Tag Archives: point

The German Military is Freaked Out by Prospect of Peak Oil

Image: Wikipedia , CC This Document Was Not for Public Consumption A leaked study by the German military reveals that the Bundeswehr is taking the possibility of peak oil (the point in time when the maximum rate of global petroleum extraction is reached, leading to a gradual decline) very seriously. The authors of the study, led by Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Will, forecast a “shifts in the global balance of power, of the formation of new relationships based on interdependency, of a decline in importance of the western industrial nations, of… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The German Military is Freaked Out by Prospect of Peak Oil

Sofia Vergara Hides Her Tits of the Day

This is some typical slut behavior. When bitch was trying to get out there, she had no problem using her tits as hard as she could to get both work and noticed….It got to the point where she was only known for your immigrant tits….but now that she’s won an Emmy, she’s got arrogant and feels confident, like she doesn’t need to exploit herself anymore….and this is typical ….luckily it never works out, because the public only care about her tits, she just has a delusion that they care about her anyway she comes…but that’s not reality…and when reality finally sets in…she’ll back to her old slut self…but in the meantime, welcome to the dry period….

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Sofia Vergara Hides Her Tits of the Day

The Verge: Odette Yustman

People often like to compare Odette Yustman to Megan Fox, and on the one hand, you can see their point. Both actresses are knockout brunettes, and when Yustman plays the former high school mean girl tormenting the nerdy Kristen Bell in You Again , it’s almost as though she’s doing a less supernatural take on Fox’s haughty Jennifer Body’s performance. The key difference is that Yustman has a more expansive range and a more extroverted nature, especially in person, when she practically leaps from her seat while answering questions. The super-sweet 25-year-old told Movieline how good it is to be bad, what’s behind the world domination of her You Again costar Betty White, and what auteur she plans to stalk.

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The Verge: Odette Yustman

Worker got paid for 12 years and never showed up once

“We don't know at this point how something like this can happen. We're very concerned,” she said. “We're working on procedure to prevent this from happening again.” All I can say is, where can I get a job like this… he he http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/08/27/virginia.paid.for.no.work/index.html?iref=NS1 added by: sunshine1649

Top 10 Passive-Aggressive Notes

The best way to get your point across to your coworkers while avoiding confrontation is to leave a condescending letter. Sure, it make you look like a bit of a coward, but hey, at least you’ll get what’s bothering you off your chest. Here’s a collection of our favourite scathing notes: link: http://www.bite.ca/bitedaily/2010/08/top-10-passive-aggressive-notes/ added by: romanswietlik

The Definitive Guide to Abusing Your Assistant: What You Can and Can’t Get Away With [Guides]

This week, Star magazine investigates the perilous lives of celebrity assistants. But what’s the point of having power if you can’t abuse it? A guide to which underling abuses are reasonable, and which will just get you sent to jail. More

New Research Shows Bleak Future for Life in Acidic Oceans By Century’s End

Photo via Science Daily, Credit University of Plymouth There’s little good news about the ocean these days, unfortunately. We’ve taken it past the point of any sort of speedy recovery, from rising shorelines to over-fished species, from plastic pollution to acidification . And for this last problem, it looks like dire consequences are inevitable within this century, according to new research from the University of Plymouth and the University of Santa Catarina, Braz… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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New Research Shows Bleak Future for Life in Acidic Oceans By Century’s End

Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Video: Kiss The Past Goodbye

New clip sees LP pushing the envelope even further. By James Montgomery Photo: Warner Bros. Records Linkin Park are probably one of the 10 biggest rock acts on the planet. I mention this mostly because: A) It’s true, and B) It makes everything they’ve done post- Hybrid Theory (their big breakout album) all the more admirable. They have never been afraid to push the envelope and try new things. This is easy to do if you are a band that has nothing to lose, but in LP’s case, it borders on insanity. Their albums are the kinds of things labels schedule their financial quarters around. They’re tent poles (or life preservers) meant to keep things from sagging too low or sinking too deep. The danger of alienating their fanbase is very real, and the results could be catastrophic. Still, with each successive album, Linkin Park push even further into the void, and, in the process, they leave their n

"Hallowed Ground" | History Eraser Button

“A few photos of stuff the same distance from the World Trade Center as the “Ground Zero Mosque” (click on the picture to access the photos) “What’s my point? A month ago, I wrote about my support for a group of Muslim New Yorkers—whom I consider my neighbors—and their right to put a religious building on a piece of private property in Lower Manhattan. Since then, the debate over the Park51 community center, inaccurately nicknamed the “Ground Zero Mosque,” has jumped from talk radio to mainstream conversation, and turned nasty in the process. Sarah Palin wrote that, “it would be an intolerable and tragic mistake to allow such a project sponsored by such an individual to go forward on such hallowed ground.” “Look at the photos. This neighborhood is not hallowed. The people who live and work here are not obsessed with 9/11. The blocks around Ground Zero are like every other hard-working neighborhood in New York, where Muslims are just another thread of the city fabric. “”At this point the only argument against this project is fear, specifically fear of Muslims, and that’s a bigoted, cowardly and completely indefensible position. “Update: Read some samples of reader feedback on this post.” added by: Vierotchka

LA Times To Hollywood: Please Ignore the Box Office Success of ‘The Expendables’

Last week, film writer extraordinaire  Christian Toto  fell under the delusion that yours truly was interesting enough to interview, and if you’re under the same delusion you can read the two-parter  here  and  here . Among other things, Toto asked me about the clout critics wield and the most common mistakes they make. Here’s a combination of my answers: Critics aren’t dumb, they know the public doesn’t much care which way their thumbs point. But critics do know that based on their opinions and reviews they can enjoy an influence over what kind of films get made. And that’s not a small amount of power. Culture is upstream from politics, after all. If you have 95 percent of critics savaging a faithful retelling of the Gospels as anti-Semitic, no matter how successful “The Passion” is, no one’s going to go near that subject matter again. And that’s the goal. Same with anything that comes close to patriotism or conservatism. Such cinematic rarities are frequently labeled “jingoistic, fascist or simple minded.” This is all done consciously and for a desired effect. You have to understand that when I look at the critical community I only see it for what it really is: a journolista cabal of left wingers deeply engaged in a cultural and ideological war, deeply committed to shaping the powerful messaging of sound and fury that emanate from our pop culture masters. As if to prove my point, this very morning Left-winger Steven Zeitchik of the L.A. Times ran  this propaganda piece ; a not very subtle attempt on his and the paper’s part to tamp down any enthusiasm development execs might have to copycat what made “The Expendables” such a box office success and cultural phenomenon: [emphasis mine] But the Stallone picture –  with its hard-charging, take-no-prisoners patriotism unbothered by the vagaries of the real world  (it takes place in a fictional country, for starters) and its caricature of freedom-hating enemies (“We will kill this American disease,” as the TV spot enticed us) – planted itself squarely in the old-school genre. And this weekend, the movie showed that there’s life in that category yet. … On one hand, it’s understandable that a movie of easy American heroism (OK, first-world Western heroism) would catch on. In fact, it’s surprising it didn’t happen sooner. Apple-pie-patriotism already is behind the success of a cable news network and supports large sections of the contemporary country music industry. Why not a film hit too? …. Political eras are, of course, rarely just one thing or another, and the movies we want to see in a given period are hardly monolithic.  But as tempting as it is to infer that the success of “The Expendables” shows a deeper cultural need, it may well be the wrong inference. When times are confusing, we want movies to reflect that confusion, and even to make sense of it. But we probably don’t want to pretend that confusion doesn’t exist. If you’re wondering why Hollywood is so out of touch with the 80% of their audience who aren’t liberal, part of the reason is certainly because much of the industry takes pride in being so, but you also have this kind of constant pressure from cultural enforcers like Zeitchik who disguise themselves as journalists. What Zeitchik’s quite purposefully doing here is toxifying “The Expendables” by ridiculing its simple worldview – as though the nihilism found in the moral equivalency preached by the likes of George Clooney and Paul Haggis is somehow “complicated.” He’s essentially sending out the message that whoring yourself to the movie-going rubes and their desire to see good conquer evil makes you dumb, uncool, and unsophisticated. So don’t do it. And the timing is perfect. Zeitchik wants to slap some of the excitement out of a box office success and affect the narrative before the Monday morning development meetings begin. He’s also offering talking points to his fellow travellers who attend those meetings. Therefore, even though Zeitchik is factually wrong, facts won’t much matter. No one wants the L.A. Times calling their movies uncool and simple-minded, and regardless of how big the hit, no one wants to have to defend “hard-charging, take-no-prisoners patriotism unbothered by the vagaries of the real world.” Not in this town. But again, Zeitchik is simply wrong. From an artistic point of view, “The Expendables” is a much more impressive achievement than the likes of the flood of “Syrianas” that have been bombing one after another at the box office over the past few years. A simple straight-forward story that’s actually about something is much more difficult to successfully craft than a confusing and muddled story that’s believes in absolutely nothing. Paint-by-numbers might not be Rembrandt but it takes more skill than throwing monkey shit at a canvas. The other false narrative Zeitchik tries to poison the development well with, is the false one that says the success of “The Expendables” is something of a fluke: Until this weekend, old-school action movies – defined, for argument’s sake, as films with a slew of explosions, a shortage of moral ambiguity and a triumph of physical effects over digital ones – had seen better days. It’s been nearly two decades since pictures of this sort were produced with any regularity by the studio system, and a lot longer since they were stateside successes. “Until this weekend?” Ah, no. Laughably, to bring home this point, after mentioning Stallone’s most recent “Rambo” and “The A-Team,” Zeitchik then offers up Jean-Claude Van Damme’s “JVCD” as further proof that films lacking in moral ambiguity “have seen better days.” Really? The one-location, self-referential piece of crap  that is ” JVCD ” is Zeitchik’s Exhibit C in this closing argument? But this is what happens when you’re in possession of a laughably biased theory in search of proof – especially when the surprise successes of  “300″ and “Taken,” not to mention “Salt,” the first “Transformers,” and “Gran Torino” – make a total fool of that moral ambiguity theory. That would be like me ignoring the “Bourne” trilogy while making some sort of argument that un-American, shaky-cammed action films starring hardwood don’t make money. There’s plenty of room at the multiplex and plenty of box-office cash for everyone’s worldview. Unfortunately for our side, the Zeitchik’s of the media world will stoop to pulling the “JVCD” Card in order to remove our seat at that table. UPDATE:  A commenter quite correctly points out that in his closing paragraph, Zeitchik talks about action films with heavy CGI effects and explosions, not just moral ambiguity – and that my counter-examples of “300,” “Transformers,” and “Gran Torino” don’t refute that point. Though I close my paragraph to explain that I’m specifically refuting Zeitchik’s moral ambiguity statement (which is most of the overall argument of his write up, and where I was most focused in my response), I could’ve been much clearer in that regard. As far as Zeitchik’s  full  argument, “Salt” and “Taken” are still better examples than “JVCD.” I would also add the hits “Man on Fire,” “Vantage Point,” and “Inglourious Basterds.” Crossposted at Big Hollywood

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LA Times To Hollywood: Please Ignore the Box Office Success of ‘The Expendables’