Saturday, May 03, 2008

A catch-up

Well, its been a while since i've been able to post. I've been quite busy, but nothing real major has happened. I've been working lots, I just finished my last Driver's Ed class on the first of this month and now i find myself having a lot more free time, although, it does seem to be slowly filling up with more hours becoming available at work

Tomorrow is Chad and Cory's birthday, so tonight we are celebrating by heading over to their house and have a party. That should be lots of fun. Everyone will probably get filled in on the happenings shortly thereafter.

Last night everyone went to see Iron Man. From what I've been told, its pretty good. I personally didn't get to see it because i had to work, so i'll be seeing it next Saturday so long as everything goes according to plan.

Last night, while at work i got hungry, so, since McDonald's is right there in the same parking lot as Sobey's, I waltzed over and grabbed myself one of their new Angus Burgers with bacon and cheddar. Now, normally, i walk into McDonald's with a great sense of disgust and my body starts hating me because of the crap that i'm about to put into my body.Last night was no exception, but this time, on top of that was curiosity. I wanted to know what kind of quality McDonalds is going to put into these so called Angus Burgers. As it turns out they were actually decent, mind you that they weren't as good as a real home cooked burger, it was good for McDonald's standards. So, in short, if you feel like bringing yourself one step closer to having a heart attack, and you want something slightly better than a regular McDonald's burger, I suggest the Angus with bacon and cheddar.

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Thursday, May 01, 2008

Super lame GTA launch story

Now, I don't really consider myself a huge GTA fan. In fact, I have never really liked the games. I found them ass ugly to play, full of glitches, and could never get engrossed in the storyline, I always just ended up using cheats to get the tank and pwn everything in my way. But this one seemed different, from all the videos and reviews they have seemed to have perfected the GTA formula, so I decided to give it a try, and even found myself buying into the massive hype machine.


Monday, April 28th;

I decided I was going to go to blockbuster on Tuesday morning, because I saw on a poster that if you trade in four games, you get GTAIV free! How could I go wrong, so I asked around and Cody and Kyle said they would come with me. Cody had a pre-order at wal-mart for his copy, so we decided to go there after blockbuster. I went home and chose about 8 games, just to be safe. They were the shittiest, oldest gamecube games I had, and after reading the fine print for the trade in I was convinced they would get me the much sought after prize.


Tuesday, April 29th;

Yes, the day was upon the world.

I woke up to the radio describing lines in front of most major retailers in anticipation for the game, I was glad I had a chance to get it before the after-school rush. So I got up and did all the usual morning jazz, and then I got in the car and went to pick up the Krolikowski girls. We arrived at the school and I decided math was not necessary on this particular day. So me and Monica went to Tim Hortons and then to Jon's house to waste time until second period, and the epic road trip to Blockbuster. We arrived at school and went to the caf and talked with Isaac and Rob about what their strategy was to get the game, and then the bell rang. Cody arrived very quickly wearing some glasses that made him look like a queer. After a short search we found Kyle, and then we were off. Everyone was clearly very excited. We all hopped in the Beetle and sped off towards Brantford blaring some Iron Maiden. After a short drive and much talk about killing hookers and whatnot we arrived at Blockbuster. So we walked in, saw a lady with a box of GTA’s and I went up to her and set down my massive stack of games. After some smooth talking I convinced her that my name was Sandra Coté, because only the cardholder can trade games so I had to make it so it was my name. After that close call she scanned my games to make sure they were eligible for the trade in thinger, and then. The biggest bullshit EVER. “ I’m sorry sir but we can only give you 15$ off the regular price with these 8 games”

Yeah,

I was pissed.

I told her that was bullshit and grabbed my games, promptly leaving the store whilst giving it the finger. So then we put some Deathklok in the cd player, and continued to wal-mart, headbanging like scene kids.

When we arrived at wal-mart we made our way to the electronics section, and presented Cody’s pre-order to the sales lady, she checked his age by asking him if he was 17 and gave him a weird look. While the debit transaction was going through she asked her cohort what was in the special edition the of the game. And I quote, “ Theres a bag thing, a little book thing, a map thing, a cd type thing, the game, and a box thing, you know, to put all the dead hookers in.”

Cody continued to rub it in my face that I couldn't get it, and so I kicked him in the face and now he is even uglier.

The end.

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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

A Car Factory? Ep. 8: My Favourite Number Edition

I remember back in kindergarten, when the teacher was showing us how to write numbers. I drew mine with two circles: one big circle at the bottom, and smaller circle at the top. I liked it, it reminded me of a snowman. But the teacher wasn't as amused as I was. She told me it was wrong and it had to be done with one single curved line. "Don't take the pen off the page when drawing an eight!" she said. I heeded her advice and from then one wrote my eights without breaking the line. Now my eights look strange and deformed.

Somehow, eight manages to remain my favourite number. For some reason it seems aesthetically pleasing to me. Go figure, I mean everyone has there reasons for things, and I just think that an 8 looks neat.

Oh, yeah! The Ford Plant. Yes. I forgot...

Many of you may question how I could forget the Ford Plant, and the show I saw, witnessed, (was pummeled by?) Well I didn't, I was kidding. This show was incredible (well, most aspects), so let's get down to business.

A large group of us went to the FP on Friday: Bryan, Reid, Alex, Matt, Rob, Isaac, Nolan, and I. We walked in, and sat on the couch. I presently moved over to the piano and started to play Viorar vel til Loftarasa by Sigur Ros. As the soothing waves of Icelandic music poured from the old ragged instrument, a rather burly fellow sauntered in. And by "burly fellow" I mean scary tattooed buff guy.

"Where's the owner, Tim?" he asked me.
"Oh sweet bits of cod," I thought. "This guy's going to kill Tim and shut us down!"
"Uh, I think he's over there." I said, waving my hand in the direction of the window, outside of which Tim stood.

The guy kept asking people until someone told him exactly where Tim was. Tension was mounting, we could all feel it. The man "wanted to speak to " Tim. Oh crap, this was it, he was going to knife Tim!

Slickit! Blorp! Klunk! Tim was on the ground, quivering. The man had done away with Tim in a single stroke of his switch blade.

Fortunately, in real life, the guy was just worried that his bike was going to get damaged by the jerks who were breaking bottles at the back of the buildings. The two spoke for a couple minutes, and everything seemed worked out. Hooray for talking about things!

Happy that the show could continue without a dead Tim, I proceeded to enter into the show room. Clarence was setting up on the stage. I had never heard of Clarence before, but the singer/guitarist held a strong semblance to the singer/guitarist of the Quantum Physique. I'm not sure if they were the same guy, but who knows?

Clarence was having trouble with the mic, so the rest of the band just warmed up. On stage we had a keyboardist, a bassist, a guitarist, and a drummer. The keyboardist and the drummer interested me. The keyboardist had his keys run through his laptop via, what I assume was, a MIDI cable. Hooray for extra sound modulation!

The drums that were used were electronic, which is a first for me at the Ford Plant. I have never seen electronic drums in use prior to that set. Mind you, this was, what I felt was a negative aspect of the show, which I will touch on later.

The mic was still not working, but they played a song anyways. It was a really interesting electronic jam, the drums were on an interesting setting and sounded very drum and bass. Finally, the mic was working and the show went into full gear. The band played an odd mix of electronic music and metal, it is kind of hard to explain. The synthetic drums added the electronic touch, while the songs themselves had aspects of prog and metal.

Unfortunately, the mic had the complete opposite effect than intended. Instead of fleshing out the sound and making the songs more interesting, I found that the singer did not add a thing. In fact, I would say that he detracted greatly from the rest of the band. As a guitarist he was fine, but he could not sing.

As I said, the drums were a bit of a negative aspect. The drummer played fine, and his lines were interesting, but there was something awry. An electronic drum set can, by no means, sound better than a real drum set. The crash sounded way too synthetic, and sometimes it just sounded cheesy. When playing real drums you get all the subtle nuances, you get the sounds of the true drummer. The electronic drums paled in comparison.

After they finished we went outside, and Matt said something that I agree with completely. Clarence's opening instrumental jams were more intriguing than their actual songs.

The crowds were getting larger outside of the Ford Plant, and I was anxious to get a good spot for the Torcus. We walk back in and there is a large amount of people there already, but we manage to squeeze our way into a good spot. Now, I've reviewed the Torcus before (See: Ep. 4 Tile-Stealing Mutha-Shut Yo Mouth! -Ed. which is me (but is actually I, Matt who is currently proofreading this post)) and I've commented on their incredible performance. This time around it was the same rambunctious live show as before, kicks and jumps and windmills. Mind you, this time Alex Iarocci did the windmill for, what seemed like, 2 minutes straight. I would like to touch on the songs themselves. Last time I reviewed them, I boldly stated that they played mostly all covers, I was wrong! My apologies to the Torcus, for they write their own material, and mostly play that. Their songs sound straight out of the sixties, and they play them with passion. I think that's the key word here, the Torcus took the stage and played their fucking hearts out. And not only that, but they sent that energy from the stage into the crowd. The band was exhausted when they were finished, and we were exhausted.

Something that Reid pointed out was that everyone in the band got a solo. Alex tore up the stage with his crazed guitar antics, Myles showed his technique and melodic soloing with his red arch-top, and as Myles and Alex were switching instruments, Andrew morphed his drumming from the song into a drum solo that not only filled in some silence devoid of rock, but showed that he was no slouch at percussion.

The FP was filled with this crazy vibe during that set. At one point, I turned to see Reid with his eyes as wide as dinner-plates, jaw-open at the stage. The crowd was jumping and dancing, Scott at one point just went limp in the middle of everyone so they had to push him around. At the end of their set, Mr. Iarocci told us that we could be all be "Torcumaniacs" if we got a free pin from them, and then he let out a series of short shouts. It was so cool. Oh, and Myles had kickass side-burns. Awesome.

The headliner hadn't played yet, and I was tired, hot, and sweaty. We went over to the Imperial to get some drinks, and walked back to the FP, I was rather pumped for Born Ruffians. After the disappointment of them not playing a couple weeks ago, I was really getting ready to hear them. We got into the FP at just the right time as we got to be right in the middle of everyone. Born Ruffians started to play and I was immediately taken in by their sound, they reminded me of Animal Collective in some ways. So, already I was liking their set and it was only the first song. The whole set was danceable and ultimately enjoyable. All three band members moved around and did their thing. The drum was nuts, he was just firing off those beats. The guitar tones were quite agreeable to the ear and the singer had a very interesting voice, while the bass riffs added a nice bounciness to the music. Everyone in the band seemed absolutely essential to the sound. They played this one odd song that would start off fast and slow down, and then go back to being fast and then slow down again. I don't know what song it was, but I was intrigued by its strangeness.

For me, one of the highlights of their set was "Foxes Mate For Life" being one of the only songs I kind of knew by them. I just love the bass in that song. People were singing along and it was an altogether great time.

See, I said "altogether" so there had to be a problem. Was it the band? No. Was it the people in the crowd? Yes. A couple times, Born Ruffians had to tell the audience not to push towards the stage because people were almost falling on the stage. It's too bad when the band feels uncomfortable, but the drunk people stopped being idiots and were good. Also, an odd amount of people were falling over. I saw maybe three or four people topple into the crowd, which is strange because usually I don't see anyone topple.

During this set, the vibe got crazier. Everyone was getting into the music and more so. Unfortunately, one lady got a little too into it and ended up punching me in my man bits. Thanks lady. Eh, but what could be more rock and roll than groin injury?

Finally, at the end of the night, I was completely done. I was tired and sweaty, but filled with a sense of fulfillment. We got to witness an incredible night of music. With the Torcus' rock and Born Ruffians' oddness, it made the perfect night. My friends who had never been received the perfect welcome with these two bands.

I am actually still sore from that show, and I won't soon forget it. I think the best way to end this review is to quote something Alex Iarocci said: "WOO!" Woo, indeed Alex, woo indeed.

-Lucas Thurston

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Isaac's Links 1.0

I just recently re-organized my bookmarks in Firefox and in doing so went through all my random bookmarks that I told myself I would get back to one day. I found some pretty out-dated stuff that I immediately deleted but I also found some gems that I thought I'd share.

Feed the Head
First up is a link I bookmarked on September 1st, 2007. It is an interactive time waster that gives you simple commands to get some pretty creative results. I found out that it is actually part of a larger site with similar interactive time waster games that you may or may have not seen before. I enjoyed the creativity of this site and was looking forward to what would happen after each click.

Seam Carving for Content-Aware Image Resizing
This second link is to a video of software that resizes your pictures in a very cool manner. I bookmarked this link back on August 21st, 2007. I'm not even sure I understand how this works but I think it is a very very cool product and am curious to what state of development and use that it is at today.

Body Tricks
Going back even further in time to July 10th, 2007 I bookmarked this link thinking I probably wouldn't remember these from reading them once so I bookmarked them to be able to read them later on. They are simply little body tricks that everyone should know to help out in everyday life.

Lip Dub - Flagpole Sitta by Harvey Danger

As I was looking through my random bookmark folder I saw that the first link that started that folder, the first bookmark in which I was like, "I must bookmark this but it is so random. Where do I put it?" I remember discovering this video long before I ever bookmarked it. I remember discovering it on Kevin Rose's blog in early summer of 07' when we were still in the school year. I remember discovering it and immediately falling in love with the people in the video and went on to watch all of their other videos on Vimeo. I quickly became a lover of lip dubs and other short videos that people put up on the video sharing site (namely Amanda Ferri and Jakob Lodwick). This started my video-making craze of the summer of 07' which has continued on my facebook and vimeo accounts to date. I'm not saying that I owe my entire video making hobby to this video and this site but they have certainly encouraged me to make many many lip dubs and other everyday videos. I hope that some people watch this video and think it is cool but I also hope that there are others that enjoy the internet and what it can do and recognize how vimeo excels over other video sharing sites and make an account and explore it.

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