This week finds us watching Tom Hanks movies. I don't know why, but I'm in a Tom Hanks mood. Before Saturday, I didn't know there was such a thing as a Tom Hanks mood.
Apollo 13 (1995) - I've been wanting to watch Apollo 13 since picking up the 15th anniversary edition (a year late), so maybe this was the movie that started me thinking about Tom Hanks movies. Even after 16 years this movie holds up well, maybe in part because it's set in 1970. | |
Green Mile (1999) - This is one of the movies on my list of if I ever see it on TV I quit flipping channels and watch it. I'm not sure how many times I've seen this movie, much less the parts here and there when I'm flipping channels. Somehow I'd forgotten how Michael Clarke Duncan just looms over everybody at 6'5". | |
Still To Watch |
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Cast Away (2000) - I had to go buy this one today. Somehow it was missing from the collection. I guess I'd watched it on VHS a couple of times, but not on DVD. I was wanting to watch this one right after Apollo 13, but that's when I found out I didn't have the movie. Thanks to $5.99 and the "used" section at MovieStop, that's no longer an issue. | |
Saving Private Ryan (1998) - I'm not sure if I'll follow through and watch this one. It's on the list since I just finished The Pacific, but I'm going to have to be in the mood to watch for nearly 3 hours. I like the movie, but it's not on my all-time favorites list. |
I tend to read wrestler's biographies. I've read most of the WWE biographies published over the past 10 years. I know most of the events that are gone over in any given bio, but I enjoy picking up some behind the scenes info. You can usually pick up a little extra of someone's personality from their biography based on how they view events, people, places, etc. I guess that makes me feel like I know these people I see on TV every week just a little bit better.
The latest biography I'm reading is Bill de Mott's The Last Laugh which has just been published by Crowbar Press. Crowbar is one of those publishers who tend to gloss over the little things in books, like spell checking. It's not bad spell checking, it's more syntax checking. It's not unheard of to read "we took they're hand" or "and then the the other guy". I notice it more in the later chapters, almost like you can see the editor get tired.
Syntax picking aside, I've enjoyed reading Bill's book. You get the feeling you're sitting down and having a beer with the guy while he tells you his life story. I grew to like Bill while he was a trainer on Tough Enough back in 2003. There's something about his personality that makes you think he's a no-shit guy, and I like that.
I've still got about 50 pages left in the book. Right now there are little stories (paragraphs usually) about the kids he's trained in the developmental territories. Overall it's not the best bio I've read, but it's been interesting enough to keep my attention.
Whenever there's a slow news week, one of the bullets that pops up in the technology arena is how websites install cookies for advertisers and how it can be a risk to your personal information and ultimately lead to identity theft costing you billions of dollars, personally. One of the joys of developing websites for the past decade plus is that I understand a little about how cookies work, so I don't jump on the paranoia bandwagon. In fact, I kind of like the ad-based cookies targeting what I may be interested in. I'd rather see an ad for a computer doohickey than a sewing machine.
There are some parts of these 3rd party cookies that I don't understand. I emptied out my cookie cache and opened up a non-commercial website. Above are the cookies sent to my computer when I go to my local NBC affiliate's website (WAFF). It sets cookies for 5 sites (revsci.net, doubleclick.net, scorecardsearch.com, adblade.com, quantserve.com) when I visit the front page. That's not just reading cookies to find out what ads I should be seeing, but setting them. There's nothing there that makes me worry about my personal information being passed around, but that's just useless crap cluttering up the browser.
Sometimes I go browsing and the adservers think I'm interested in an item when I'm not. A couple of months ago I was at LeatherUp.com looking at motorcycle gear. I was looking for a specific helmet, found it, and ordered it. For the next 2 weeks it seems every banner ad I saw was motorcycle helmets from LeatherUp. I got tired enough of it I went through and deleted cookies, which luckily got rid of the unwanted ads and replaced them with something of such minimal annoyance I don't remember what it was. Since then I go through roughly every other month and clean out ad-based cookies. If nothing else it narrows down ads to what I'm currently interested in.
One day back at ResGen, Bob Burruss mentioned how he missed being in school just for the chance to have a summer vacation. Back in the old days, when we walked in the snow uphill both ways to school, summer vacation was 3 months of freedom. No getting up early, no homework, no responsibilities at all. Get up at 10:00 AM, go to bed around 2:00, play in between. Sure, being a grown up with a job pays better, but that lost part childhood was one of the better parts of being a kid.
Last week at lunch with Jer, I mentioned how we should bring back summer vacation, or at least a form of it. Although I remember making a week-long Star Wars figure battle back in the trailer park days, it's just not feasible now. I'm lacking the desire for that, too. But I do miss doing those little things just for fun, and there are things that I put off because there's always something more important to do (New Year's Resolutions not withstanding). So I said to Jer that we should take a little time each day to do things for ourselves that would normally put off. Those little things that bring us joy that might take up half an hour, try to fit that half hour in.
The best I've managed so far is to catch up on some of my comic book reading - the Ultimate Comics line has just released a lot of trade paperbacks. I've been firing up the 3D gaming tutorials more often. After 6 weeks of poking around Unity, I finished the first book I was reading and am just over ⅓ through the second (screenies coming soon, I hope!). When I need some down time, I've been playing the iPad version of Ticket To Ride. Ticket To Ride is one of those games I've been wanting to try for years, but was unsure about the play mechanics. After watching the iPad versions How To Play video along with playing through the tutorial game, I'm having a blast with it! I now think every board game should have a video tutorial.
Revisiting summer vacation has turned out a lot different that I thought it would. 30 years of difference in interests will do that.
It's been a while since I found something good to read. When the power was out after the tornado(s) of April 27, I was looking for something to read outside of the comics I usually pick up for a quick fix. All I've read over the past 2 or 3 years, outside of those comics, has been either biographies or business/entrepreneur books. I used to be all about Sci-Fi fiction, but nothing has grabbed my attention and not seemed overly made-up; Ironic, since it's Sci-Fi and it's all made-up anyway. I scanned a shelf and came across Joe Haldeman's Forever War. This is a book I pick up and read every 5-10 years, and it had been long enough since the last reading that the details had faded enough for me to enjoy the book one more time.
For a book written in 1976, it's still among my favorites, perhaps only bested by Heinlein's Starship Troopers (movie series no withstanding). Forever War is a short book, barely 200 pages, yet I still soak it in with my snails pace reading and took 3 weeks to finish it. Looking back at my latest reading, I was amazed at how little action is in the book since it's classified as military sci-fi/space opera. I enjoy the book for the characters and how their environment changes, and within that the effect that tolls on the characters. Now I can look forward to forgetting details over the next decade and reading it again!
Once I returned to comics, I found a series that's been out for a couple of years but slipped under my radar. Marvels Secret Warriors brings back the Nick Fury I remember similar to the old Nick Fury vs SHIELD series. There's ample super powered shenanigans going on, but behind it all is covert conspiracy world domination at the ready shenanigans. Plus, I've always liked Fury. I don't care if he's David Hasselhoff or Samuel L. Jackson.
Of the 4 trade paperbacks published I'm working on #4 right now. #5 comes out Jun 29, with #6 scheduled for Sep 28. Amazon Pre-Order power to full!
As always, correct spelling is optional in any blog entry. Keep in mind that any links more than a year old may not be active, especially the ones pointing back to Russellmania (I like to move things around!).
Tags have been added to posts back to 2005. There may be an occasional old blog that gets added to the tag list, but in reality what could be noteworthy from that far back?
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