"I don't get it! Half the damn midwest is underwater and people won't stop buying Doritos."
Monday, June 30, 2008
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Did Mario and Luigi Work for Scale?
In the Japanese version of Midway, do you shoot down countless hordes of American fighter planes?
If Supermariokart were to be made today, would there be an airbag requirement?
If Ubisoft released Prince of Persia today, would it violate the Patriot Act?
Madden '94: would we have stopped it back then?
Is Grand Theft Auto any worse than Death Race?
Did George W Bush played too much Axis & Allies back in college? Me, I think he was more of a Risk fan.
Monday, June 23, 2008
It's Official: Americans Make No Sense
According to a recent Pew Survey (courtesy of NYTimes), Americans apparently believe in everything.
"The new report sheds light on the beliefs of the unaffiliated. Like the overwhelming majority of Americans, 70 percent of the unaffiliated said they believed in God, including one of every five people who identified themselves as atheist and more than half of those who identified as agnostic.American beliefs:
- The Gulf War wasn't about oil,
- No Child Left Behind is really about the children,
- We can protect the environment without raising taxes or altering our lifestyle,
- and 20% of atheists believe in God.
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Thursday, June 19, 2008
What Would God Make If He Were a 13 Year Old Boy?
Spore is a game being developed by the folks who brought us Sim City. In the game, you build a civilization from the bottom up - literally. From unicellular beginnings in a world sea, the gamer creates life that can eventually spread across the universe. It can even meet other intelligent life.
That's the interesting part. You really do 'design' the organisms under your command. Each copy of the game will anonymously send your creatures to a database located on the internet, which will then populate other games. Similarly, the creatures created by other gamers will eventually feed into your game.
Which, of course, brings me to my main question: if a 13 year old boy were endowed with the ability to make creatures in whatever image he desired, what form would they take? Since, to my knowledge, you can't design a 'gun creature', there is only one possibility. Namely,
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Note, this may be NSFW..
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Sunday, June 15, 2008
Well, I'd heard that the military had lowered their standards...
Ok. Is this some clever play on words that I'm simply too dense to see or has the Air Force confused 'site' with 'sight'?
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
I think I'd hire a Private Dectective
From a Fox News story about a pair of brutal murders:
An official investigating the double murder of two young girls in Oklahoma saidOur 'official' Stan Florence works for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation. With analytical chops like this, I'm sure the FBI will shortly be beating a path to his door.
Tuesday the "shooter wanted these girls dead"
But wait - Stan the Man isn't done:
"There's obviously an issue here where the shooter wanted these girls dead and certainly carried that to its fullest extent"Huh. Well, I'm glad they ruled out the possibility that the brutal double killing was accidental.
Sunday, June 08, 2008
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
You Might Be a Freegan If...
10. You boast about the amazing set of candlesticks that somebody just threw away.
9. You do most of your grocery shopping behind Safeway.
8. Your living room is furnished with items originally tagged 'free - haul away at own expense'.
7. When you offer to bring a dish to pass, friends and relatives tell you hastily "no, no - just yourself is fine".
6. You surreptitiously sort your neighbors' garbage into 'recycle', 'non-recycle', and 'Christmas presents'.
5. You claim that hand-knit socks are really the way to go.
4. Hot water is only for special occasions.
3. Your definition of "living" is cracking open a slightly used 11-pack of Sam's Club soda.
2. Car? What stinking car? You gots the bus, man!
1. "Extreme consumerism" is a contact sport.
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And please, don't think I'm making this up. See here, and here. Is anyone surprised that this movement started in San Francisco?
Monday, June 02, 2008
Public Construction - Done Right
From A History of the World in 6 Glasses:
"The workers who built the pyramids were paid in beer, according to records found at a nearby town where the construction workers at and slept. The records indicate that at the time of the pyramids' construction, around 2500 BCE , the standard ration for a laborer was three or four loaves of bread and two jugs containing about eight pints of beer..."Ok. 4,500 years ago state workers created stone monuments that have lasted for the ages. And according to the historical records, they were drunken state workers at that.
Am I missing something here? How is it that the pharaohs were better at public works than we are?
