New Chucks for February 2013

 

How I wish these glowed in the dark

Another reason why I try to visit the Converse Store often is their recycling program. Every times I wear out a pair of running shoes (currently 175 miles), I throw them into a special bin the Nike people (Converse’s parent company) say is used for converting the shoes into playground surfaces. Might as well. I don’t want someone from the Third World destroying their arches with my exhausted footwear.

Oddly the outlet store didn’t have anything in my size nor in my interest. Something must be wrong! I did score these two pairs on sale from the fine folks at Journeys who still have dibs on the cooler, exclusive DC comics stuff. The Justice League pair was on clearance and get this, the display shoes were in my size! What are the odds?

Only five of the seven current, core members

Looks like Jim Lee's work without the redesigned costumes

I love the extra details Converse puts on the tongue

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Specialist visit number two – more tests

Thankfully the several dozen scratches on my arm have faded by lunchtime. Holding my arms out for 15 minutes while they itched sucked too. When I saw the reaction on one, I thought, hooray, we have a winner! Turned out to be the control group which should swell. Damn.

The good news. I’m not allergic to cats, dogs, dust mites (I was really worried over this but we’re undergoing a major Spring cleaning to put Alexandria back on track), mold, pollen, the usual suspects. Four candidates were tried again as minor injections into my left arm. Injections? The nurse/tech used syringes. Still passed the tests.

Then came a little video game. Blow out the virtual candles. I saw the device state at least once while I was exhaling, “cough detected.” Tell me something I didn’t know you overpriced Gameboy!

The bad news. The doctor has to now pursue the other, evasive theories: asthma despite no signs to cinch it; acid reflux (anything but that!); and a super, nasty sinus infection. I am onboard with the latter. When the weather got much colder last week, my congestion ramped up. Plus I experience enough drainage lately it makes me hoarse.

What’s the plan now? Stronger anti-biotics for 10-14 days. I do hope this works especially in light of the horror stories circulating about strains gaining immunity from our drugs. Nanobots aren’t ready to take over the job. The doctor said the new stuff is brutal so I need to eat some yogurt to replace the good things it’ll kill alongside the enemy. Works for me, I’ve recently gotten hooked on a brand which uses various Greek gods to represent the different flavors. My favorite? Let’s see if you can guess, prove how well you know me.

The anti-biotics will take around 10 days. Should this be inconclusive while I continue taking the other jazz. I may be in for a cat scan around the sinus passages. The doctor and his crew will have to go an expedition to hunt down the elusive, stubborn infection. I’m sure it’ll hurt.

Here’s to the next two weeks and modern chemistry succeeded.

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Happy 45th birthday Molly Ringwald

We’re both married these days so there’s still no chance of us getting together as I had hoped when I was finishing up high school. Her red hair probably explained why I used to date Stephanie briefly. Several flaws in that theory. Stephanie dyed it red, it wasn’t the correct shade and by late 1987, I was pretty over Molly…The Pickup Artist, For Keeps? and Fresh Horses cured me. My tastes had changed anyway.

I prefer being married to Somara too. I can’t speak French fluently enough and I’m confident Molly is accustomed to a lifestyle level I couldn’t provide.

In preparation for her birthday I did recently watch Not Another Teen Movie; if you can endure this mediocre parody of She’s All That/Can’t Hardly Wait/American Pie to the end, Molly makes a significant and clever cameo. I’m not wasting the electrons posting my viewing of it, especially with how behind I am. It was good to see Molly, the late Paul Gleason (he died a few years ago) and an uncredited Melissa Joan Hart.

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Russellmania was a fantastic day

Matters are calming down enough for me to finally share with everybody some rather past-due stories, especially all the hype I pushed last month over Alamo’s first and hopefully not its last Russellmania. I won’t put a Roman numeral after the title until there’s a second festival celebrating all films starring Kurt Russell.

Let me get one thing out of the way, Kurt was invited multiple times by MC Zack but he declined every opportunity. You know already from a past post that James Hong appeared instead. There will be more involving him later. Again, maybe next year when he (or his agent) discover the outpouring of affection for him.

To review, Russellmania was an all-day marathon featuring five random movies of Kurt’s along with food specials following the theme. Check them out here courtesy of Somara’s flickr page.

As we were entering the Ritz’s larger theater, there was a table with goodies to get into the spirit…eyepatches and candy cigarettes. The pre-show consisted of these videos:

  • Snippets of the Disney short Dad Can I Borrow the Car?
  • Teen Kurt giving the Osmonds a tour of the Haunted Mansion. Even as a kid Donny was creepy.
  • Kurt’s audition for Han Solo! It was amazing to see how different the script was when he was reading for it. Alderaan = Organa; Luke is the only passenger.
  • John Carpenter talkin about how he enjoyed working with Kurt.
  • Snippets from the Elvis miniseries Kurt starred in.
  • The Big Trouble in Little China music video.
  • Kurt narrating the highlights of Disneyland.
  • A scene from a Western Kurt did as a kid with Charles Bronson.
  • A toy commercial for an air cannon shaped like an RPG and tweener Kurt is dressed like a terrorist.
  • Kurt’s appearance on Martin Short’s Jimmy Glick show.

MC Zack hit the stage with his crew dressed as various Kurt Russell characters. They explained to the audience about how hard it was to maintain secrecy on their choices. Numerous people approached them during the previous two months with suggestions and/or demands to know what would be shown. Zack assured everyone the day would be awesome as we would be shown Kurt’s versatility.

Now to give the list with anecdotes, genres and my personal rating, not necessarily in such an order.

  1. Captain Ron – Comedy – B+: The programming crew was surprised by how many people insisted on this early Nineties comedy being in the marathon. I’ve always wanted to see it yet never got around to it. Despite Kurt stealing the show, I recall Ron was really a starring vehicle for Martin Short. It certainly was a product of its time. I remember Hollywood making numerous movies centered around families from Chicago (Uncle Buck, Home Alone, Wayne’s World, etc.) until my move to Austin. Captain Ron is genuinely funny and I recommend it.
  2. Escape from New York – Action – 1981 version of me A; 2013 A-: Keeping up with movies in which Kurt wears an eyepatch, the programmers chose the game-changer in Kurt’s career. For years he was seen as “the kid” from those Disney movies. Never mind the Elvis miniseries and Used Cars preceding this, Escape got all the attention. I too remember how my parents ridiculed the commercials because Kurt would always be the clean-cut teenager from The Barefoot Executive. Anyway, I had no idea Carpenter originally wanted Charles Bronson for Snake. I’m glad he rolled the dice with Kurt since they made a couple more memorable flicks afterwards. Escape is rather dated, (hell it happens 16 years in the past!) but it remains well loved thanks to the cast (Isaac Hayes, Donald Pleasance, Ernest Borgnine, Harry Dean Stanton, Adrienne Barbeau and Lee Van Cleef) and how over the top it is. The black comedy elements are easily lost on anyone born after Mayor “Benito” Guiliani’s reign. The only downside was the film’s print. It was an original from 30-plus years ago, thus it was very scratched and faded. I’ll take it over digital for the event.
  3. Dreamer – Drama – B: The programmers wanted to demonstrate Kurt’s acting chops, plus he stated how proud he was of it on a press junket for something other flick. I certainly was under my radar when it hit theaters years ago, must’ve been a Spring or Fall release. Dreamer’s cast is its selling point: Dakota Fanning, Luis Guzman, Kris Kristofferson and Elisabeth Shue. The acting is superb. The story is rather predictable. The facts behind the real-life events were extremely fudged to make this into a movie.
  4. Breakdown – Thriller – A-: This was another hidden treasure in the Russell catalog. I have no memory of its release in 1997 and I went to the movies practically every weekend. The plot is very predictable, especially when the main heavy appears in an early scene. Breakdown earns a high rating for successfully making my heart race during the final act. I doubt it was the sugar in my bloodstream by then.
  5. Big Trouble in Little China – Multiple – A+: If this weren’t shown, the police would’ve been required to quell the ensuing riot. I’m not going to ramble on about China, so many others have covered it better and either you know this Action-Comedy or you don’t. Zack did ask everyone to stick around for the surprise…James Hong.

Before I describe James Hong’s involvement, between each screening we had quick bathroom breaks and trailers which acted as hints about the movies they wouldn’t be showing:

  • Soldier
  • World’s Strongest Man
  • The Thing
  • Tango & Cash
  • Overboard
  • Now You See Him, Now You Don’t
  • Miracle
  • Tombstone
  • Used Cars
  • The Barefoot Executive
  • Sky High
  • Executive Decision
  • The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
  • Dark Blue

With Big Trouble in Little China concluded, the Alamo crew started their re-enactment of the wedding scene from China. The audience gave James Hong a standing ovation when he hit the stage dressed as Lo Pan. James spoke briefly, made a couple jokes and thanked everyone for making his first ever visit to Austin great. The evening then wrapped up with a video parody of the worn-out K-Pop tune “Lo Pan Style.” Hong having a cameo in it brought me a smile.

James Hong thanking Austin for coming

Following the same pattern of choices, these are my suggestions for Russellmania II:

  • Comedy: Used Cars
  • Action: Stargate
  • Drama: Miracle
  • Thriller: Unlawful Entry
  • Multiple: Big Trouble in Little China, why mess with success!
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Backyard cat situation continues being resolved

I took last weekend off from taking more of Princess Buttercup’s children to the Austin Animal Center (not quite the Humane Society). Sadly Lynx-o disappeared several days ago. I fear he died or another, more aggressive cat scared him away. It’s probably the former because he loves to eat too much to be intimidated. I will continue to hold hope for Lynx-o since I received good news regarding his siblings, later I’ll share it.

Today I foolishly fed the others this morning which made it difficult to round them up when I was ready to head for the AAC. Ramses and Princess Buttercup responded to sound of food on the dish. Hattie eventually appeared. Neffie was a no show. I gave the gray kitten about 30 minutes before giving up, I will have to make a third trip. Hattie and Ramses were easily placed in the carrier; their loud purring indicated fear. The drive was thankfully uneventful beyond some panting.

The paperwork with the city was different from two weeks ago. It remained no bother and to help with the burden, I chipped in another $50 to help care for the animals this center takes.

Out of curiosity I asked the clerk if she could tell me Leona, Tigra and Cleopatra’s fates/statuses. Leona and Tigra have been adopted! Cleopatra is at an adoption center. How overjoyed I was! I’m not terribly worried for Cleo, she’s still a kitten, people prefer them since they think adult cats can’t adapt.

With additional optimism in my heart, I was allowed to have a final goodbye with Ramses and Hattie. I let them know I do love them but what I do is for the best. It would selfish of me to keep them around when there are other people who will love them as much.

Fingers crossed on catching Neffie and spotting Lynx-o. Afterwards, no more kittens for their momma and maybe getting the city to collect the less sociable creatures.

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Earth and civilization are still intact…

The rather graphic event in Russia didn’t help quell the chicken-littles thinking our “near-miss” would have a convoy smaller objects. These must be people who get their Science lessons from Armageddon and the Left Behind novels. What missed the earthy by 17,000 miles (twice the earth’s width!) was 150 meters wide. It’s highly improbable the meteorite that made the headlines was redirected or accompanying the one astronomers knew about.

We should still be vigilant yet I figure my state’s junior senator “Teabagger” Ted Cruz will veto any action because he doesn’t have faith in Science. As a writer from the Guardian said elegantly, I don’t have faith in Science, I have confidence in Science, a fundamental difference. I also prefer the meaner dig…I have a personal relationship with reality.

I hope to get more, overdue posts completed later this weekend, another factor holding something back fell through, darn AusChron. I’ve been running behind all day. It was worth having a phone call from Hoser though.

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Happy 59th birthday Matt Groening

It’s not quite a “key” birthday as Patton Oswalt argues about but I’ve been watching my Simpsons DVDs in chronological order again; I’m on the first disc of season three. Plus season seven of Futurama is available on Netflix streaming. One day I really hope to meet him, I want to personally thank Matt for the entertainment, laughter and pop-culture references his creations have given me. I think he’d have a good time in Austin, we’re no LA yet I think we have more in common with his original home Portland.

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Valentine’s Day affects more than humans

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Moontower Comedyfest Past and Future

With the Geek Bowl out of the way and my indifference to SXSW, the new countdown is the Moontower Comedyfest, a recent addition to Austin’s rather crowded schedule: SXSW, ACL Fest (now two weekends), Fun Fun Fest, Wizard World Austin, Staple, Fantastic Fest, Dwarf Con and Lone Star Roundup (hot rods). The list I gave is just the tip of a rather large iceberg.

I attended the inaugural MCF but wisely chose the a la carte route because a badge was rather pricey. Then rumors abounded about badge-holders being denied access to some shows plus it didn’t include the headliners at the Paramount Theater. Sounds like the ripoff SXSW has become. Since MCF is one of many numerous comedy gatherings, at least I don’t feel unwelcome; SXSW and ACL are for Californicators looking to move here, find a new place to ruin.

So on the opening night I saw the wonderful Maria Bamford with Jackie Kashian (a Milwaukean!) at the CapCity. Thursday was Marc Maron (I posted that) at the Mohawk. Friday was Dana Gould and Friends at the Scottish Rite Temple. I passed on the final day to take in the Adventure Time banquet, again, old post. The Dana Gould performance was a nice change from the previous two. Dana was the MC for brief sets with Maria Bamford, Andy Kindler, Chelsea Peretti, Tom Rhodes and John Ramsey. After the show I got to talk to Andy, Dana and Tom briefly. I told Andy I loved his Home Movies and Bob’s Burgers characters, he smiled, said thanks. Dana I caught up with regarding this Star Trek special he did (I’m still late on delivering it as a DVD). Tom gave me his latest CD which I highly recommend, I owe him a review since it was request.

Tom Rhodes and Andy Kindler are both returning so I’m going to make a strong effort to see them, especially Tom. No sign of Dana but Marc Maron and Maria Bamford are listed, no venues yet.

Posted in Austintatious, Brushes with Greatness | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday Jeff

Lucky dude, he shares his special day with Peter Gabriel. I don’t see him around work so I’m hoping he got the time off. I need to get him something nice for the interim.

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Abraham Lincoln’s 204th birthday

Just wanted to whip this up since I miss getting the day off on 2/12…when I was in school. My dad got it too because he worked for the state government for a while.

I also like to mention him down here since Abraham Lincoln is the 19th Century Hitler to some Southerners. How fitting President Obama gives his SOTU speech today since they enjoy throwing that comparison at him too.

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Laundry-basketball “playing” cat

This young cat is such a natural at performing the alley-oop move to assist in dunking, he/she should be signed to the NBA!

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Idiot America by Charles P. Pierce

I was motivated to read this book thanks to two different references for the author. The first was Eric Alterman who would often let Pierce participate on his Friday column/blog. The other was Idiot‘s opening about the creationist museum based in Northern Kentucky which is a hilarious bit by Marc Maron. As I write this, I could throw in a third reference, namely the horrendous Texas SBOE pushing for creationism as Science.

Pierce’s premise is similar to Chris Mooney’s The Republican War on Science, actual expertise is ridiculed, attacked and discredited by nut-jobs, religious fanatics and cranks. It isn’t anything terribly new in America’s history as the author gives an opening example: Ignatius Donnelly’s books about the existence of Atlantis seemed to have credibility during the 19th century. Never mind Donnelly never going on an archaeological digs, it was all based upon literary research and probably good doses of imagination. Sounds possible. Look at all the morons buying into Jenny McCarthy’s autism/vaccination nonsense. Actual scientists are boring and rarely appear on MTV and Playboy magazine.

Sadly, Pierce is preaching to the choir with me. I’ve already felt this annoyance and reached such a conclusion when I was a teenager after the nation re-elected a doddering B-movie actor in 1984. It was nothing new. The majority could “relate” to a retired, golf-playing general over an effective governor in the Fifties and bought into the FUD campaign of an inbred sociopath in 2004 since he was a “regular” guy. He does bring to light more useful details about the Terry Schaivo debacle, media consolidation poisoning American democracy, the creationist push into Biology textbooks, a remote Alaskan community being eroded by global warming/climate change as the Pacific Ocean slowly rises and the spurious case for invading Iraq.

It’s a well-written series of essays and research but I think I read it too late. I’m glad to have thrown some coins toward Pierce after reading his numerous contributions for Alterman. However, his arguments are not going to change any minds. The camp he says that follows its gut won’t change its collective minds soon, they’re probably hoping for the Rapture to justify their moronism.

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Happy 14th birthday TJ

It’s a day late but at the rate I’m going this year, I’m early.

The Silders’ oldest kid is becoming a teenager. I think high school is next year. I know it is with my nephews Nick and maybe Hunter, Landon is already in the thick of it.

As for his mother, it could be worse…TJ could’ve been a girl, giving Helen and Paul more to panic about.

I wish TJ the best now that he has what I consider the entry-level age for Western Empire’s creation (namely America) known at teenagerism (or is it a -hood). It’s a fantastic transition period, you just don’t realize it when it’s happening to you! Numerous cool things come to your attention or gain a better focus:

  • The opposite sex, or same, I’m cool with either. I think Paul (his dad) would freak out.
  • Music. This may have lessened thanks to the Internet. It used to be a tribal identity thing when I was growing up. Kids still start up bands at least.
  • Friends. They become a stronger group to confide in because your parents and other adults are often “dumb, clueless and/or uncool.”
  • Movies. Hollywood spends the budgets of small nations catering to the 12-34 male demographic. How do you think Adam Sandler got a career?
  • Misc. Some teens go further with fashion, take up smoking/chewing, sports, books, D&D, etc. The strengthening of an individual identity. I remember seeing former classmates from eighth grade already on the path to White Trashdom a year later. Being separated from them is probably what gave me the judgmental perception.

I hope it’s a wondrous, happy time for him and unlike mine, he’ll get to enjoy in real time, not in hindsight.

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Great week for Science and History

Up first, it seems the Brits are all abuzz over finding Richard III’s corpse. We Yanks shouldn’t be surprised, remember the Princess Diana crap? As if she really did anything to make the UK a better place or defeat a vicious enemy like Churchill or King Arthur. Through actual Brits and Terry Jones’ shows about the Middle Ages, I’ve learned that Richard was mostly demonized by Shakespeare who was prone to writing pro-Tudor propaganda. Despite his brief rule (two years), this king brought many reforms which endeared him to the poor. Gives me mixed feelings about Richard being the last Plantagenet; I always found his ancestors to egregious rulers, especially Richard the Lionhearted. The UK press had some good editorials too. Economist did an obituary saying he was the last king to die in battle (learned something there). Makes sense though, the successors, namely Henry VIII, were slowly eaten away by syphilis or America divorcees. The Guardian had a historian saying the body’s discovery won’t end the debate between those who put Richard III on a pedestal versus the camp saying the former Lord Protector had his nephews murdered in the Tower of London to get the job. I do see some parallels in America. Henry VII, the winner at Bosworth and founder of the Tudor dynasty (a Medieval nouveau riche clan), went on to rule poorly, strapped the nation with debt and was a greedy SOB. I wonder if he also started two unfunded wars before he died. I will always enjoy Ian McKellan’s version, inaccuracy and all.

Yet another earth-like planet was found about 13 light years away. Whatever. The media has cried wolf too much to care and I didn’t bother to get the details because its mass is probably incapable of human life. Wake me when we have a confirmation of a earth-like world orbiting Alpha Centauri A, the best candidate to colonize/explore.

A new prime number was discovered. Now this was pretty cool. It’s over 17 million digits long and if you typed it out, the number would be a 23 MB file.

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