Fresh Prince of Tom Jones

Fresh Prince and Carleton do it Tom Jones style.

Scoble on flamewars for fun and profit

Scoble scobleizing. You can't see the cleft hooves in this pic 

This is brilliant. Someone is paying people to post flamestrikes against Robert Scoble over at Payperpost, and Scoble is all, like, bring it biotches!

Everyone else has cooler flamewars than me.

Payperpost continues its “hit campaign” on Scoble

As long as you guys keep linking to me I’m happy that someone is paying you to post. Heheheh!

Speaking of which, if you wanna get paid to blog there’s a lot better way to do THAT than get paid a few bucks to post. I know of a few companies right now hiring bloggers. I don’t even have to link to them. I bet that within a few minutes someone will post a link to the sites that are listing jobs for bloggers.

For everyone else: PayPerPost is paying people to link to me and make fun of me. Damn, why didn’t I think of that?

;-)

Fuck that. Why didn’t I???

Flamewar alert warning

cruel and unusual collective bargaining: bagpipes!!!

Sir? Put them down and back away with your dirk in clear view

FishbowlNYC today alerts raincoaster (and, no doubt, eighteen million other people) to the fact that the Writer’s Guild East has begun a return to the barefisted, take no prisoners style of union negotiation of yore. Jimmy Hoffa would be proud.

They’re using bagpipes.

If you were listening closely during this morning’s Early Show on CBS, you probably heard the dirge of bagpipes. Why bagpipes? “To mark the slow death of quality news at CBS,” says the Writers Guild of America East chapter, who staged the rally outside the Early Show studios to “call attention to the declining quality of news at CBS, quality they assert will further decline if CBS is successful in its contract negotiation demand to take newswriters/producers out of the union, under which protection they have worked for more than 40 years.”

CBS News staffers have been working without a contract since April 1, 2005.

One is reminded, one is, of the infamous Good-Looking Bagpiper Guy of Gastown a few years ago. This fellow was, indeed, very good-looking. But he was, verily, the worst bagpiper ever to manhandle a pipe, and that is saying a great deal.

They say that glass is not a solid but rather a supercooled liquid; I believe it, because when he played outside the windows of the store I worked in, you could almost see the molecules of glass scrambling over one another in a desperate bid to escape the pane.

Unfortunately, Mr. G-L B G o’G was far less mobile; he’d set up shop about 10:30 and play without rest or (apparently) breath, and certainly without benefit of lessons, for a good eight to ten hours a day. He made good money, too, because A) tourists can see better than they can hear, particularly when there are buses on the street and B) none of them had to stick around and listen to that for more than a couple of minutes.

We, however…

So our company finally took pity on us and, with a coalition of other local businesses, lobbied City Hall for a new bylaw that would limit the length of time a busker could stay in one place. We had nothing against the pan pipers, nor even the Chinese fellow who played that violin thing that sounded like a Siamese cat being tortured; we were focused solely on Mr. G-L B G o’G. And we lost.

So our very clever building management (who had their offices immediately above Mr. G-L B G o’G‘s favorite piping spot, although I am certain that didn’t factor into this at all, no, not at all) made a deal with the unsuspecting piper.

Go play at City Hall on Tuesday and we’ll give you 150% of your normal daily earnings.”

Wednesday comes along and Hey, presto! Bylaw passed.

Now THAT would be practical!

ugly baby? here’s hope for the future

Baby SuriDaddy

Ladies and gentlemen, Mister Tom Cruise
(via Gawker)

religious persecution and the founding of America

Gore Vidal's AmericaNot what you think.

Fortean Times is the go-to site on the Internet for all your Gore Vidal quotation needs, as all the literati know (particularly since the New Yorker went all Kato Kaelin/Beyonce/Roseanne Barr), and the On This Day entry for today is perhaps the finest example thereof.

6 September. The Pilgrim Fathers set sail from Plymouth on this day in 1620. Gore Vidal one remarked that they left England ‘not because they were persecuted for their religious beliefs, but because they were forbidden to persecute others for their beliefs.’

Well that would explain a great deal.