Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Lightning and Snow

The evening of December 9th saw it snow in Austin. I'm not talking little flurries, I'm talking big, honking snowflakes.

People outside, taking pictures, running around with their dogs, talking about Christmas miracles, making excited phone calls, etc.

Of course it didn't last long, but while it did, it was fun.

I was listening to the radio in my car (not a frequent thing for me) and "Janie's Got a Gun" came on. Not my favorite, but I stayed with it. When Tyler says "lightning" a few minutes into the song, a bolt of lightning darted down from the sky on the horizon. SO AWESOME! NEW FAVORITE SONG!

OK I should get back to work on my grad school essay. I'm almost done, I swear!



"Dancing in the Dark"
Bruce Springsteen

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Hurr Derr More Politics

I won't say anything about the outcome of Prop 8 that hasn't been better said by Priya (hope you don't mind the shout-out), but I will repeat one of the ideas she raises. A lot of people who oppose gay marriage site the idea that if we let humans of the same gender marry each other, then that will undoubtedly lead to people wanting to marry goats, trees, postage stamps, Playstations, Astroglide, hairless cats, large jugs of moonshine, dildos, etc. If you claim this idea as your own, then you also claim the idea that gay men and woman are less human than straight men and women. Does that sit well with you?

OK, that's all.

I just watched SiCKO (yeah, I spelled it like that) again for the first time since seeing it in theaters a while back. Lauren hadn't seen it before. I think it's really Moore's finest work. I didn't like Fahrenheit 9/11 for various reasons. Bowling for Columbine had some great moments (I'm a huge fan of strict gun regulation -- the 2nd Amendment is vastly misunderstood in this country). I think SiCKO is pretty great from start to finish. However, I ultimately think it works better as an indictment of the US health care system than a glorification of socialized medicine systems in Canada, the UK, France, and Cuba. I'm not foolish enough to believe that socialized medicine doesn't come at a price in terms of high taxes and some way-of-life changes, but I do maintain the belief that we should try socialized medicine in this country. Our system, as it stands, is corrupt, broken, and misanthropic. The medical profession was never meant to be the cash cow it's become in the US. I'm hopeful that Obama will lean us in that direction before his first four years are done.

I'd love to know what everyone thinks about this. Reasons against socialized medicine resonate with me a great deal -- it's not like I'm completely sold on my stance. But yeah, I've heard good reasons for and against and it seems like something this country should be open to.




"Red Star"
Third Eye Blind

Monday, November 10, 2008

Long Live Jenkins

Third Eye Blind has released a new single. Apparently, they have an EP coming out on November 18 called "Red Star." I suggest you check it out. Thanks to Mike for the link.

About the song: it's pretty political, which I usually give a big "herrrr durrrrr derpy derp" to. But, the lyrics are actually so dumb that I can't even fault the song for being too political. I really like the song, though. I also like the nod to M.I.A., naturally.




"Non-Dairy Creamer"
Third Eye Blind

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Oh, Can We?

Obviously I'm pretty happy about the country's choice of President, but what the fuck was Michelle Obama wearing?

I would also love to discuss this issue with you in person, but I'll offer the topic here. Sorry to be a downer, but can we talk about the race issue? People on TV are acting like racism is "so last season" now that Obama is the President, but does anyone actually believe that because the majority of America made an informed decision to elect a "black" (more on the quotes in a second) President that it means the end of racism in America? I hope as much, but I'm skeptical.

Also, the cynic in me wants to stand up and ask, "would America have voted the same way if President Obama had two black parents instead of one?" During this whole thing, people have labeled President Obama as "black" seemingly to bolster an argument either for or against him. It's so irrelevant, yet not historically irrelevant. I see the history here, I do. It's a pretty big deal -- obviously I don't have the personal context to see it as a huge deal, you know? I get it. I see the crying, happy faces and feel something for them, but not for the country, necessarily. I'm very happy for the people that feel warm and comfortable in the historical context of the election. It's a very cool thing.

But I am a cynic. He's not black. I want President Obama to be a historical President for reasons other than half of his genes.

I'm hopeful that America will get the race thing out its system because of President Obama and see him as a great man and a great leader for this country. I'm tired of the race thing from both sides.

I'm still struck by something Colin Powell said a week ago or so. He said what amounted to an indictment of people claiming that it would be some grand horror if Barack Obama was a Muslim. He basically gave a "so what" to the idea of having a Muslim President in America. Everyone on the news tonight, tomorrow, and five years from now needs to get a little perspective here. A "black," Christian candidate wins the Presidency and everyone thinks "anyone can do fucking anything they want to in America!!!!!!" We wouldn't give a Muslim candidate the time of day in this country. Nor a Buddhist, nor a Hindu, nor an atheist. We barely give Jewish candidates as much.

Let's pump the breaks. We finally elect someone who is half black. Way to fucking go. Now let's work on electing people who choose to be something other than the status quo in America.

This was a bit scatterbrained, I know. I don't for one second want to suggest I'm not elated about the result of this election. I believe John McCain is a good man and would've been a good leader, something that I know many of my peers don't believe, but I think President Obama is the kind heart and the big brain this country needs -- whether you see it now or not.

Though, if I'm right, I think most of my readers do see that. I don't want to assume as much, though. As far as I can tell, the rest of the world seems pretty happy about our decision.

And, I'm sorry if you don't like that I sometimes talk about politics. It can really be obnoxious, I know. I really want to not be obnoxious about it, though. I like talking about issues without getting all huffy and irritated.

Also, I can't believe I'm saying this, but hurrah for Carrie Underwood. If I see Oprah half taking credit for Obama's success one more time, I'm going to blow my brains out.

But yes, good job.




"Perfect Crime #2"
The Decemberists

Friday, October 31, 2008

Just A Question, Not A Judgment. I Swear.

If you like the show 30 Rock, could you tell me why? I just can't get into it. Have I seen two bad episodes?

It might help to see the episodes in order. Maybe we're just not destined to be TV BFFs. That's OK. I want to like it, though, you know?




"The Most Beautiful Girl in the Room"
Flight of the Conchords

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Middle of the Day, Lights On

Dear Dead Space,

Fuck you, fuck you, fuck you. You are really scary, but I can't put you down. Stop scaring me, though. Seriously.

Yours forever,
John xoxoxoxoxo




"Got Friends"
The Jealous Sound

Monday, September 29, 2008

Different Kind of Hipster

Surgery again. Yes, indeedy. I have to have surgery to fix dysplasia in my left hip. The socket isn't big/closed enough to house my femur. I suspected as much starting on Thursday morning last week when I got out of bed to find that I could barely put weight on my left leg. Even for a cripple, it was alarming. It kind of feels like how that guy who ran the marathon and then collapsed all awkwardly because his muscles stopped working looked. You know that guy?

OK, that wasn't it, but it made me laugh.

It just felt totally off. I went to the doctor today knowing full well what was in store. I don't need x-rays to tell me my hip is partially dislocated. Go figure.

Here's how getting my x-rays taken went:

Nurse: Just head in the door on the left.
John: OK, thanks.
Kooky Tech: Hi, there!
J: Hello.
KT: (supersonic mumble) Cnnnoostand?
J: What?
KT: Can you stand?
J: Oh, yeah.
KT: Great! (pause, to Lauren in supersonice mumble) Arrrrooooprgnt?
Lauren: What?
KT: (ss mumble) Anychcccceooooprgnt?
L: What?
KT: A-n-y c-h-a-n-c-e y-o-u a-r-e p-r-e-g-n-a-n-t?
L: Oh! No.
J: (laughing) That would be news to me!
KT: (covers John's ears, laughing) Are you pregnant?

He thought all of that was so funny. When I sat back down in my wheelchair he also said that, "you're like all of my old ladies, just plopping down like that!" God, what a card. After returning to the examination room, Lauren was quick to inform me that, while she couldn't really tell if my hip was out of socket from the x-ray, she could see my penis. Like totally, clearly, in all of its glory -- my wiener.

I didn't 100% believe it at the time. We'll come back to that. Then the doctor came in. We talked about my pain for a while and then the conversation turned to my past surgeries.

Doc: Who did your last osteotomy?
J: Doctor Herring at Scottish Rite in Dallas.
D: Tony Herring?
J: Yeah.
D: Oh great! I went to med school with his daughter.
J: Oh yeah? He's a good guy.
D: Yes he is.
J: He also did my scoliosis surgery.
D: (gets up and leaves without saying a word, leaves the door open behind him)
-
-
-
-
-
7 minutes later...
D: (comes back in)
J: Hey there.
D: (leans over Lauren, looks at GRE math book) You doin some math, there?
L: (pause) Yeah. I have the GRE tomorrow.
J: We're both really bad at math.
D: I'm doing Kumon with my kid right now -- we're doing stuff like 12 + 8 and I'm all banging my head against the desk.
J: Uh huh.
D: Right, so you have dysplasia in your left hip...

I can't really describe to you how amazing it was how he just fucking peaced out for seven minutes without saying a goddamn thing about it. Long story short, he referred me to some doctors at Southwestern that I'll need to get in touch with. If any of this sounds familiar to you, it should. I had hip dysplasia in my right hip when I was thirteen. The recovery from the surgery then was horrible, but it should be much less horrible this time around. Something about how my pelvis wasn't fully grown when I was kid and how I had to keep my hips stationary and blah blah blah medical shit blah blah blah. I'm just so fucking happy I won't have to be in bed for two months straight. I don't know when I'm having surgery, but it'll probably be relatively soon (long before the end of October, I'm guessing). I'll keep everyone posted, though.

The link I'm about to post is a Xanga entry I just created with the two x-rays after the jump. I'm serious about this: if you don't want to see what really amounts to my penis, ass cheeks, and scrotum in between at metal hip and a hip without a socket (pretty fucked up), then do not follow the link. I do feel weird about posting this, but I think it's very funny that x-ray technology today does involve the vague outline of one's genitals. If you're very creeped out that I did this and don't find the humor in it, please tell me. Seriously, it won't offend me. I think it's hilarious, though.

And here it is.

UPDATE: I took the most obvious one down. I'm such a wuss. I think the one that's still up is funnier, though.




"Bruises"
Chairlift

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

God, I'm Unoriginal

Priya did it. Why shouldn't I? I love to watch myself write, I have nothing better to write about, and I frankly find myself daydreaming about making a room of snobby stage and screen students laugh with admiration on a fairly regular basis. So here goes:

Inside the Actor's Studio with John

1) What is your favorite word?
Daft. I love this word, especially when the Brits say it. I wish I could do a British accent as well as Hugh Laurie can do an American accent.

2) What is your least favorite word?
Moist. No joke. It really is my least favorite. Priya didn't even remind me of it or anything -- that's seriously my answer. What are you looking at?

3) What turns you on?
Being totally helpless with laughter. Ricky Gervais, Michael Cera, Steve Carell, or H. Jon Benjamin are usually involved.

4) What turns you off?
College students. I used to hate high school students, but I'd be that dumb too if I had fucking nothing to really worry or think about. Also, I'm sorry if you're reading this and are a college student. I might hate you, but you're probably an exception.

5) What sound do you love?
Really great videogame music. I know it's lame. I'd say something like "my very favorite band," but that's cheating, isn't it? I like the epic RPG stuff, but recently I've been really impressed with the old stuff. Mega Man music, the Mario theme, etc. I don't like the trend of twerps using 8-bit synth to write original music as popular music. You know? Just not my thing.

6) What sound do you hate?
The Amber Alert sound on the Dallas news stations. Seriously. It's about 21 seconds in and isn't very loud, but you'll get the idea. Fuck.

7) What is your favorite curse word?
I use "fuck" the most, but I have to say I think my very favorite is a simple "asshole." A good "asshole" is hard to find. A well-delivered "asshole" is just delightful. DON'T BE IMMATURE, PEOPLE.

8) What profession other than yours would you like to attempt?
I would love to be a lead developer on a critically successful console videogame. I'd love to stand in front of the sweaty masses at E3 or such and really talk about a game I'm proud of and a game that people actually love. I'd like people to feel warm and nostalgic while playing my game. I'd like my game to be one of those games that, years later, sells for hundreds of dollars on eBay because so many people held on to their copies of it. You know?

9) What profession other than yours would you not like to attempt?
Airline pilot. Too much pressure. Too scared of flying. Bad, bad combination of things working there.

10) If heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?
I've never liked this question. My mind's eye of heaven is more like a feeling than a place. Sitting around a fire during winter, Christmas lights, great TV show on, friends and family around, you know? I'm a massive sap, I know. It's just what I believe, OK? Thanks. But! If this scenario were reality, I guess I'd like it if God said, "Why so surprised? You have to do a lot more than making fun of ugly people to get sent to hell."



"Sex on Fire"
Kings of Leon

Friday, September 19, 2008

Um, Hello?

I don't need to go on a crusade for women. They can do it a lot better and more convincingly than I.

However.

Ohhhhhhhhhh boy, however.

There's a show on E! called "Stars Without Makeup" that I really do need to discuss.

You can guess what the show is about -- tabloid photos are shown of celebrities around town without makeup on. I have a lot of problems with this.

1) I'm no advocate of the idea that celebrities are just like everyone else and don't deserve the kind of scrutiny they get. I don't believe that. I believe that most celebrities, most celebrities, are in the spotlight because they want to be in the spotlight. They get the attention they want. My opinion, whatever. However, I think the behavior of said celebrities should be fair game for scrutiny, but not whether or not Eva Longoria eats lunch with Tony Parker without makeup. She should be scrutinized for eating fucking lunch with Tony fucking Parker, but not the makeup she does or does not wear. Angelina Jolie eats her baby's placenta? OK, that's game for scrutiny, but if she doesn't wear makeup, who gives a shit?

2) I'm getting very tired of the "I Love the....." formula -- people we don't and shouldn't care about spouting off about the absolute zero of popular culture. I don't care how many cars the backup dancers from Danity Kane have. No one should. And female celebrities choosing not to wear makeup is just about the bottom of the barrel.

3) The pictures don't even look that bad, for the most part. Nicolette Sheridan isn't wearing a stitch of makeup yet still looks better than most women I see in a day. Same goes for Kristen Davis.

4) They use mugshots. They kind of gloss over the reason behind the arrest (just a little written blurb at the bottom) and say things like, "Uh, couldn't Mischa Barton [who looked great, anyway] ask the police officer for a second to put on some lip liner? Uh, hellooooooooooo?"

5) They talk about makeup like it's something someone can apply in less than 10 seconds. Anyone who has at least ever spoken to a woman who wears makeup will call shenanigans on this one.

6) Most of the women appear to be wearing some form of makeup. Most are wearing some sort of eye liner or foundation. It's just nit-picky bullshit.

7) We're now to my biggest two reasons. Most of the women are doing something more or less noble or important when pictured. Like Felicity Huffman, for example, was running in a marathon in LA on a Saturday morning and wasn't wearing makeup. Yet they crucified her. Julianne Moore was pushing her child in a stroller for a morning walk. No makeup. Crucifixion. But it doesn't even really matter what they're doing. If they don't want to wear makeup, don't wear makeup.

8) I don't care how gay you are. I don't care how into women's fashion you are. I don't care how many awards you've won for designing women's clothes. If you are a man, you should not be bitching about a woman not wearing makeup. Seriously, don't do it. Be a fucking man. Don't be a fucking weasely prick acting all catty about women who wear less makeup than you. You're not a fucking fashion icon because you wear sparkly glitter makeup around your eyes and Katie Holmes doesn't. You can't be serious going on television and complaining about people who don't wear makeup. Frankly it's not even relevant that I brought up the gay thing. It's not. It just happens that every man on this show moaning about it was gay. I'd like to think that not all gay men feel like they can critique women willy nilly. I can't see Tim Gunn walking up to Heidi Klum and saying some bullshit about how she needs to wear more liquid liner. She's fucking Heidi Klum. Know better than you do now, you bottomfeeding dickwads. Get some class, fellas.

I know I seem very surprised that this show exists. I don't know why. It's just a step down from Perez Hilton. And frankly, women shouldn't be bitching about other women not wearing makeup.

Jesus.

*Sigh*

I just had to discuss that.




"Electric Feel"
MGMT

Monday, September 15, 2008

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Brainbustaaaaaaaaaaaaah

How the Christ did I miss that Okkervil River released a new album?

Jeez.




"Lost Coastlines"
Okkervil River

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

The Bull Shit Party, Get It?

I'm biased. I know. So bear with me.

I don't write about politics very often -- I'm not very good at it and I usually just end up getting huffy and weird. I feel compelled, though, to write about the perceived mindset of the common Republican voter.

I watched Rudy "I'll Exploit 9/11 Until the Day I Die" Giuliani's speech to introduce Sarah Palin with mouth agape. I don't understand the voter that listens to that speech (it was full of fear-mongering, fact twisting, sarcasm, etc.) and doesn't yell "HORSESHIT" at their TVs. I don't understand the voter that feels like living in the United States means you have to live in fear of "our enemies." I don't understand the voter that thinks that Americans are so far superior to the rest of the world that they don't think basic diplomacy and staying out of everyone's underwear will make all of us safer. I don't understand the voter that likes to make decisions based on fear instead of logic.

Then again, I don't understand anyone who doesn't believe in equal rights for all.

There is certainly snarkiness on the Democratic side. I know. I don't agree with that, either. I guess my issue is while the Dems seem more intent on making it known that they're willing to fiercely debate these issues, the Republicans seem intent on belittling the ideas of half the country.

I can't tell you how much bullshit that is. I find many Republican stances compelling, I do. My parents have raised me to be sympathetic toward conservative fiscalism. I truly believe the wealthy shouldn't be punished for making more. I don't. Doesn't make sense to me. But I'm a social liberal, through and through.

Jesus was a social liberal.

Buddha was a social liberal.

Everyone should be a social liberal. Fuck, I can't even really justify the "liberal" part of that phrase. What's liberal about rights for everyone in this country? It's just the way it should be.

The right to bear arms is the most misinterpreted Amendment in this country, but many conservatives feel that guns should be lightly regulated at best. Nobody studies social trends and politics simultaneously, it seems.

So Sarah Palin.

Like Bush, she seems like a woman I'd enjoy having a few drinks with. I bet she'd be a laugh riot. But are we really supposed to believe that the emporer of mighty Alaska is really more experienced than Obama? Shit, I don't even really care, to be honest. But since the Republicans are making experience just a big fucking deal, is anyone really listening to anyone saying the governor of fucking Alaska of two years has more experience than Obama when it comes to 90% of the things the President of the United States needs to know?

I feel like I'm taking crazy pills here.

See, I'm getting huffy and weird.

I didn't like her tone. I didn't like her dismisall of half the fucking country. She summed it up nicely when she compared hockey moms like herself to pit bulls. Hmm, OK, let me try to get into the mindset of the voter that feels like it's fuck-me-sideways brilliant to put someone that brazen in the White House.

By the way, I've personally heard fierce supporters of this McCain-Palin ticket say things like, "it's called the White House for a reason."

I'm serious. And no, I don't believe that all conservatives are racists. I don't. Not by a long shot.

But there's so much misguided fear out there pushing for McCain-Palin it's making me afraid. That's not good, either. I've never felt like if the election goes in one direction and not the other we're all totally fucked. I know a lot felt like that four years ago, but I really didn't. Now I am. Now I'm convinced that we really have to do something drastically different and, more importantly, something smart.

Their fear is making me fear.

*Sigh*

Like I said, I'm not great when it comes to politics.




"Raspberry Beret"
Prince

Monday, September 1, 2008

Michael Palin

I must briefly comment on the brilliant irony that is Sarah Palin's rigid stance on sex education in this country. Someone should ask her if abstinence education worked for her daughter.

Also, her? Really?




"Phantom Limb"
The Shins

Saturday, August 30, 2008

So Long Johnson

Chad Johnson legally changed his name to Chad Javon Ocho Cinco.

I wish people could write stupidity that pure.



"Fuck Tha Police"
NWA

Friday, August 29, 2008

Nickelbutt

Is there a worse song meant to be taken seriously than Nickelback's "Photograph?"

Tell me.




"Ragged Wood"
Fleet Foxes

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

VB Dickbutts

Question:

Do all video blogs suck or can there be exceptions? I think 100% of them I've seen are either ironically amazing or they just outright suck. Are all video bloggers dickbutts or have I missed a couple that don't totally eat it?

I'm curious for a few reasons. Also, should I ask more redundant questions in my entries?

Thanks!

One more thing, I think I might create another blog used solely for videogame shite.

Edit: That was quick.




"Woke Up Laughing"
Robert Palmer

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Learning to Embrace the Self-Indulgent

Our friend Jordan recently wrote that it's writing about the big events in life that comes off as silly (in so many words). There's nothing to say that hasn't been said or felt or experienced. It's hard to disagree with this assessment of blogging in general.

I'm tempted to concoct some grand entry about the wedding, and I may, but for now suffice it to say that things are more or less business as usual. I couldn't be more pleased with that fact.

Well, maybe that's not totally true. Things aren't business as usual, since the "as usual" part of the equation hadn't involved a curious kitten named Stella until now. Aside from this little fountain of happiness, things are definitely business as usual.

There are probably many things to say and many people to thank for the wedding. I hope I can show everyone my gratitude someday.

There are things to say about my state of mind in terms of employment, I suppose. I've yet to land a job, a (lack of) development that scares the shit out of me. When I spoke to my dad, he seemed to think I should take some time to try to finish and sell my scripts.

It all just sounds so funny to me -- foregoing employment opportunities to chase this incredible pipe dream. I suppose it's better to chase the dreams when you're young, right? I don't know. I can't wrap my mind around the idea of sitting here for months and refining these works to be scrutinized by God knows who.

I can't shake this feeling that I'm not cut out to be a 9-5 kind of guy. Maybe I need to find out that I'm not the script-writing kind of guy. Anyhow, I'm feeling this wave of creativity stemming from the wedding (presumably) and all of its finality and simultaneous sense of "everything is just beginning."

I have, in my mind's eye, this project, this overwhelming, overarching project, that will challenge me and make me mad with nostalgia. I have the perfect beginning and ending, and I want to share it with everyone.

Maybe that will be the way I can show everyone my gratitude for the years of love and support. Self-indulgent and selfless at the very same time.



"Lovers in Japan (Acoustic)"
Coldplay

Saturday, July 26, 2008

The BA Reconnection

I'm looking forward to this weekend's nuptials for many reasons, some obvious, some not so much.

Heh, I need to do the lame thing real quick and just say that I am really, really stoked to be marrying Lauren this weekend. I've been pretty (read: inhumanly) chill about all of this, but it's been hitting me harder and harder how big of a deal this is and, more importantly, how fucking excited I am about it. I just couldn't be happier about it.

Anyway, another cool thing about this weekend is who all will be there. Anyone who reads this will probably be there. Thanks, in advance.

I talked to Ryan Bargerstock this evening for a bit. He was one of my very best friends during my time in Buenos Aires. He's taking a break from underwater archeology studies in Mexico to be at the wedding. Apparently, he discovered some honest-to-goodness Mayan human bones the other day. Can't deny how cool that is.

I can't help but feel like the universe will explode in glorious rainbows and warm, puppy lights judging by the honest-to-god space aliens that are returning to earth to be at this thing.

It's a good thing.

We'll see if Will shows up. I hope he does. Dollars to donuts he shows up and gives me shit about not inviting Celia. I'd bet a fuck ton of money on that. All in good fun, I suppose.



"Electric Feel"
MGMT

Thursday, July 24, 2008

A Genuine Three-Parter, Written Yesterday

Part One: My Damned Car

My car quit working again tonight. It hasn't been working, really, but I've been able to fix it in odd ways (tricking it into thinking it was crushing a baby, resetting the system, having disillusioned Best Buy employees lift it for me, etc.). It just plain stopped for me tonight. If I see Corwin (our resident Handyman -- the one who calls me Tony Stark), I'll have him lift it for me before I go to Plano. Otherwise, I'm going sans wheelchair.

This is really cramping my style. I wanted to make an omelet tonight. I wanted to go get eggs, ham, mushrooms, milk, and cheese. This isn't too much for me to want, right? But no. I can't get my goddamn chair in the car, so I can't get my goddamn ass in Central Market.

Well, I could, but...Christ, it's complicated. Something about a fear of being trampled or stared at or being sighed at by people who move faster than I. Something like that.

I'll call the place in Mesquite tomorrow morning to see if they could fit me in this weekend. It won't affect my plans to see Step Brothers and The Dark Knight (again). Breakfast burritos tomorrow night. I'm definitely, definitely excited about that.


Part Two: My Review of the First Four Hours of Final Fantasy IV (DS)

For someone who has never finished the original 2D FF masterwork (it is, indeed, better than VI), I feel a little silly making such a big deal about the 3D remake. I played enough to know what the developers have improved upon and what they haven't.

I can remember the days before Final Fantasy XII, when FF games received more or less zero attention when it came to translating the Japanese originals into well-written English versions. FFXII was brilliant in terms of the vocabulary (save for their unreal pronunciation of "Marquis") used and the somewhat old-school, whimsical syntax changes. I loved it. It pleased me greatly to find that FFIV is similarly translated. Of course, the original translation was pretty piss poor (though the infamous "Spoony Bard" line is still gloriously intact) -- so I'm quite happy to see the remake lovingly cared for in the writing department.

The voice acting is a different story. It's not bad in the grand scheme of things, but it is slightly worse than FFX. That isn't great. The casting of Cecil is odd, too. His voice actor sounds like Tidus in serious mode. That isn't great. They nailed Kain, in my opinion. He sounds more or less like Maximus from Gladiator. Can't go wrong there. All in all, voice acting does not a great game make, so any gripes I have with that are somewhat irrelevant to my overall enjoyment of the game.

On the technical side of things, the graphics are very clean. Better than the remake of FFIII. Much better in a subtle way. The textures are cleaner around the edges. The animation in general is smoother. Good spell effects.

In the artistic arena, however, the graphics puzzle me. The DS, of course, is better for smaller character models, to be sure. However, the characters (more like FFVIII than FFIX) are almost universally dark, troubled, and mature. The "big head" aesthetic doesn't fit the characters whatsoever. It's easy to see why they opted for the caricatured look for the system, but I wish they had put more thought into proportioning the characters so they don't look like dwarves. I think they could've kept the small models without making them look like Timmy.

The battle system needs a faster default pace and more customization with the "auto-battle" system -- a great idea on paper, by the way. I'm not expecting an FFXII gambit system, but certainly more options than one would be great. I don't want my characters always attacking automatically if they're down to 10HP. Just doesn't make sense when I want to level, which seems to be the reason they put the feature in the game in the first place.

It's nice and difficult, though. They pumped the brakes a little on that front from the original, but it's still refreshingly tough.

They left the story untouched, for the most part. No big changes that I can see. They use an in-game engine for most of the cutscenes, which is fine by me. I stopped being blown away by FMV circa 2001, though i did enjoy the opening cinematic. With FF stories growing more complicated (not necessarily more complex, though), it does seem weird that they didn't insert transitional scenes between the gaps of gameplay and "big" scenes to make it feel a little more modern. You update the graphics, you update the gameplay, you update the sound, but you don't update the way the story is told? It feels a little behind the curve.

I'm enjoying the game, but it does beg the question: when is Square going to get around to remaking FFVII? I still can't get over the fact that some designers took the time to make a fucking tech demo, but they all had the gall to say that there were no plans to remake the game. If it's dated gameplay they're worried about, just use FFXII's example. I'd be 100% fine with that. Just get it done.

And that was my terrible review of FFIV. You didn't ask for it. You got it, though.


Part Three: State of the Heather Union

Why, oh why, John, would you be writing about Heather on this fine evening? I've seen her three times over the past seven days or so, twice yesterday. Things are fine from my end. They have been for years. Things have been great for me in general for the past few years.

Actually, I'll do the self-indulgent thing and explain the situation to my only ignorant (to this situation, silly) reader. Ah'em Priya. In case you care.

Maybe you don't.

THAT'S WHY IT'S SELF-INDULGENT!

Anyway, Heather is this girl I dated the summer between high school and college. She was my very first girlfriend. Isn't that cute? Things didn't work out for various, irrelevant reasons.

I wanted things to keep going, but did everything I could to be weird, uncomfortable, and passive-aggressive for about six months. I did a lot to potentially sabotage any friendship we had decided we wanted to have. We've been going in circles since then. I'm fine, she's weird. She's weird, I'm fine. There was a long time where we were both fine. That all kind of changed when Lauren and I got serious. Like "engaged" serious.

Things have just been a little strained. Maybe that's not even the right word. They're just uncertain. I mean, I'm fine. I have no problems with much of anything anymore. It's funny what impending marriage does to your overall view of life. I'm a pretty carefree, happy guy. Heather seems a little less so. Maybe that's just me being hyper-observant.

Maybe if the roles were reversed and Heather was getting married while I was on my eighth or ninth girlfriend since our breakup, I'd feel a little off, too.

I've decided I won't go into specifics, but during the time we spent together this past week, it's clear to me (I think) she's a little weirded out by all of this. I don't know if that's "me-specific" or specific to the idea of getting married in general. Specific in general. Jesus, John. Anyway, I kind of get why she was so resentful of me when I was all weird and shit after the breakup.

Perspective.

Eh, I grow more cautious the more I write. I'm not even that upset about any of this and none of it's really confirmed anyway.

Just a hunch I got.



"L.E.S. Artistes"
Santogold

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The Mysterious Stranger

I just need everyone to know that this exists and that I want to shake the hands of the people who made it.

It is part of this, and based on this, one of Mark Twain's unfinished works.

Um, yeah. Please watch and understand that things will not be the same after you do.

Also, I just got this in the mail today. Color me excited.



"Dancing in the Dark"
Bruce Springsteen

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

An Interesting Time for Gamers

It is. I'd say 2008 is shaping up to fall just below what 2007 ultimately was, but I'm still very excited about the rest of 2008. E3 isn't technically over yet, but all other games yet to be announced or spotlighted are likely to be 3rd party borderline titles -- i.e. games that will either be just fine, mediocre, or plain terrible. There are exceptions, I'm sure, but this is how it usually pans out.

I watched all three press conferences today. Nintendo's and Sony's were live, Microsoft's was from yesterday.

I have to say, I was extremely impressed with Sony's presentation until I watched Microsoft's. It became very apparent to me that FFXIII's exodus to greener pastures is going to hurt Sony quite a bit -- more than I originally expected. Xbox seems to be cornering the Nintendo niche without forsaking the "hardcore gamer." I'm not sure I like the phrase "hardcore gamer" to describe anyone who likes their games with narrative, complexity, and depth, but we'll use it anyway since I'm hard-pressed to find a better descriptor. I may not like the exclusives and the "hardcore" games Xbox has lined up, but they'll sell like nobody's business. The avatar system and the new Xbox Dashboard pretty much even them up with Nintendo and Playstation in terms of overall presentation (though I am still partial to the minimalist PS3 dash). Sony seems a great distance away from putting a date on Home, which isn't great news for PS3 fans. The movie/TV rental/purchase system for PS3 is impressive (especially since they announced it today and it's already up and running as I write) but suffers from a thin library when compared to the Netflix system on Xbox.

I think connectivity options with the PSP and the fact that they offer HD titles give Sony the edge here, but it's not by much when all is said and done.

What I want to see -- what Jeremy and I want to see -- are old-school remakes that are Sony exclusives. We're talking Road Rash, Battle Arena Toshinden, Final Fantasy titles of the past, Vagrant Story, Jumping Flash, etc. Nintendo can update their titles. 3rd parties (poorly) update their titles. Sony should get their hands on these IPs and run with them. Spend some money here. They love doing it already, why stop now? Make the PS3 the gaming powerhouse you know it can and should be.

It will hurt them not to have exclusive FFXIII. It'll hurt because GTA4 sales for PS3 paled in comparison to GTA4 sales for 360. It'll hurt because Madden for 360 will probably outsell PS3 Madden by a 3:1 margin or something like that. When games show up on both consoles, people flock to 360, and that's bad business for Sony, great business for Microsoft, and wonderful business for the developer of the IP.

There's such an emphasis on innovation in peripherals when developers by and large are forgetting how to make wonderful games to go along with the innovation. Little Big Planet looks like pure magic and I really can't wait to get my hands on it. Sony announced an MMO action game that promises 256 players in a game at one time. I think we're righting the ship a little bit from this "Nintendo-centric" world we're in right now. I think it's funny how the once-saviors of the videogame industry (and financially, they still are) are now public enemy number one for anyone who gives a shit about really well-made games.

Don't get me wrong, I think the last Zelda and Mario IPs are fantastic and stand up incredibly well against games with better graphics, sound, and replayability on other systems. But, for the most part, Nintendo is only interested in coming out with little tech demos for their motion innovations. It's cool shit, but the rest of the industry seems positive they should follow suit and make everything about accessibility when quality is being forgotten.

It did make me happy to hear that no one thought Nintendo's familiar song and dance at E3 was a good thing. Wii Music looks exactly as lazy as what I was talking about earlier. Shaun White Snowboarding was a massive flop. These peripherals are cool, for sure, but developers should take some time to make sure the games that go along with them are fun beyond a "honeymoon" period.

I'm jumping around, I know.

Let me summarize by saying this: I like what Microsoft is doing from a business standpoint. They're making their product more accessible without jeopardizing their core market. They want a piece of the pie without forsaking the thing that brought them to the dance. Sony, while I'm impressed with how they stand up to everyone else now more than ever, seems to be responding to Microsoft by mimicking their actions. I think this path makes them less likely to stand out to developers and, subsequently, gamers. I think they should focus on making exclusive IPs that really pop in the market. Of course, this is risky because they could lose a whole lot of money, but maybe this is the next paradigm shift. Nintendo seems to think they're the Messiah of the gaming industry -- they thought the same thing in the mid-90s, too, when Sony, at that point not a developer of videogames, shoved the industry on its ass with the release of the Playstation. I wish Sony would quit worrying about Microsoft and Nintendo and start making game after game after game that make people realize why they started gaming in the first place. They could be forced out of this race doing this, much like Sega was, but I've always had a very, very soft spot in my heart for Dreamcast and Saturn.

And maybe that will be Sony's legacy, but I wish they wouldn't sell out this much to keep up with people who are losing sight of what gaming was and what it should be.



"Spirits in the Material World"
The Police

Monday, July 14, 2008

Our Final Fantasy Condolences

I'm up late mainly because I've been reading about all things E3. I'm excited that I don't have a job for at least one day, seeing as I can watch all of the press conferences tomorrow.

Yes, I'm excited about press conferences. I'll definitely have to be up in time for Sony's conference, but that shouldn't be much of an issue. Nintendo probably won't do anything too surprising, though I've read a rumor about a sub-$100 DS that's even smaller than the Lite. That would be cool. I think my mom officially owns my old DS. I'm sure I could get it back, but from what I understand she's really digging it. Maybe I can convince them to get me one.

Oh, to be young again.

I just have to be able to play the remake of FFIV. It's out on the 22nd, I believe. I still have a copy of The World Ends with You that I haven't been able to play. I hear good things about that. Even from what's his face at Zero Punctuation.

I guess the big news of the day (for me, at least) is the fact that FFXIII is no longer a PS3 exclusive. I own both the PS3 and 360, so it's not like I have a horse in this race, but I feel bad for the PS3. MGS4 sold like hot cakes at launch but I don't think it has staying power. I think it's a forgettable exclusive for PS3. Besides, what's stopping Konami from porting the latest installment to Microsoft's console in a year? They've done it in the past. I could probably write a novel about what's wrong with MGS4. It's not a bad game, but there are that many problems with it. Kind of makes it a special game. So many things wrong but still enjoyable.

Anyway, I think Little Big Planet looks awfully good for a PS3 exclusive, but I'm worried about the console as a whole. We should find out more about Killzone 2 tomorrow, but PS3 is hurting for a big-time exclusive. FFXIII could've been that exclusive. It should've been exclusive. I have a soft spot for playing FF games on a Playstation console. It's just a natural thing. XBox doesn't scream "JRPG" to me. Playstation seems so perfect for the hardcore gamer to spend 100+ on JRPG goodness. The latest trailer definitely shows more, too. Maybe not as much as I had hoped, but the only glimpse of the FFXII world outside of Rabanastre, the beach, and the Salikawood happened very close to its release back in 2006. 360 can have Gears of War 2. They can have Halo 1-25. Playstation and FF are PB & J.

Two games I don't give two shits about: Fable 2 & and Too Human.

One game I give twenty shits about: Fallout 3. My goodness. My only issue is people are gibbing over a headshot? Maybe that's how Fallout and Fallout 2 rolled, but it feels dated to me. Maybe they'll tone it down before release. I stopped "oohing and ahhing" over gibbing (unless it's grenade-related) about the time Unreal Tournament was released.

UPDATE: I think I realized that the demo I saw had the perk, "Bloody Mess," activated. That's why an enemy gibbed when shot in the head. Makes sense.



"Second Best"
Barenaked Ladies

Favorite Songs Part 1: Viva Las Vegas

No, not Elvis. Don't worry. I haven't totally lost my mind.

What's that? Shut up. Elvis sucked and you know it. It's a haymbuhguh.

He did, though. Yes, yes, yes, he's a pioneer, sure. But saying you like Elvis now is like saying you like Ric Flair's later work.

What? That went over your head, too? I know it didn't go over Jeremy's head. Which might be all that matters.

OK, well I don't like Elvis so that's the point.

Anyway!

Shawn Colvin, an Austinite by way of Ohio or some other fucking place, recorded a version of Elvis's hit about his love for Sin City. The song was used during the credits of The Big Lebowski.

Not the first song. Keep listening until you hear the voice of the girl that did "Sunny Came Home" like twelve years ago. You know? That song with the woman on the swing? They played it on VH1 every five minutes back in the day. That and "As I Lay Me Down to Sleep" by Sophie B. Hawkins.

As opposed to Elvis' version, this version is menacing, sad, and much, much more melodic. Of course, she does the thing I hate where the cover artist changes gender so he/she doesn't sound gay. I think that's dumb. Just me, though.

I forgive her, though. I think this version of the song is really beautiful. Kind of haunting in this really specific way, too. Y'all might the hate the way she says "viva," especially if you're turned off by Claudio Sanchez or the lead from Rush. She's a little raspier, though.

Love it, though. Give it a listen. It's hard to find for download unless you're a shithead and steal music. Like I did. This once. Maybe more than once.

What?



"Viva Las Vegas"
Shawn Colvin

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Nigerians, Italians, Backwoods, and the Like

You know what movie is surprisingly unfunny? This is Spinal Tap. I laughed at all the things I had already seen: "this one goes to 11," the tiny Stonehenge, and the pod that didn't open. All funny. The cucumber wrapped in foil made me laugh. A few other things did, too, but for a feature-length movie the laughs were way too sporadic. Also, just in case you didn't know, Christopher Guest is apparently the most terrible bastard on earth when he must be interviewed for anything. I don't have any evidence here, but I've read it in a few places that at this point in his career he's a total cock during interviews. He also hates the term "mockumentary," but at the same time refuses to come up with another term for it.

He's also said that being funny isn't what he is, it's what he does for a living.

So apparently he's the antithesis of comedy. Makes me sad for someone who's made some funny stuff. Sorry he thinks comedy is total bullshit outside of a film.

Anyway, Rampvan update? Rampvan update.

I went to Hutto again the day after I wrote the previous post. They seemed upset that I was still having the problem, so good for them. I had a different technician than Little Bill the second day -- I couldn't shake the feeling that Little Bill felt really awkward about not fixing my car in the first place. I also can't shake the feeling that it's not at all his fault, that there's a deeper problem involved, but I felt like if I told him that without any prompting that would've opened up a huge opportunity for him to do this uncomfortable song and dance in front of all the waiting customers.

I just figured avoid it at all costs.

Good story, I know.

Sharon, the receptionist, struck me as intelligent, though she used some of the worst grammar I've heard a person over the age of 40 but under the age of 70 use in a long time. Kind of a shame. She was nice, though, which at times like these is really the only thing that matters.

I was the only person in the waiting room on day one, but on day two things were very different. The most uninteresting in attendance was a woman, about age 40, who was getting her van's lift repaired for her son, who I eventually found out had pretty bad CP and couldn't drive himself. She was nice, kind of a hick, but nice.

The uninteresting turned to interesting very quickly. In walk three people. One was a really, really plain, frumpy lady with a really bad limp and really orthopedic footwear. Just about as unfuckable as possible.

I know that sounds horrible, really, really horrible, but if you saw what I saw you'd know what I meant. She wasn't ugly or really unpleasant to look at or anything, but she was totally unsexy. Just the least sexy person I've ever seen. Hard to explain and maybe I'm the fucking worst, but whatever. It is what it is. She was accompanied by two elderly Italians, a man and wife, who spoke enough English to get by. The couple sat next to the first hick lady and the frumpy girl sat next to me. I listened in on their conversation and began to think they were the frumpy girl's parents, but then she referred to them as "visitors," which definitely made the quiet Italians seem mysterious and powerful from there on out. The man turned to me at one point and asked what was wrong with my car. I told him, and he asked some questions that amounted to me repeating the original story a few times to the point that I considered changing the story a little with each retelling.

That would've been rude, though. These people didn't deserve that.

I wanted to tell them that I really enjoyed their country, but I always assume compliments coming from Americans about a foreign country always come across as "Gee golly I sure did think that there McDonald's outside the Vatican was damn tasty! Couldn't believe they didn't have the McRib, though. Only in America, only in America..."

So I skipped all of that and asked about their problem, which was really only the frumpy girl's problem since they were "only visitors." It was a similar problem. She used a scooter to get around when she wasn't limping all over the place. Their problem got fixed extremely fast, which made me a little angry/frustrated. Can you blame me? I had already been there for an hour and they had been there ten minutes.

I didn't show my anger, though. Counterproductive at that point.

Frumpy and the Italians left, leaving me there with Hick Lady and Sharon. Well, in stroll in a 25-or-so-year-old-man with CP and his 6'5" Nigerian assistant named Mike. CP Man had a very specific white trash aesthetic. Bold polo shirt, baggy, deep blue jeans, two large gold earrings in both ears, Casper-white tennis shoes, and meticulously cropped facial hair.

Let's back up a second. CP Man has really bad CP, OK? Get it? He's got the inward-folding hands, no use of his legs, and frequently-strained speech. It makes sense that he has an assistant, sure, but meticulously trimmed facial hair? Someone had to do this for him. I guess there are either: people out there who would do anything for money or people who would do anything out of the kindness of their hearts. I'm hoping the second, but Mike the Nigerian would suggest the former.

The Nigerian had a laptop with him, which he used whenever he got a moment. These moments didn't occur with any frequency, because CP Man had to have The Nigerian take his iPhone out of his pocket and make phone calls to various people.

The man with useless fingers has a phone operated almost universally by touch.

Okie dokie.

He had a Bluetooth headset, too, which he couldn't operate because he couldn't lift his arms to his ear.

I'm straddling a line here between thinking this guy's a total douchebag and being impressed with his apparent refusal to think inside his own tiny box. I leaned toward douchebag until I learned that he's the head of some kind of disability group that plans events for local cripples. Nothing I'd be interested in, mind you, but it's certainly a cool thing for a lot of people who need it. So less of a douchebag -- and besides, if I had to have someone do just about everything for me I'd want it to at least be fun for him. The Nigerian had a Bluetooth headset and iPhone to fool with.

He also had to help CP Man pee, too.

Less cool thing to work with.

While CP Man and the Nigerian were there, the Backwoods Family entered the scene.

Mr. Backwoods was a man in his 70s with no legs.

Well, he had less than no legs. He was an honest-to-goodness egg of a man. His legs were not stubs, his legs were nonexistent. He was a weeble-wobble. He was Dr. Robotnik. He was a little wooden Russia doll with eight duplicates inside of him. Get it? He was rotund and sans legs.

His wheelchair was held together with tape. Medical tape. He was wearing an A&M hat (what did you expect?), old blue jeans tucked under himself, and a button-up farm-looking shirt. Mr. Backwoods was accompanied by Mrs. Backwoods. Mrs. Backwoods, no shit, was as close to a man posing as a woman (or maybe vice versa) as I've ever seen. Cut six inches off of her black, greasy hair and she was a living, breathing man about town. Her voice was lower than 80% of the men I know. I'm not exaggerating. I'm really not. Mr. B talked to Mrs. B like a husband would a wife, with many "sweethearts," "honeys," and "babes." However, it was later revealed the he is her uncle, but maybe not a biological uncle.

It was confusing.

This was one of their conversations:

MR: Well, ya know I think the best place I ever had deer sausage was there at the uh...
MRS: Oh the festival in Haltom City?
MR: Yes ma'am, the festival in Haltom City. That's where it was. Great deer sausage.
MRS: I ruhmember that. Though I think I remember having great sausage close to here once.
MR: Oh, in Taylor?
MRS: Oh yeah, in Taylor. I think it's great there.
MR: Ehhh, I dunno. They used to be good when theys were making sausage for them and them only and not the rest of Texas. Ya know?
MRS: I think it's good.
MR: Well, alls I know is I don't like the red wieners.
MRS: I ain't never liked the red ones.
MR: I don't e'en know what's in them red ones.
MRS: Maybe some kinda special deer. I dunno.
MR: I reckon so.

Here was another one:

MR: Well my daddy was a bootlegger.
MRS: Was he really?
MR: Yes he was. He had a successful farm until the Depression and then he had to bootleg to get by since nobody wuhn't buying nothin from the farm.
MRS: That's amazin.
MR: He made that there corn whiskey. He made big batches of that corn whiskey in a bathtub in the main house. They used this special corn and when it fermented...they call it "sour feed."
MRS: Is that right?
MR: Yeah, and sometimes they'd mix up the sour feed with the reg'ler feed and the chickens would get drunk.
MRS: Nah-ah!
MR: Oh yeah. One time...he had this rooster...and one time the rooster got so drunk on that sour feed he leaned back to crow in the mornin and fell right back on his rear.

Simply. Amazing.

They also talked about learning the banjo. Mr. B didn't care for the sound of the banjo but plays his "Ghee-tar" with some frequency. He gets magazines where can order his instruments since he "doesn't know nothin about the computer business."

Have we forgotten The Nigerian? Nope. We haven't.

At some point, the Backwoods Family got to talking about gas prices and what its doing to Mrs. B's trucker husband. Mrs. B used to be a trucker, by the by. The Nigerian breaks into a diatribe about how Americans aren't idealogically cohesive enough to do something about gas prices like collectively take a day off work to protest gas prices like some communities do in the UK. He said many things of the hypocrisy of Americans complaining but never taking collective action against the government in protest.

Now, these things The Nigerian spoke of, I don't really disagree with them.

But, given the company, I knew this would be bad. And it was. Not in a climactic way, but it was bad. The Backwoods Family commented briefly about how gas prices were bad and maybe the new elections would bring some change on that front. And then the changed the subject. Very quickly. The Nigerian wasn't done and wanted to talk more about it, heatedly, but I kind of pushed the conversation in a different direction with the Backwoods Family because I knew the poor guy would've been decapitated had this gone on any longer. Kind of a shame, but the Backwoods Family was looking more and more uncomfortable with each passing set of commentary.

It was the kind of hypocrisy the Nigerian was talking about.

And, the car didn't get fixed. Again.



"Get Innocuous!"
LCD Soundsystem

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Let's Talk About Benito Mussolini

I got bored with yesterday's topic. I might get unbored, but for now we're moving on.

Let me tell you a story about my van and the people involved with making my van one of the most inexplicably fucktacular pieces of machinery in the history of man.

I got my first car back in high school. It was a Chrysler Town & Country (is there a dumber name for a car? It might as well be called the Chrysler Cigar Aficionado) -- I forget the year. It was champagne-colored because it was the only one on the lot that I could have immediately instead of waiting upward of two months for some factory to ship it to Texas. The car was fine, really. I had some good memories in that car. Making out in the back seat (it happened once or twice, I swear to 8lb, 6oz Baby Jesus), almost fucking killing someone in a Chili's parking lot, and driving with the hydraulics broken, making every speed bump a perilous crapshoot. It served me well for the most part. I can't recall a moment when the ramp failed. It was clanky and squeaky and was definitely an eyesore, but it was my eyesore.

The car just required too much maintenance for me. After a few years I decided I wanted a smoother ride -- a car that was less of a hassle. So I "upgraded" to a Toyota Sienna, a move that I thought got me closer to having a Lexus. Stupid. I know. Just because they share a same parent company doesn't mean they both make cars that can suck your dick while making your favorite beverage McGyver-style using pocket lint and antifreeze.

Duh.

I'm being unfair. The car itself is probably just fine. It's the conversion of the car into a "Braun Rampvan" that's turned the universe on its head and penetrated its earhole.

The factory used to be in Arizona, where they presumably churned out buttery-smooth car after buttery-smooth car, but they had to close that factory down I'm sure because of some kind of child labor violation or kiddie sex dungeon scandal. Regardless, they opened up shop in Indiana the week I decided to get a new car.

I'm sure this is how it went over there in Indiana.

Supervisor: Oh hey, we just got an order in for an 06 Sienna with a side ramp conversion.
Plant Worker: But we just opened up shop!
S: So?
PW: I had plans to take it easy this week and worship Benito Mussolini in my spare time.
S: Oh yeah? I hear great things about this Benito Mussolini guy.
PW: Yeah, he was a totally great guy -- really misunderstood.
S: Great, let's go kill some sugar gliders and worship Mussolini together.
PW: Can we round up some heroin get some tranny hookers first?
S: I thought you'd never ask!
PW: We'll leave the malevolent, autistic badger here to build that stupid Sienna Rampvan!
S: And how!

Just speculating. I think I'm right, though. This is all evidenced by the fact that my ramp works 46% of the time, which, if you're figuring this out at home, means I can't go fucking anywhere 54% of the time. I'll put on my "EQUAL RIGHTS FOR CRIPPLES" hat here for a second and say that we have a fucking right to be independent people if we have the physical means to do so. The physical means, in my case, are a functional vehicle and wheelchair ramp.

If this is too much to ask, then tell me. Really. I mean it. Has the technology that has given us Playstations, rocket ships, iPhones, pocket pussies, Bose stereo equipment, GPS systems, robots that perform surgery, and man-made black holes from Switzerland really left wheelchair ramp cars in the dust? Have we forgotten the little people here? The little crippled people?

Hell, years ago I was thinking how cool it'd be to have a hoverchair or something like that. But now, I find myself begging, begging, for a car that has a ramp that lowers and then raises again. It's a fucking Erector Set in a car. Ya Ya from The Sandlot could build a fucking Rampvan. Why can't these people in Indiana do the same thing?

It doesn't help that no one knows what the fuck to do with it. Everyone who touches it says they fix it. They don't. I mean today was a great example. They were super nice in good ol' Hutto, but Little Bill (there's a Big Bill, FYI) got the ramp to work fifteen consecutive times and told me he found no problems. "I just reset the system," he said. Thanks, Little Bill.

I then told him that I just knew that the second I got home it would break again.

And folks, it was one of those things...one of those things where I said something out of amusement rather than actual clairvoyance. I had the confidence that "resetting" the system would fix things. Hell, the fuckos in Mesquite replaced the whole engine days ago, so I thought that was it. Just reset the new engine and I'll be golden.

Little Bill and I had a fantastic laugh over the idea that it would break again and I was on my merry way back to Austin.

And I got home. I got home and decided to go out for a ride. Decided to go out to the bank, maybe swing by Best Buy to see if they have Mario Kart for Wii, who knows? Big day. Hell, it's my birthday, I figured I should treat myself to a DVD or a sandwich or something. But nooooooo.

I'm...I don't know. I don't know how it could be that complicated. I mean I would be a shit engineer. I know that. I don't know anything about it, but honestly, it seems like a pretty simple mechanism. It's a drawbridge. Pea-brained serfs built drawbridges. Are we nothing but pea-brained serfs? I hope not.

So yes, I rambled about my van. If you're not Lauren you probably don't have all the information you need to understand how fucking dumb this is, but hopefully I've filled in enough holes for you.

I'm going to sign off, make some Chicken and Dumplings for birthday dinner, and send one of my BMs to Indiana.



"So Long"
Rilo Kiley

Monday, June 30, 2008

About My New Old Dreams

I've always had vivid dreams. Anyone who's known me for more than five years knows that I have vivid dreams. They used to wear me out, but now they serve to do little but remind me of different times. They used to make me think about deeper meanings of things, but now they clarify the idea that things are only as deep as we want to make them.

Things are just more pleasant now. I still dream of the same things. I rarely have a dream I haven't had before. They usually involve the strife involved with teenage love or lust or obsession or some such -- you know, the ones with Marcia doing an interpretive dance of Jewel's "Hands" the same night Celia gave some speech to the 8th grade class about how friends are so important to her and never mentioned my name once. Or better yet, the ones where I take two girls to a formal dance and never pay attention to them as I watch Celia's every move. Sometimes I still have the ones about Heather's cold rejection in the aftermath of our relationship with the bleak, grey skies above. I have scattered dreams from college years, too, but they're less intense. I used to be so tired after these dreams.

The cool thing is that in each of these dreams I have a companion now. Maybe that's what makes everything more pleasant. Lauren's just a spectator, too -- she never interacts with anyone. She just sits there, next to me, watching my every social disaster. I don't think it's that deep. When I think of "me," I think of two people now. Maybe that's what love really is: when you get to the point that you don't separate yourself from that other person. Well, maybe that's what love really is to me.

I still experience the negative emotions in the dreams, but when I wake up I'm not stressed about it. It's fascinating to me.

I'll try explaining it within the context of one of the dreams when I'm less dead-tired. I have to drive to Hutto tomorrow. Woohoo!

Oh, it's my birthday. Weird.

Also, speaking of nostalgic dreams, I'm finally getting serious about this TV pilot. What's that? You don't know about that because I never tell anyone anything? Silly me.



"Inner City Pressure"
Flight of the Conchords

Friday, June 20, 2008

Serious Business, People

I am quite perplexed that, despite seeing the likes of the Grape Lady and the Falling Model Video, I find Serious Cat to be the funniest thing on the Internet.

I just can't stop laughing at it. He's been around forever, sure, but it's only been recently that I've become obsessed with his little, stone-cold serious face.

Anyway, Matt and Jeremy are coming down this weekend. It might be a laugh riot. We're seeing Goldfinger at Master Pancake Theater on Saturday night. That ought to be excellent. Hopefully I'll get to ride that shit-terrible elevator at Alamo. Remember that, Shelley? Remember yelling down at Lauren and I as we went .000000001 feet per minute down that long shaft? I do. I remember.

I'm making a little headway on the job front. I'm applying to a marketing position at Accenture's Austin office. Yep. Accenture. I'm OK with it because I'd be working in a department my dad and his cohorts have/had nothing to do with -- but yeah I'd probably have some pretty good references.

Not holding my breath, though. I'm meeting with a woman next week that should be able to help me narrow my search a bit. Every little bit helps, I guess.

OK, I did forget about this. Not as good as Serious Cat, but it's pretty good.

Camp Rock is pretty bad so far. Yesssssss.



"Breakin"
The Music

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Cheelitism

I'm hoping to have some photos of the new place up (either here or on Facebook) sometime tomorrow. I ate dinner at 11:30pm tonight. Why? Don't know.

But yeah, fuck living somewhere that doesn't have a Whole Foods or Central Market less than an hour away. I don't know how I lived in Sherman for five years. Call me an elitist, but there's something about paying $9 for a pound of cheese that makes me feel better about the world.

Maybe I'm just a cheese elitist. A cheelitist?

Yep, a cheelitist.

I need to call Charles and Kelsey this week to do something. This past weekend was hell of hectic. Glad Gillian's alright, for sure. Glad about our wedding gifts. What? I mean everyone should get married once for the gifts. Seriously. Even if you're totally against the institution or something like that. Just try it. I had no idea what I was getting into, but it's undeniably nice. I hope I'm half as generous with love and support (both tangible and otherwise) as everyone's been so far.



"Cold Girl Fever"
The National

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Best Laid Floorplans



It's been asked of me for a while, so I'm updating. I tried sleeping, but I couldn't. Doesn't happen to me often but sometimes I don't feel like laying around until I feel like falling asleep. So, here I am, up and about.

I've been playing with the layout editor on Triangle's website. I think I've come up with two decent ideas. OOH, I think I just figured out how to attach the files. Here goes nothing...

I'm pretty sure that'll look like utter shite, but what do I care? I'm up way too late, anyway.

The big difference between the two is the living room. Which do you envision more? Answer me, dammit!

Jeremy's place is pretty wicked. I would bet a large sum of money that Triangle and Trinity Bluff are owned by the same people. I should investigate. Had a nice little workout from Jeremy's place to Mi Cocina. German engineering is fucking dumb as far as I can tell looking at the rolling disaster that is my wheelchair. Christ.

Ratatouille actually made me extremely happy after seeing it for the second time. It made me want to open a bistro in Paris, for sure. That reminds me, somewhat tangentially, that I need to make reservations for the honeymoon. Harlem's famous chicken and waffles won't reserve themselves, right? Right!?

Also, watch The Wicker Man at least four times before you die. It's so fucking worth it. Funniest movie I've ever seen -- I'm not even exaggerating. Not one bit.

Am I crazy or is Forgetting Sarah Marshall one of the better movies you've seen in a long, long time? It drills into your brain in the nicest way.

And! Eagle vs. Shark is about as bad as you thought it would be. That girl isn't as hideous as the trailer made her look (this is years ago, mind you, in case you have no fucking idea what I'm talking about), but it is about as unfunny and painfully "indie" as it looked in the trailer. It's like someone saw Me, You, and Everyone We Know and thought, "Gee, let's just make the characters totally unsympathetic and give them hilarious Kiwi accents." AND, nothing about trading poop back and forth (it's worth it for that scene alone, seriously -- Me, You, and Everyone We Know, that is).

That reminds me, in Flight of the Conchords they make reference to Bret saying his name like "Brit," but as far as I remember no joke has been make about how Jemaine's name is "Jemaine" and not "Jermaine."

Right? That seems like something to call attention to. Does that make me sound totally uncultured and daft? Is "Jemaine" a super common name in Kiwitown?

By the way, Jermaine Jackson's son is named Jermajesty. If you didn't know that, you're welcome.

Looking forward to the wedding and seeing everyone. Love to all.



"Just Another"
Pete Yorn

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Stars in 4OT

What a hockey game. Glad I stayed up to see it.

Apartment hunting tomorrow in Austin. Expect an update on that.



"I Will Possess Your Heart"
Death Cab for Cutie

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Ed Norton Reading the Phone Book

I need to own the film, Keeping the Faith. I caught a few minutes of it this morning and it made me super happy. It's just so, so sweet. Love it.

Love this song, too.



"Heart of Mine"
Peter Salett

Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Writing Gig

EDWIN
Yeah, pretty intense shit. So, a few years ago I started telling people that he had a pig heart.

BECKY
(loud laughing)
Why?

EDWIN
I don’t know. I mean I read some article about how pig organs are theoretically the most interchangeable with human organs. I just ran with it, I guess.

BECKY keeps laughing.

EDWIN (CONT’D)
The best part is that most people don’t know their shit and give me this blank stare for a while before I have to tell them that I’m kidding.

BECKY turns to MITCH.

BECKY
(loud)
I never knew about your pig heart!



I am doing some serious rewrites. Forgetting Sarah Marshall was actually incredible. Yeah, I know, right?

Alright, you know what actually bothers me about the whole writing gig? You ready for a little arrogance? Good. I actually think I'm a pretty good writer. I do. It may not be reflected in the passage above, but I am confident that I can make an extremely comfortable living as a writer.

It's the drive. I can watch a movie or TV show that inspires me for a day or week, but never for a longer stretch of time. My most productive period was when I was writing for a grad school deadline. That's really frustrating. I have all of these free-flowing ideas that I should be capitalizing on, but I usually don't unless I have this sense of urgency like, "Hey John, there are some really funny, really talented people out there writing up a storm and there's nothing in the goddamned universe you can do to stop them."

That, friends, is the long and short of my lingering fear about my chosen career path. Is there a pill I can take? Is there a libation I can consume?

THANKSEVERYBODYBYEEEEEE.



"Daisies of the Galaxy"
Eels

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Los Rollings

Contemporary music is just fine. I'm rather enjoying the current musical climate, but I'm still not totally convinced that The Rolling Stones between 1962 and 1982 don't represent the absolute pinnacle of what we know as modern rock music. Most people know their hits, which sound a lot like you'd expected rock music that old to sound, but a lot of their stuff that didn't receive a ton of (or any) airplay is extremely varied in structure, lyric, and melody.

Some people say "The Beatles," but The Stones can bring the rock a lot harder. Some say "Led Zeppelin," but The Stones write a better ballad. Some say "Dylan," but The Stones embrace a wider variety of influences. Some say "Nirvana," but The Stones know how to have more fun with their music.

The Stones do everything and they do everything exceedingly well. I won't be so brazen to declare that they're the best band ever, but I will say they're the most complete. It just so happens I also believe they're the best.

Not that you asked.



"Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)"
The Rolling Stones

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

The Office: Frasier Edition

The relatively recent announcement that a spin off of The Office is coming (and consequently debuting on Super Bowl Sunday 2009) may have confirmed my fears that the staff is totally overexerting itself. Color me concerned. I am happy that the original is coming back on the air next Thursday.

That's all.



"Change Your Mind"
The Killers

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Robert Downey Jefferson

No one could possibly understand how excited I am about Tropic Thunder. It's just wrong how excited I am.



"Blank Slate"
The National

Monday, March 17, 2008

A Horrible Colloquialism

"I could care less."

People I love. People I respect. People I admire. Intelligent people. Grammatically conscious people. I, myself.

They all say it or have said it.

But think about it. Please. If you could care less, then you could very well care a great deal for whatever is being discussed. You dig?

It doesn't peeve me as much as "nucular" does. Jesus H. God in Everlasting Heaven that makes me angry. As long as you pronounce the word "nuclear" as the Maker fucking intended, then we're cool.

I think we should all try to overcome the bad colloquialism of "I could care less," though.



"Heart Shaped Box"
The Crest

Things to Remember: Lauren, Part One

What I would consider our first date, though this is certainly up for discussion, would be the night we spent in Dean the Saturday before that fateful Valentine's Day.

We took a short trip to Wal-Mart at about 1am to procure Pizza Rolls. I can actually feel how windy it was that night. It was a crisp night, but it wasn't cold.

In an effort to install Ms. Muirhead-esque symbolism grasping into my blog, I can tell you that the wind really meant something to me that night. I don't know. I just remember how "windy" (Jesus, what am I doing?) my life had been for a while up to that point, and how I felt like my life wasn't the windy thing; at least for one night.

A date had been something to freak out about, something to get obscenely nervous about, something to analyze as it happened, and in many ways something to dread. This was different. This was...organic, I guess. I think that's the best way to describe it.

A dimly-lit room, some (bad) movies, some junk food prepared in the basement of my dorm, and some discussion about personal tastes. There just wasn't anything outside that dorm room.

The evening gave me every reason to be confident enough to man up, so to speak.

And here we are.



"Ada"
The National

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Entrepreneurs

Peter just posted a brief entry about how he entertains the idea of setting up a website where he can showcase his creative talent. I've always wanted to do something entrepreneurial, but I've never been quite sure what that would be. I'm not really good at the web comic thing. Any blog entries I write aren't super interesting or well-written.

I've been told I could have a knack for radio, but I think that's a nice way of telling me I'm ugly.

In all seriousness, I've entertained the idea of setting up a radio program over the internet (or a podcast, as the young people are calling them nowadays) but I wouldn't know where to start. I know who I'd like to work with if they'd have the time/want to, but that's only a small start. I know the content I'd like to present on the show, which is a slightly better start. I just don't know how expensive/lucrative/possible it would all be.

These ideas are flowing a little more freely this evening since I received the first of what I assume will be two rejection letters from the UT Austin Graduate Program this afternoon. I'm not even that down about the rejection since it hasn't broken my spirit when it comes to writing. It's not like the rejection makes me enjoy the process any less. Hey, maybe I'll be able to sell my shit without having to go through 2-3 years of graduate school.

In the meantime, I'll probably (read: certainly) need to get a job in Austin. I'm still pretty solid on moving down there for my first few years or so of married life. It seems like a nice place to start. I'd love to get a nine-to-five, come home to Lauren, write a little in the evening, and maybe do a radio show on the weekends. That would be marvelous. Marvelous, I say.



"Little Sister"
Queens of the Stone Age

Monday, March 10, 2008

The Hour Lost

Best emo band name ever?

The idea of losing an hour is so uncomplicated, but for some reason it just beats me half to death every year. It's times like these I wish we all lived in Arizona, where they don't even fuck with Daylight Savings Time. Or at least I think I'm remembering that right from when Mike lived there.

That doesn't seem right.

I'll look it up tomorrow to confirm.



"M79"
Vampire Weekend

Saturday, March 8, 2008

What Made Dexter Freebish Famous

OK, so I love this Austin-based band called What Made Milwaukee Famous. I first heard them when they opened for Arcade Fire years ago at an ACL after show. You know, the one where Gweneth Paltrow sat on Lauren's jacket and Lauren glared at her before realizing that it was fucking Gweneth Paltrow. Anyway, they just released a new album and I like it a lot, but there is an unreal similarity between their new single entitled "Sultan" and Dexter Freebish's 2000 ditty from Life of Saturdays called "Deeper." I mean, I can remember hearing "Last Nite" by the Strokes and thinking it vaguely sounded like something I had heard from Tom Petty ("American Girl") but I usually don't dwell on songs from different bands that sound exactly the fucking same.

Of course, I exaggerate a bit, but it's just odd that they're both bands from Austin and write self-aware ballads and alternative songs that sound an awful lot like each other. It is a wonder to me why Dexter Freebish was never bigger than it was. I guess they probably should've come out with a much, much better follow-up to Life of Saturdays than they ultimately did.

Goodness, same with Lovedrug. What the fuck happened there?

I can remember listening to Pretend You're Alive and thinking, "If these guys aren't the biggest little indie band on the planet in three years I'll just fucking snap." I was so excited for their sophomore album, but it was probably the biggest musical disappointment I've ever experienced.

Actually, the fact that Third Eye Blind won't get their shit together and will probably never, ever release another album until the day they all die is my greatest musical disappointment. I was pretty optimistic after hearing a few of their new songs in concert, but Jenkins is just kind of a tool box. Judging by the minutes leading up to their show, he's way more interested in bolstering the career of Vanessa Carlton (even though I don't think they're dating anymore) than writing new material for 3eb. Before a band takes the stage, they usually pipe similar music through the speaker system to get people psyched for the show, but all we got were songs from Carlton's newest album. I don't really have a problem with Carlton, per se -- I've been known to rock way the fuck out for "White Houses" -- but Jesus with Out of the Vein it was all about Charlize fucking Theron and now it seems like he's all about this piano-playing, Jay Leno doppelganger who probably couldn't buy another hit if she sold her strong jaw to a desperate transsexual looking to find the missing piece that doesn't rhyme with "weenus."

I'm a man who's passionate about my 3eb. There isn't a world that can exist where people value new 3eb albums less than Vanessa Carlton's entire career.

I am serious, though, I love "White Houses." It's almost like Ste......oh wait he did co-write and produce that song. Well. Jimminy Shitmas.

Maybe Jenkins can just write a billion songs for Vanessa Carlton. I mean, it's better than nothing, I guess. JUST GIVE ME SOMETHING, STEPHEN JENKINS.

I guess we'll always have The National. I swear, Boxer has to be one of the better albums front to back that I've ever heard. I like most of their other stuff, too, but Boxer is just sublime through and through. I can't stress that point enough. You want me to do a little flow chart? I think you do. Here we go!

John's Amazing Albums Through the Years Flow Chart:
The Offspring Smash --> Third Eye Blind Third Eye Blind --> Incubus Morning View --> Pete Yorn Musicforthemorningafter --> Interpol Turn on the Bright Lights --> The Killers Hot Fuss --> The National Boxer

It's something like that. I've probably forgotten something. Wow I'm tired. I have to get up at eight.



"Self-Destruct"
What Made Milwaukee Famous

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Red Ring of Death

It only took six months for my Elite to fry. Hoo-ray.

I'm a little miffed, although I am really surprised they didn't ask me to send my entire hard drive with it. I don't know why they would ask for it, I just expected they would for some unknown, stupid reason.

What's even more frustrating is that it started to work after I called the problem in. I mean it's probably best to just send it in anyway, but it's still lame.

Peter alerted me to an article about a guy who had his 360 signed by a ton of Halo developers and sent it in to be worked on. He wrote them a really long letter about how he would prefer to fix the system instead of replacing it for obvious reasons. When he got his system back, it was totally blank with faint streaks on it resembling scrubbed-off permanent marker.

To my knowledge nothing has been proven, but it takes a special kind of dick to obey the request of a letter from a paying customer just to erase what made the request relevant in the first place.

Maybe I should forge Bill Gates' signature and see if they scrub it off.

Also:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=cl90RGpB1EQ



"Lucky You"
The National

Friday, February 29, 2008

Life's Spoiler Alert

Do your damnedest to act like you didn't read this here (Ben and Shelley, I'm talking to you two since I believe you two are the only ones who ever read this thing besides those who already know) in case they really, really want to tell everyone in person like they did Jeremy, Lauren, and I, but I just really, really wanted to document the fact that I am quite stoked that Mike asked Rachel to marry him and she said "yes."

You gotta lock that down.

And he has.

Good one, Mike.



"Mr. November"
The National

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Things to Remember: Shelley, Part One

Remember when we all went over to your dad's place for a summer barbecue thing? Remember how much fun that was?

What time did we all go home that night?

I think that might have been the first time we all hell of gossiped for that lengthy amount of time.

I find fighting nostalgia with nostalgia works alarmingly well. Does that make sense?

It was a red-letter night, that's all I'm saying.

Feel better, Shellphone.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Things to Remember: Mike, Part One

I can recall a day between second grade and fifth grade that Mike and I had a very, very heated discussion (read: pissy argument) about which conference the San Francisco 49ers belonged to.

He insisted that it was the AFC, but I knew better. It wasn't enough that I knew better, though. It was that I was a huge, dicky brat about it. I stormed into the kitchen and asked my mother and father. They backed me up, of course, but I could tell even then that they were appalled at how demonstrative I was about something so inconsequential.

In my defense, Mike was being a dicky brat about it, too. He just wouldn't let go of the idea that if the Cowboys and 49ers played each other in the playoffs, it meant that the 49ers were in the AFC.

It wasn't horrible logic for an elementary school student who knew the Super Bowl was always played between the NFC and AFC and that the Cowboys and 49ers almost never played each other during the regular season.

I wouldn't let it go, either.

I really, really doubt he remembers that. Maybe I'll post it on my Xanga to see if he does. In a way, I still feel bad about it to this day.

It was the kind of stubbornness that brought us back together after a year of fighting in fifth grade, though. I have to be thankful for that.



"Here Comes Your Man"
Pixies