Pokemon Advanced - Boxed Set Volume 1 (DVD) newly tagged “dvd”
18 used and new from $25.00
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First tagged “dvd” by Geoffrey Colman “geoffc86″
Customer tags: pokmon advanced, dvds, dvd, boxed set, season 1, advanced
Thu 31 Jan 2008
Thu 31 Jan 2008
Everytime I turn on the radio, Nickelback’s Rockstar comes on. The song is has a catchy tune and the lyric - if you listen closely - stereotypes the lifestyles of rock ‘n roll stars.
So what do you call it when someone parodies a music that itself is a parody? Does two negatives make a positive? Will the universe implode? Well, don’t worry about the philosophical implication: just enjoy this music video Popstar by Alaskan musician JamesatWar.
Hit play or go to Link [YouTube] - Thanks Algonkin!
Update 10/30/07: Neatorama reader I go by Suzuki online XD suggested that we check out Nickelback’s music video - lip-synched by both celebrities and regular people!
Posted on October 26, 2007 at 9:28 pm by Alex
Category: Music, Video Clips
Thu 31 Jan 2008
Thu 31 Jan 2008
Buy this Car Now click here
Description
Item Specifics - Car
2004 Honda : Accord LX
Miles: 18650
Body Type: Sedan
Transmission: Automatic
Number of Doors: 4
Engine: 4
Interior: Tan
Year: 2004
Title: Clear
VIN Number: 1HGCM56324A168191
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Exterior: Gold
Engine: 4 CYLINDERS 2.4 Liters
Inspection: Inspected
Fuel Type: Gasoline
This vehicle’s transmission runs like it just left the factory. The vehicle engine runs very, very smooth. The elctrical and optional equipment on this vehicle has been checked to insure that it is all in working condition. This vehicle has no known defects - it is super.
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Thu 31 Jan 2008
Yesterday, KFI’s John and Ken were urging listeners to oppose California’s plan to seize control of your thermostat.
And I got countless Google hits with the words “California” and “thermostat.”
I think word is getting out.
UPDATE: I’m told Rush Limbaugh mentioned it. Well, that would explain the 523 kajillion Google hits. (Okay, more like dozens, or maybe even hundreds. You get the idea. There were a lot.)
UPDATE x2: John and Ken are talking about it again, right now. They are giving numbers for members of the California Energy Commission. Also, they are explicitly crediting the N.C. Times — i.e. Bradley J. Fikes’s article. Apparently Channel 6 in San Diego picked up on it. It’s a direct line from Somsel to me to Bradley to what I’m listening to right now. Cool.
Right now I’m tenting my fingers and saying, in my best Monty Burns voice: Excellent. All according to the plan.
Apparently the NYT is working on an article as well.
Thu 31 Jan 2008
What a sad, sad story for the woman. But a story of encouragement about people helping eachother out.
SALEM, Ore. — Five Good Samaritans stopped a rape in progress in a south Salem neighborhood, according to police.
Officers said a 22-year-old woman on crutches was walking near the intersection of Liberty and Boone streets southeast just before 1 a.m. Saturday when she was attacked and assaulted by 37-year-old Paul Landingham.
According to authorities, a car with five people was driving by, saw what was happening and came to the woman’s rescue.
Three men pulled Landingham off the woman and held him until police arrived at the scene.
The victim was transported to an area hospital.
Landingham was taken into custody on first-degree rape charges.
Now check out the mugshot of Landingham. Pretty sure those unnamed good samaritans who stopped to help did a little more than “pull Landingham off the woman and hold him until police arrived at the scene.” Good for them.
I can just imaging how the conversation went when the police arrived. Probably something along these lines:
Officer: “So you just pulled the attacker off the victim and held him here until we arrived?”
Good Samaritan 1: “Well, we actually roughed him up a little.”
Good Samaritan 2: “A little? Look at his face! We messed this pervert up good! Stupid idiot, attacking a woman on crutches. You cops got here so quick we couldn’t really get a rhythm going. But we did what we could.”
Officer: “So, you just pulled the attacker off the victim and held him here until we arrived, huh?” *wink*

Thu 31 Jan 2008
Some guys in New Jersey escaped from prison by using pictures from magazines to hide the hole in their cell wall.
From CNN.com
ELIZABETH, New Jersey (AP) — Two inmates escaped from a county jail, hiding the holes they made in the walls by putting up photos of bikini-clad women, officials said.
Authorities searched over the weekend for Jose Espinosa, who was awaiting sentencing for manslaughter, and Otis Blunt, who was facing robbery and other charges. They also launched a review of jail security.
The two got out of the Union County jail Saturday evening. The county prosecutor’s office said the two apparently removed cement blocks from two walls, squeezed through the openings, jumped to a rooftop below and then made it over a 25-foot-high fence. The section they escaped from was supposed to be the most secure area of the facility.
“I’m extremely disturbed that a jail with the capability of security it has would foster a breach of this nature,” County Prosecutor Theodore Romankow told The Star-Ledger of Newark for Monday’s editions.
Espinosa, 20, an alleged gang member, was awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to manslaughter in a 2005 drive-by shooting in Elizabeth. Blunt, 32, was awaiting trial on charges of robbery and weapons offenses.
The men helped cover up the break by placing dummies under their bed blankets, and hiding the wall holes with magazine photos of women in bikinis, authorities said.
Authorities launched a review of security measures, and barred inmates from pinning up pictures from magazines on their cell walls.
Sounds just like The Shawshank Redemption escape.
“What say you there Fuzzy Britches?!”
Thu 31 Jan 2008
This morning I am receiving an IV of Septra, a combination of two antibiotics. Although I have not seen the doctor yet, the internet tells me that Septra is used for bacterial infection, which means the bronchoscopy must have found a garden-variety pneumonia, probably contracted as a result of my travel last month. (Note to Chaya: I won’t be cleaning any more garages.) Unless drug-resistant, bacterial pneumonia is more treatable than viral or fungal infection. I should be out of here Monday or Tuesday, if I guess aright. My wind is already improving. When I was unplugged from the IV for a time earlier this morning, I hiked up and down the corridor at good pace without panting.
Update: The doctor has been in, and my inference was mistaken. He does not have the pathology results yet. He’s just hitting a spectrum of the likeliest possibilities. PCP (fungal) pneumonia is still the top suspect, however bacterial is quite possible — or a combination. However Doctor M was pleased that I could report an improvement in wind. I was pacing the corridor like a caged animal this morning, and I could walk at a normal clip for the first time in ten days.
Thu 31 Jan 2008

Maurice Sendak and Tony Kushner have done a marvelous job of recreating the magic that is Brundibar in their new book. It narrates the story on which the opera of the same name is based:
Two children, Pepicek and Aninku, have no money to buy milk for their ailing mother. Seeing passers-by giving coins to the organ grinder Brundibar, the children try to earn money by singing on the street corner. Brundibar chases them away, but a friendly Dog, Cat and Sparrow help them round up the other children in town, who form a choir large enough to compete with the organ grinder. When Brundibar steals Little Joe’s hatful of coins, the children overpower him.
–Allan Kozinn, New York Times
The original music was composed by Hans Krasa, a Czech-Jewish composer imprisoned in Terezienstadt. The opera was performed by a children’s choir of camp inmates in front of an audience of Nazi guards. The story of the work and its performance is one of the remarkable and macabre events that seemed to happen in the midst of horrors like the Holocaust. Not least of the horrors: the composer of this wonderful music and those who performed it would soon face extermination by those same Nazis who enjoyed their performance of this work.
Brundibar is an odd work in its way. It is about children and performed by children. Yet the story is so dark that it is hard to imagine telling it to a young child without a great deal of preparatory explanation. First, there is the deathly ill mother with her two young children who live in abject poverty. Then there are the children assaulted by the terrible bully, Brundibar. I’ve read the book several times to my nearly 4 year old son. He doesn’t know what to make of it and certainly doesn’t like it as much as his dinosaur books. But I feel there are many troubling things he will meet and hear about in life, one of these certainly being the Holocaust. And I don’t want to shrink from the telling of this sordid tale to him. I don’t know how I can explain it to him when he’s old and wise enough to ask. But I’m going to have to try. And it seems that by reading this book to him I can begin in an artful way to approach the subject.
Finale of Brundibar original production (credit: Terezin)
Sendak’s drawings are extraordinary and capture both the wonder and macabre nature of the work. But what I especially cherish is the original libretto’s utterly brave in-the-face-of death assault on the bullies of the world who oppress the innocent Aninkus and Pepiceks:
Remember, please be brave
And bullies will behave!
French horn and violin
Bassoon and clarinet!
The wicked never winWe have our victory yet
Tyrants come along, but you just wait and see
They topple one-two-three
And thus we end our song
Our friends make us strong.
page from the Sendak-Kushner Brundibar (credit: Bill Moyer’s NOW)
They believe they’ve won the fight,
They believe I’m gone–not quite!
Nothing ever works out neatly–
Bullies don’t give up completely.
One departs, the next appears
And we shall meet again my dears!
Though I go, I won’t go far…
I’ll be back.
Love,
Brundibar

The message would’ve been clear to anyone who listened carefully in that original audience. But perhaps those highly cultured German guards weren’t so highly cultured after all. Adolf Hoffmeister, who wrote the libretto, noted that while the children might have vanquished Brundibar this time, that new and more dangerous Brundibars would arise to take his place; and that we must be ever vigilant to prevent their ascendancy. If you consider that Hoffmeister wrote this in 1938 before he knew the full measure of Hitler’s murderous despotism, you’d have to say that Brundibar is one of those rare prescient works of art which foresees history and warns us of what lays in store.
The Saskatchewan Music Educators Association will host performances of Brundibar in May, 2005. In preparation for this event, it has created a remarkable website containing documentary resources about the opera including full curriculum outlines for grades 5-8.
Bill Moyers’ late, lamented NOW program on PBS carried an interview with Sendak about the making of this book. The website contains other interesting background material about the project. Kushner’s and Sendak’s adaptation was also turned into an opera of its own by the Chicago Opera Theater. The original operatic version of Brundibar has also been performed here in the States. Allan Kozinn wrote a wonderfully comprehensive and appreciative review for the New York Times of a production that toured in 2003.
Brundibar the opera has been recorded numerous times. On doing some online research, the accompanying recording was recommended at a classic music review site.
Please Note: This mp3 blog showcases my love for world music. I hope you come, listen, enjoy, and follow the links to buy the music. Such good deeds reward the artists I feature here and allow me to cover a small portion of the expense involved in maintaining this blog.
Thu 31 Jan 2008
NEW YORK–This month, the New York City Council passed the “New York City Plastic Carryout Bag Recycling Law,” requiring any store in New York City that uses plastic bags and occupies 5,000 or more square feet to establish an in-store recycling program for plastic bags.