Twin tails! Sailor fuku! Zettai ryouiki!

Suckerpunch looks to be a real fan boy movie. I’m there. Of course, it’s a Zack Snyder production so it will be a 90 minute film stretched to 2.5 hours all in slow motion.

sp_babydoll_lg

I’m interested in seeing it for the anime/manga/otaku influences. Twin tails is so anime/manga. I wonder if she is tsundere. She’s got the sailor fuku going. Not too bad except that this one’s too Americanized with the bare midriff highlight. Next Halloween we’ll be getting sexy sailor fuku at all the Halloween parties. Most importantly though, zetta ryouiki. Hopefully this movie doesn’t ruin it all, which most assuredly it will.

0x1f == 11111

Happy 1F-day, motherfumpders!

Can’t wait for another 10 months for 3F-day!

Ha ha ha ha…

This should’ve been a tweet….

Link of the Day [10.28.09]

I read some of the blogs linked off of Camden Chat. Normally, it's an Orioles news site such as Roch Kubato (sp?) of MSN or other Orioles blogs such as Roar from 34, but some of the time I find time to check on Orioles specific blogs. One of the early ones was Orioles Card 'O' the Day. It takes a look at past and present Orioles via baseball cards. It's a cool site that allows you to see Orioles history and to remember some of the team's players.Looking at all these baseball cards has gotten me to think about my own history of baseball card collecting. Yes, I've got baseball cards. It's what every all American male would have been doing as a kid. My brothers and my dad also contributed to this passion. My dad, especially, was keen on this hobby. He would buy us a pack or take us on to card shops and buy some older cards. He would continue to collect even when his sons out grew the hobby. We still have his boxed 1987 (year?) Topps complete collection somewhere, although, my older brother seems to be hoarding these for himself for safety (hee hee). Anyway, visiting baseball card blogs recalls my fondness for those cardboard collectibles, and in particular my passion for it during the halcyon days of 1980. It was the year I truly bought lots of cards. They were only $0.25 for a pack. I remember buying lots at a time. Of course, the Orioles of that time were the only cards I really cared about. I have a fondness for Jim Palmer because of that year as I seemed to have many multiples of his card. The Pittsburgh Pirates cards I hated, and it seemed that I had plenty of the damned Kent Tekulve. I must burn his card any chance I get.Today's link is to a baseball card blog that's going through each individual card of the 1980 Topps set. How nostalgic.http://1980toppsbaseball.blogspot.com/

“Do thank-you notes have candy inside them?”

I read the Wyman’s post on summer reading, and it reminds me that I, too, did some heavy summer reading. Heavy in the sense that I read more books in the past few months than I had done in a long time. And, no, they weren’t filled with 2D girls or men in tights, they were real books with words, sentences, and paragraphs. Stories, persuasive arguments, colorful anecdotes. All there in the books I read. I’ll divide the books into the genres I was reading to highlight what piqued my interest for the summer.

The first subject I devoured relates to the grand old national pastime, baseball. It began with Alyssa Milano’s recollection of her life filtered through the joys of the boys of summer: Safe At Home. Admittedly, I picked it up because as an 80s kid, I had a crush on her, and I want to find out her views on the game. She’s very knowledgeable about the game. It’s rather intimidating as I only know it superficially enough to get by in the stands, but she knocks ’em out of the park with her experience (and love for the game.)

I also read an interesting account of the 1966 World Series, Black And Blue. The Orioles first World Series. It seems so long ago as compared to the sad, sad team they are today, but we were champions once. It’s an interesting read, but I think all sports books kind of have the same ebb and flow: here’s team A, then here’s team B, then they meet, post-mortem. It really should’ve been Black and Orange as the tale (and the Series) was mostly about the Orioles.

I read about Ichiro and his impact on the game. I have the prequel and intend to read it, but it languishes on my nightstand.

The next genre was new urbanism. I got through James Howard Kuntsler’s tirade, Home From Nowhere and slogged through Traffic. It’s almost making me want to move into high-density, public transportation ready cities. I’m currently reading Jane Jacob’s polemic, The Life and Death of Great American Cities.

I did geek out. Besides Oscar Wao I managed to read the light novel, The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. It’s the original source for the anime. It’s decent, but exactly like the anime. I’m catching up with Suzumiya-sama by starting in on The Sighs of Haruhi Suzumiya. Kami-sama saves.

Link of the Day [2.26.09]

I’ve never read Love Hina. I’ve heard good things about it. It’s a harem manga and kami-sama knows how cliched they could be. I might pick it up after reading how it makes otaku swoon. I’m sucker for harem manga (Ichigo 100% is straight up harem), but I hope the guy is no doofus (in Ichigo 100% that guy’s frustrating) so that I’m not yelling at him every few pages.

http://animealmanac.com/2009/02/24/repost-keitaro-urashima-the-everynerd/

Link of the Day [2.20.09]

I can’t believe I forgot to post about the technical Oscar awards. These are better than Sunday’s broadcast because it’s all about the nerdy stuff. And it’s hosted, lately, by a hottie. This year’s host was Jessica Biel. Yeah! She’s pretty hot! But not comparable to when Rachel McAdams hosted it a few years back.

http://www.oscars.org/awards/scitech/index.html

Quote of the Day [12.11.08]

“I’m interested in upgrading my 28.8 kilobaud Internet connection to a 1.5 megabit fiber optic T1 line. Will you be able to provide an IP router that’s compatible with my Token Ring Ethernet LAN configuration?”

Comic Shop Guy, The Simpsons “Das Bus”