1. Theravada Buddhism (100%)
2. Unitarian Universalism (99%)
3. Secular Humanism (97%)
4. Liberal Quakers (87%)
5. Nontheist (73%)
6. Mahayana Buddhism (69%)
Sunday, September 12, 2010
FIBA WC 2010 (Turkey)
The crown was fantastic! This was the all time biggest basketball game of Turkey history. In semifinals of World Championships! Versus tough young Serbian team! Winner plays Team USA in the Finals! On Home turf - in Istanbul, Turkey!!!
p.s.
he is a great player with flair, control and cold blood running through his veins:

Saturday, September 4, 2010
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Personal Inception
what i am proud of being now.
i should be proud of what i will become
as i am proud of what ever i am right now.
its about me and my perception of life.
'instituo-ui-utum iam'

Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Monday, August 23, 2010
The Last M. by N.S.
My personal most anticipated movie of this summer/year will be skipped for probably the whole eternity of my life.
Yes, life is that short!
After some research i decided to completely skip the Mr.Night-Shilamaya-Yo-Mama-Is-A Piranyah's movie and let those few hours of my saved life be filled by "Avatar: The Air Bender" Tv Series instead!
Friday, August 20, 2010
Youth is Beauty
We're only young and naive still
We require certain skills
The mood it changes like the wind
Hard to control when it begins
The bittersweet between my teeth
Trying to find the in-betweens
Fall back in love eventually
Yeah yeah yeah yeah
Can't help myself but count the flaws
Claw my way out through these walls
One temporary escape
Feel it start to permeate
We lie beneath the stars at night
Our hands gripping each other tight
You keep my secrets hope to die
Promises, swear them to the sky
The bittersweet between my teeth
Trying to find the in-betweens
Fall back in love eventually
Yeah yeah yeah yeah
As it withers
Brittle it shakes
Can you whisper
As it crumbles and breaks
As you shiver
Count up all your mistakes
Pair of forgivers
Let go before it's too late
Can you whisper
Can you whisper
Can you whisper
Can you whisper
The bittersweet between my teeth
Trying to find the in-betweens
Fall back in love eventually
Yeah yeah yeah yeah
The bittersweet between my teeth
Trying to find the in-betweens
Fall back in love eventually
Yeah yeah yeah yeah
Saturday, August 14, 2010
CLaarkamp1287
1 year ago 17 "likes"
" It's sad that this is probably one of the five best films ever made and 99.999999999...% of the world's population will never watch it because of its run time.
Oh well, that doesn't stop me from making an effort to pimp this movie out as much as I can so I can finally convince someone to watch it. People don't know what they're missing. "
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Vancouver State of Mind
a Big Thanks to Joseph Lin for doing the work of finding this:
VANCOUVER - (Olympic State Of Mind) Noble & B.Diamond Ft. Various Artists from Hitstape.com on Vimeo.
Toni Sabas 5 серпня о 1:27
i thought of you guys when thinking of this.
is there anywhere a "Vancouver State of Mind" song?
first album i ever got was Ilmatic by Nas. Been listening to a ton of him lately. Realize how beautiful 604 is. You guys agree with me i assume.
but yeah
Vancouver State of Mind???
is there anywhere a "Vancouver State of Mind" song?
first album i ever got was Ilmatic by Nas. Been listening to a ton of him lately. Realize how beautiful 604 is. You guys agree with me i assume.
but yeah
Vancouver State of Mind???
Friday, July 30, 2010
The BOOM a.k.a. The Movie: I N C E P T I O N
Inception: 9.2/10 bananas

This entire article is a major spoiler for Inception. Please do not read it until you've experienced Christopher Nolan's film for yourself.
She asks him that in a scene that we all know is a dream, but Inception lets us in on this elsewhere. Michael Caine's character implores Cobb to return to reality, to wake up. During the chase in Mombasa, Cobb tries to escape down an alleyway, and the two buildings between which he's running begin closing in on him - a classic anxiety dream moment. When he finally pulls himself free he finds Ken Watanabe's character waiting for him, against all logic. Except dream logic.
Watching the film with this eye you can see the dream logic unfolding. As is said in the movie, dreams seem real in the moment and it's only when you've woken up that things seem strange. The film's 'reality' sequences are filled with moments that, on retrospect, seem strange or unlikely or unexplained. Even the basics of the dream sharing technology is unbelievably vague, and I don't think that's just because Nolan wants to keep things streamlined. It's because Cobb's unconscious mind is filling it in as he goes along.
That leaves two key figures. Saito is the money guy, the big corporate suit who fancies himself a part of the game. And Fischer, the mark, is the audience. Cobb, as a director, takes Fischer through an engaging, stimulating and exciting journey, one that leads him to an understanding about himself. Cobb is the big time movie director (or rather the best version of that - certainly not a Michael Bay) who brings the action, who brings the spectacle, but who also brings the meaning and the humanity and the emotion.
The movies-as-dreams aspect is part of why Inception keeps the dreams so grounded. In the film it's explained that playing with the dream too much alerts the dreamer to the falseness around him; this is just another version of the suspension of disbelief upon which all films hinge. As soon as the audience is pulled out of the movie by some element - an implausible scene, a ludicrous line, a poor performance - it's possible that the cinematic dream spell is broken completely, and they're lost.
CONTAINS SPOILERS!!!
NEVER WAKE UP: THE MEANING AND SECRET OF INCEPTION
- By Devin Faraci
- Published 07/19/2010
- The Devin's Advocate
This entire article is a major spoiler for Inception. Please do not read it until you've experienced Christopher Nolan's film for yourself.
Every single moment of Inception is a dream. I think that in a couple of years this will become the accepted reading of the film, and differing interpretations will have to be skillfully argued to be even remotely considered. The film makes this clear, and it never holds back the truth from audiences. Some find this idea to be narratively repugnant, since they think that a movie where everything is a dream is a movie without stakes, a movie where the audience is wasting their time.
Except that this is exactly what Nolan is arguing against. The film is a metaphor for the way that Nolan as a director works, and what he's ultimately saying is that the catharsis found in a dream is as real as the catharsis found in a movie is as real as the catharsis found in life. Inception is about making movies, and cinema is the shared dream that truly interests the director.
I believe that Inception is a dream to the point where even the dream-sharing stuff is a dream. Dom Cobb isn't an extractor. He can't go into other people's dreams. He isn't on the run from the Cobol Corporation. At one point he tells himself this, through the voice of Mal, who is a projection of his own subconscious. She asks him how real he thinks his world is, where he's being chased across the globe by faceless corporate goons.
She asks him that in a scene that we all know is a dream, but Inception lets us in on this elsewhere. Michael Caine's character implores Cobb to return to reality, to wake up. During the chase in Mombasa, Cobb tries to escape down an alleyway, and the two buildings between which he's running begin closing in on him - a classic anxiety dream moment. When he finally pulls himself free he finds Ken Watanabe's character waiting for him, against all logic. Except dream logic.
Much is made in the film about totems, items unique to dreamers that can be used to tell when someone is actually awake or asleep. Cobb's totem is a top, which spins endlessly when he's asleep, and the fact that the top stops spinning at many points in the film is claimed by some to be evidence that Cobb is awake during those scenes. The problem here is that the top wasn't always Cobb's totem - he got it from his wife, who killed herself because she believed that they were still living in a dream. There's more than a slim chance that she's right - note that when Cobb remembers her suicide she is, bizarrely, sitting on a ledge opposite the room they rented. You could do the logical gymnastics required to claim that Mal simply rented another room across the alleyway, but the more realistic notion here is that it's a dream, with the gap between the two lovers being a metaphorical one made literal. When Mal jumps she leaves behind the top, and if she was right about the world being a dream, the fact that it spins or doesn't spin is meaningless. It's a dream construct anyway. There's no way to use the top as a proof of reality.
Watching the film with this eye you can see the dream logic unfolding. As is said in the movie, dreams seem real in the moment and it's only when you've woken up that things seem strange. The film's 'reality' sequences are filled with moments that, on retrospect, seem strange or unlikely or unexplained. Even the basics of the dream sharing technology is unbelievably vague, and I don't think that's just because Nolan wants to keep things streamlined. It's because Cobb's unconscious mind is filling it in as he goes along.
There's more, but I would have to watch the film again with a notebook to get all the evidence (all of it in plain sight). The end seems without a doubt to be a dream - from the dreamy way the film is shot and edited once Cobb wakes up on the plane all the way through to him coming home to find his two kids in the exact position and in the exact same clothes that he kept remembering them, it doesn't matter if the top falls, Cobb is dreaming.
That Cobb is dreaming and still finds his catharsis (that he can now look at the face of his kids) is the point. It's important to realize that Inception is a not very thinly-veiled autobiographical look at how Nolan works. In a recent red carpet interview, Leonardo DiCaprio - who was important in helping Nolan get the script to the final stages - compares the movie not to The Matrix or some other mindfuck movie but Fellini's 8 1/2. This is probably the second most telling thing DiCaprio said during the publicity tour for the film, with the first being that he based Cobb on Nolan. 8 1/2 is totally autobiographical for Fellini, and it's all about an Italian director trying to overcome his block and make a movie (a science fiction movie, even). It's a film about filmmaking, and so is Inception.
The heist team quite neatly maps to major players in a film production. Cobb is the director while Arthur, the guy who does the research and who sets up the places to sleep, is the producer. Ariadne, the dream architect, is the screenwriter - she creates the world that will be entered. Eames is the actor (this is so obvious that the character sits at an old fashioned mirrored vanity, the type which stage actors would use). Yusuf is the technical guy; remember, the Oscar come from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and it requires a good number of technically minded people to get a movie off the ground. Nolan himself more or less explains this in the latest issue of Film Comment, saying 'There are a lot of striking similarities [between what the team does and the putting on of a major Hollywood movie]. When for instance the team is out on the street they've created, surveying it, that's really identical with what we do on tech scouts before we shoot.'
That leaves two key figures. Saito is the money guy, the big corporate suit who fancies himself a part of the game. And Fischer, the mark, is the audience. Cobb, as a director, takes Fischer through an engaging, stimulating and exciting journey, one that leads him to an understanding about himself. Cobb is the big time movie director (or rather the best version of that - certainly not a Michael Bay) who brings the action, who brings the spectacle, but who also brings the meaning and the humanity and the emotion.
The movies-as-dreams aspect is part of why Inception keeps the dreams so grounded. In the film it's explained that playing with the dream too much alerts the dreamer to the falseness around him; this is just another version of the suspension of disbelief upon which all films hinge. As soon as the audience is pulled out of the movie by some element - an implausible scene, a ludicrous line, a poor performance - it's possible that the cinematic dream spell is broken completely, and they're lost.
As a great director, Cobb is also a great artist, which means that even when he's creating a dream about snowmobile chases, he's bringing something of himself into it. That's Mal. It's the auterist impulse, the need to bring your own interests, obsessions and issues into a movie. It's what the best directors do. It's very telling that Nolan sees this as kind of a problem; I suspect another filmmaker might have cast Mal as the special element that makes Cobb so successful.
Inception is such a big deal because it's what great movies strive to do. You walk out of a great film changed, with new ideas planted in your head, with your neural networks subtly rewired by what you've just seen. On a meta level Inception itself does this, with audiences leaving the theater buzzing about the way it made them feel and perceive. New ideas, new thoughts, new points of view are more lasting a souvenir of a great movie than a ticket stub.
Inception is such a big deal because it's what great movies strive to do. You walk out of a great film changed, with new ideas planted in your head, with your neural networks subtly rewired by what you've just seen. On a meta level Inception itself does this, with audiences leaving the theater buzzing about the way it made them feel and perceive. New ideas, new thoughts, new points of view are more lasting a souvenir of a great movie than a ticket stub.
It's possible to view Fischer, the mark, as not the audience but just as the character that is being put through the movie that is the dream. To be honest, I haven't quite solidified my thought on Fischer's place in the allegorical web, but what's important is that the breakthrough that Fischer has in the ski fortress is real. Despite the fact that his father is not there, despite the fact that the pinwheel was never by his father's bedside, the emotions that Fischer experiences are 100 percent genuine. It doesn't matter that the movie you're watching isn't a real story, that it's just highly paid people putting on a show - when a movie moves you, it truly moves you. The tears you cry during Up are totally real, even if absolutely nothing that you see on screen has ever existed in the physical world.
For Cobb there's a deeper meaning to it all. While Cobb doesn't have daddy issues (that we know of), he, like Fischer, is dealing with a loss. He's trying to come to grips with the death of his wife*; Fischer's journey reflects Cobb's while not being a complete point for point reflection. That's important for Nolan, who is making films that have personal components - that talk about things that obviously interest or concern him - but that aren't actually about him. Other filmmakers (Fellini) may make movies that are thinly veiled autobiography, but that's not what Nolan or Cobb are doing. The movies (or dreams) they're putting together reflect what they're going through but aren't easily mapped on to them. Talking to Film Comment, Nolan says he has never been to psychoanalysis. 'I think I use filmmaking for that purpose. I have a passionate relationship to what I do.'
In a lot of ways Inception is a bookend to last summer's Inglorious Basterds. In that film Quentin Tarantino celebrated the ways that cinema could change the world, while in Inception Nolan is examining the ways that cinema, the ultimate shared dream, can change an individual. The entire film is a dream, within the confines of the movie itself, but in a more meta sense it's Nolan's dream. He's dreaming Cobb, and finding his own moments of revelation and resolution, just as Cobb is dreaming Fischer and finding his own catharsis and change.
The whole film being a dream isn't a cop out or a waste of time, but an ultimate expression of the film's themes and meaning. It's all fake. But it's all very, very real. And that's something every single movie lover understands implicitly and completely.
* it's really worth noting that if you accept that the whole movie is a dream that Mal may not be dead. She could have just left Cobb. The mourning that he is experiencing deep inside his mind is no less real if she's alive or dead - he has still lost her.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Are you suffering from Pandorum?
Pandorum: 8.1/10 bananas At first it looks just like any other spaceship/survival sci-fi flick thats bound to have many loop holes in the story, but it a well made movie. simple yet very entertaining.
| ||
Hey guys, what the *beep* This film has NO plot holes, you simply have to listen to what is said. Sorry I am not having a dig at anyone in particular but some of the retarded posts on this board just amaze me. How can people not get this film? To clarify a bunch of points and facts about the film (in no particular order): The very first thing you see is the flight crew with Gallow hearing the msg "You're all thats left of us" and "Gods Speed" etc.... This clearly explains that the Elysion was Humanities last hope Second, Bower explains that when you wake from extended hyper sleep you experience amnesia. This explains why he has no memory of Payton or the other members of his flight crew or his wife Third: it is explained that the flight crews were supposed to rotate, 3 members monitoring the ship while the 60,000 other passengers from various walks of like (obviously the best and brightest picked to colonize Tanis) stayed in hyper sleep. The flight crews are awake for two years and then they wake up the next team who take over. So Bower and Payton (really Gallow, we find out later) rightly assume that they have been asleep for 8 years when they wake up as bowers tattoo says team 5 (bear in mind WE NEVER SEE PAYTONS TATTOO Until he regains his memory of being Gallow) When Gallow hears the msg at the start of the mission he suffers from Pandorum, kills his flight team and looses his mind believing himself to be a god because humanity is gone and he is in charge of the ship. So he awakens SOME of the passengers, kills many, sends the rest into the hold when he becomes bored and then goes BACK TO SLEEP. Meanwhile the people he woke up proceed to evolve thanks to the serum they all took that is explained to greatly increase evolution to allow the humans to adapt to Tanis quicker, and they become the monsters we see when Bower awakens. It turns out the ship had been on its way to Tanis and then stuck under the ocean on Tanis when it crashed, obviously it had no one to land or dock it and so it lay stuck for a total mission time of 900+ years. The woman explained that "This ship was designed to outlive our childrens children" in other words the Ship was incredibly well built. But after the crash the reactor began to fail, so over the course of those 800 years (the journey to Tanis was said in the film to be 120+ years) on the ocean floor, the ship began to randomly awaken or release members of the various different passenger sections because the ship was steadily loosing power and loosing the ability to maintain the 60,000 stasis pods. And because the hunter humans had become cannibals, they would hunt and kill anyone who awoke. So it would stand to reason that only the strong would survive for long on the ship; the female, the dude with the spear and the cook. Eventually Bower gets his memory back and remembers that his wife had in fact left him and that Payton was not the guy he remembered. We also realize that Payton is really Gallow, and that his Pandorum combined with the loss of memory from the 800 year hyper-sleep meant that he had forgotten who he was and his personality split until he fully regained his memory. He must have killed the real Payton, we can assume a member of Gallows flight crew attempted to wake the next crew but failed, was killed, and Gallow took his tube. So after all of this, if someone can come up with an actual plot hole that is so massive they can't work it out with reasonable assumptions based on known facts from the film or with a little thought then I'm a dutchman. I went into this film expecting another *beep* film like Event Horizon but I was pleasantly surprised, this film is one of the best scifi films from Hollywood in years and I would love to hear anyones plot holes (totally none confrontational, I was just amazed to hear people got confused watching this film) |
Mr.Polanski you did it again!
The Ghost Writer : 9/10 bananas
This is a very good movie, that must be enjoyed slowly without any distractions!
Do not watch the trailer if you would like to not know much about the story!
But definitely do NOT read the post below, taken from the imdb.com forums. It's a very good explanation by someone that has read the original book and seen the movie
But definitely do NOT read the post below, taken from the imdb.com forums. It's a very good explanation by someone that has read the original book and seen the movie
After watching the film yesterday, I immediately read and finished the book last night. All clues come clear now and I must say I am ought to watch the film once again to enjoy the plot. Here is my Step-by-Step theory of the plot. It is a bit long. Please let me know how you think: 1. Ruth was recruited by Emmett as a CIA agent. 2. Ruth and Emmett decided to get Adam as a puppet in British political circle because of his great acting skills and other characters. But they didn't prepare to let him know the truth all along. 3. Whether Adam joined the party at 75 or 77 (before or after meeting Ruth) is not that important. The purpose is to trick the audience that Adam was lying intentionally. 4. With the help of CIA, Ruth's always been able to provide great advices to Adam and help him to rise in the Party as a star as quick as possible, and finally became the PM. And then Ruth influenced Adam to make all the decisions in favor to the USA. 5. During the process, Adam thought the reason of his success was because of his passion and because of the smart advices from his wife, not knowing the secret behind her. 6. After stepping down, Adam was going to write his memoirs with the help of Mike. Ruth (and the CIA) originally supported that because it might extend Adam's popularity and his influences in the world's politics. 7. After some in-depth research, Mike had a theory (perhaps no proof yet) about Ruth being a CIA (perhaps after investigating the background of Emmett, or perhaps from some other means, but it doesn't really matter). He tried to tell the theory to Rycart, an enemy of Adam, but no chance (he felt that he was being watched and his phone was being tapped all the time after asking too many questions). Therefore all he could tell Rycart on the phone was that "it's all there at the beginning" (of the manuscript). 8. Since most people would interpret that as "the beginning of the book", i.e. Chapter 1, which is all about the family tree. Thus, even if the CIA overheard it on the tapped phone, they won't find anything there and won't realize that Mike had found out the truth. So he thought he would be safe for a while, and at the same time had a way to leak the story to Rycart or the world. 9. At the same time, Mike tried to expose this theory to Adam, (since they were friends, and Adam was in fact out of the loop and didn't know that he was a puppet all along, so Mike thought that it was for the sake of Adam to tell him the truth), but Adam could not believe it. They had a fight. 10. Mike planned to visit Emmett and ask for proof (perhaps to prove the case to Adam, and perhaps to Rycart) more questions. He set the GPS and go. Whether he did go or not doesn't really matter. Emmett could have known it because of the encounter or because of how Ruth overheard the fight between Adam and Mike. No matter what, Emmett sent someone to kill Mike, dumped him on the beach, as if he was drunk and drown. 10. The reason why they (the CIA) need to put the body back on the island but not anywhere else (or even simply made it disappear) because they want to trick Adam (instead of the rest of the world). If mike suddenly disappear, Adam would feel suspicious and try to dig for more. 11. However, Adam stills started to feel suspicious about the case, and so he started to stop taking Ruth advices (as told by Ruth during the dinner with The Ghost). 12. Ruth and Emmett don't know exactly what Rycart knew already. They only knew that the clues was in the manuscript. At the same time, they need to finish the book anyway, so that's why they hired Ewan (the Ghost Writer with no name) . That's the start of the story (both the film and the book). They knew that Rycart was desperate to read the manuscript, and so the lawyer deliberately gave a wrong package for Ewan to hold, so that Rycart would sent someone to steal it. That way, it would trick Rycart to waste some time, and also exposed how eager Rycart was. But the most important of all, it added the suspension for the audience. 13. They wanted Ewan to study the real manuscript with high security and find out exactly what Mike had put in there. That's why they paid such a handsome money for a job which basically just to retouch a finished original. 14. Things turn bad for Adam during that time, and Adam started to act against Ruth advices (went to Washington instead of UK). 15. Ruth stayed in the house and cried, perhaps because she really felt that it was the end of the whole operation (since Adam found out the truth and started to ignore her). But the audience and Ewan at that time thought that this was solely due to the problem of their broken marriage. 16. The following act of how Ewan and Ruth talked and ate and cried and slept together were just for Ruth to let Ewan feel that Ruth is trust worthy, and would expose to her any secret that Ewan might have found already. 17. The existence of Amelia was to trick the audience to have sympathy on Ruth and trust her more. At that stage, Ewan and the audience were still thinking that there was a secret behind Adam but not anyone else. 18. There could be a slight chance that the photos under that draw and the pre-set GPS were all set up by the CIA to lead Ewan to approach Rycart (and tapped them all the way), so that they know what exactly Mike would have told Rycart. Of course this was a bit too risky for the CIA to plan like this, so even myself don't find this convincing. 19. Ewan found Emmett and asked him questions. Emmett sent someone to kill Ewan after their conversation, because he realized that Ewan had reached the knowledge level of Mike and could no longer be kept around. 20. Ewan escaped, talked to Rycart, and then picked up by Adam. On the plane, the reason why Ewan had to tell Adam about "everything" because Rycart instructed him to do so (and try to see Adam's reaction). In the book, the conversation on the plane was taped by Ewan. But not in the film. 21. Adam felt angry after the conversation because Ewan told him that Mike sold him out to Rycart, but not because of the CIA content. He knew the theory about CIA from Mike directly anyway, just didn't know that Mike also told the theory to Rycart. And that's why he wanted to "have a meeting" with Ewan after going home. Perhaps also about the secret of his wife. But we would never know, because... ... 22. Adam was then killed at the airport. In the book, there is a slight chance that Adam knew the killer and approached him proactively, giving a sign of a chance that he in fact what to kill himself anyway (but I don't think that's the case). In the film no hints for that. 23. After Adam was gone, Emmett and Ruth accessed the situation and felt that Ewan and Rycart didn't really get the real truth (about how Ruth instead of Adam is with the CIA). The false "truth" was how Adam being a CIA would buried with his death, and the interest of the investigation is gone. So therefore there is no immediate need to erase Ewan. They allowed him to finish the book first. 24. At the launch, Amelia casually mentioned about "it's all there at the beginning". Ewan heard that from Rycart before, but this time when he put his mind on that again he figured out something that he had never thought of --> the real truth is exposed by putting all the first words of each chapter together. 25. I admit that I have no idea why Ewan need to tell Ruth about his founding. That is somewhat suicidal. However the effect of the ending was stunning. Sound of a car crash and then flying papers, without showing exactly what had happened --> and that's the thing. It could be an accident, it could be a planned act by Emmett, it could be an immediate response by Ruth / Emmett after knowing the secret is cracked, or it could even be Ewan killing himself after knowing no where he could hide from this. But we never would know what really had happened. That's the dirty part of politics / CIA, and that's the beauty part of this ending. 26. However, I like the ending of the book more. "Ewan" in the book didn't inform Ruth about his knowing, and simply left the party and went home. He immediately fled to stay in hotels in the next few weeks to avoid the CIA. Soon after that there was a news about how Rycart died in an accident (supposed to be killed by CIA as well). He knew he would be next, so he wrote this book (the book that we are reading) in the hotel, and passed the manuscript of this book to Kate (his former girlfriend who never appear in the film), and asked her to expose everything by showing this book to the public if anything happen to him. The reader assumed the "Ewan" in the book got kill eventually, and that's why we have a chance to read the book. It made a lot of sense. 27. For that, the book ends with this: "This puts me in something of a dilemma, as you may appreciate, now that we reach the final paragraph. Am I supposed to be pleased that you are reading this, or not? Pleased, of course, to speak at last in MY OWN VOICE. Disappointed, obviously, that it probably means I'M DEAD. But then, as my mother used to say, I'm afraid in this life you just can't have everything." 28. The ending echos very well with the starting sentence of the book (now I realize) : "The moment I heard how McAra (Mike) died, I should have walked away. I can see that now.. ..." You see, basically when the Ghost Ewan write the book he already KNEW that's the end of his life. 29. The name of the book is "The Ghost". Which I guess is better than the name "The Ghost Writer" because The Ghost means the ghost writer itself but also indicates the puppet show that Ruth playing Adam with, or how the PM of Britain in fact was a puppet controlled by the USA. But I got the strongest feeling about the name "The Ghost" when I watch the ending of the film and see how the body of Ewan got crushed and papers were flying to the sky as a symbol of how "soul" of a ghost was broken into pieces and flew off everywhere. I also get another feeling about "The Ghost" when I reached the end of the book and feel that I am reading a book written by a person who is already dead, while his job was to write something on behalf of another dead person. The feeling of "everything's all gone" is weird and sad. 30. That's the end. Cheers. |
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Smart People
#29 | |||
Running Like God Stars: rat sauce 89 FTP: Unfortunate 89 Join Date: Aug 2008 Posts: 912 | Two quotes that really inspired me when i made my decision Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma - which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of other's opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary." - Steve Jobs "Almost everything--all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure--these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart." -Steve Jobs
|
Friday, July 23, 2010
two hundered thousand miles
iRob says (3:29 AM):
3 reminders
1- craig valentine
2-school
3-jacky's guitar
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Movie Reviews
Dear John: 5.5/10 - very unrealistic love story with horrible acting by main actors.
Brothers: 7.8/10 - starts off slow, but that a good feel for what is the difference between the normal world and 'war world'. characters grow on you as you watch it. well acted.
Unthinkable: 5.1/10 - barely watchable, if only to see what will happen next and how crazy can Samuel Jackson get.
Say Anything: 6.8/10 - older movie starring John Cusak.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Just a normal day. [VIDEO]
Just a normal day. [VIDEO]
i love this www.wimp.com site!
i hope they have a lot of videos!
because i am planning on watching it a lot!
i love this www.wimp.com site!
i hope they have a lot of videos!
because i am planning on watching it a lot!
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Tour De Vancouver
Today left at 14:00 from my house, met with Vic at 14:20 and we left on a bicycle tour. 
The path we took is highlighted in red.
We took the Ontario Street route back home last time on the way from the ARG vs GER game. This time we took the Cypress Street route home. The hardest point of the whole trip, physically, was the highway part of the S.W.Marine Drive on the way to UBC. Also another tough part was from West 4th along Cypress all the way until maybe around 37th. Many uphills that forced us to gear down very low in order to make it up without having to get of the bikes.
I did not know if i would be able to complete this, but i pushed through and with some of Eminem's new album was able to push myself.
Monday, June 28, 2010
Epic Thirty So Hours
-shawarma


-Minoru swimming pool
-walking to Francis & Gilbert
-odOm
-YaOoOoO
-whiskey
-soy chocolate milk!
-bicycle
-Gnarlz Barkley
-sushi
-Wizardry of "Oz"
-8am
-all three siblings^
-soy chocolate milk with bananas as a smooth shake "Monkey something"
-manu chao
-house?
-TCC for #2
-Eriksson?
-Matsuyama
-17th floor
-Shrek
-Huckleberry
-pool/sauna/jacuzzi
-cccp
-Gustav
-banana
-Ger vs Eng
-Arg vs Mex
i know i know "cool story bro"
yuppers :)
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Not the Yin, but the Yang
iRob said:
u won't be able to wake up
жук said:
why not? 7:30am
iRob said:
it's already 1 am
iRob says:
fck... i blew off $550 on 1-2
JJ hit a set
жук says:
tonight?
iRob says:
but lost to a flush
жук says:
jsut hand that u get away from?
iRob says:
AQ lost to AK... obviously
lol
жук says:
can't
iRob says:
i was playing too loose
i put the guy all in on the turn... but he only had $70 left
i was in a happy mood... calling bets i shouldn't call preflop
like A9o in sb
then flop AJJ.. and i called the guy down
lol
жук says:
makes sense why you feel so
iRob says:
i am a fish
what do you mean?
жук says:
that you played loose
iRob says:
yeah... happy = loose
willing to gamble
жук says:
admit that to yourself and now learn
not to
iRob says:
but it'd be good to act
makes other ppl wanna gamble with you
that's a good image
жук says:
you dont think i look like that when people play vs me hehe
iRob says:
haha
yap... but it's true
жук says:
its part of poker
iRob says:
ppl don't realize that
ppl want to act like pros
жук says:
phycological aspect
iRob says:
diminish profit
жук says:
notice how friendly all real good old school pros treat all fish on poker that sown on TV
shown*
people that "act" pros are the nits that can't read any hand and just play nuts
and at times they even are the fish a ton of times without even knowing that cause the real good player who's been taking money from them has an image of a donk that he himself created, check mate
(read it carfully, i was tripping out on the logic of it all while typing)
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)