03/04/05 08:42 - ID#28029
Fetishism of Ladies
I will admit some guys do Have a thing for Asain girls. But some white guys love black girls only. Some people love ass or legs or breasts. Some guys love Feet or bondage. I think that guys can and do fetishtise everything. If I was having a party I could get stripers, sushi girls, a human sunday or maybe something else. I have also seen white girls serve as a dinner plate. They lay on a table nude except covered in food. Then You take the food of off them. I've only seen pictures not the real thing unfortunatly. Some guys and girls as part of sex do like to eat food of each other, I think that is how they came up with the idea of banquet girls. I would love to go to one of those parties. If I went to one and say a friend of mine as the girl I don't know how I would react, I wouldn't know how to react to seeing a freind in a sexual way. I think my main point is that a lady us guys find hot or sexy or maybe even sluty has to have something that we like about her. For example I don't find all Asain ladies sexy. Yes some of them are but not all of them. There is just something that when you see them it turns you on, and I think that is true of every race.
Permalink: Fetishism_of_Ladies.html
Words: 364
Location: Buffalo, NY
03/04/05 08:19 - ID#28028
Korean Suicide reply
Permalink: Korean_Suicide_reply.html
Words: 140
Location: Buffalo, NY
03/03/05 07:46 - ID#28027
Soulfly
Permalink: Soulfly.html
Words: 224
Location: Buffalo, NY
03/02/05 08:21 - ID#28026
Art?
What about Buildings in General. I know that buldings do serve a function and that is primary. But there is also an athestic quality to them. If there wasn't then no one would care that Pano wants to destroy the house next to his resturant. I have seen some amazing looking buildings In Buffalo, Cleveland, and Toronto and some on the web.
Someone mentioned that they don't think that violance is art. I have to disagree on that one. Some of the coolest looking art that I have seen has been in comic books and Animee. Is all of that violant no but that dosn't mean that something being violant disqualifies something as art. But just because something is vilant dosn't make it art either. I think is is a lot of great vilant art in Kill Bil, but that is just me.
I admit I wish I had the talent to draw well. I would love to be able to paint dragons, make city scapes, be a tatoo artist or even maniuplate photos and other stuff also. But I admit it is a talent I don't have. But I try not to judge what is art and what isn't. If I see something that looks like art to me then it is. I have had a couple of friends who are very good at art. You see a picture they drew and you think it is good. And they say no and they point out where they messed up or how it isn't just right and i find that amazing. My main point is that there is a lot of art that I don't understand or get. What I try to do is not judge it as not being art. I just say I don't get it or I don't like it.
Permalink: Art_.html
Words: 451
Location: Buffalo, NY
03/01/05 08:54 - ID#28025
Patronage
Permalink: Patronage.html
Words: 177
Location: Buffalo, NY
02/28/05 09:52 - ID#28024
Oscar and more
Permalink: Oscar_and_more.html
Words: 299
Location: Buffalo, NY
02/27/05 03:50 - ID#28023
What's Art?
was a great movie and should win something. I think movies are a type of art. I admit I havn't seen very many movies that you might consider artsy. But I do like good animated movies like Spirted Away and Ghost In the Shell 2. We are surrounded by art everywhere but we don't really think of allot of it as art. Some one had to design that package of Softlips you bought to keep your lips soft Or that cool pepsi symbol or that cigeratte symbol they both are versions of the Ying Yang. I think we take art for granted and don't relise how much of it is around us. I admit I hardly ever go to Art Galleries. One reason is that I don't know what type of art they are going to be showing. I'm odd about what kinds of pictures I like. I think Ice Sucputures are amazing. They look so differant when lighted at nite. I mean the big ones that they have festivals for. I had a final point I wanted to end with but I forgot it, so I hope those of you who read this enjoyed it a little bit. If my art skills in writting where better this would have been more interesting and about 10 more paragraphs.Metallica Some Kind of Monster
Permalink: What_s_Art_.html
Words: 450
Location: Buffalo, NY
02/26/05 07:51 - ID#28022
Internet Fame
What's internet fame like, and really what is it. Is everyone on this site internet famous to each other if we only interact here. What about to those who view what we say. Or does it take us to be none and talked to offline by someone we don't know from being on line?
Well here is an article that poped up as i went on line using AOL today. I have not seen the video. Even though American Pie was meant to be funny what happens to Jim is a good point. Internet Fame is not always a good thing. That is the end of the philosphy discussion and here is the article that I read
Internet Fame Is a Cruel Mistress for a Dancer
By ALAN FEUER and JASON GEORGE, The New York Times
ABC News
Gary Brolsma of Saddle Brook, N.J., lip-syncs an obscure Romanian song. Watch Video
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· Numa Numa Dance
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(Feb. 26) - There was a time when embarrassing talents were a purely private matter. If you could sing "The Star Spangled Banner" in the voice of Daffy Duck, no one but your friends and family would ever have to know.
But with the Internet, humiliation - like everything else - has now gone public. Upload a video of yourself playing flute with your nose or dancing in your underwear, and people from Toledo to Turkmenistan can watch.
Here, then, is the cautionary tale of Gary Brolsma, 19, amateur videographer and guy from New Jersey, who made the grave mistake of placing on the Internet a brief clip of himself dancing along to a Romanian pop song. Even in the bathroom mirror, Mr. Brolsma's performance could only be described as earnest but painful.
His story suggests that the quaint days when cultural trinkets, like celebrity sex tapes, were passed around like novels in Soviet Russia are over. It says a little something of the lightning speed at which fame is made these days.
To begin at the beginning:
Mr. Brolsma, a pudgy guy from Saddle Brook, made a video of himself this fall performing a lip-synced version of "Dragostea Din Tei," a Romanian pop tune, which roughly translates to "Love From the Linden Trees." He not only mouthed the words, he bounced along in what he called the "Numa Numa Dance" - an arm-flailing, eyebrow-cocked performance executed without ever once leaving the chair.
In December, the Web site newgrounds.com, a clearinghouse for online videos and animation, placed a link to Mr. Brolsma on its home page and, soon, there was a river of attention. "Good Morning America" came calling and he appeared. CNN and VH1 broadcast the clip. Parodists tried their own Numa Numa dances online. By yesterday, the Brolsma rendition of "Love From the Linden Trees" had attracted nearly two million hits on the original Web site alone.
It was just as Diane Sawyer said on her television program: "Who knows where this will lead?"
You Said It
Nowhere, apparently. For, in Mr. Brolsma's case, the river became a flood.
He has now sought refuge from his fame in his family's small house on a gritty street in Saddle Brook. He has stopped taking phone calls from the news media, including The New York Times. He canceled an appearance on NBC's "Today." According to his relatives, he mopes around the house.
What's worse is that no one seems to understand.
"I said, 'Gary this is your one chance to be famous - embrace it,' " said Corey Dzielinski, who has known Mr. Brolsma since the fifth grade. Gary Brolsma is not the first guy to rocket out of anonymity on a starship of embarrassment. There was William Hung, the Hong Kong-born "American Idol" reject, who sang and danced so poorly he became a household name. There was Ghyslain Raza, the teenage Québécois, who taped himself in a mock light-saber duel and is now known as the Star Wars Kid.
In July 2003, Mr. Raza's parents went so far as to sue four of his classmates, claiming they had placed the clip of him online without permission. "Ghyslain had to endure and still endures today, harassment and derision," according to the lawsuit, first reported in The Globe and Mail of Toronto.
Mr. Brolsma has no plans to sue, his family said - mainly because he would have to sue himself. In fact, they wish he would bask a little in his celebrity.
"I don't know what's wrong with him," his grandfather, Kalman Telkes, a Hungarian immigrant, said the other day while taking out the trash.
The question remains why two million people would want to watch a doughy guy in glasses wave his arms around online to a Romanian pop song.
"It definitely has to be something different," said Tom Fulp, president and Webmaster of newgrounds.com.
"It's really time and place."
"The Numa Numa dance," he said, sounding impressed. "You see it and you kind of impulsively have to send it to your friends."
There is no way to pinpoint the fancy of the Internet, but in an effort to gauge Mr. Brolsma's allure, the Numa Numa dance was shown to a classroom of eighth graders at Saddle Brook Middle School - the same middle school that he attended, in fact.
The students' reactions ranged from envious to unimpressed. "That's stupid," one of them said. "What else does he do?" a second asked. A third was a bit more generous: "I should make a video and become famous."
The teacher, Susan Sommer, remembered Mr. Brolsma. He was a quiet kid, she said, with a good sense of humor and a flair for technology.
More From The Times
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· Required: Law and Charm-School Degrees
"Whenever there were computer problems, Gary and Corey would fix them for the school," she said.
His friends say Mr. Brolsma has always had a creative side. He used to make satirical Prozac commercials on cassette tapes, for instance. He used to publish a newspaper with print so small you couldn't read it with the naked eye.
"He was always very out there - he's always been ambitious," said Frank Gallo, a former classmate. "And he's a big guy, but he's never been ashamed."
Another friend, Randal Reiman, said: "I've heard a lot of people say it's not that impressive - it doesn't have talent. But I say, Who cares?"
These days, Mr. Brolsma shuttles between the house and his job at Staples, his family said. He is distraught, embarrassed. His grandmother, Margaret Telkes, quoted him as saying, just the other day, "I want this to end."
And yet the work lives on. Mr. Fulp, the Webmaster, continues to receive online homages to the Numa Numa dance. The most recent showed what seemed to be a class of computer students singing in Romanian and, in unison, waving their hands.
Mr. Reiman figures the larger world has finally caught on to Gary Brolsma.
"He's been entertaining us for years," he said, "so it's kind of like the rest of the world is realizing that Gary can make you smile."
Permalink: Internet_Fame.html
Words: 1214
Location: Buffalo, NY
02/26/05 07:21 - ID#28021
Durst
Permalink: Durst.html
Words: 112
Location: Buffalo, NY
02/26/05 07:10 - ID#28020
Fantasic Four
I know there are a lot of remakes out there now. But that has kinda allways been the case. For example look at all the steven king movies, LOTR, and Harry Potter. It is really hard for movies to be original. Even Original movies have themes and ideas from other movies or other places. The thing to remember is that it is not the original and to take that into consideration when watching it. What I would like to see more often is a double deal on DVD's. What I mean is the New Version and the original Packaged togather. There are some movies where that would be really interesting and where you might get three movies. A great example would be "A christmas Carol" There are a bunch of differant Versions of it. I think That could also work at movie houses and drive ins. They allready have some premeires that when you see them you can stay for a second movie. Wouldn't it be cool to go see for example (this may not be a good example it is just the first one to come to mind) The New Batman Movie and after words they show one of the old ones back when he had the blue cap and robin was all colorfull. I think that would be cool.
Permalink: Fantasic_Four.html
Words: 405
Location: Buffalo, NY
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