Tuesday, July 07, 2020

Don’t let the Libertarians kid you.

Don’t let the Libertarians kid you. Without our innately cooperative nature,  Humankind would have long been extinct. Killed by larger, sharper clawed, faster, furrier animals. And we MOST certainly would have never developed complex systems like: toilets, roads, crops, garbage service, microchips and the AR15. 

The next time someone tells you their “Natural Rights” or “God Given Rights” are unencumbered by society because they are granted by God and should flow as freely in the modern world as they would if they were on a desert island... make this suggestion:   Go plant yourself on a fucking desert island.  One without all the annoying, cooperatively developed technology required build an AR15.  You are free at that point to re-discover for yourself all that “cooperative tainted" science needed to build your own assault rifle.

You will be able to use everything you build with your bare hands on that desert island with absolute, total, Freedom™.  Use a stick to mine the ore, build the furnaces to smelt it and machine tools cut it, learn the math, metallurgy and chemistry required to build an AR15 and use it freely, as a rugged individualist, with all the "Natural Rights" springing up on that desert island, to your heart's content far away from any of that overbearing Government!

Let's not bitch about the about your loss of “Individual Freedom” to possess lethal technology at will, while you drive your ass down the public road engineered by the DOT to not kill you at 70 mph, with your drivers licence in you pocket and EMTs standing by at every Fire Station you pass, while you use the skills you learned in public school to read the street signs provided, again by the DOT,  to your favorite piece of Public Land managed by the Bureau Of Land Management so YOU can shoot 150 rounds through your AR15 and not be run out of the Kings forest by one of the local Nobles members of the 1%. 

Your individualistic ass drinks every fucking day from the well that humankind has been digging cooperatively for ten thousand years, so don’t be so shocked when society bars you from pissing in it or has the audacity to ask you help dig for a minute or two.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Rear Wheel Steering

Spring has been really aggravating my I-don’t-have-a-motorcycle allergy luckily I found a very effective prescription:  2008 Husqvarna te610.  I developed the allergy at a young age, you can read all about it about it here, but this is a discussion of how I landed myself on the Husky rather than some other bike.

 

 

Since I sold my 88 Honda Hawk I’ve had the itch to replace it.  In fact I made sure my fiancĂ© knew when I sold it that I’d be getting another bike with the money at some point.  I sold the Hawk because I was short on cash and the way I was riding it was scaring the beejesus out of me.  Every where I went I had the need to peg the throttle and I found myself thinking about buying a bigger more powerful bike.  I decided it was time to get away from street bikes. 

 

My house is literally 4 minutes from the closest logging road which, if you navigate right, meanders for a few hundred miles without touching pavement again.  Lower speed, less traffic, great scenery... I’m thinking Dualsport is the right machine for where I live.  So I started looking at bikes. 

 

My first plan is a used Honda XR650L.  It’s a Honda, it must be good, right?  My neighbor has one and he is a total gearhead so I assume that is the best choice and start shopping.  Local dealer wants $5700 for a new one, I use that as my benchmark and hit every Craigslist in the 14 western states.  Pretty quickly I discover that I can buy a new 08 in Portland for $5000, adjust benchmark.  I’m hoping to find a nice used 07 with less than 5000 miles on it for $3500, it doesn’t happen.  Everyone seems to want about $4200 and at that price I’d just assume buy a new one.   I start thinking I need to be shopping for an 05 or 06, hmm, what are the differences between an 05 and an 08? None.  No changes.  In fact there have been no really significant changes since the 1990’s when the bike was introduced.  This is a revelation to me.  I begin to doubt my no-research methodology, maybe my neighbor’s choice was best when he bought the bike but that might not be true today. 

 

I start to actually do my own research.  I decide that weight, power, suspension, and fuel injection are the factors I should be looking for.  The Honda makes about 36 HP, weights 350 lbs, is carbureted and costs $5000, it is the benchmark.  I consider a ton of bikes but  $5900 the demo te610 at my local Husqvarna dealer destroys the price/performance matrix I’ve constructed in my head.  Its fuel injected, weighs ~320 lbs, and makes 50hp at the crank.   Everybody I can find that owns one flat out loves it.

 

I stew over it for week then raid my tax savings account.  I put $xxxx sized wad of cash into my fiancĂ©s wedding account and snap a photo of the deposit slip with my phone.  I send her the picture then head down to the dealer.  She calls me when I’m about 3 blocks away.

 

ME: Hi hon, did you get the photo of the money I put in our wedding account sweetie?

 

HER: Yes I did, that’s great!

 

ME: Good.. hey by the way I’m going to buy that red and white motorcycle I showed you the other day.

 

HER: Uh.. Ok.  When?

 

ME: Now.  I’m 3 blocks from the shop, it’s a good value and my itch for a bike isn’t going to go away.

 

What could she say?

 

I rode the bike home.

 

The next morning I took the bike up Tolman Creek road, a winding narrow bit fun on the mountain.  The last time I rode any kind of dirt bike was about 25 years ago, I was stunned.  This bike has an assload of power and that power apparently can and be mixed with rubber and gravel to manufacture traction.  The experience reminded me riding a wave runner. If you idle along, it kind of drifts and wanders but as soon has you hit the throttle you have perfect steering authority, the craft moves with precision.  The bike felt similar in some ways, nailing the throttle when exiting corners produces a rear-steering sort of effect and traction seems to increase as if the bike is being propelled and steered by a jet of gravel shooting out the back.  Dirt bikes have rear wheel steering, who knew?

Sunday, March 29, 2009

The Motorcycle War

One of my earliest memories is watching the neighbor kid zoom up and down a gully by our house (Canter Lane for those who know) on his "mini bike".  I couldn't have been older than 3 or 4.  I wanted to ride that bike and thus began The Motorcycle War.
When I was 11 or 12 a few kids in my buddy Aryl's neighborhood had dirt bikes.  I didn't, neither did Aryl.  We were extremely jealous.  I asked (read:begged and pleaded) mom and dad if I could get a motorcycle and got a firm no.  I promised to pay for it myself with my paper route money, a whopping $140/month which was actually an assload of money for a 11 year kid to dispose of every month in 1982. They still said no.
  
So I bought one anyway.

You see, there was this old dude on my paper route that had 1971 Suzuki TS 185 in his shed.  It was a not so prime example of early 70's 2 stroke technology.  I bought it from him for $200.  I had no idea where I was going to keep it so I left it in his shed. After a week or so he told me I had to get it out of there.  So I pushed it home and tucked in to an infrequently accessed shed on the side of our house fully knowing that my folks would find it eventually. I was racked with guilt for having disobeyed by parents and thrilled to finally own a dirt bike.
  
I should mention here that I had no idea how to actually drive a motorcycle, and that when I climbed on this bike I couldn't put my feet flat on the ground and that I probably weighed about 110 lbs.
Try to imagine skinny, glasses wearing, guilt ridden kid, trying to teach himself how to ride a motorcycle.  I wish I had video.  I sure it was terrifying slash hilarious for any observer.  
I'd read about motorcycles.  I'd watched some of the neighborhood kids ride.  They had advised me of all the controls and what they did. I was pretty equally determined and terrified.  I remember performing about a thousand jerky stalls before I finally got the thing moving for the first time.  The first time I went around a corner, a 90 degree right hander at the end of our street, I started from the center of my lane then helplessly drifted across the left lane and out into the gravel on the left side of the road.  It didn't corner like my bicycle.  I can't remember if I had a helmet.  I don't think I did.

Those first few weeks were pretty fun.  I'd sneak the bike out of the shed and ride it a few miles to Aryl's house we'd take turns riding it in an empty field that was through patch of forest behind his house.  The kids blessed with motorcycle-parental-support all had much newer and faster machines.  Although I didn't know it at the time, in retrospect, I'm pretty sure that me and my bike were the laughing stock of the neighborhood.  My brother James got respect though.

James was the kid in our house that went to the hospital the most.  He simply lacked fear and didn't have the skill to offset his lack of fear.  They guys had built a jump out in the field.  They would ride their parentally-blessed, shiny, modern powerful dirt bikes over it.  I was in awe of their abilities.  I'd go over the jump at half of their speed probably in 2nd gear.  I'm sure I landed within 3 feet of the end of the dirt ramp.  This was not the case with James.  He started his run at the jump from clear across the field, much further back than anyone else.  He must have been halfway through 4th gear when he hit the ramp.  He flew easily twice as high and twice as far as anyone else.  The seat flew off the bike in mid flight and the fearless pilots' feet came off the pegs making for a less than perfect, but still upright landing.  The parentally-supported-motorcycle kids were stunned and amazed. Suddenly they wanted to ride my bike off the jump since it went so much further.  It was a game changing event for that little posse of pre-pubescent riders.  By the end of summer everyone was hitting that jump "rapped out" in 5th gear.

One day I had run the bike out of gas and was pushing it down the street toward home. I  heard a car approaching, I glanced up at the driver of the passing car and there was my mother!  She kept right on driving.   The fateful PD day arrived. PARENTAL DISCOVERY DAY.  I was fully expecting the earth to crack open and swallow me whole, after my mother forced me to witness my motorbike going through an industrial rock crusher but amazingly none of those things happened.   I think it was at dinner that night.  She said, "So Joe, do you want to tell me about that motorcycle you were pushing down the road today?"  I don't remember the details but in the end I got to keep my motorcycle, the motorcycle war settled into an uneasy truce with neither side giving any more ground.  I got to keep my bike but the situation was far from motorcycle-parental-support.

We drove the shit out of that bike and I had not a tiny clue about how to maintain it. The clutch stopped working but aside from no longer having to pull in the clutch lever, it really didn't affect how we rode at all.  After awhile the brakes stopped working so we used the transmission to slow down and hit the kill switch for a full stop.   

We moved a few years later to a house with a massive piece of lawn and an L shaped garden on the edge of it. Despite genes from my green thumbed grandparents, we are not gardeners.  So brothers and I laid out a track in the grass, culminating in a bermed left hand corner.  It was fun but I got tired of riding over the same loop over and over.  I had a POS (Piece Of Shit) bike and I was an island in the motorcycle world.  I didn't know anyone else with a bike, I didn't know where else to go ride, the bike didn’t run or stop well. Eventually my parents seemed to win the motorcycle war.  I sold it.  

My dad put a card up on the bulletin board at work and some dude with a mullet came out to look at it.  I rode it down to the front lawn and carefully explained the lack of clutch and brakes and demonstrated proper stopping technique.  He hopped on it and proceeded to rip around our bermed corner the wrong direction and fly toward the flat corner at the end of the lawn.  He was quickly faced with a choice between bailing off and or cashing into the forest.  He bailed, then gave me 300 bucks for the bike.  

My urge for a motorcycle never disappeared, it was just submerged for the next ~20 years under the morass life, poverty and  parenthood.  Still, every time I drove through open land I always imagined driving a dirt bike through the scape.  I was always curious about where the dirt roads to nowhere   -went.  

In the early nineties my brother and I stopped by the local Honda dealership to ogle.  He was fixated on the Honda Hawk NT650, which since has become a cult classic.  Its a 650cc v-twin naked street bike.  It had what was widely considered to be a lack lust engine and a great chassis.   The twin spar aluminum frame with a single side rear swing arm was very advanced for its day and the bike had a reputation for fantastic handling.  

Early 2002 I was without children had pretty steady job and  my on girlfriend at the time had turned me on to  coolness of the Ducati Monster.  Like the Honda Hawk it was a V-Twin naked bike with reputation for good handling.  I was scanning classified and checking the local dealer for used bikes.  Then I found out that my girlfriend was pregnant.   End of motorcycle urge for the foreseeable future.  The next four years were an age of turbulence, with a lot of happiness, heartbreak, poverty and growth.  

2007 found me the owner of a freight brokerage and with more financial stability than at at any point in the previous 17 years.  My two wheeled urge returned.  My brother had two words for me:  Honda Hawk and I had new weapon in The Motorcycle War:Craigslist.  For a month I inhaled everything on the Internet related to this bike including Craigslist forsale data in the 14 western states.  When a 2 owner bike with 12,000 miles for $1800 popped up in Sacramento I was on the phone within an hour and owned the bike within 24 hours.  I bought it sight unseen based on my conversations with the owner.  I took me almost 2 weeks line up the schedule of a friendly local trucking company with Sacramento.  I had the previous owner band it down to a skid and set on the back of a flatbed truck.  It arrived at poached loading dock at about 9 pm.  
It was cold, dark and wet.  I was wearing my snowboarding gear.  I'd never driven a street bike before.  I practiced a bit on the abandoned street of the industrial park, then picked my way to my hot girlfriends' garage.  It was a great bike.   

I rode it every chance I got.   I put almost 1000 miles on it in JANUARY!  I rode it to lunch, to the mailbox to my girlfriends house to the shooting range, to everywhere.  In the summer I went on a few group rides with the local riding group, I loved it but it scared me.  
Riding on the street is addictive and like drugs I had to go faster and faster to get the same rush.  by the end of summer I'd put about 3000 miles on the bike and kept finding myself going 84 mph in places where you really shouldn't be going 84 mph.  I had the itch for a bigger and more powerful bike.  I figured that if I continued on that trajectory I would need to get a dedicated track bike and stop riding on the street.  When my daughters tuition came due I was a bit tight on money so I sold the Hawk for $2500 with plans to replace it in the future.  I'd owned the bike for about 10 months, put 3000 miles, an new chain and new sprockets on it.  I made about $500 and gained valuable experience.   I think that it was my last street bike.







Monday, July 07, 2008

Ashland: Home Sweet Home

July 7, 2008

I cut off my hair and moved to Ashland.


I like it... both.

Thinking about getting McCain sticker just to be difficult.

My GF and I found a great place, 4 bedrooms, hot tub, garden, deck, pretty new (2005?) and pretty cheap on rent...  I moved out of my dump in west medford to pimp house in Ashland and my rent drops $200.. go figure.  The place happens to be one block from Ashland Mountain Adventures which bodes well for me and freshly minted bike.  This town suits me.

The company is also good.  BVZ and I,  and our respective offspring, seem to be fitting together well.  I tend to get more shit done and not worry so much about the shit I don't get done with her around.  She's making me happy.

-j

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Quick and not so dirty!




May 17th 2008
Race: Sucked.
Motorcycle: Terrifying and cool.

Moving to Ashland in with my fabstastic GF, kinda  terrifying, very exciting.  We have a sweet place.

I'd like to personally curse / thank to ASS HOLE who stole my bike:

I curse thee with the flees of one thousand camels. I'm sure there is an extra hot spost in hell for anyone who steals a bicycle.

Thank you very much for stealing my bike.  My insurance company replaced it with a  Santa Cruz Nomad with all the fixins, I couldn't be happier.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Love and Kindness



Because, over my deep core of extremely nice guy I sometime wear the shell of an ASSHOLE-

I just want shout out a ginormous:  NAH NAH NA HAN NAAAAHH NA (insert rasberry noise here)  -to all folks who weren't able to attend the Camper Van Beethoven show last night.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Sex on wheels.



It is a flat out miracle that I don't own a Ducati Monster.  I want one. There is a nice used one for sale locally.  I have the money.  Only my normally paper thin sense of financial responsibility is holding me back.  WEIRD

stuff.i.use.dat





Adobe Lightroom: Image database/editor/tagger/printer

Slim Server / Squeeze Box + wireless network = all the music on your computer available through a powered speakers anywhere in your house or through your tuner. (supports FLAC)

FLAC Free Lossless Audio Codec: Kinda like a mp3 format only WAY BETTER in terms of sound quality. IE: Joe buys music on cd / Rips to FLAC / store or sell CD / Listen to anywhere. *forsale Sony 300 Disk CD changer $90

Pidgin: Open Source Multiprotocol Chat client. Got friends on yahoo, icq, msn and aim? No problem.

Launchy: Open Source window application launcher / search widget / calculator

Google Notepad: Web based shareable note pad. Work: Call Log, Quote Log, Specialized truck list. // Personal: To Do list, To Buy list, Birthday ideas, Family Recipies, Camping trip list, beach list,

Google Calandar: one for me/Avery. One for work. One for me and Girlfriend etc.

Viewsonic VG2230 22" widescreen LCD monitors. 2x they kick ass and only cost about $300

Raid 5 drive array: fast, redundant.

Filemaker Pro: allows non programers to pretend.

Sig .22 cal w/silencer: plink with no ear protection! A bitch to aquire, a blast to shoot.

4wd 6speed 1991 Honda Civic Wagon: The ultimate 28mpg snow car.

Alesis M1 MkII Monitors: The perfect computer speakers. Used on Ebay.

www.craigslist.org : With time on your side you can get a good deal on ANYTHING by using this site. IE: Fender Bass $60 // B&W Speakers $150 // Sold Nikon N90s.

Nikon D3: NOT YET // Full Frame Sensor // ISO 25600 // Great ergonomics // Ugly price

Ducati Monster S4: NOT YET // WAY better than any low tech bad handling, heavy slow, pointlessly loud, ugly Harley Davidson. ( I'm sure I just offended the masses)

Keen Shoes: Great for folks with wide feet.

Redheaded GF: Good for the Soul.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Religious Experience




All of you (all 4 that is ) with the exception of the photo nerd, might as well tune this one out.

As I'm sure you know from reading my previous blogs I almost sold my soul awhile ago and joined the digital world under the Canon flag.  Being the shallow DOF WHORE that I am, I couldn't stand the idea of shooting on small sensor (DX in Nikonspeak)  I even went so far as to build a nice Bronica 6x6 system in an exercise in financial self-mutilation.  Since Nikon didn't offer any "full frame" cameras(image sensor equal in size to a frame of 35mm film)  I've been rocking back in forth in the corner mumbling to myself while twitching.  Finally, after blowing another ~$100 on 36 badly focused 6x6 images I had about decided that I was going to have to encase my heart in steel and buy a canon 5D.... but figured I'd wait till after the next round of body announcements from Nikon.  Thank GOD!  Nikon announced this week their first full frame digital SLR.

 

This machine (based on its spec sheet) is a great example of the quirky resourcefulness of Nikon.  Nikon makes lithography equipment.  This stuff is used in the chip fab plants to etch circuits in silicone.  So they know how to work with chips but they don't make their own.  This has put them at a slight disadvantage to Canon which fabricates their own sensors.  In the case of the D3, Nikon designed the sensor and isn't saying who they farmed the fabrication out to... probably Sony. 

It is as fantastic sensor... beyond fantastic.. amazing.  While the universe obsesses about mega pixel count, Nikon has focused on image quality, dynamic range, and sensitivity.  At 12 mega pixels and full frame this sensor has MASSIVE imaging sites (pixels) this means low noise, great shadow detail, great dynamic range and STELLAR ISO performance.  This little fucker goes to ISO 25,600. Compared to your average 400 speed film, this thing will get a good capture in light only 1/24th as strong. Think: well exposed-naked girl-shots, by CANDLE LIGHT!!  The 12 mega pixel resolution next to Canons 21 mega pixel, $7K, body, might seem less than cutting edge but consider this:  In a printed image you need 4 times the resolution to double print size.  In reality you can only print about %30 larger @ 21 mpix vs. 12.  Some say that current lenses don't really resolve anything over about 16 m-pix ( in 35mm format) so at 21, you don't really capture any more detail, you just generate larger files and expose the flaws in your lens system.  I don't KNOW this is true but for $2,000 and my soul I'll take it on faith.

Now all if have to is wait patiently till November, scrounge up $5K for the body, and about $5K more for a few lenses.


-J F S

for sale:
Bronica SQAI Bodies (2) $550
PS 40mm    350
PS 180mm  $450
PS 50   $200
PS 80mm (2) $150
PS 150mm $150
AE finder $300
Waist Level Finder $50
Prizm Finder $100
Power Winder $250
Grip $100
Bag of ramdom shit $50

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

STOLEN!!


Somebody STOLE the big blue couch off my front lawn!! I advertised it for sale a few days ago here. The idea was that someone was supposed to leave $20 in the mail box upon removing the couch. Last night I go check the mail at my old place and the couch is gone but NO $20 IN THE MAIL BOX!! BASTARDS!
I crack myself up
.


Monday, July 16, 2007

Compact Digital Cameras



I get this or some variation of it alot:

quick question - my ma gave me some $ for a digital camera, and i need some intel. my pa thinks canon is the way to go (it's just for point and shoot/light travel purposes), and the only feature he said to insist on was optical image stabilization. do you have anything to add/subtract? lemmeknow, k?

I'll side step the whole sensor size / depth of field trade off as I've covered it the past.  Lets just say that don't get alot of contol of DOF in a digtal P&S so if that photographic tool is important to you, don't buy a digital point and shoot.

Moving right along.

Camera Shiznit:

I really recommend the reviews on this site:

www.dpreview.com

Query their database by feature/cost/brand/formfactor etc... Their reviews are very comprehensive... so comprehensive in fact that I'd recommend skipping to the conclusion.

I generally agree with your Pops on Image Stabilization (IS)... be careful there are a lot of cameras that advertise IS but are really just choosing higher shutter speeds and calling it IS, read the fine print.

I don't think Stabilization is that important unless you get a camera with a big zoom range. Out @ 150mm + you need some help holding that lens still. I personally would much rather have the wide end of the zoom than the long.  The difference in how an image looks @ 28mm wide vs 38mm wide is HUGE where as the difference between 120mm and 180mm is minor.  Also lens quality goes down as zoom range goes up.. what good is a 38-420mm zoom if the images look like shit?  28mm on the wide end is very rare in the compact camera segment because the average consumer doesn't know what the numbers really mean.  They think high numbers must be better so they choose the 38-420mm piece of shit lens over the 28-70mm sharp lens.  Personally I'd love to have sharp 24-48mm F1.4 (great for low light) in a compact camera.  But its never going to happen.

Canon makes the S80 with a 28-110 lens that reviewed pretty well. I'm not sure its still in production. Panasonic also builds wide angle compacts but they apparently have some image quality issues.

http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canons80/page14.asp

Most compact cameras are worthless after about ISO 200.  Fuji builds their own sensors and has developed great technology for for better iso performance... so if shooting indoors/low light is important to you you might consider this camera which got a stellar review and has OPTICAL Stabilization:

http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/fujifilmf31fd/page17.asp

Canon is pretty much the 800 lb gorilla in the market, they build great stuff. Check out this camera of theirs:


http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canona710is/page12.asp

back to work!

Sunday, July 15, 2007

The Last Temptation of Joe



Digital.

It tears my heart but I'm about about to abandon film.  It kills me because I've built an absolutely beautiful medium format camera rig over the last year at a cost of about $3000.  Its the system I've dreamed of owning for ten years.  Now that I have it I find that I'm not happy with it.   Its slow, hard to focus, heavy, expensive ($1.20/frame).  It really requires a herculean effort to get just few good shots out it.  Thoes few good ones are usually spectacular.

Every day I see amazing  shots by folks who have owned a digtal SLR less than a year.  They shoot, adjust, re-shoot  tweak and publish.  I'm tired of waiting for film to come back only to be disappointed by what is on the film.  I want to be able to fix my fuckups while i'm still shooting.

I'm waiting for Nikons next pro-body announcement and if its not full frame* I'm dumping the last remnants of my Nikon system and buying a canon 5D.  

Anyone know where I can get a good price for my Soul while I'm at it?

- J F S


*Full Frame =  Image sensor the same size as a frame of 35mm film  (24mm x 36mm)  Most digital SLR's use a "cropped" sensor making it more difficult to control depth of field.

Friday, July 13, 2007

The Iron Giant // Work



The Iron Giant *KICKS ASS* !  No matter how many times I watch it with bot on the couch I never get tired of it.  Same with Nightmare Before Christmas.

Take your average "very busy day" at work and multiply it by three... thats what my day was today.  Consider that on average I move about 30 loads of freight per month or about 1.4 loads per day. 

Today I moved NINE. 

Thats 9 loads. 

NINER, NINE-O-MATIC, NINEAMOUS, NINECHO.

As in 30-fucking-percent of a MONTHS' worth of business in one day.  I took lunch break too. Can't wait till pay day.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Tuesday Swing in A-Town // $2! // Air Conditioned



A friend of mine who is a dance instructor is hosting a series of dance nights in ashland this month.  I plan to be there it should be really good time with plenty of drinking afterward.  You don't need to be a fantastic dancer to have a blast.  Ladies if you can move your feet, you can learn enough swing in ten minutes to follow a half decent lead so come on  out!! Here is the dirt:


What's up?

This is an open Swing Dance. There won't be any real formal instruction, but Nate and I will each bring an intermediate step to share, for those who are interested. We'll be playing various tempos of Big Band/Swing music for Lindy, Balboa, Charleston and East Coast Swing.

When?
Tuesdays, July 17 & 24 (also July 31, if people are still interested) 7:00-8:30.

Where?
Grove Gym, 1195 E Main Street in Ashland. (It's air conditioned!)

How Much?
We're asking $2/person to help pay for the room, etc.

How do I sign up?
You don't! Just come.


-Cori

www.UpAndDancing.com
541-Redacted

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Transformers



This movie KICKS ASS!!  I just flatout loved it.  They didn't get all distracted by potential sub plots or love lines... they kept the story clean and robots trey kewl.  My favorite Gatling gun with an air frame wrapped around it (A-10) got a bit part.  Jukes joint strike fighter was a lead bad guy... I have a feeling I may be taunted about that.  Bumped in to N & J which was cool/weird... I have this little itch in the back of my head... like I should know these folks better.

Frank Sinatra // Cake



I'd really be interested in hear what people thing this song is about.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

An Examination of “Nugget” by Cake



One of the best songs of all time.  This song is a commentary wrapped in symbolism and analogy.



/Lyrics/
Heads of state who ride and wrangle    

[ These are the Politicians, Lawyers and Corporations they serve]

Who look at your face for more than one angle      

[Weighting the value of your vote (if you will vote) and against the cost of what they have to represent to get your vote.  2 angles cost/benefit.]

Can cut you from their bloated budgets

[Cut social and education programs aimed at the middle class, working poor, and homeless]

Like sharpened knives through chicken mcnuggets      

[Can do it easily, its will cost them very little politically.]

Now, heads of state who ride and wrangle
Who look at your face for more than one angle
Can cut you from their bloated budgets
Like sharpened knives through chicken mcnuggets


(Shut the fuck) up
Yo, shut the fuck up
(Shut the fuck)
Right, right, learn to buck up
(Shut the fuck)
Right, shut the fuck up, hey, ho
(Shut the fuck)
Now, now learn to buck up

 [The voice of the politicians, corporations and the wealthy saying:  Quit whining about your poverty, your hunger, your need, your alienation, your $8/life, your lack of health insurance.  BUCK UP you could fix it if you wanted to. It's your own fault.  We shouldn't have to help you.  You are lazy.]



Now, nimble fingers that dance on numbers

[Analysts, Accountants, MBAs- Servants of the Corporations]


Will eat your children and steal your thunder   

[Will figure out how co-opt more of your effort, time, energy, and also how to keep your children in the same cycle of wage slavery, poverty and debt.]

While heavy torsos that heave and ho

[The heavy lifters of the economy, the people who actually do the work, drive the trucks make the widgets, build the roads]


Will crunch like nuts in the mouths of squirrels 

[Crushed by the Analysts, Accounts Lawyers, Corporations.

Now, nimble fingers that dance on numbers   

[Nimble on a calculator (Analysts/MBA's Accountants)]
Will eat your children and steal your thunder               

[Again, they plot to keep your children in the same cycle of poverty and steal the creative efforts of your work through non-compete agreements, contracts and patent law.]


While heavy torsos that heave and ho
Will crunch like nuts in the mouths of squirrels

(Shut the fuck) up
Yo, shut the fuck up
(Shut the fuck)
Right now learn to buck up
(Shut the fuck)
Right, shut the fuck up yeah, ho! Yow!
(Shut the fuck) Yow! Yow! Yow!
Learn to buck up

Now, simple feet that flicker like fire                           
And burn like candles in smokey fires 

[INDIVIDUALS trapped, burning like candles, separate from others that share their fate.]



Do more to turn my joy to sadness
Than somber thoughts of burning planets        

[The thought of individuals suffering, troubles the commentator more the threat of global catastrophe.]

Now, clever feet that flicker like fire               

[Its clever, intelligent, talented people in this trap, not just lazy]
         
And burn like candles in smokey fires
Do more to turn my joy to sadness
Than somber thoughts of burning planets 

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Sick


My daughter arrived this morning @ 8:32:04 AM by 8:32:26 there was puddle of vomit on the floor.   No fever. Just can't hold any food down.  It squeezes my heart to see my little bot not well.  The weird part is that little bit of me is a happy about it because she will probabally be willing to sleep on my chest on couch, which she hasn't done in a long time.  Fatherhood.... is 

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

www.fuzz.com


Once again, my personal Music Collection and Taste Manager, Annamarie** (she is so expensive!) turned me on something spectacular:
www.fuzz.com

Its pretty much the most ass kicking music site there is. Frankly if you don't subscribe to her blog you're missing out and if she is not on your friends list you are not anywhere near as cool as ME.


jfs_braindump


**Nicole- You should hire her you need an update. Erasure IS a guilty pleasure... you obviously haven't your guilty.pleasures.dat file since 2003