Clerks II: the YouTube trailer and the making of the YouTube trailer

The real scandal is that Goatee Boy here only got the part because of the outrageous salary demands on the part of Kevin Smith, the original Silent Bob. The director and producer simply refused, after a long attempt at negotiaions, to deal with the volatile star, and who among us can blame them?

And is it my imagination, or does Smith call us "You tubers" in some clever couch-potato referencing action?

Naw, he'd never do that!

Reno? 5 HP, tops

Borat? A 5-HP Reno

From Defamer comes this ghastly photo and report. Sacha Baron Cohen's endearingly clueless Eastern European avatar Borat has been mistaken for the even-less-decorative-and-more-highly-scented Jean Reno.

we'll never live down the one where we recently misidentified Dakota Fanning as "Bruce Willis' favorite dominatrix"–whoops!

For those who pay attention to such things, the Hollywood Reporter has taken the original pic down. Awwwwwwww. This is why mirror sites and renegade bloggers exist, people: so that you may enjoy an unimpaired view of Borat's furry treasure trail, free from mainstreaming corporate namby-pambyism.

impossible thing #15: taking Steven’s advice

Where's your head at?So I took Steven L's advice and went out to the pub for a bit instead of staying home in my pj's blogging. And what was the result?

I'm back home now, sitting here in sweat-soaked clothes, shaking like a Chihuahua in an eagle cage, with aching biceps and what feels like two black eyes; the pain is aleviated only slightly by the pharmacopea of chemicals in my system, and I am under the impression that the sweat itself is so toxic that it's bleaching the insides of my clothes.

How did this happen? Will I ever leave the apartment again? Can I possibly get Sauvignon Blanc delivered? Well, it's this way:

Mug shots...raincoaster may be next!

As longtime readers of the raincoaster blog know, I have been known to dabble in food consumption from time to time. Yes, I know it's unfashionable, but I like to eat, and not just on the weekends. No indeedy! I eat every damn day, and I don't care who knows it. It's not something I'm ashamed of, it's just something I do, and it's perfectly normal to do it, even several times a day. Indeed, there's hardly a period of time where I'm not eating or haven't just eaten, or am going to eat in a few hours. I even stop blogging to eat. Well, sometimes. Like for soup: soup is hard to keyboard while eating. I hardly ever have soup. Damn soup.

The Irish Heather pub is right next door to the Salty Tongue deli, and the deli, as you Snakebite, duhmight imagine, is full of food. So instead of following Steven's orders to go to the pub and top off the pot of Italian roast with milk and sugar that I had for breakfast with a few pints of Snakebite, I am diverted by the irresistable scent of, you guessed it, food.

I say hi to Erin, who has brought the baby, Orla Roisin, in for the day. I make the same inane remarks that everyone does, seeing a baby they haven't seen in three months: "She's getting so big!" and indeed she is, although why I feel the need to share this information with her mother, who has undoubtably noticed, being one sharp cookie and responsible besides for making sure the young un's got clothes that fit, is beyond the wisdom of the ancients to discover.

It must be the drugs.

This is my brain on drugs. How's yours?

Should I back up and explain the drugs? There's caffeine, of course, but who among us does not begin the day with three large mugs of dark roast with sugar and 1%? Eh? Exactly, it's like background radiation; everybody gets the same base exposure, at least in Vancouver they do. This is why God invented the Venti: so people could say "oh, I only have one cup of coffee a day" and still consume enough to get a racehorse barred from a race. There was one unfortunate horse who failed a drug test because the jockey'd given him a Coffee Crisp before the race, which also helps explain how I got through exams at University; coffee and Coffee Crisp. And the adrenaline rush provided by screaming at the eedjits who'd finished and who were playing Pink Floyd really loudly in celebration.

So there was the caffeine. There was also the speed.

Well, I don't think it's technically speed. It's technically "Dayquil" which is like Nyquil, only Day-ish rather than Ny-ish. I'm taking half the recommended dosage, so only one terrier-sized jelly gob per 12 hours. The Dayquil red is so bright and the Nyquil green so green that they look like Mexican jumping beans that an alien might hatch out of any second. Trust me, if you're on Dayquil this metaphor is up there with Donne, okay?

"Alcohol is essential," said Mae West. "A little for you, a lot for your audience." Why don't we all try that now?

Back? Cool.

Tripping signSo the Dayquil has dried up my nose, thank god, and miraculously eliminated my swollen glands; it had reached the point where I had to walk around with my elbows sticking out like a bodybuilder, because my arms wouldn't go down all the way. Having recovered from the self-tanning disaster of earlier, I am now red-and-white tobiano, thanks to the rash.

The fine print that somehow escaped me earlier, or maybe the elves painted it when I went out, cuz I don't remember seeing it there before, informs me that I am currently floating on a high that owes its existence to dextromethorphan hydrobromide, pseudophedrine hydrochloride (what, don't I deserve REAL phedrine hydrochloride???), and acetaminophen, as well as FD&C red #40, FD&C yellow #6, gelatin (oh goody, protein), glycerine, polyethylene glycol (that's either antifreeze or alcohol; either way it's good; I shall not freeze to death if I pass out in a snowbank), povidone, propylene glycol (that's the other one, so I'm all prepped for this passing out in a snowbank thing, too bad I'm not in Edmonton), purified water (cuz we wouldn't want any toxic chemicals in it, eh?) sorbitol (because if it's not sweetened, the Americans won't go near it), and titanium dioxide, for lo, we do not wish our Dayquil to get sunburnt.

I'm wondering which of these causes the shaking and which of them causes the OCD.

So at the deli (we're at the deli, right? Keep up) I ask what kind of soup they have. I don't know why I ask, but I always do. I always order the damn soup anyway, even if it's parsnip, because the soup they make is just the best damn thing around when you've got a cold, no matter what kind it is. It's usually gingery or coriandery or something that you just know God himself orders up when he gets the sniffles. So today all that registers when the nice girl whose name I can't remember helpfully tells me what kind of soup it is, is that the soup is orange. I, unsurprisingly, order it, to go. I take the little paper bag with my soup and bread and head out to the A&N, for by now I'm in a full-blown food attack, and I walk right past the pub.

Even though there is money in my pocket. Yeah, I have trouble believing it, too.

At the A&N I buy white people food, for it is one of the few places around Main & Hastings where you can get such a thing. I grab numerous cans, for when I am sick I don't like to cook, perferring to reheat. When you've been through cancer you get very practical about such things. I also need laundry soap, so I can do, you guessed it, laundry. You're a clever one. I also buy about fifty rolls of tp because it is on sale and it doubles, as we all know, as a hankie, and I feel this flu is settling in for the long run. Now I am presented with the difficulty of hauling this extremely hefty and bulky double-bagged bounty back the six or so blocks home.

Fortunately, it is Mardi Gras and none of the people on the street are particularly hungry, so I get no trouble from them. Mostly it's just the moocow tourists walking three to five abreast that get in my way, and I only have to clip a couple of them with the laundry detergent to get them to move out of the way. Because I am now streaming with sweat and shaking slightly and, let us put it bluntly, not exactly looking my best, they scuttle away without a word.

I attempt to flag down a taxi but am too tired to lift my arms, and lose out to a junkie hooker, who needs to get to her dealer's anyway. An emergency is an emergency, I guess.

The six blocks takes me about twenty minutes to cover, stopping two or three times a block and blowing steam like a stampeding buffalo, albiet one who stampedes at a pace that could be described as, at best, dignified.

By the time I get to my apartment there is no circulation in the fingers of my right hand, and I have to use both hands to turn the key. The Chinese neighbors look at me confusedly; this Gwai Lao isn't usually that kind of trouble, they think.

So that is why I am sitting here in sweat-drenched clothes, shaking like a Chihuahua in an eagle's cage, watching the colours in the room brighten and dull with each beat of my heart, and possessed of the distinct impression that my head is vibrating like a waterballoon after a hearty smack.

Once, I took a Contac C and an extra strength NeoCitran, drove over to my friends' house and fell into a trance looking at just how incredibly green the carpet was. It was twenty-year-old astroturf. No, they didn't let me drive home.

Maybe for experimental purposes I will take a Dayquil tomorrow and then hit the pub. Stay tuned, this could get…vivid.

My brain on drugs...and snakebite?

13 things that do not make sense

Mr Burns is weirdThat's a scientist for ya. He thinks there are only 13 things in this world that do not make sense. He obviously doesn't read as widely as I do.

The New Scientist, on 13 things that do not make sense. Bonus points if you've actually heard of all these things; you're pre-confused, and thus ahead of the rest of us.

“Something on Mars is ingesting nutrients, metabolising them and then belching out radioactive methane”

  1. the placebo effect
  2. the horizon problem
  3. ultra-energetic cosmic rays
  4. Belfast homeopathy results
  5. dark matter
  6. Viking's methane
  7. tetraneutrons
  8. the Pioneer anomaly
  9. dark energy
  10. the Kuiper cliff
  11. the Wow signal
  12. not so constant constants
  13. cold fusion

Weird Science

CIA Areas of Interest

From Cryptome.

Spooks, Squid, and the Shat: we certainly have taken a detour through the Twilight Zone recently, haven't we?

Hayden...doesn't he look like Tweetybird? I think it's a chickenhawk commentEvery time I publish something like this and read something like Sec. 158.13 (i) I wonder how long it'll be before some nicely-suited yet jackbooted team in Mormon haircuts beats down my door…but then I realize I live on the Downtown EastSide and if the security here can keep the home-grown junkies out, it can certainly keep the CIA at bay for a few days at least, long enough for the email to get through. Unless they, like the burglar of two years ago, climb into the parking garage and up the chimney of the incinerator to the roof, from whence they lower themselves on ropes. Yeah, they could get in that way. If they were fireproof. Patrick hooked the incinerator back up, just for protective purposes. We shall see how well it works.

20 May 2006

Source: http://www.gpoaccess.gov/cfr/index.html

———————————————————————–
[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 32, Volume 1]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 32CFR158.13]

[Page 629-631]
 
                       TITLE 32–NATIONAL DEFENSE
 
              CHAPTER I–OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
 
PART 158–GUIDELINES FOR SYSTEMATIC DECLASSIFICATION REVIEW OF CLASSIFIED
INFORMATION IN PERMANENTLY VALUABLE DoD RECORDS–Table of Contents
 
Sec. 158.13  Central Intelligence Agency areas of interest.

    (a) Cryptologic, cryptographic, or SIGINT. (Information in this
category shall continue to be forwarded to the NSA/CSS in accordance
with Sec. 158.11(d). The NSA/CSS shall arrange for necessary
coordination.)
    (b) Counterintelligence.
    (c) Special access programs
    (d) Information that identifies clandestine organizations, agents, sources, or methods.
    (e) Information on personnel under official or nonofficial cover or revelation of a cover arrangement.
    (f) Covertly obtained intelligence reports and the derivative information that would divulge intelligence sources or methods.
    (g) Methods or procedures used to acquire, produce, or support intelligence activities.
    (h) CIA structure, size, installations, security, objectives, and budget.
    (i) Information that would divulge intelligence interests, value, or extent of knowledge on a subject. (you mean like this?)
    (j) Training provided to or by the CIA that would indicate its capability or identify personnel.
    (k) Personnel recruiting, hiring, training, assignment, and evaluation policies.(then you need to take your help wanted ads offline)
    (l) Information that could lead to foreign political, economic, or military action against the United States or its allies.
    (m) Events leading to international tension that would affect U.S. foreign policy.(this could be all of the news, every damn day)
    (n) Diplomatic or economic activities affecting national security or international security negotiations.
    (o) Information affecting U.S. plans to meet diplomatic contingencies affecting national security.
    (p) Nonattributable activities conducted abroad in support of U.S. foreign policy.
    (q) U.S. surreptitious collection in a foreign nation that would affect relations with the country.
    (r) Covert relationships with international organizations or foreign governments.
    (s) Information related to political or economic instabilities in a foreign country threatening American lives and installations therein.
    (t) Information divulging U.S. intelligence collection and assessment capabilities.
    (u) U.S. and allies' defense plans and capabilities that enable a foreign entity to develop countermeasures.
    (v) Information disclosing U.S. systems and weapons capabilities or deployment.
    (w) Information on research, development, and engineering that enables the United States to maintain an advantage of value to national security.
    (x) Information on technical systems for collection and production of intelligence, and their use.
    (y) U.S. nuclear programs and facilities.
    (z) Foreign nuclear programs, facilities, and intentions.
    (aa) Contractual relationships that reveal the specific interest and expertise of the CIA.
    (bb) Information that could result in action placing an individual in jeopardy.
    (cc) Information on secret writing when it relates to specific chemicals, reagents, developers, and microdots.
    (dd) Reports of the Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) (– Branch, –Division) between July 31, 1946, and December 31, 1950, marked CONFIDENTIAL or above.
    (ee) Reports of the Foreign Documents Division between 1946 and 1950 marked RESTRICTED or above.
    (ff) Q information reports.
    (gg) FDD translations.
    (hh) U reports.

Keep on Bloggin'!