Monday, January 31, 2011

woman falls in fountain texting

And the lady is an employee at the same mall. She has contacted a lawyer for this incident. LMAO @ clownshoe

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Nine Inch Nails - Head Like A Hole (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Terrible Lie (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Down In It (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Sanctified (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Something I Can Never Have (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Kinda I Want To (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Sin (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - That's What I Get (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - The Only Time (Pretty Hate Machine)

Nine Inch Nails - Ringfinger (Pretty Hate Machine)

Friday, January 14, 2011

Vandals - The Legend of Pat Brown

Vandals - Pirates Life

Vandals - I Want To Be A Cowboy

>

Vandals - Anarchy Burger (Sweatin' to the oldies part 1)

Bad Religion - 21st Century Digital Boy

Bad Religion...

Bad Religion - Generator Live

Bad Religion @ Warp Tour

Simple solutions to high-tech problem

Can't work your iPhone with your winter gloves on? Got a scratched DVD that's skipping? Or how about a work PC that signs you out the moment you step away from your desk? The MacGyver-approved answer may be hiding in your junk drawer.

In this week's episode of Upgrade Your Life, Yahoo! News's Becky Worley delivers some simple, everyday solutions for what might appear to be daunting high-tech problems, starting with:

1. Touchscreen phones that won't work when you have gloves on
The capacitive touch displays on the latest and greatest Android and iOS handsets are tops when it comes to tapping out messages with a light touch. Winter gloves, however, will block the electrical charge from your fingertips that capacitive screens use to register a tap — bad news if you're trying to answer a call in a blizzard.

Becky's solution: Cut a tiny slit in your wool gloves (assuming you don't mind slicing up your winter wear) to allow a finger to pop out whenever you need to start tapping.

Don't want to cut holes in your gloves? Try the Pogo Stylus, a pencil-sized metallic stick with a specially made tip that works with capacitive displays.

Related:
Pogo Stylus

2. Dirty cell phone cases
That case you bought for your smartphone looked pretty spiffy when you first slipped it on. After a few months, though, you'll be in for a rude shock when you take the case off and look inside. Where did all that gunk come from? On second thought, don't tell us.

Becky's solution: If it's a one-piece silicone case, just toss it in the dishwasher — done. Beware, though: Plastic cases with multiple, glued-on parts will come apart if you give them the dishwasher treatment.

3. Wet gadgets
News flash: Gadgets and water rarely mix. If you do manage to leave your cell phone, camera, or other battery-powered gear out in the rain — or worse, drop them in a toilet — the prognosis is usually pretty grim.

Becky's solution: Before you give up hope, try dropping your soaked gear into a Tupperware container full of rice to draw out the moisture. (Check out more details on this method from Popular Mechanics.) Or, as a general preventative measure to keep moisture away, save some silica gel packs (you know, the ones you'll find in boxes of new shoes or beef-jerky packages) and stuff them in your cell phone or camera case.

Related:
How to Save Your Wet Cellphone: Tech Clinic [Popular Mechanics]
8 Clever Uses for Silica Gel [Popular Mechanics]

4. Scratched DVDs and CDs
There's nothing quite as annoying as a skipping music CD or a DVD that randomly jumps seconds or minutes ahead, without warning. In some cases, you might be dealing with a dirty laser in your CD or DVD deck; more often, however, the culprit is a scratched disc.

The good news is that it is possible to repair scratches in the polycarbonate plastic coating that protects the underlying layer of data on a DVD or CD, as long as the scratch isn't too deep.

Becky's solution: Polish the scratches with a little furniture cleaner, perhaps with a follow-up dose of car polish. Just be sure to start from the center of the disc and rub outward, in a straight line; whatever you do, don't rub in circles.

Related:
How to Recover Scratched DVDs [eHow]

5. Work PCs that sign you out too quickly
Code-clearance NSA operatives performing top-secret data entry at secure terminals should probably skip this tip. For the rest of us, however, here's an easy way to keep your paranoid PC from signing you out the moment you turn away from the screen.

Becky's solution: Take off your watch (assuming you still have a watch, of course) and lay your mouse on top of its face; the ticking hands will fool the optics in your mouse into thinking it's still in motion.

6. Not enough D batteries for your flashlight
The power's out, and you've got your flashlight — minus one more D battery. D'oh!

Becky's solution: If you've got a spare C battery floating around in your junk drawer, you're in luck; just drop it into the D-cell slot and fill the remaining space with a stack of quarters. Sounds crazy, but Becky promises it'll work. (Just make sure to pick up some more D batteries the next time you're in the hardware store.)

By Ben Patterson

How to make Facebook more private and productive

Among Worley's tips:

1. Check your privacy settings
One of the most persistent complaints about Facebook is how tricky it is to manage all your privacy settings — and indeed, Facebook ultimately rolled out a totally revamped set of privacy controls in response to the outcry. To access the settings, click the Account link in the top-right corner of the main Facebook page, then click Privacy Settings; from there, you can share all your Facebook profile info with the world, or confine it to just your friends, all in a few clicks.

Simplified though they are, you could still spend hours tinkering away at Facebook's privacy settings. But if you want to quickly lock out any and all outsiders from your Facebook account, go to the left-hand column in the privacy panel and click Friends Only. Want to keep third-party apps from meddling with your Facebook info as well? Click the "Edit your settings" link under Applications and Websites, then manage the access settings for your individual apps in the "Applications you use" section. Or, to cut off all outside app and website access completely, click the "Turn off all platform applications" link.

Related:
Facebook rolls out new, simpler privacy options
How to put your third-party Facebook apps on lockdown

2. Avoid getting stuck in a Facebook chat
The little browser-based IM window in Facebook makes it easy for your pals to see whether you're online and ready to chat — perhaps a little too easy. Luckily, there's a simple way to keep your Facebook presence hidden when you're not in the mood to field a barrage of instant messages. Just click the Chat bar in the bottom of your browser to open the interface, then click Options, and finally select "Go Offline."

Another option is to turn off individual Friends Lists in the Chat interface: Just click the little switch next to the List name to make it go offline or come back online. And if you're already moved over to Facebook's revamped Groups feature, just open the Group page to chat privately with any fellow group members, or click the "X" on the chat bar to deactivate Group chat.

3. Create a Group
Just as you can control who can see you in the Facebook chat window, you can also create a public, private, or even secret space where you can share updates, photos, and other info with only a select group of Facebook friends. Thanks to the recently redesigned Groups feature, you can create one of these private virtual Facebook spaces in just a few clicks.

Here's how it works. Just go to the left-hand column of the main Facebook page, and click the "Create Group" link. A pop-up window will appear that lets you name your group, add new members, and choose a privacy option: public (which means everyone can see who's in your group and what you're sharing), private (the names of your members are public, but the content you're sharing is private), and secret (everything about your group, from its content to the group members, is private).

Related:
Five questions—and answers—about Facebook Groups

4. Personalize your Facebook user name
Facebook recently unveiled its new, unified messaging system, a pumped-up version of its existing chat interface that will incorporate different modes of communication — including email, text messages, and instant messages — into a single, threaded chat window. Part of this "modern" messaging system entails offering everyone on Facebook the option to get an "@facebook.com" email address based on their Facebook user name.

Of course, that assumes you've already designated your own, customized Facebook user name — and if you haven't, you'd better get cracking before all the good user names are taken (and indeed, many of them are already gone).

To pick a user name, click Account in the top right-hand corner of any Facebook page. Then click My Account, click the Setting tab, and enter the user name you'd like under the "Username" heading. If the name you want is already taken, keep trying until you stumble upon one that's still unclaimed. Also, choose wisely — you can only change your user name once.

Related:
Facebook's "modern messaging system" is "not an email killer" … yet

5. Hide annoying wall posts
Couldn't care less whether your Facebook pal just became the mayor of Starbucks, or that your old roommate from college is building an orchard in FarmVille? Here's a quick way to keep those pesky wall posts from junking up your news feed.

Just click the little "X" next to the offending post; then, from the pop-up window, you can elect to zap only the individual item, hide all posts from the annoying application (like FourSquare or FarmVille), or nix any further posts from the Facebook friend who bothered you in the first place.

6. Download Facebook photos to your desktop
Facebook ranks as one of the largest photo repositories on the Web, but downloading photo albums — either your own, or those of your friends — to your desktop isn't as easy as it could be. Luckily, Becky's found a couple of key photo-sharing tools that can help.

First up: FacePAD, a plug-in for Firefox that lets you download an entire Facebook photo album to your desktop. Just visit the FacePAD add-on page and follow the installation instructions — keeping in mind, of course, that you'll need to be using the Firefox browser for the component to work. Once you've installed FacePAD, log back into Facebook, find a photo album you'd like to download, right-click it, and select "Download Album with FacePAD"; a pop-up window will ask you for a directory into which you'd like all of your new photos to be downloaded.

Want to download one of your own photo albums, or all of them? One easy, if space-consuming way to do so is simply to download your entire Facebook profile — including all your shared photos, videos, wall posts ... everything — to your desktop. Just click Account, then Account Settings, select the Settings tab, and click the "learn more" link next to "Download Your Information." When you're ready to proceed, click the Download button. (Think twice — or even three times — before downloading your entire Facebook profile to a desktop that isn't yours.)

Related:
FacePAD download page

7. Get better birthday reminders
Sure, Facebook will already remind you of upcoming birthdays for your friends — but usually only a day or so before the party. Want a little more notice?

Click the Account link at the top of the page, then click Account Settings, select the Notifications tab, and scan the first group of settings. Near the middle, you'll see an option that reads, "Has a birthday coming up." Click the appropriate check box, and you'll get a weekly email digest reminding you of all "Happy Birthday!" messages you'll need to post in the coming week.

— Ben Patterson is a technology writer for Yahoo! News.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Alexander SkarsgÄrd - True Blood

Alexander SkarsgÄrd get his revenge by seductively luring his victim.

Ferris Bueller House Still for Sale?

By Colleen Kane, CNBC.com

Architecturally significant home featured in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' is for sale
Photo: Paramount Pictures


The 57-year-old midcentury modern home at 370 Beech Street in Highland Park, Illinois is instantly recognizable to many 1980s survivors and fans of John Hughes movies as Cameron's house from "Ferris Bueller's Day Off." By now, it's also known from popping up in the media, as it's been on the market for over a year.

But this 4-bedroom, 4-bath home has been notable since long before the '80s. Designed in 1953 by A. James Speyer and David Haid, the house is now heralded as "architecturally significant." With this significance, and the added cultural cachet of being featured in the movie, comes a price tag: the house is currently listed at a reduced price of $1,650,000. So how's that market for designer midcentury homes looking lately?

"We have a very bad market in this price range," says the property's realtor, Meladee Hughes (no relation to writer/director John Hughes). "This is a midcentury modern home that is not always what all the young people want-it doesn't have the bathrooms and kitchens with stainless steel-well, it does have some of the original stainless-but the young people want stone, they want this and that [updated features]."

"Some of the buyers that we've had have all wanted to preserve it, but other people walk in and they say, ‘Oh my God, I have to put in a new kitchen, a new bath...' "


Exterior of the famous Highland Park home for sale
Photo: Realtor.com
Hughes notes that the house is spacious at approximately 4,000 square feet, but there's also the matter of how the space is used, which doesn't work for all buyers. A lot of that space is taken up by the main room, so when a family comes in with 2 or 3 children, by today's standards it doesn't work. She explains that currently the bedrooms are configured as two at 20 x 20 feet each. The house originally had 5 bedrooms plus a den, and all the steel constructed walls are removable, so when the children of the original occupants left, they converted the four bedrooms into two larger bedrooms.
There was a buyer ready to go, laments Hughes, but they were thwarted when a storm caused damage to the roof and water damage inside last August. "We're fighting with the insurance company ever since-which is standard-and they are being very difficult to deal with. Because of that, the offer from the buyer was put on hold."

The plus side of all this, notes Hughes, is that the eventual buyer will get a brand new roof, and the home's exterior has already been restored. Because of the fallen tree limbs in that storm, the buyers will have new flooring, and two totally restored travertine marble baths.

Kitchen of famous home for sale
According to Hughes, who has been a realtor for 45 years and specializes in architecturally significant properties, things are looking up.

"We hope to have this sold in the next 30 to 60 days. Someone is going to be the lucky owner! I wish it would be me, I love this house, it's a magical house, just sitting there, looking outside, the deer come by, it's enchanted."

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The Lost Boys

Kiefer Sutherland in Lost Boys. Below is a scene from Lost Boys - - Michael and David Fight Scene

Follow the link to see the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SEcDuqdmy3M&feature=related

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Two-Headed Cow Calf Born In Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia (AP) — A cow in Georgia has given birth to a two-headed calf.

Farmer Irakli Dzhgarkava, shown with the calf on Imedi television, says the cow is refusing to allow her strange offspring to suckle, so they are giving it milk from a bottle.

He says the calf eats with both heads.

Friday's television report says people have been coming to the village of Martvili to see the grayish-brown calf since it was born Jan. 2.

The village is located in western Georgia, about 280 kilometers (170 miles) from the capital, Tbilisi.


Frank Langella - Dracula


Russell Peters



Saturday, January 8, 2011

Old Skool Ass Whoop'n over Facebook

Uncle Gives His Nephew An Old School Ass Whoopin On Webcam For Acting Hard On Facebook. Forced To Put The Video On His Wall! "Put That On Your F*ckin Wall"

2 Million Dead Fish Wash Up In Maryland

Cirque Berzerk - Opening Night

Cirque Berzerk show is rich,dark, sexy fun dabbed with debauchery.
Here are some pictures from Opening Night - Jan. 7, 2010.

Members of Death's Cabaret perform during the third scene of Cirque Berzerk's latest show, which opened Friday night at Club Nokia in downtown Los Angeles.
The Woman in Red, played by Emilie Livingston, takes part in a fire ceremony that signals her membership into the performer's class of the underworld after passing her talent test in Cirque Berzerk's latest show.

The gigolo, played by Neal Everett, along with one of his lovers, left, brings the Woman in Red (Emilie Livingston) into their bedroom for some erotic debauchery during Cirque Berzerk's latest production.
Death, played by Kevin Bourque, reclines in his underworld home with a couple of subjects at his feet during Cirque Berzerk's latest production.

Members of Death's Cabaret arrogantly keep their distance from the Woman in Red during the 'Death's Cabaret' scene in Cirque Berzerk's latest production.

Nelson Pivaral and Goulia Rozyeva perform hand-to-hand gymnastics.

The Woman in Red (Emilie Livingston) excels during her talent test to join the ranks of the performers in the underworld.
The Woman in Red (Emilie Livingston) is cajoled into signing her death contract by Death (Kevin Bourque) and his wife (Suzanne Bernel), holding the pen.

Trampoline acrobats bounce up and over a wall during 'Four Off the Floor'

The Woman in Red, played by Emilie Livingston, takes part in a fire ceremony that signals her membership into the performer's class of the underworld after passing her talent test in Cirque Berzerk's latest production.

A Cirque Berzerk clown eerily readies to throw knives at a human target during the beginning of Friday's show at Club Nokia in Los Angeles.

The Woman in Red (Emilie Livingston) dances with inhabitants of the underworld in 'Danse Macabre'.

The Woman in Red fights off Death's lowly minions who want her to join their ranks.

Death's wife, played by Suzanne Bernel, walks a couple of her minions at Death's Cabaret.

Tavi Stutz, facing, and Neal Everett perform aerial acrobatics.

The Woman in Red (Emilie Livingston) must pass a talent test for Death (Kevin Bourque) to avoid being condemned to joining the ranks of the lowest creatures of the underworld.

Death's wife, played by Suzanne Bernel, is haunted by minions while performing her aerial acrobatics.

An underworld couple played by Brady Spindel, left, and Katrina Kemp try to figure out how to dispose of a head.

A member of the underworld takes part in a fire ceremony welcoming the Woman in Red into the ranks of the performer's class after passing her talent test.

Jacqueline Knight, left, has just had her pocketbook lifted by a circus character, center, as Michael Shattoo looks on.

Cast member Brady Spindel mingles with the crowd on stilts before Friday's performance of Cirque Berzerk.


Photos were taken from the O.C Register website.   I do not own these photos.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Cirque Berzerk 2011



This week is opening night for Cirque Berzerk at Nokia Theater on Friday, January 7 - 16, 2010.  Los Angeles's most sexiest, erotic and darkest underground entertainment. Do not miss!!



Cirque Berzerk 2009

Face in the Refrigerator


Found a face in the refrigerator this morning.