Mel Brooks’ The Critic was apparently one of his first movies. I think I might use that “it’s symbolic of junk” line :)
Category Archives: Ideas (blog)
Books
When the hardest decision that you can conceive of at a given moment is the decision on whether to re-read Dandelion Wine, which you adore, or to re-read The Martian Chronicles, which you adore, while soaking in a hot bath and listening to random music off of iTunes until it’s time to go to bed with the man you adore, you are living a good life.
I am living a good life.
Wow.
I just watched the pilot of Firefly (Serenity, parts 1 and 2) and all I can say is wow.
Wow.
Stainless Steel Hot Dog Cooker
Make sure to check out the “super bowl” ad on the site right now. You’ll enjoy the Hot Dog Cooker, but you should probably enjoy it at home, especially if your employer has no sense of humor.
Now here’s an interesting little project
You make the comic is an interesting little project launched by David Morgan-Mar — the author/artist of Irregular Webcomic.
As I’m having problems getting my own buffer filled I highly doubt I’ll be participating in this anytime soon, but, well, I know that some of the funnier goofballs here would probably do quite well on a project like this.
On changing techology and shifting bills
We’ve been looking around the house for ways to cut expenses and trim our debt a bit, because, well, what better time to do it than when things are going well? One of the first things that caught our attention (after the credit cards — which are where we’re trying to cut debt in the first place) was the utilities conundrum.
My folks, when I was growing up, only had a few utilities to worry about: electricity, oil (if you can call it a utility), and the telephone. The electricity ran the house appliances and the well pump. The oil powered the heater. And the telephone was how we connected with the outside world, with local, regional, and long distance calling. (My folks had a huge antenna on the roof for television, because the cable company wouldn’t run a cable down the street to our house.) We could lose a lot of things, but those three (along with the roof over our heads) were permanant items on the budget sheet. So if you wanted to cut your utility bills, you had to use less electricity, lower the thermostat, and stay off the phone. Well, you might take advantage of a new long distance deal, but outside of that, you were locked in.
Now, things are a lot more complex. We have electricity, a home telephone, cell phones, cable TV, internet access, and the condo association fee. The electricity runs our appliances and the heater. We have a local phone with Verizon that’s got regional calling and long distance. We’ve got cell phones with national coverage and no long distance fees. We’ve got cable internet for fast Internet access, and we’ve got cable TV for television, and we’ve got the condo fee for the water and sewer and trash. That’s a lot of fees.
And really, in this day and age, there’s little we could give up. We literally can’t get a TV signal in the house without cable and the condo association won’t let us put an antenna on the roof. I could give up the Internet, but, well, I like all of you, and it’s hard to post a comic with no ‘net connection. We’ve got the most efficient electricity we can muster, we don’t control the condo fee, and that pretty much leaves us with the telephones.
Ah, the telephones. Our home phone rings about twice a week. It’s usually either my parents, or a doctor’s office when it’s someone we know. When it’s someone we don’t know, which happens 5 times as often as someone we know, then it’s a survey or (shudder) politicians.
We spend around $45 a month for the privilege of receiving surveys and political calls.
Why $45? Because between the monthly local package with three features, the monthly fee for regional toll, and the monthly fee for long distance, that’s as cheap as it gets. And when you add in the almost $100/month for the cell phones and the just over $100/month for the cable/internet, well, $45 is a damn lot of money for a phone full of people I generally don’t want to talk to.
So we’re actually seriously considering something that wasn’t even available when I was kid. We’re considering telling Ma Bell where to pack it. When 20 years ago you couldn’t even change local phone companies, now you can not only change companies, but shut your whole service through the phone company off and still have a local phone — either by getting phone service from the cable company, or just adding a line to the cell phones and leaving it in the livingroom all day.
The most interesting part is that, if you do it right, either of those options is much cheaper than the alternative. I knew that the communication industry had become cutthroat, the same way that I know that the mall sells clothing. I don’t price it very often, and I’m often amazed when I do.
Right now, I’m just amazed that the era of the home phone is about to disappear before our very eyes.
Jazz and Rock.
Can anyone recommend a good essential Jazz album? I’m looking for more Louis Armstrong specifically, but will branch out into other artists as well quite willingly.
Along the same lines, I want to buy a good Led Zepplin collection — I own none of them right now — Stairway is obviously required — and I have no idea which one to pick. Help?
The forum is the fastest way to suggest, since I monitor it more frequently, but the second fastest would be to email me (kirabug) at this domain. Thanks!