I never knew you could make fire so easily without matches or anything!
http://www.5min.com/Video/How-to-make-fire-without-matches-or-a-lighter-9386
Friday, September 14, 2007
Jelly Battle Game
This game is really simple but fun. I kept wanting to play it for some reason.
http://www.jellybattle.com/
http://www.jellybattle.com/
Modern Oregon Trail flash game!
Oh man, I love the Oregon trail. Many a long time spend playing that game.
I have a copy of it for windows 95-2000, but I don't know where it went.
Anyways, for those of you who love the game as much as me, here's a more modern version made in flash. It has the same controls and the same graphics. It also has a great sense of humor.
http://www.thuleroadtrip.com/thule_trail/thuleTrail.html
I have a copy of it for windows 95-2000, but I don't know where it went.
Anyways, for those of you who love the game as much as me, here's a more modern version made in flash. It has the same controls and the same graphics. It also has a great sense of humor.
http://www.thuleroadtrip.com/thule_trail/thuleTrail.html
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Trapped in a Cube
Very bizarre black and white film of a man trapped in a cube. Seems to have been one of the darker projects by Jim Henson:
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Patrick Norton: My Anti-Drug
LOFL this is just pure techtv/unscrewed greatness!
Patrick Norton: My Anti-Drug
Patrick Norton: My Anti-Drug
WILFORD'S WACKY SPAM 2
Hi, Wilford here again. Looks like this one is like a combo of a bunch of a strange documents. I got about 6 of them in different arrangements of the exact same paragraphs... I have no comment.
Over the years, Dr.McAdams and others have interviewed hundreds of men and women, most in their 30s and older. The entire two-hour session is recorded and transcribed. A note of disappointment seems to close each narrative phrase. But the point is that the narrative themes are, as much as any other trait, driving factors in people’s behavior, the researchers say. — they draw on these stories implicitly, whether they know they are working from them or not,” Dr.McAdams said.
Adler reported on 180 adults from the Chicago area who had recently completed a course of talk therapy. They sought treatment for things like depression, anxiety, marital problems and fear of flying, and spent months to years in therapy. For all I know, there may be an endless supply of “Shrek” sequels in the pipeline. But there is nonetheless a feeling of finality about “Shrek the Third,” a sense that the tale has at last reached a state of completion.
Which is only to say that “Shrek the Third,” directed by Chris Miller and Raman Hui from a script with a half-dozen credited begetters, already feels less like a children’s movie than either of its predecessors. After exploring the predominance of violence in American culture in Bowling for Columbine and taking a critical look at the September 11th attacks in Fahrenheit 9/11, activist filmmaker Michael Moore turns his attentions towards the topic of health care in the United States in this documentary that weighs the plight of the uninsured against the record profits of the pharmaceutical industry. If ever a movie had a case of the blues and the blahs, it’s “Spider-Man 3,” the third and what feels like the end of Sam Raimi’s big-screen comic-book adaptations. This film seems to be "All About the Benjamins," to use the title of an Ice Cube action comedy. Shot on Super 16-millimeter film, with many scenes steeped in a blue that would have made Yves Klein envious, “Zoo” is, to a large extent, about the rhetorical uses of beauty and metaphor and of certain filmmaking techniques like slow-motion photography.
The cinematographer, Sean Kirby, has done some striking work here. The prowling camera and dusky colors give much of “Zoo,” which opens with the portentous image of what appear to be miners emerging from a tunnel, a sumptuous, almost velvety look and vibe, an effect enhanced by the repeated use of slow-motion photography.
Idriss Abdoulaye sells water from a pushcart for 20 naira a jerry can, about 15 cents, to people like himself, too poor to have wells. Will he take over his father-in-law’s business or remain true to his vocation of bellowing and smashing things? After exploring the predominance of violence in American culture in Bowling for Columbine and taking a critical look at the September 11th attacks in Fahrenheit 9/11, activist filmmaker Michael Moore turns his attentions towards the topic of health care in the United States in this documentary that weighs the plight of the uninsured against the record profits of the pharmaceutical industry. (Ready or not, the studio is talking about a fourth.) Aesthetically and conceptually wrung out, fizzled rather than fizzy, this latest installment in the spider-bites-boy adventure story shoots high, swings low and every so often hits the sweet spot, but mostly just plods and plods along, as if its heart were pumping tired radioactive blood. zaudergrill nomariogirard888gmail.commo Most of the decisions involving this sequel to the spirited original "Barbershop" — a movie that itself cobbled together pieces of other projects — are about carefully retracing the steps of that 2002 hit in order to keep those $100 Benjamins flowing. But although Ice Cube's business sense is right on the money, the minor surprises of the first film are gone. He said he worries they will end up as poor, illiterate traders like him.
For all I know, there may be an endless supply of “Shrek” sequels in the pipeline. The current installment finds him faced with impending fatherhood and something of a career crisis. Unless the Shrek team wants to follow its hero into the dangerous swamps of mid-life, thus shifting his literary pedigree away from William Steig and in the direction of John Updike or Philip Roth, it may want to leave him in a condition of more-or-less happily ever after.
If ever a movie had a case of the blues and the blahs, it’s “Spider-Man 3,” the third and what feels like the end of Sam Raimi’s big-screen comic-book adaptations. As it happens, the over-all shape does recall a Busby Berkeley musical — snappy story, lavish number, snappy story, lavish number — but without the snap or fun.The bittersweet aspects of the film add texture, though they can't supplant the lack of comedy; there were more laughs in Ice Cube's last picture, "Torque." The director Robinson Devor apparently would like viewers who watch his heavily reconstructed documentary, “Zoo,” to see it as a story of ineluctable desire and human dignity. Shot on Super 16-millimeter film, with many scenes steeped in a blue that would have made Yves Klein envious, “Zoo” is, to a large extent, about the rhetorical uses of beauty and metaphor and of certain filmmaking techniques like slow-motion photography. In the first movie Shrek (voiced by Mike Myers) met and wooed his lady love, Fiona (Cameron Diaz); in the second he got to know the in-laws. The current installment finds him faced with impending fatherhood and something of a career crisis.
Will he take over his father-in-law’s business or remain true to his vocation of bellowing and smashing things? Instead they go to a Koranic school, where they learn the Koran by rote. That DreamWorks ogre’s skin is the color of money after all. Unless the Shrek team wants to follow its hero into the dangerous swamps of mid-life, thus shifting his literary pedigree away from William Steig and in the direction of John Updike or Philip Roth, it may want to leave him in a condition of more-or-less happily ever after.
After exploring the predominance of violence in American culture in Bowling for Columbine and taking a critical look at the September 11th attacks in Fahrenheit 9/11, activist filmmaker Michael Moore turns his attentions towards the topic of health care in the United States in this documentary that weighs the plight of the uninsured against the record profits of the pharmaceutical industry. As it happens, the over-all shape does recall a Busby Berkeley musical — snappy story, lavish number, snappy story, lavish number — but without the snap or fun. A movie featuring Ice Cube bellowing "No more profanity. When the moneyed inner-city entrepreneur Quentin Leroux (Harry Lennix) builds a lavish competitor called Nappy Cutz right across the street from Calvin's shop, the battle is on — Calvin has to fight to keep his business alive. The bittersweet aspects of the film add texture, though they can't supplant the lack of comedy; there were more laughs in Ice Cube's last picture, "Torque."
Instead they go to a Koranic school, where they learn the Koran by rote. Unless the Shrek team wants to follow its hero into the dangerous swamps of mid-life, thus shifting his literary pedigree away from William Steig and in the direction of John Updike or Philip Roth, it may want to leave him in a condition of more-or-less happily ever after. If ever a movie had a case of the blues and the blahs, it’s “Spider-Man 3,” the third and what feels like the end of Sam Raimi’s big-screen comic-book adaptations. A movie featuring Ice Cube bellowing "No more profanity.
Over the years, Dr.McAdams and others have interviewed hundreds of men and women, most in their 30s and older. The entire two-hour session is recorded and transcribed. A note of disappointment seems to close each narrative phrase. But the point is that the narrative themes are, as much as any other trait, driving factors in people’s behavior, the researchers say. — they draw on these stories implicitly, whether they know they are working from them or not,” Dr.McAdams said.
Adler reported on 180 adults from the Chicago area who had recently completed a course of talk therapy. They sought treatment for things like depression, anxiety, marital problems and fear of flying, and spent months to years in therapy. For all I know, there may be an endless supply of “Shrek” sequels in the pipeline. But there is nonetheless a feeling of finality about “Shrek the Third,” a sense that the tale has at last reached a state of completion.
Which is only to say that “Shrek the Third,” directed by Chris Miller and Raman Hui from a script with a half-dozen credited begetters, already feels less like a children’s movie than either of its predecessors. After exploring the predominance of violence in American culture in Bowling for Columbine and taking a critical look at the September 11th attacks in Fahrenheit 9/11, activist filmmaker Michael Moore turns his attentions towards the topic of health care in the United States in this documentary that weighs the plight of the uninsured against the record profits of the pharmaceutical industry. If ever a movie had a case of the blues and the blahs, it’s “Spider-Man 3,” the third and what feels like the end of Sam Raimi’s big-screen comic-book adaptations. This film seems to be "All About the Benjamins," to use the title of an Ice Cube action comedy. Shot on Super 16-millimeter film, with many scenes steeped in a blue that would have made Yves Klein envious, “Zoo” is, to a large extent, about the rhetorical uses of beauty and metaphor and of certain filmmaking techniques like slow-motion photography.
The cinematographer, Sean Kirby, has done some striking work here. The prowling camera and dusky colors give much of “Zoo,” which opens with the portentous image of what appear to be miners emerging from a tunnel, a sumptuous, almost velvety look and vibe, an effect enhanced by the repeated use of slow-motion photography.
Idriss Abdoulaye sells water from a pushcart for 20 naira a jerry can, about 15 cents, to people like himself, too poor to have wells. Will he take over his father-in-law’s business or remain true to his vocation of bellowing and smashing things? After exploring the predominance of violence in American culture in Bowling for Columbine and taking a critical look at the September 11th attacks in Fahrenheit 9/11, activist filmmaker Michael Moore turns his attentions towards the topic of health care in the United States in this documentary that weighs the plight of the uninsured against the record profits of the pharmaceutical industry. (Ready or not, the studio is talking about a fourth.) Aesthetically and conceptually wrung out, fizzled rather than fizzy, this latest installment in the spider-bites-boy adventure story shoots high, swings low and every so often hits the sweet spot, but mostly just plods and plods along, as if its heart were pumping tired radioactive blood. zaudergrill nomariogirard888gmail.commo Most of the decisions involving this sequel to the spirited original "Barbershop" — a movie that itself cobbled together pieces of other projects — are about carefully retracing the steps of that 2002 hit in order to keep those $100 Benjamins flowing. But although Ice Cube's business sense is right on the money, the minor surprises of the first film are gone. He said he worries they will end up as poor, illiterate traders like him.
For all I know, there may be an endless supply of “Shrek” sequels in the pipeline. The current installment finds him faced with impending fatherhood and something of a career crisis. Unless the Shrek team wants to follow its hero into the dangerous swamps of mid-life, thus shifting his literary pedigree away from William Steig and in the direction of John Updike or Philip Roth, it may want to leave him in a condition of more-or-less happily ever after.
If ever a movie had a case of the blues and the blahs, it’s “Spider-Man 3,” the third and what feels like the end of Sam Raimi’s big-screen comic-book adaptations. As it happens, the over-all shape does recall a Busby Berkeley musical — snappy story, lavish number, snappy story, lavish number — but without the snap or fun.The bittersweet aspects of the film add texture, though they can't supplant the lack of comedy; there were more laughs in Ice Cube's last picture, "Torque." The director Robinson Devor apparently would like viewers who watch his heavily reconstructed documentary, “Zoo,” to see it as a story of ineluctable desire and human dignity. Shot on Super 16-millimeter film, with many scenes steeped in a blue that would have made Yves Klein envious, “Zoo” is, to a large extent, about the rhetorical uses of beauty and metaphor and of certain filmmaking techniques like slow-motion photography. In the first movie Shrek (voiced by Mike Myers) met and wooed his lady love, Fiona (Cameron Diaz); in the second he got to know the in-laws. The current installment finds him faced with impending fatherhood and something of a career crisis.
Will he take over his father-in-law’s business or remain true to his vocation of bellowing and smashing things? Instead they go to a Koranic school, where they learn the Koran by rote. That DreamWorks ogre’s skin is the color of money after all. Unless the Shrek team wants to follow its hero into the dangerous swamps of mid-life, thus shifting his literary pedigree away from William Steig and in the direction of John Updike or Philip Roth, it may want to leave him in a condition of more-or-less happily ever after.
After exploring the predominance of violence in American culture in Bowling for Columbine and taking a critical look at the September 11th attacks in Fahrenheit 9/11, activist filmmaker Michael Moore turns his attentions towards the topic of health care in the United States in this documentary that weighs the plight of the uninsured against the record profits of the pharmaceutical industry. As it happens, the over-all shape does recall a Busby Berkeley musical — snappy story, lavish number, snappy story, lavish number — but without the snap or fun. A movie featuring Ice Cube bellowing "No more profanity. When the moneyed inner-city entrepreneur Quentin Leroux (Harry Lennix) builds a lavish competitor called Nappy Cutz right across the street from Calvin's shop, the battle is on — Calvin has to fight to keep his business alive. The bittersweet aspects of the film add texture, though they can't supplant the lack of comedy; there were more laughs in Ice Cube's last picture, "Torque."
Instead they go to a Koranic school, where they learn the Koran by rote. Unless the Shrek team wants to follow its hero into the dangerous swamps of mid-life, thus shifting his literary pedigree away from William Steig and in the direction of John Updike or Philip Roth, it may want to leave him in a condition of more-or-less happily ever after. If ever a movie had a case of the blues and the blahs, it’s “Spider-Man 3,” the third and what feels like the end of Sam Raimi’s big-screen comic-book adaptations. A movie featuring Ice Cube bellowing "No more profanity.
WILFORD'S WACKY SPAM!!
WILFORD'S WACKY SPAM!!
This was in a spam message I got a while ago in my email. Usually I just delete them, but this one was so funny I had to post it.
Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects. However, if we
choose name like IExplore, we might be able to bypass even personal firewall.
The reams of paper he consumed all disappeared into Fishface's pocket
without any visible evidence that he had succeeded in communicating
with his hosts. If the cipher was intended to get security by
remaining secret, this is yet another testament to the fact that
security through obscurity is an unworkable principle.
Now Hosaka hunts me. They were sticky and wet, and difficult to handle.
You have interrupted me. It is likewise always pronounced in the
middle of words like Celeborn, Menegroth.
Thy friends suspect for traitors while thou liv'st, And take deep
traitors for thy dearest friends. The fire in which you burn has to
be maintained.
If so, how do I subclass an OLE control. UDP is a facility available
for applications to deliver information between systems.
From him I have express commandment That thou nor none of thine shall
be let in. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore USA
1998Research Energy 760 504640 80000 10000 152.
Jones et al, Oct 1971. See the included "glos.h" header file.
A instance containing an XML-encoded representation of the security
object, including state information. Main liebe, main liebe, Main
liebe eee.
If so, have a look at some of the many fascinating ways of lacing,
either for different functions or just for appearances. That is not a
concept my people embrace.
Glavnoe samomu krome kak klikat, ne4ego delat ne nado. You have
interrupted me.
She knelt on one knee and unwound the remaining chain from Rapaldo's
waist. He suggested a slight fullness to the lips and showed me a new
nose I liked, and I went flat-out trendy with the ears, letting him
give me his latest design.
...WHAT??
My favorite part had to be "Glavnoe samomu krome kak
klikat, ne4ego delat ne nado. You have interrupted me." as if the person was talking in another language to
piss someone else off. lofl.
This was in a spam message I got a while ago in my email. Usually I just delete them, but this one was so funny I had to post it.
Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects. However, if we
choose name like IExplore, we might be able to bypass even personal firewall.
The reams of paper he consumed all disappeared into Fishface's pocket
without any visible evidence that he had succeeded in communicating
with his hosts. If the cipher was intended to get security by
remaining secret, this is yet another testament to the fact that
security through obscurity is an unworkable principle.
Now Hosaka hunts me. They were sticky and wet, and difficult to handle.
You have interrupted me. It is likewise always pronounced in the
middle of words like Celeborn, Menegroth.
Thy friends suspect for traitors while thou liv'st, And take deep
traitors for thy dearest friends. The fire in which you burn has to
be maintained.
If so, how do I subclass an OLE control. UDP is a facility available
for applications to deliver information between systems.
From him I have express commandment That thou nor none of thine shall
be let in. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore USA
1998Research Energy 760 504640 80000 10000 152.
Jones et al, Oct 1971. See the included "glos.h" header file.
A instance containing an XML-encoded representation of the security
object, including state information. Main liebe, main liebe, Main
liebe eee.
If so, have a look at some of the many fascinating ways of lacing,
either for different functions or just for appearances. That is not a
concept my people embrace.
Glavnoe samomu krome kak klikat, ne4ego delat ne nado. You have
interrupted me.
She knelt on one knee and unwound the remaining chain from Rapaldo's
waist. He suggested a slight fullness to the lips and showed me a new
nose I liked, and I went flat-out trendy with the ears, letting him
give me his latest design.
...WHAT??
My favorite part had to be "Glavnoe samomu krome kak
klikat, ne4ego delat ne nado. You have interrupted me." as if the person was talking in another language to
piss someone else off. lofl.
Boomshine Game
I just found this game earlier today and it is quite fun. The objective is sort of like that missle game where you have to make a chain of explosions to prevent damage to the cities on the ground, but instead of protecting something, the key is to get as many explosions in a row as possible. So far, my best score is level 12 and 53 lights in one try.
Try it, it is fun!
Boomshine Game
EDIT: as of approx. 10 seconds ago, I managed to beat the game with 59 lights total out of 60. yays.
Try it, it is fun!
Boomshine Game
EDIT: as of approx. 10 seconds ago, I managed to beat the game with 59 lights total out of 60. yays.
Highspeed Chase Game
Hi, Wilford here. I just found a fun new game. It's like a combo of burnout and grand theft auto 2, neither of which I have played for a long time, and this game makes me want to play them again, lofl.
Highspeed Chase Game
I've only played 2 games, but I'm already hooked! Enjoy.
Highspeed Chase Game
I've only played 2 games, but I'm already hooked! Enjoy.
Ever wonder about Le Wood De Morning?
I just found a nice article explaining why and how we men get morning wood, lofl. Read it here:
http://www.healthbolt.net/2007/08/27/morning-wood/
I also came up with a joke:
What kind of erection does a person wake up with after a funeral?
MOURNING WOOD.
http://www.healthbolt.net/2007/08/27/morning-wood/
I also came up with a joke:
What kind of erection does a person wake up with after a funeral?
MOURNING WOOD.
Rowan Atkinson - Invisible Drum Kit video
I just found this hilarious video of Rowan Atkinson doing the Invisible Drum Kit shetch. I lofled hard.
Best of John Cleese Video
A short video of the great John Cleese doing some funny stuff.
GO AWAY! belgian!
GO AWAY! belgian!
Monty Python's The Holy Grail with LIGHTSABERS!
Monty Python's The Holy Grail with LIGHTSABERS!
Awesome!
Awesome!
Impatient Kitten Video!
My kitty is almost this impatient... but this is hilarious! What a cute kitten.
Sproing game!
I love a good physics flash game, and this one has got me addicted already.
http://kongregate.com/games/squidsquid/sproing
http://kongregate.com/games/squidsquid/sproing
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
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