only chain that has turned down the movie. "They're kind of a lone wolf on this one," said Steve Bunnell, chairman of domestic distribution for The Weinstein Co.

Advance response from exhibitors and audiences has been positive, Bunnell said. "People are really responding to the romantic-comedy part of the film," he said, comparing "Zack and Miri" to such hits as "Knocked Up" and "The 40-Year-Old Virgin," films that have played at Megaplex theaters.

"Zack and Miri" will play in about 2,800 theaters nationwide, Bunnell said. In Utah, the movie will screen at theaters owned by the Cinemark and Carmike chains, and at the not-for-profit Broadway Centre Cinemas in downtown Salt Lake City.

"It's definitely a crossover title, something normally that would not be on our radar if it wasn't for Kevin Smith," said Tori Baker, director of the Salt Lake Film Society, which operates the Broadway. Baker cited director Smith's history as an independent filmmaker, going back to his 1995 debut "Clerks" premiering at the Sundance Film Festival.

"Zack and Miri" features images of full-frontal nudity, male and female, but never together and never in a sexual act. Similar content can be found in movies that have played at Megaplex theaters. In April, the chain booked the comedy "Forgetting Sarah Marshall," which showed star Jason Segel naked. Earlier this month, the chain opened another comedy, "Sex Drive," filled with sexual dialogue and bare skin.

The ban on "Zack and Miri" also comes a week after the horror movie "Saw V" opened nationwide, including at four Megaplex theaters. Among the grisly images in "Saw V" are a woman decapitated by blades in a collar and a man forced to crush his hands to escape being cut in half by a pendulum.

When asked by The New York Post about the apparent double standard of screening the violence of "Saw V" but not the sexuality of "Zack and Miri," Gunderson replied, "No comment." (By deadline, Gunderson had not responded to calls from The Salt Lake Tribune seeking comment.)

The uproar over "Zack and Miri" is reminiscent of Megaplex owner Larry H. Miller's decision in January 2006 to pull "Brokeback Mountain," the Western drama starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal as gay sheep herders.

* I wasn't to excited for this flick BUT after another BONEHEADED move by the powers that be here in Utah I will try and see this opening weekend to make sure it hits #1. Maybe someone should have banned good ol' Larry from wearing that Jazz throwback uni a few years ago that was clearly 3 sizes too small. There isn't enough eye bleach in the world after looking at those nutters.

Peace, DAG!
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