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Your blog/web page text has an overall readability index of 15.

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Looking at pronoun indicators, you write mainly about yourself, then the world in general and finally your social circle. Also, your writing focuses primarily on the present, next the past and lastly the future.

Today I was juggling for money, in that I was at work and I was learning how to juggle on company time. The circus skills guy is called Harry and he's a regular fixture at my workplace where we're always trying to get the students to do stuff whether they like it or not. Whenever we need a bit of team-building or confidence training or any other buzzword we call Harry and he brings his juggling balls and devil sticks down until senior management are happy that we're all having fun.

I like the diablo, but despite the fact that I must now have been through Harry's circus school half a dozen times I still can't do it very well. I can throw it up and catch it but that took me almost a year and I haven't progressed much further. Circus trainers have a weird effect on people, we seem desperate for their approval. It's so rare that we're actually starting to learn an elementary skill any more that it almost seems imperative that we have constant re-assurance. Every time I twizzled that devil stick or caught the diablo I was looking up to Harry for approval and possibly a treat. A weird phenomenon.

Today I met someone who dosn't know how to do McDonalds. I didn't think these people existed outside of some former Yugoslavian territories but a middle aged guy who was with us had no idea how McDonalds worked. He was trying to order a McMuffin at 1.30pm, didn't understand the concept of the meal deal, couldn't work out where the bin was and thought that he had to eat outside because he mistakenly asked for his filet o'fish 'to go'. He assumed there was some VAT related reason why they even bothered differentiating between 'to go' and 'to eat in' and was probably worried that the manager would come and turf him out of a seat or demand an extra 6p if he didn't immediately vacate the premises.

More DS Bulletins

My brother borrowed my laptop whilst I was away and now it won't load the internet from our wireless router for absolutely no reason. The little dialogue bubble keeps taunting me by saying 'Connected to Belkin54g, and the signal is bloody brilliant, why don't you dive in?'. Then I click on Firefox and it looks back at me as if I'm an idiot. I feel like it's the internet equivalent of gluing a pound coin to the pavement and watching people try to pick it up.

I have some new pics of Zachary Quinto at the Ojai playwrights conference that I found through clever sleuthing (or clicking on their weblink, as it's sometimes known) and I feel fine.

I had another damn sex dream about a slightly embarrassing TV actor. Ten DS points if you can guess who it was (Kev, you can't play and I wish i had never told you).

Tomorrow I'm off to London to see The Cribs. Hurray!
doubleshiny: Shark jumping from the water (Default)
( Aug. 15th, 2008 05:12 pm)
OK so I stole it from Star Trek and changed the show but it's still mildly diverting.

First write down 10 Heroes characters and number them.

1. Sylar
2. Matt Parkman
3. Hiro Nakamura
4. Claire Bennet
5. Nathan Petrelli
6. Mohinder Suresh
7. Noah Bennet
8. Angela Petrelli
9. Claude Rains
10. Nikki Sanders

1. What do you and 8 have in common?
We're both ruthless harridans.

2. Which other character on the list would 4 get busy with?
I think Claire has a secret thing for Sylar, and yes I probably have been reading too much fan fiction.

3. Which character on the list would 7 kill if they had to?
He'd kill Claude Rains, but not Sylar. I think he has a thing for him too.

4. Which character on the list is most likely Sylar's next victim?
I like Mohinder but I kind of what to see Sylar smack him about a bit. (Again, without Petrelli turning up).

5. 2 got turned into an animal! What animal is it?
A grizzly bear, who would read you mind to find out where the picnic baskets are.

6. You go on vacattion with 1, where do you go?
Switzerland to tour the antique timepiece museums. That would keep him quiet.

7. What would you do if 3 confessed their love to you?
Run a mile, everyone Hiro fancies ends up dead or kidnapped or something.

8. If you could have any power from the characters in the list, which would it be?
I would have Hiro's power, but I would only use it for convenience, not the good of humanity or anything.

9. Which characters would you kiss, marry, shove off a cliff?
Kiss Parkman, marry Sylar (he has life insurance right?), shove Rains off a cliff, though it didn't work the last time.)

10. If 9 and 2 were in a plane crash with you and there were only two parachutes, which would you give the spare to?
I'd give it to Parkman, I'm not down with the whole 'us northerners need to stick together'.
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doubleshiny: Shark jumping from the water (Default)
( Aug. 12th, 2008 06:51 pm)
OK, last week I wrote this huge post about Comic-Con and for some reason it never showed on my journal. Perhaps it was the internet gods saying "You know Kirst, there were no real insights in there, why do you have another go and in the meantime we'll just delete this hour's work". Well, screw you internet Gods! Now I can't remember what I wrote so I'm going to have to go through my little notebook to see what I did on my holiday. I will break it into manageable chunks.

Shout Outs To The US -massive (aka some of the people we met)

At the LA Greyhound station there were a couple of people clearly going to Comic-Con. One of them was a guy named Greco from, as he put it,  'the crazy country of Chile'. He had a costume from Battle of the Planets and he was very excited to be one of the 50 people chosen for the masquerade. We mentioned that we had mistakenly got two passes each and he gave us his mobille number asking whether he could have the spare for his friend. He told us he knew someone at the Dark Horse booth but when we tried to deliver said pass they said they'd never heard of him. Greco showed up at a few Q and As, usually asking completely nuts questions. One of them was to the Family Guy panel - "When are you going to make fun of the crazy country of Chile?", to which Seth Green responded "How about right now?".

At the Browncoat social on the Saturday night (while others were schmoozing with Joss and getting invited to the IESb party with Zach Quinto, not that I'm jealous. Except I am) we met three great kids called Jasmine,Mike and I forget the other one. They were really cool though and we had a great time talking to them about all sorts of nonsense from Eddie Izzard to tiger training. Also in attendance were the awesomely hard working people from the California Browncoats and it was a great night, I'm glad we did it.

It was also great to bump into people from various message boards and internet places at the Browncoat fan panel where me and Kev talked about Serenity marketing and websites and ended up inadvertently launching our new collaboration 'JJ and Joss', whih is a musical puppet show based on the early life of Joss Whedon and JJ Abrams. People laughed at the concept, or towards the concept, which is good enough for me.

TV Is Awesome (aka Panel time)

The first panel we went to was Doctor Who and Torchwood in Ballroom 20 on Thursday. Steven Mofft, the new showrunner and writer of Doctor Who was very funny and the panel altogether was great, I had no idea that there was such a strong Who folllowing in the US. I accidentally ruined the series finale for a guy next to me because I didn't realise that they hadn't caught up yet, so sorry mate.
Torchwood panel was basically the John Barrowman show but I got some sweet footage of him singing a song from Miss Saigon with Naoko Mori.

Friday was the Dr. Horrible panel, which was legen- wait for it - dary. You'll have seen it on youtube no doubt so I won't bore with the details but it was nice to keep seeing Dr Horrible and Captain Hammer tshirts everywhere. I got myself a Dr Horrible one because the airline lost my damn bag and I literally had nothing to wear. I spent about £50 of Air France's money on shirts through the weekend. The screening of Dr Horrible was nice too, great to see it on the big screen and here the anguished cries of those who had never seen it before at the denoument.

We also saw the American Dad panel which was basically a table read of the first act of a new episode followed by an unrendered version for the second act and the finished product for the last act. It was a clever way to do it and it flowed straight into the Family Guy panel which also had an hilarious ten minutes from a new episode. Seth MacFarlane's voice is awesome.

On Saturday morning we got to Hall H for 8.00 am, two and a half hours before the start of the Heroes panel, and we still had to join the queue almost half way round the back of the convention centre. I was worried we wouldn't get in but the capacity of the room was 6,000 so we were fine. I was most excited about this panel and when they announced that they would be screening the entire first episode of Season 3 I almost vomited with pleasure. I've never seen Heroes on the big screen before either so it was doubly special. I was furiously writing down everything that happened for my mates on 9th Wonders, the official UK fanclub site, only pausing to go "I knew it!" when we found out who Nathan's assassin was, and when a certain other character appeared and did his thing. The question and answer session had to be quite short and unfortunately there was rather rubbish screening of questions which meant that one guy admitted he had never seen Heroes before and asked the castt to summarise the two seasons, and another woman asked if she could hug Milo Ventimiglia because she had bad eyesight or some such nonsense.

We managed to miss the Dollhouse panel because of Heroes but we got into Ballroom 20 early for the Fringe panel and ending up seeing Chuck, including Adam Baldwin. (Apparently ZQ was there for both Chuck and Fringe but I managed to miss him completely). We'd seen the screening of the Fringe pilot on preview night and I was really into it. I was hoping that someone would ask JJ more about Star Trek but no-one did and he didn't venture much information, except to say that they had no screenable clips because none of the FX were done yet.

Sunday morning saw us participating in a panel of our own, rather excitingly (see above). The final thing we did at Comic-Con was to go to the Buffy the Vampire Slayer musical screening in Ballroom 20 which was really good, but tinged with sadness becaue they kept announcing that Comic-Con was over. I'd really fallen in love with the place by this point and I definitely want to go back in the future.

Shopping madness

I got my hands on some really cool stuff including my beloved Heroes watch which apparently sold out on Sunday morning. I have a nice tan line to show my devotion to the watch. I also camped out in front of the Paramount stand trying to get a Spock poster, which I achieved after using Neuro Linguistic Programming on the guy handing them out. I felt such geeky achievement when I got my hands on that poster, it was the nerd holy grail of the weekend. After all the hassle I had trying to get the first one I accidentally got a second one by just walking by at an opportune time and sticking my hand out. I'm going to give the second one away in a contest when the Trek Movie gets closer, because I'm nice like that.

I also got a handbag that looks like a hotdog, and a Kingdom of Loathing tshirt. Their booth was awesome, though I haven't yet tried out the free item thing that they gave out. I am now a Level 9 Accordion Thief and have an 'I Stole Your Accordion' sticker for my erm, accordion case.

Well, I can't think of anything else, all in all it was a magical weekend! Bring on next year!

If you want to know what happens with Sylar (Zachary Quinto) in the first episode of Season 3 Heroes, go to www.zacharyquinto.co.uk and read my complete recap of the episode. 

Having fun at SDCC!

Love Doubleshiny

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doubleshiny: Shark jumping from the water (Default)
( Jul. 24th, 2008 06:55 pm)
V quick post cause internet cafe time is running out, but SDCC is ace. Very proud of my new Heroes watch and Kingdom of Loathing tshirt. Managed to get a Spock poster today from the Paramount booth, which is an achievement which for me surpasses my degree.

Airline lost my luggage and I had to do a shopping spree a la the montage in National Lampoons European Vacation.

Love to all,

PS Joss Whedon tomorrow, Zachary Quinto on Saturday.

PPS I have a crush on Neil Patrick Harris

PPPS No-one can pronounce my name
Well, we're off to Comic Con tomorrow as proper press and everything. We have the pro camera, the solid gold contacts, the press accreditation and the business cards, and now all we need is a pro-looking mic block like all the big entertainment presenters have. Now, these don't come cheap, but you can knock one up with a few easy steps.

Step 1 : Take a normal kitchen sponge and remove the scouring bit. I thought about leaving it on so that I could do last minute nail buffing but then I thought, what would Joan Rivers do?



Step 2 : Cut a whole in the sponge for the mic to go through. Better get your mum to do this because craft knives are sharp.



Step 3 : Voila! You have a mic block! It already looks awesome and we're not even finished yet!



Step 4 : Next, disguise the fact that your block is made of kitchen sponge by covering it with some spare box. Again, mums are better at this.



Step 5 : Marry the foam block and cardboard together in a perfect erm, marriage of card and sponge.



Step 6 : Add your kick ass logo to the block, and you're ready to go, with just one final step...



Step 7 : Do a practice interview!



So there you have it, we're ready to go!
More details are being released every day for Comic-Con. They have already tentatively hinted at a full Heroes panel, as well Dollhouse and Dr.Horrible's Sing-a-long-blog, so I'm excited about those, they also have a massive list of fan stalls which are going to be set up. Most excitedly - Kingdom of Loathing! Now I don't really know what they'll be doing, maybe selling merchandise or whatnot (how much do I want a KOL tshirt? Answer - very much.)

There will also be a stall by the California Browncoats who I think [profile] gossi knows and I'm pretty sure there'll be some sort of meet-up planned, though the unoffical strategy guide to Comic-Con tells you not to even attempt this. Fie on you sirs!

I've currently ordered two tshirts from my own Zachary Quinto Spreadshirt shop   , one has a picture of Spock and the phrase 'under new management' and the other says 'I went to Kirby Plaza and all I got was this lousy stab wound'. They are the two geekiest things I own.

I've also realised that there will be a free shuttle bus to the convention centre from quite near the hotel where we're staying which is good cos we had visions of it being about 100 mils away. "But it looked so close on the map!"

I'm bored today so I thought that I might post some weblinks which would make other people less bored. I have already used up my boredom on these sites today, so have at it.

Kingdom Of Loathing

I came upon this after it was advertised in a They Might Be Giants newsletter, it's a free browser based rpg which is very funny and has the added charm of taking a long time to complete. I used to play on it every day and then forgot about it for a month, at which point my game was reset. I'm currently stuck in Guano Junction trying to break down the walls with sonar-in-a-biscuit but it's not working. I know I've done it before, all the walkthroughs (which I only use in the most frustrating or circumstances) say you need 3 of them and I've had about 50,000. Stil, I plough on. By the way I'm a level 7 Accordion Thief.

Free Rice Dot Com

A vocabulary game which I saw linked on Danny Wallace's Random Acts of Kindness site. You are given a word and you have to say what it means from a choice of four. Every time you get an answer right you give rice to third world countries, paid for by sponsors. It's strangely addictive. The highest my vocab level has ever been in 43, so try and beat me and donate some rice.

Wordle

I found this on the Jonathan Coulton site, you paste in some text and it makes a 'word cloud' with it, it looks pretty good, some are better than others. I put all my recent blog post titles in and got this 

http://wordle.net/gallery/livejournal_titles

T Shirt Watch

As an afficianado of tshirts I was quite excited to see this site which just documents the cool tshirts that celebs wear. It also has a link to Threadless, which is my favourite tshirt site, although I have never bought any of them because I don't have a credit card. One day I will get that Mastercard thing which you top up and I will get every tshirt they have and live in massive debt but with good tshirts. I'll stop saying tshirts now.

Sensible Units

My friend sent me a link to this site and I thought it was a bit pointless until my other friend was planning on buying some weights and wanted to know whether he could carry 220 kilos. I put this amount into Sensible Units and it revealed that that is the weight of an average microwave oven so he knew he couldn't. There you go ladies and gents, proof that the internet can be useful in real life situations. (BTW I weigh the same as ten average domestic cats)

Band Name Maker

Yes it's a band name maker, but it's really inspired. I use to generate random two word phrases which I then use as song title. You can use it for pretty much anything because you can put an optional word in and use that in the phrase, so if I wanted to run away and change my name I could go with either Kirsty Bleach (the punk singer), Kirsty Beethoven (the composer) or Kirsty Doom (the super villain). You could also use it for livejournal titles : Dinky Journal, Last Journal, Journal of the State, Altered Journal and the Atomic Beau and Journal Eruption are just a few of them gems it came up with.

Of course the irony is that my boredom has been relieved by writing this journal entry, so everyone's a winner!


I decided this weekend to go to London, visit some friends, hang about, see if i could get run over by a pushbike, that kind of thing. Let's skim right over the part where my card was declined at the hotel (through a series of errors and 'issues' which were uncorrectable because banks aren't open on Saturdays, you know, when everyone needs them) because that story is more tedious to re-tell than it was to live.

I ended up at the St Giles Hotel which was very nice and right by Tottenham Court Road tube. I met up with my mate Clarry in a pub called the Princess Louise and we talked hysterical bollocks for a few hours and did a podcast, which should be making its way towards www.thegreatbarred.com very soon. At least, within the next month. Or before Christmas.

Clarry was off to a Veronica Mars convention at the Thistle Heathrow so I called my pal LiLi and she suggested a trip to the pictures to see Gone Baby Gone, which was an enormous pile of crap. The photography was good, and Casey Affleck was okay but the female 'sidekick' was a simpering idiot who constantly needed defending or rescuing. The dialogue wasn't bad but the script itself was structured like an ADHD sufferer's nightmare and the ended was completely unbelievable. Good job I was drunk through most of it and trying to eat chicken nuggets out of a bag.

Next day I was pretty skint because of the hotel debacle so I set about trying to prove that you can have fun in London without spending too much money. I went to St James' park, which is one of my favourite places in London. I like watching the fat, fearless squirrels grabbing at Japanese tourists' nuts and the pelicans who always have a crowd of people around them. There are some great views from the bridge over the lake of the london eye on one side and Buckingham Palace on the other side. There are kids cooing at the ducklings. I thought I might jog over to the Cabinet War Rooms but it was £12 to get in so I jibbed that and headed for Trafalgar Square. The National Gallery is free so I went in there to look at Van Gogh's sunflowers, Botticelli's Venus and Mars and Turner's The Fighting Temeraire amongst others.  There was also an exhibition by Alison Watt called Phantom, which may have looked okay in the Tate Modern but alongside the old masters it just looked like a dodgy canvas print that you could pick up in IKEA.

After I went to the National Portrait Gallery,  which I preferred because they had a lot of photographs and they make more sense to me. I think the fact that the medium has self-imposed limits it what I like, it shows real accomplishment when people's photographs make you gasp because scientifically the medium is restricted by light and image production. They had loads of pictures by Bryan Adams (yes, that Bryan Adams) which were actually really good. 

I was meeting my friend Stephen who's in a play at the Kings Head in Islington which is like a pub with a theatre in the back, In fact it's exactly like a pub with a theatre in the back. The musical was called Betwixt and it was great, entertaining and with some really good songs. It was camp as Christmas which to be honest is what I want in a musical. Ste was playing the lead which was great for him and he's next coming up to Liverpool to play Oberon in A Midsummer Night's Dream.

So that was that, I had a pint of Hoegaarden which cost £4.50 for God's sake but apart from that a nice trip. Next week I'm going to eat Chinese, play Rock Band and record a Cribscast with Kev and I think that will be just as good, plus cheaper.
doubleshiny: (Brought This On Myself)
( Jun. 14th, 2008 11:33 am)
My dad is stood on the doorstep in the rain with a dazed look on his face and a sprig of privet hedge in his hand. He looks up, with his usual visage of incredulity and gives the feed line to what I know will be a night full of coffee drinking and gasping for air as the laughter stitch leaves us both bent double and crying ; “You’ll never guess what just happened to me!”

My dad’s blond with blue eyes, and I am not. Because of this, throughout my life I’ve been told that I’m ‘exactly’ like my mother. I am not. If you have to draw parallels between parents and their offspring you have use a better starting point than their colouring because it’s the personality traits that really hit people. Anyone who really knows me knows that I am virtually the same person as my dad. This is immediately evident to anyone who sees us drinking together. I’m basically him in a dress, which is a chilling visual to say the least.

When I was born, my dad was 19 years old. I’ve got a picture of him with shoulder length hair and a cheesecloth shirt which was taken when I was about two months old and he looks barely out of nappies himself. He was at art college studying photography, a job he does to this day. I think a lot of the foibles I picked up from him were a symptom of his youth; the obsession that he had for The Beatles and Paul McCartney fed my obsession for Suede (my Dad used to have a guilty stash of magazines that I used to think were porn but were actually issues of Record Collector) and the reason that I have always found it so easy to embark on hare-brained schemes definitely comes from his attitude of “What’s the worst that could happen?”.

Dad’s schemes ranged from the sublime to the ridiculous. He’s good with this hands (something I haven’t inherited in the slightest) and once made my grandparents a wardrobe. He then decided that this would be a first rate business venture, though that one wardrobe was all he ever produced. For a whole summer in about 1993 he helped his friend set up a crazy golf course next to Pickmere Lake, which was functional but lacked aesthetic value, in fact it looked like something from Disneyland Chechnya. It was made completely of unfinished concrete and you risked serious injury in trying to retrieve wayward balls because of the bits of broken glass and nails that were lurking inside every hole.

He was also adept at spotting new technologies that would become quickly obsolete. He bought a toploading Betamax video recorder in 1982 and quickly amassed a collection of taped off the telly programmes which he carefully labelled and filed. He used to spend hours sat in front of that machine fast forwarding to accurately document what was on the tape and for how long. To this day he insists that Betmax was the higher quality format, and I have to agree with him. He had a carphone in 1988 which my friends thought was the height of sophistication, even thought it was only used about three times because the calls were 50p a minute. In 1992, four years before the first DVD players came onto the market, he had a Kodak PhotoCD player, which was possibly the most useless piece of equipment ever invented. Only professional photographers have ever heard of them for they were designed to play back photographs from files that had been digitised, and only professional photographers wanted to do that. It was never popular and was quickly replaced by a technology we now know as the ‘computer’.

Our computer was an Acorn Electron, which my dad played on for hours. His favourite game was called Sphinx Adventure which consisted of a small, badly rendered elf character trying to reach a sphinx. A typical moment of game play is as follows:

YOU ARE IN THE ICE CAVES

>GO LEFT

YOU ARE IN THE ICE CAVES

>GO RIGHT

YOU ARE IN THE ICE CAVES

>GO FORWARD

YOU ARE IN THE ICE CAVES

>GO BACK

YOU ARE IN THE ICE CAVES

YOU HAVE BEEN SLAIN BY A WIZARD

GAME OVER

It took him nearly four years to complete, and was rewarded by a screen saying ‘THE END’. He also enjoyed ‘Tree Of Knowledge’, a quiz game where you had to actually input all the quiz data yourself. You could spend hours building a database on Neighbours characters or Manchester City Players 1964 – 1984, only for the game to formulate questions based on this data, which you obviously already knew the answer to.

It would take me a long time to run through all of the things that make my dad my dad. I attempted it when I was best man at his wedding to my stepmum, but the speech ended up being a testimonial to the man and I binned it, thinking that stories about the notes he used to leave in my lunchbox featuring poems about the headmistress’s underwear, or the time he took payment for some photography work in the form of a rabbit would say more about my relationship with him than his with his new wife.

I’ll leave you with the conclusion of the opening paragraph – so there’s my dad, privet hedge in hand and relates to me the following tale;

“I was dropping off some photos at a woman’s house, and came back to find the car was gone. Now, my first thought was ‘The car’s been nicked’, so I went to go back inside and call the police. Just then I saw the car at the bottom of the hill parked in someone’s drive, so I went down there to see what they were playing at. The next thing, this old fella comes out ranting and raving at me, saying that my car’s ruined his hedge. Turns out I must have left that handbrake off and the car’s rolled right down the hill into the guy’s drive and only been stopped by his privet hedge. Before I know it, he’s blocked me in with his car and is getting me to sign a written confession that I have damaged his ‘valuable’ hedge. He wouldn’t let me go until I’d signed it and taken some pictures.”

“So why did you bring some of the hedge with you?”

“This? This is my evidence.”

And so goes another normal night in the life of Keith Walker.
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...and some came from abroad! Well, Inverness anyway. Operation Minibus was on yesterday, a folly consisting of trying to get 16 Cribs fans from the North West to Coventry for a 'warm up' gig at a nightclub called the Kasbah.

A guy calling himself KnackeredConverseBen posted on the Cribs forum back in March to say that there would be an 'intimate' gig at the nightclub where he was the booker, and told us that we could have £200 towards a minibus if we got one down. How I got involved I don't quite remember but it could be something to do with the fact that I'm a busybody Queen of Entropy. So, three months later, after cancellations, swapping about and a last minute double booking by a complete fool from Advance Travel Leeds, I was stood at Oxford Road station in Manchester waiting for two people I'd never met before to get on this 16 seater to oblivion. Luckily neither of them were murderers, one had come all the way from Inverness on a coach to be here, and the other had come from Sainsburys, rather less impressively.

Most people were getting on at Leeds, a random assortment of forumers and their assorted friends, all of them thoroughly nice people. 'The Cribs' went on the CD player, and after a stop for birthday cake at the service station (more of that later) we were outside the Kasbah looking like weirdos as we had an impromptu buffet served from the minibus step.

Moving to the more traditional picnicking arena of a grass verge we sat eating sausage rolls, pringles and scotch eggs, being eyed cautiously by the scenesters making their way into the venue. Kelly Cherrypicks was due to turn 24 at midnight so we sang to her and after a few lethally strong vodka and lemonades in plassy cups we went inside, amazingly getting past 'security' with a pro digital SLR camera and a digital voice recorder!

The Kasbah is pleasing to the eye but the queues at the bar were ridiculous, the bar staff stretched to their limits and the beer was so expensive that it formed the only topic of conversation for the assembled crowds. There was a chorus of "How much?!" every time someone got served which must have been fun for the barman. The venue is absolutely rammed and we've already been split up into two splinter groups so some of us start off upstairs where there's a bit more room and you can actually still see the stage if you don't mind it being slightly blurry through some tinted glass. After Kelly hassles some bouncers they open up the balcony doors and we havethe best view in the house from stage right.

Shrag are excellent, full of bounce and madness and the front row are responding to it. Later me and Kelly saw the girls in the toilet and let out a girly cry of 'Hi Shrag!' to which they replied "Hi!" in unison and we all collapsed into giggles like a missing scene from Sex and the City.

When The Cribs finally make the stage Ryan whacks his head on the doorway before they launch into Bovine. By now there are many more people on the balcony and we're having to do a stupid balancing act with two half pints of lager because the bar has run out of plastic pint glasses. I've never seen the pit at a Cribs gig from above before but it looked like a swarm of crazy, sweating bees and I was glad I wasn't down there getting bounced around like Ms Pacman. As Danny Glover once said, I'm getting too old for this shit.

The setlist is awesome, dropping in bsides and storming through most of MNWNW and The New Fellas. I hear the familiar chugging of one of my favourites, North of England, and Ryan announces 'This is for the cool people'. I translate this into 'This is for the minibus people' and it sounds twice as good. Everything's going brilliantly until Gary says "I can't do this anymore, I'm just being honest. It's nothing to do with this band but just me personally. I can't do this anymore.' Donna and I stare at each other with that 'Did I just hear right?' look, and the crowd boos. As the guys start playing again there's a real buzz of confusion which doesn't subside until Be Safe calms everyone down with the dulcit tones of Mr Ranaldo and his funny pipe. Be Safe is such a great song that it should inspire great works of art, symphonies and architectural wonders but for lack of brushes, instruments and blueprints everyone just points and jabs the air.

As the boys wander off stage everyone is cheering extra hard in the wake of Gary's comments (or Gary-gate as it came to be known on the forum today), in case this is the last we see of them. Then the DJ comes on and tells us all he'll be playing songs until we all drop dead so we bag a nice booth on the balcony and submit to the ultra-priced bar. We've been told there's an aftershow but it seems to consist of what we in the real world would call a club night. Just around the time this kicks off I go looking for Ben the promoter because he owes me the £200 I have paid for the minibus. Strangely he's nowhere to be found and no-one knows where he is. I wonder if he's some kind of mythical figure and then I notice that one of Team Jarman is outside, having been thrown out for being too young. Now, we were never made aware of the fact that under 18s weren't allowed in the venue after the gig, what are they supposed to do, round them up and do DNA testing? Anyway I have an altercation with the bouncer, who I would describe as a neanderthal except for the fact that neanderthals had the brain power to use simple stone tools and this bloke would struggle with a twig and some berries.

Eventually Ben appears and it's a Wizard of Oz moment as I realise he's about 19 and incredibly affable. We sort out our bit of business (Ben = ace bloke) and I am escorted off the premises by another security guard, seemingly for the crime of talking back to a knuckle dragging simpleton in a bomber jacket. After a last minute sweep for stray Team Jarman members me and Melissa head out looking for cheap booze houses who don't much care about ID. We find a dodgy looking 'student wine bar' and settle in with two hammered regulars, the rastafarian landlord and four Cribs fans from Manchester who've been chucked out for smoking in the beer garden. The Kasbah's a nice place but they need to sort out their security, it comes to something when even the band on stage have to interrupt the gig to tell them to leave their fans alone.

Back on the minibus we're heading for home and Kelly's distributing birthday cake (actually it was chocolate logs but that was all I could get from the service station). After a while everyone's napping on each others shoulders even though some of them have only met a few hours ago. We drop most of the busers off at Leeds station and by 4.30 I'm back at my hotel and Rob and Mikey are off to Oxford Rd and hopefully then Inverness.

Some of them came from the North of England and some came from abroad
doubleshiny: Shark jumping from the water (Default)
( Jun. 10th, 2008 12:14 pm)

New Swine is out today if you'd like to read it www.swinemagazine.co.uk  My article is called KW Senior.

I saw a new thing on the front of livejournal saying 'Newly Available Usernames' so I had a quick look. I find it a shame that people give up on blogging, actually maybe they haven't, maybe they just defected to blogger or something, but the fact that the old usernames are now flouting, unloved on the 'for sale or rent pages' makes me feel a little bit sad. 

Some of the names have clearly been thought out, they're not just Dave20374pl. Take for example "errorindeath" or "raggedmemory". It half makes me want to adopt those blogs just so that the great names don't go missing. "Kabukicockroach" is a great name, as is "screweveryone" which is criminally unused. 

I like the random journal button too so I thought I'd click three randomers to get a snapshot of life today

1. 

[livejournal.com profile] injir    this first one is in Russian so I don't actually know what it says, but it's a pleasing shade of lilac. There's also a nice picture of some water lilies.

 2. Syvia

Has a warning about mature content but I plough on to a nice layout with some anime icons. All the posts have further warnings but I'm the brave sort and I click only to find that it's mostly stuff about fanfic. I can't work out what she is fanficcing but it's probably anime related.

3. Tinned gulley

 It's another Russian one! I can't understand this either but it's got a poll on it with some indeterminable option. I voted for 'manafa'.

 

Spam on gmail is so much more fun than normal spam. Spam subjects can range from the poetic to the arresting, to the downright filthy, but always something a little different. Today I thought I would compile a list of my favourite spam titles by category from the 322 spam emails I currently have in my folder. 

Romantic 

"Together Forever"
"A small thing that makes your lady happy" (A statement in complete opposition to most of the emails in there)
"You make my world special" (Thankyou mark.hardy)

Slightly less romantic

"Make it large and steady as rock" (Steady? Is that a good thing now? I don't want to balance a cup of tea on it! Well, maybe...)
"Britney strips down to undies" (Are we in the 1920s? I think modern gentlemen want a bit more than this)
"Take her from behind" (From the unsuitably named 'Mildred')

Frankly baffling

"African bushmen reveal genital growth secrets"
"A GOOD OLD COUNRTY BOY THATS GOOD TO THEIR WOMEN"
"Bombards cocking"

Miscellaneous

"Agree to be sick? No way!"
"Come alive!"

Writer's Block,  it's all over! Has it been interesting? Sort of. I might pay more attention to them in future.

Talk about the movie that you love to hate the most, and why.

I don't really understand this question, does it mean a movie that I hate but like watching? Or a movie which I love which is awful? Either way I can't think of one. My top three quite embarrassing films are :

1. Police Academy 5 : Assignment : Miami Beach

I like this because it has two colons in the title, and because it is incredibly stupid. Rene Auberjonois is in it as a diamond thief.

2. Bring It On

Come on, it's awesome!

3. National Lampoon's European Vacation

Some say this is the worst of the Vacation films but I like the bit where they are going round and round the London roundabout.

Elsewhere in DS Manor....

Me and my Dad rolled out a 41/50 on the Lion quiz. 

I started a new online game called Twighlight something. I actually signed up to Second Life but as soon as someone said anything to me I bailed out. I don't like talking to strangers on the internet.

3 days til Cribs in Coventry, 5 days til London. Come on!

This weekend has completely passed me by, I think it's because I haven't got the ability to really relax at the moment. Next week I'm going to London for the weekend and I know I'll be able to relax there because no-one there wants anything from me. Sure I've made a few plans to meet people, but if I then upped and disappeared it would be completely fine and no-one would hassle me. I'm going to be able to check into the hotel and do whatever the hell I want, which is why I hardly ever stay with friends in London. I always get offers, which is really nice, but I'd much prefer the freedom to come and go whenever I like. I'm tempted to not even have the bloody phone on all weekend, though I might come back to the hotel on Saturday night and see a nationwide campaign on TV called 'Find Kirsty So We Can Hassle Her'.

I hate my phone. I hate that people can reach me whenever they want when it's not even important. Increasingly I turn it off at weekends and leave it like that but it's caused so much consternation amongst people that now I can't do it so I just leave the ringer off and only look at it when I can be bothered. If I'm at home on my own I don't answer the house phone, I find it galling that people should be able to make you stop what you're doing to talk to them. If you went to someone's house, rang the doorbell and then went and switched off your TV so that you had their full attention you'd think they were rude and obnoxious, but people even get out of bed or out of the bath to answer the phone. I know what you're thinking "Oh, but it could be an emergency!". It never is though, is it?

So I've let this weekend go and I'm focusing on Thursday when I'm off to see The Cribs in Coventry, and next weekend when I'm off to London, train strikes notwithstanding.

So to today's Writer's Block..

If you were exiled to outer space, where would you be sent and what would you bring along?

Now, I'm all for imaginitive questions, but how bad must I have behaved to constitute being exiled to Outer Space?! You don't even get 20 years for murder these days, what heinous crime not only calls for a harsher punishment than taking a life, but won't even allow you to continue to live on this planet?

Anyhow, let's say I was exiled to Outer Space, I have no idea where I would be sent. I'm still battling with the concept of exile being used as a punitive measure so I'm really not ready to try and map the solar system looking for a suitably uninviting planet. Let's say Jupiter so we can get on with this farce.

Everything I might normally take on a trip would be useless on Jupiter, why take paper and a pen? Who is going to read what you've written? I'd probbably take a ball. What's the gravity like there on Jupiter? Good? Yes, a ball and a wall to kick it against. Just me, on Jupiter, kicking a ball against a wall until I die. Is that what you want, Livejournal question setters?
Today I woke up with hayfever and that's never a good thing - in case you don't know, this is how hayfever makes you feel;

1. Your nose itches and no amount of scratching helps
2. You sneeze constantly and your nose runs
3. Your head swims because you're constantly blowing your nose and sneezing
4. Your eyes itch and you want to scratch them out
5. Your eyes puff up and water
6. After a while you can't be bothered to breathe because it's such an effort.
7. You get no sympathy because it's 'just hayfever'
8. There is no cure - some days are better than others but most days in the summer are unrivalled hell

However, instead of staying inside and crying which is what I wanted to do I found myself on the way to Liverpool and then proceeded to walk for about a thousand miles, which didn't help the old 'lack of breath' thing. Luckily I was back by 5 o'clock but it was a miserable day.

Anyway- to today's stupid Writer's Block question

What should cheese go on, and what should cheese NOT go on?

I really don't give a shit.

There!
Tags:
Originally published in Swine Magazine

Drunkenness, class wars, casual racism and a complete rip-off. Yes, the Glastonbury Festival is the most British of events. What escapes me is how the failure of a multi-million pound company to sell out a festival in three hours should be of any concern to anyone, anywhere, at any time.

I’m sick of hearing about Glastonbury. I was sick of it before I even heard of it. Why this overblown monster, this idiot taxation system, this money-grubbing behemoth of corporate whoredom should be greeted with such dewy eyed reverence by the music fans of this country is beyond me. The news that ‘Glasto’ , as it’s bog snorkelling ‘disciples’ insist on calling it, hadn’t sold out in under 4.0 nanoseconds was greeted with more wailing and gnashing of teeth than the death of John Lennon. Could it be that the World’s Greatest Music Festival (TM and don’t you forget it you snivelling internet pirates) was losing its grip on the zeitgeist?

Well hold the phone Martha, Glastonbury isn’t on the cutting edge? You could have fooled me, they even had Shirley Bassey there last year. It was a faux-ironic move that the made the students piss themselves but which was lost on the urban youths of Hackney, which is possibly why this year, when dear Emily Eavis announced - shock horror – Jay-Z as the headliner, the regular Glastonbury crowd started burning their crosses. ‘This isn’t irony, this is just unexpected! This will not stand!’ bleated Effie and Hugo Thorntonley-Smythe as they ditched daddy’s credit card and started making plans to plant cotton fields in Ecuador instead.

Glastonbury has finally been seen for what it is, another hollow ‘experience’ for those with more disposable income than imagination to tick off their Observer Music Monthly ‘Do Before You Die’ list. It’s been a long time coming but finally the wheels have come off the Worthy Farm bandwagon. The ‘Glasto tourists’ have realised that although it might be a mildly diverting after-dinner topic to mention that they’re forgoing the South of France this year and taking the kids to ‘really experience Glastonbury’, they don’t particularly want to spend over £600 to subject Kitty and Basil to ’99 Problems’ while a load of cidered up City boys vomit on their brand new Jeff Banks tent.

The new generation of festival goers are not fooled by Glastonbury and its fake hippy ethos. They have more choice than ever before, more new festivals cropping up every year, and they go not necessarily for the lineup, but for the fun of it. Remember fun? It’s what festivals are supposed to be, a weekend away camping, listen to a few bands you might not normally bother with, have a few drinks, etc. You know, fun? Glastonbury over recent years has become more like a stint in Vietnam than a weekend break. First there’s the ridiculous notion of pre-registering, where you hand over more information to Festival Republic Ltd. than you would to a national census. Then if you’re actually lucky enough to win the ticket lottery you have to plan for the inevitable deluge where your tent and all your belongings are washed away on a river of someone else’s feculence with your only comfort being an acoustic set by The Pigeon Detectives which you can’t even hear properly. Yeah, that sounds like a blast.
Vacuous proto-hippies will claim that the best of the fest is actually away from the music, in the ridiculously contrived Field of Lost Vagueness and the Healing Fields but even they are being ploughed over this year.

The day Glastonbury failed to sell out isn’t The Day The Music Died, it’s the Day That Music Woke Up And Punched Michael Eavis In His Great Big Beardy Face. The fact that organisers believed Kings of Leon and The Verve would offer value for money demonstrates just how clueless and out of touch they have become. The Verve reunion must be the least wanted comeback since legwarmers so why foist them on an audience who were pre-pubescent when they last charted? It’s almost as if they were trying to counteract the boat-rocking signing of Jay-Z with something purposefully bland and inoffensive, like having cucumber dip with your Balti.

However, the headliners can’t be blamed for the lack of interest in Glastonbury, after all T In The Park also have The Verve and Kings of Leon and they managed to sell out, as did Leeds/Reading (The Killers, Rage Against the Machine and Metallica). The fact is that the Glastonbury ‘experience’ which cons so many into going is losing its sparkle year after year, starting with the sell off of the management to Mean Fiddler in 2002, which was brought on by the fence-jumpers and the ridiculously over populated 2001 and 1999 festivals. So in essence it was the freeloaders who killed Glastonbury, trying to force the hippy envelope and take advantage of the naïve security and the ease of spreading the ‘weak fence pole’ hints online.

If Glastonbury truly is a national treasure there needs to be a re-think on what exactly it is there to achieve. If the original aims were trampled during the Battle of Yeoman’s Bridge in 1991 when New age Travellers clashed with police, they certainly haven’t been allowed to resurface since, instead the festival has moved further and further away from the mission of free entertainment and co-operation. Personally I blame Thom Yorke, and until he’s burned in a wicker man on the Field of Lost Vagueness the ‘Glastonbury Highlights’ programme on the BBC will be mis-named.

Union meetings are great because you're allowed to shout things and you get to vote on issues and then feel like you've actually made a contribution. And I got a free pen! Life doesn't get much better than that.

Saw the google news update of The Man Who Can't Be Named and saw gossi's post which made me spasm as I thought it was real. Divvy.

Well, it's Friday and so here is part 4 of the Writer's Block mini project..

If you knew it was your last day on earth, how would you spend the time?

Well that all depends, I mean, do you find out on the morning of that day or the week before or what? If I knew well in advance I would have an all day party where everyone had to do things I like. In fact, I would have a one day Kirsty Con, where I would subject everyone I knew to a lot of nonsense that only I (mostly) am into. Here is the programme of events :

Screening Room

9.00 am      Beggars and Choosers  - the gay mountain man episode

10.am         Meet Me In St Louis

12pm          Terrahawks - 'Thunder Roar' and 'Ten Top Pop'

1pm            Children's TV Holocaust  - Trapdoor, The Wind In The Willows and The Best of Going Live!

2pm            The Simpsons - 'Lisa's Rival' and 'Bart Sells His Soul'

3pm            Football Frenzy - Champions League Final 99 and 08 (last ten minutes of each), Uniteds; Greatest Goals

4pm             Danny Baker's Own Goals and Gaffs

5pm            Buffy the Vampire Slayer - 'Earshot'

6pm            Heroes - 'Parasite'

7pm            Firefly - 'War Stories'


Main Hall

9.00am      Nintendo DS wifi session for swapping fruit in Animal Crossing and playing Mario Kart

10 am        Skee-Ball tournament

12pm         Open mic

1pm           Fishcake and cheese sandwich lunch

2pm           Kingdom of Loathing 

3pm           Dogs unleashed in hall

4pm           Outdoor water fight plus drying time

5pm           Barbecue and beer tasting

7pm           PARTY!

Then at midnight I'll sneak off and die somewhere while TMBG are on and everyone's dancing to polka. 


Today I went to a leaving party for someone at work who has been there 15 years and is retiring. I like this job, I can imagine being here for 15 years, though I hope I won't be posting on livejournal in my lunch hour when I'm the Principal. Actually, I probably will be. 

Today's Writer's Block is rubbish :

 If you made up your own cereal, what would it consist of, and what would you call it? 

What a boring question. Why would you make your own cereal when there are too many varieties anyway? Choosing cereal now is a real ball ache, they're all either full of crap like Lucky Stars, or not crappy enough like Bran Flakes. I quite like crunchy nut cornflakes but the bits of nut gets stuck in your teeth. I'm also keen on sugar puffs but they go soft too quickly in the milk. I suppose if I made up my own cereal it would be a nut-bit free puff of sugared wheat which was particularly hardy. The Ray Mears of sugared cereals.

Elsewhere in DS Meadows

I have lost my DS charger, and this is causing me some distress. 

I'm going to the Jacaranda for the first time in ages tomorrow, could be messy.

Paypal have incurred my wrath and I may have to write an angry email, or at least seethe quietly.

I need a Father's Day present for my Dad and have no ideas. My ideas so far are : a DS charger, a rabbit, a Poland football shirt.
I'm in the google news update for The Man Who Will Henceforth Not Be Named again today! I'm such a knobhead. Okay, back to the Writer's Block project which I almost forgot about

Out of all the funny things that have ever happened to you, which experience still cracks you up?

The only thing I can think of is a moment at the radio station. Now, when we were on air we were working flat out, 14 hour days if we lucky, and we all went a bit nuts. We used to find a great deal of fun in throwing a small cuddly Tigger onto the fan and seeing how far it would be flung. Once when we were having a particularly stressful day we launched into a game of Tiggerball as the game became known and it flew straight out of the small open window at a single bound and landed in the street below (this was a first floor office). We laughed for about an hour, which is no exaggeration, until we were crying on the floor, at which point we retrieved Tigger and gave him the day off from Tiggerball as a reward for flying so true. On reflection it's not even that funny which is why I find it weird that I remember that one moment out of all the moments of hilarity in my life. 

Elsewhere in DS land

It is much too sunny and I want to go and drink beer, which this morning I challenged myself not to do for a week. 

My contract officially got extended today so I won't be selling flowers in nightclubs, or pegs on doorsteps for the forseeable. 



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