Tuesday, February 04, 2014
YouTube Tuesday: Chimpnology
I even had time to party a bit!
tagged: YouTube, Tuesday, dance, music, video, chimp, humor
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Winter for humanity
Welp, just poking my head up from a long hiatus to highlight an interesting opinion piece I just read:
You know, just a little light and inspirational reading as we had into the long, dark winter months. I wouldn't want anyone to get all depressed or anything, especially my all-time favorite American Prepper, El Borak.The biggest problem climate change poses isn't how the Department of Defense should plan for resource wars, or how we should put up sea walls to protect Alphabet City, or when we should evacuate Hoboken. It won’t be addressed by buying a Prius, signing a treaty, or turning off the air-conditioning.
The biggest problem we face is a philosophical one: understanding that this civilization is already dead. The sooner we confront this problem, and the sooner we realize there’s nothing we can do to save ourselves, the sooner we can get down to the hard work of adapting, with mortal humility, to our new reality.
The choice is a clear one. We can continue acting as if tomorrow will be just like yesterday, growing less and less prepared for each new disaster as it comes, and more and more desperately invested in a life we can’t sustain. Or we can learn to see each day as the death of what came before, freeing ourselves to deal with whatever problems the present offers without attachment or fear.
If we want to learn to live in the Anthropocene, we must first learn how to die.
Anyway, I'll catch you crazy scamps in the Silicocene.
tagged: geology, climate change, mortality, global warming
Thursday, September 19, 2013
A Salute to A-hole Driver in Prairie Village
Real Men of Genius!
Today we salute you... Mr. Douchey Entitled Prairie Village Teen Driver.
My daddy bought me bitchin' Honda!
You own Mission Road in your own mind, and you’re not afraid to prove it by texting your friends a selfie from the driver's seat every five minutes.
Yellow light means floor the accelerator…
You know nothing make you manlier than drag racing a cyclist. And when you swerve into the bike lane, you cockily yell "You're welcome!"
Eat my dust, stoopid cyclist!
And while your over-worked pops has to pay your speeding tickets and your higher insurance rates, being pulled over by the Prairie Village police every time you hit the road is something those Lancer chicks really dig.
They love the bad boy!
So wave the green flag and put the pedal to the metal, oh swoop-haired future ambulance occupant. Because even though you’ll never make it to Victory Lane, that over sized spoiler on your 1990s Honda looks really boss!
Mr. Douchey Entitled Prairie Village Teen Driver!
tagged: Kansas, Prairie Village, driving, teens, humor, salute
Tuesday, August 06, 2013
YouTube Tuesday: Wolverine: A Film By Woody Allen
tagged: YouTube, Tuesday, Wolverine, Woody Allen, parody, comedy, culture
Thursday, August 01, 2013
YouTube Tuesday: How To Hack A Website
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Tuesday, May 07, 2013
Aegrescit medendo ...
I mean, when you think of if, it's really not all that different from pro cyclists banking their blood for later use in the Tour de France... except you're (hopefully) regrowing your flowing locks instead of sitting on a tiny bike seat for six hours a day.You might claim you’d do anything to reverse baldness, but the “vampire treatment” puts that sentiment to the test. Scientists use injections of “platelet-rich plasma” to combat aging on the face and hands and can use the same process on the scalp.
Yes, the “vampire treatment” involves extracting your blood and re-injecting it into your scalp. Volunteer attempts have proven successful, with many subjects experiencing significant hair growth in spots that have long gone dark.
Researchers believe that the treatment works by stimulating stem cells below the skin, assisting in the re-growth of hair.
tagged: science, health, blood, baldness, vampire, cycling
Friday, February 22, 2013
Snow Country for Old Men
There's the point where you decide to pay a guy to take care of your yard because who needs that aggravation?
There's the point where you switch from a propane grill to a wood chunk charcoal smoker (dude, don't even bring that charcoal brick stuff around my house. What do you think this is, Gladstone?).
And then there's the day when you get your power snow thrower.
Of these three, I think the final one represents the furthest stage of "maturity." I mean, it seems like a bit of an extravagance. You're spending a couple hundred bucks or so on an appliance that you'll use maybe once or twice a year? But when you have a snow event the likes of which we had this week, you damn well are grateful that you have a snow shovel that you can plug in or power up and just walk behind to clear your driveway. That goes double if, like a majority of the guys on my block, you have "advanced experience in the role of life."
Me? I kind of take it as a point of pride that I haven't yet crossed that threshold. I'm still young. I'm able bodied. I ain't 'fraid of a little cold white stuff, and shoveling it off my driveway is my manly duty, a rite of passage each winter that, like the out-taking of the trash and the smashing of the spiders, proves how important I am to this family.
So I wasn't at all daunted when I opened the garage door Thursday afternoon to attack the thick layer of white stuff in my driveway. Hell, I was kind of looking forward to it!
![]() |
| Before: A tabula rasa |
![]() |
| 10 inches exactly |
And when I say it was a heavy snow, I don't just mean there was a lot of it. Don't get me wrong, there WAS a lot of it, but it was also quite wet and heavy. This was going to be a tougher job than I was expecting.
Frost thing's first. I shovel a path from the garage door to the end of the driveway. Whew, this is tough. Next, shovel out the rest of one side of the driveway.
![]() |
| Halfway done with half the driveway |
![]() |
| I'm going to need this later... |
![]() |
| After |
But numbers aside, I was prepared to reward myself for a job... well... done.
![]() |
| Time for a cold one |
1) All math calculations done by the Internet and may be subject to my complete ineptitude at mathematics.
tagged: winter, snow, Kansas, shoveling, beer, snowstorm, blizzard, weather
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Graze anatomy
You see, a couple of years ago I went through a weight-loss regimen. I never really got the hang of political correctness, but I believe the proper term for my body-type was "fatus-boombalatus," and I'd come to that point in my life where you've gotta either get busy livin' or get busy dyin'... Aw hell, it wasn't all that dramatic. I just wanted to see a lot less of myself.
So I did. I dropped about 40 lbs and never looked back.
I didn't really want to make a big deal about it, and I still don't. So I'm not going to go into the whole process right here/right now (maybe some other time). I only bring it up by way of introduction of what I do want to discuss.
You see, part of getting rid of 20-percent of myself was eating smaller portions but higher-quality food. Of course if you're consuming fewer calories, you want to get more from each individual one. So you look for good ways to eat nutritious food.
Well, a few weeks ago I stumbled across a Tumblr post about a new service/web startup called Graze. This service married my passion for being lazy by shopping from home over the internet with my passion for eating delicious low-calorie snacks.
Well, here's how they explain it:
So I like what I see, and I sign up to pay five bucks a week for a box of healthy snacks that get sent to me in the mail. Sounded like a good deal to me. I mean, I spend more than that on coffee each week.
About a week ago we get the first shipment. (which was free, btw. Yeah, your first and fifth boxes are free when you sign up. Sweet!).
When you enroll for the service, you pick the four snacks you want included. For me, the toasted pistachios were a no brainer (FTW!). I also opted for a dried raisin/apple/almond mix ("Eleanor's Apple Crumble"), and a Fruity Mango Chutney (with black pepper dippers).
I also got the "Yin & Yang" a mix of almonds, raisins dried cherries and chocolates. I'm not crazy about chocolate, but I thought the women in my life might like it. (I was correct, of course).
All of the food is really tasty, especially the apple stuff which was gone within a matter of hours. And all of the portions are low-calorie (the one with the chocolate was 217 calories for the entire serving).
I can hear you asking... "But, hey. You ordered food through the internet? Was it any good?"
Well, when the box arrived, I opened it and put on the dining room table. Between me, my Supermodel Wife and two daughters, it was empty within two and a half days. So, yeah it was good.
Looking forward to the next box coming in this week. There's a kind of granola bar-type snack that I'm eager to try out.
Anyway, if you're looking for a nutritious, low-cost and (most importantly) lazy way to get good snacks, check out Graze. Since they're sill in a beta soft-launch, you'll need an invitation code. You can use mine if you want: TNPZWDP
If you sign up, let me know what snacks you tried and what you think.
tagged: diet, health, nutrition, snack, food, Graze, weight loss
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
End zone
To misquote my good friend Rick Blaine, "The problems of grown men playing a child's game don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world."
Five of his sons were in the room, as were a daughter-in-law and an infant granddaughter, a full group that would spend the next week together starting the next day, nearly 24 hours per day, in a hospice care facility. The NFC Championship game was on the hospital television, and while the volume had been kept low for the most part, it was turned up as a replay was analyzed. The camera flashed to San Francisco coach Jim Harbaugh, who clearly disagreed with the replay call on a disputed completed pass.
As his morphine intake increased in a morbid race against his body’s increasing pain, Dad had spent recent days mostly asleep, only waking when his failing body demanded water, or when a nurse would attempt to move him in his bed. However, as it turned out, that replay moment came in the middle of Dad’s last rally, and he had gone as far as to sit up a bit in bed, fully alert, enjoying both the company in his room and the game.
That’s when, despite his voice being mostly a loud whisper by that point, Dad let the 49ers coach have it.
“Shut your mouth, Jim Harbaugh!”
tagged: life, sports, football, NFL, death, family, cancer









