Kiss me, I’m Reebok St. Patrick’s Day Classic Sneaker

Begorra! 

Yes, they are real. Reebok St. Patrick’s Day Classics. Green, with white trim, shamrocks, and “Kiss Me, I’m Irish” on the heel cup.

And a goddam Union Jack on the label. Use orange laces on these buggers and you could start another civil war right there on the sidewalk. If you check out the other model through the link above, you’ll see that the Orangemen are also well-represented. I can’t wait to see that in an updated version of West Side Story.

A sneaker you can wear once a year. The fashion world has reached its apotheosis, people; here is where it ends. Here, Karl Lagerfeld swallows his own tail and vanishes in a puff of brimstone.

Besides, they’re Reebok: they’re crap. Soft, pretty crap, but it’s a good thing they’re only wearable one day a year, because that’s the only way Reeboks would last more than one year anyway.

I’m wondering, looking at these, if they were designed by a Dublin dominatrix who, being new to the business, hadn’t really gotten the hang of the “Kiss my feet” thing yet.

“Yo P.Paddy, is it me feets ye’d be kissin?” Heel, boy.

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Celebrating the 70th anniversary of the Transition of Howard Phillips Lovecraft

Rats, I'm telling you! Rats in the walls!

God grant me the grace to pump out something decent in memory of the 70th anniversary of the death of HP Lovecraft, the power to force the audio player to work, and the wisdom to come back later and edit this into something that makes a helluva lot more sense than it does at 4:18am.

Audio from SFFAudio, via SFSignal. For more audio of forbidden madness, check out this roundup of all available HP Lovecraft audio.

Yog-sothoth be praised! If you’ve been looking for H.P. Lovecraft audio look no farther! We’ve compiled a list of all the story readings and audio dramas that we know about! Most of these “old ones” are out of print but once you know it exists you’re half way to finding it – though perhaps that’s not the wisest move. If you own one of these audiobooks and can provide more details or a scan of the cover art please send us an email. But no copies of the Necronomicon please …. we’re crazy enough!

the library cards of the acolytes of the elder gods 

and now, here’s your Podcast of the Elder Gods:

The Dunwich Horror
(23 minutes)

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Muy Bono?

Bono, dressed as a sexy lab tech. Kinky!So then there was the time I met Bono.

That was at Ceili’s too, although it wasn’t Ceili’s then. And it wasn’t really “met”. It was…

complicated.

So, okay, Bono‘s obscenely wealthy. And the sunglasses thing is just weirdly selfindulgent at this point, the Celtic version of Elvis’ white jumpsuit

But the man is talented. The man is earnest.

The man is dead sexy.

So we will hear not a word against Bono at the ol’ raincoaster blog, nay, no matter how many hundred and eighty million dollars may be squandered marketing Red merchandise to make only a million for charity.

We luv us some Bono, indeed we do.

Bono dressed as...a sexy middle-aged guy wearing blackSo there was this time I met Bono at Ceili’s, but it wasn’t Ceili’s then and I didn’t actually meet him.

It was like this:

I was strolling home from something I don’t remember, which was – oh yeah, yet another trip to the courthouse to deal with my father’s probate. I was doing that a lot that summer. And this particular day, for what reason I am sure I know not, I decided to wear my orange floral batik sundress that I got in Indonesia, my cute sunglasses, and my silver thong sandals. For once, I looked adorable.

And as I trundled homewise, a bundle of papers in my bag and a song (“Vertigo,” actually) in my head, I passed Skybar. Skybar was the biggest, the glammest, the coldest, the Thinks-Its-New-Yorkiest bar in the city. And I am, yea verily, the sharpest tack in the tack shop, for when I noticed a huge tour bus with blackened windows pulled up outside, heavy-duty velvet rope and door gorrilla action going on, a paparazzi-corralling area (although only two had been rounded up so far), and literally several hundred U2 posters on the wall, it began to dawn on me that something may, in fact, be happening or be about to be happening or be about to be preparing to be happening, so I asked.

I walked up to Security Gorilla #1 (you can tell because he’s the one talking into his cuffs) and asked brightly, “So…what’s going on?”

He looked left. He looked right. He looked down at me and whispered “U2“.

“Oh reeeeeeeaaaaalllly?” I responded, in my blondest-possible voice. “Do you think I could peek?”

He paused. He looked left. He looked right. Apparently, his alien leaders gave him permission through the wiring in his ear, because he looked left-right yet again, leaned down and said, “Okay, but Do. Not. Speak. To. Anyone.”

The. Edge. Would YOU force that man to look at pictures of your cats?This was a no-brainer. If anyone in U2 had spoken to me, I’d have lost all power of speech and quite possibly bladder control as well, so no probs. I wasn’t going to natter on and force The Edge to look at photos of my cat or anything, no way.

Security Gorilla #1 led me upstairs. I should explain that the bar is multileveled, and at that time every level was as dark as the inside of Satan’s mangina. And I, being both blonde and somewhat giddy on U2 fumes, had forgotten that I was wearing my dark sunglasses, so I was not going to see much of anything at all, even had the place been lit like a WalMart. He opened the door to the VIP bar, looked left, looked right, and motioned for me to look.

I did so.

As I peeked in, a voice to my immediate and I mean IMMEDIATE left like just out of range of my tiny, prehensile ear hairs said, “Hi.”

I turned to the person standing beside the door, automatically saying, “Hi” back. My mistake.

A hand closed on my shoulder and SG#1 said, “That’s it, let’s go” and downstairs and out the door we went.

All I had time to see was a pale face and, yes, dark sunglasses.

So either I met Bono or I met the ghost of Roy Orbison.

Roy Orbison. See the resemblance?

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Cui Bono? An evening at Ceili’s

Irish Daycare!

Cui Bono indeed. 

Look, I try not to bore my readers with local minutiae. I try not to be a haircut blog. I try not to be relevant only to the 20,000 or so local-blog readers in the Lower Mainland.

Oscar Wilde once said that there is nothing so provincial as a provincial celebrity, and, as always, old Oscar nailed it.

So I try not to be a local blogger.

But at some point, I snap. At some point, I can take it no more.

That is the point at which I have to teach the bartender at Ceili’s how to make a Martini. For the second time.

The Celtic Kink Limerick Challenge 

If you think writing limericks is easy, try doing it with scantily-clad lasses shaking their shamrocks in front of you! Form a team to challenge the Vancouver Limerick allstars in an all-out battle to compose the best and kinkiest limericks. Beware of distractions from live performances by the Sweet Soul Burlesque troupe and the sultry accordion stylings of Rowan Lipkovits! Hosted by “Ravishing Rhonda” and adjudicated by celebrity judges.

In Partnership with Ceili’s Irish Pub

What an awesome event, I thought. This looks like a lot of fun, I thought. We’ll have a great time, I thought.

Three strikes.

Well, to be fair, it was only two strikes: the event itself was great. The dancers were just the right mix of naughty and nice, and they, like all the best entertainers, gave the impression that they were having the time of their lives when onstage. I think I recognize the dreadlocked one from the Drive, and boy, does she ever look different out of the Guatemalan sweater and cargo pants! The emcee was bawdy and upbeat, the celebrity judges were funny, particularly the corporate, pantsuited Hillary Clinton figure from the Downtown Business Improvement Association, who became quite filthy and nearly incoherent as the night wore on. I’d actually heard of two of the celebrities (Hi, Catherine!) which is a high for Canadian celebrities, and some of the poetry wasn’t half bad.

So much for the good stuff.

It wasn’t actually me this time who had to explain how to make a Martini; it was Jeff, which was, I suppose, unfortunate, as Jeff is not what you’d call a Martini drinker on anything like a regular basis or, even, like, ever. But that’s what I asked him to get me. Unfortunately, the bartender had apparently never heard of such an exotic concoction and so somehow Jeff explained it, using primitive hand signals, wampum beads, and tidbits he’d probably picked up from old Cary Grant movies or something. It had booze, and olives, I’ll say that for it. Next time it might even come in the right glass, or less than half water, but I’m not holding my breath on that.

Jeff only got any alcohol at all because he spent twenty or so minutes trying to catch the attention of one of the bartenders, who had, apparently, other and far more important things on their minds. Like world peace or What Would Bono Do?

So did the crowd, if I’m any judge of why so many tiny ziplock baggies end up on the floor of a bar. I mean, it wasn’t as if you could get a drink. Booze report: 2.5 hours, 1 Martini, no waitress encounters at all except the time I lunged at one and thrust my empty glass onto her tray; she scuttled away before I could order anything, as if such a thought horrified her.

And this does not take me to my happy place.

There had been a whiskey tasting beforehand, which for reference next year would be the cart before the Clydesdale. I guess the distilleries must have brought their own samples, because no way did those people get as drunk as they did on the same kind of service that I saw. A good half of the room was three sheets to the wind, or if not three sheets then at least a couple of sleeping bags and a tea towel. It’s rare you see someone at a bar where the drinks are $10 apiece so wasted he’s picking fights with anyone within arm’s reach, but Ceili’s is nothing if not rare; it is, in my experience of Irish pubs, unique.

And thank god for that.

After the show things cleared out a bit and Jeff and I grabbed a table instead of the stageside chair I’d had and the stageside uncomfortably-trying-to-avoid-the-mean-drunks standing room he had, but after many futile glances at the bar I realized it would take dynamite or at least a pantiless Britney sighting to get those people out from behind there, and even if they came to take our order the chances were not good that they even knew what went into a Rusty Nail, which is what I was feeling like driving through their feet at that point.

So we bailed and got to Steamworks for last call and had two lovely drinks for the price of one @ Ceili’s. It’s true we were not surrounded by imitation Irish heirlooms, but we were also not surrounded by imitation waitstaff, either.

Also, here’s the limerick I wrote for the contest.

The Black Donnellys of Huron County
Were rotters all, each worth a bounty.
Pushed beyond all endurance
They took out insurance:
See, each of them blew their own Mountie
.

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