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November 29, 2004

Don't Need Nothin, But A Good Time

If you were cognizant in the 80s, you will now have that song stuck in your head. Have a nice day. ;)

Just kidding.

This blog entry has a few jumps in time frame, so stay with me. I guarantee you’ll find at least one thing absurdly funny. We’ll start at last Sunday.

I was heading home from running errands and turned on the car radio just in time to hear an ad of some kind, with the familiar riffs of Poison’s “Don’t Need Nothin But A Good Time� playing in the background. Turns out, Bret Michaels, the former lead singer of said band would be playing a solo gig at the Magic City Music Hall, in Johnson City (10 minutes from my house), the following Sunday night.

The Magic City Music Hall is basically a large bar with a dance floor. In previous incarnations it was known as “Touch of Texas� (the big dance floor was for line dancing) and before that, a giant-rat-puppet-themed-over-priced pizza joint. Yes folks, Bret Michaels was to grace the same stage as “Chuck E. Cheese�... Priceless.

For the next week, I proceeded to FORGET to buy tickets. It finally occurs to me on the day of the show to call the box office and order them. The oh-so-helpful (note the sarcasm) guy who answered the phone asked if I wanted GA (stand all night, but pay 5 bucks less) or Reserved Seating. He then offered me the choice between seats at a table or in the chairs set up by the stage. Uh, hello?? I’m buying tickets to SEE a concert not sit at a bar table and drink all night. There’s a million other bars in the Triple Cities where you can do that without a $20 cover charge (the cost of the reserved seating ticket). I chose ‘seats near the stage’. But Mr. Helpful couldn’t tell me exactly where the seats would be until he could ‘get into the ticket system’, but I’d be able to pick them up at Will-Call.

Dan and I headed over the hill to Johnson City a bit late (dinner with the ‘rents). Ok, it was more like 45 minutes later then we expected. Yet we were very surprised to see that there were STILL parking spots available in the tiny parking lot in front of the Music Hall. We actually parked 20 feet from the door. Not exactly looking like a sold out crowd.

I’ve picked up tickets at Will-Call before, so I know the drill. Bring picture ID and the credit card you used to purchase the tickets. The (more than) slightly daft girl at the ticket window asks for my name when I tell her I’m picking up tickets. I give her my last name and she starts thumbing through the Tupperware recipe holder. She can’t find it. I spell my last name for her (it’s 4 letters long). She still can’t find it. She asks my phone number. Still nothing. She calls over the other clerk to help her look. AT NO POINT DID EITHER ONE OF THEM ASK FOR MY CREDIT CARD OR MY ID. Finally, tweedle-dumb and tweedle-dumber find it in the aforementioned recipe holder with the 8 other Will-Call tickets yet to be picked up.

With tickets in hand, we go in search of our seats. Now WE can’t find them. I go ask one of the bouncer/security types if he could help us. He kindly points out that these are not tickets for the seats by the stage, but for a table on the edge of the dance floor… behind a floor-to-ceiling post. YOU HAVE GOT TO BE *&^%ING KIDDING ME!! There’s 20 x 30 feet of dance floor space where the people with GA tickets could stand in front of these craptacular seats. I (as calmly as I can muster at the time) point out that I was told on the phone that these were seats on the floor and I specifically did NOT want a table seat. The security guy was nice enough to go dig up two more chairs and puts them out on the floor for us. We’re now 6 ‘rows’ from the stage.

Which pretty much became a moot point when Bret Michaels took the stage and basically told everyone to “Come On Down!� Seating of any kind in front of the stage was no longer an option if you actually wanted to see anything...and I was there to get pictures, dammit! I made my way up closer to the stage and spent the next hour and a half trying to focus my camera while holding it straight-armed above my head. Good times.

Actually, the show was pretty good. Especially considering that Bret Michaels had the flu. When he spoke he sounded like ‘he swallowed a handful of nails’ (to quote the man himself). He apologized profusely for sounding so bad (and promised on more than one occasion to buy everyone a beer the next time he was in town), but he sounded just fine when he sang. It was an instant flashback to junior high.

*insert next time frame jump here*

Back in junior high, I listened to the requisite 80’s junior high school music, AKA ‘New Wave’. Duran Duran and A-ha being my two favorites (no, this is not the absurdly funny part I mentioned earlier). My cousin Lisa, on the other hand, was into ‘Metal’. More specifically, she re-wallpapered her bedroom in early Motley Crue and (here’s the seque) Poison. I remember the first time I saw the poster for the album cover of “Look What the Cat Dragged In�.

I thought “My God, those are four ugly women wearing waaaaaay too much make-up.� Upon closer inspection I realized, “those are four scary looking guys and the make-up isn’t helping.� But Lisa thought Bret Michaels was God’s gorgeous gift to the planet while I would have argued the same about Rick Springfield (no, this isn’t the funny part either).

*time frame jump back to the near present*

During the time between finding our seats and the appearance of the opening act, I thought it would be fun to call Cousin Lisa and torment her with the fact that while she was home with her husband and three kids, I was less than 20 feet from where her big-haired metal-idol would appear in the next hour or so.

Speaking of hair, DEAR LORD!! I haven’t seen so many bottle blondes and bad perms since junior high. HELLOOOOOO?!?!? The 80’s called and want their curling irons and AquaNet back!

After Lisa and I had a good laugh over the over processed parade in front of me, I told her that I would call her back after the show if I could get Bret Michaels on the phone. She promised to be up, but really didn’t believe I’d have the opportunity or the cajones to do it.

*one more time frame jump to after the show*

Dan and I hung around in the bar for a little while after the show ended and chatted with the professional photographer who was there from Syracuse. Then we decided to head out towards the tour bus where about 30 other people had congregated. Security (the guy who got the extra chairs for Dan and I) came out and said that Bret Michaels was too sick to stand outside and sign autographs and would be getting directly on the bus. He also informed the crowd that they needed to leave (or at least move a ways back) or they would be arrested. (Nice). I’ve been to enough concerts, everyone from Rush to Rick Springfield (stop laughing, already) to Weird Al Yankovic, to have heard the same threat in various permutations. First off, I’ve never seen anyone arrested for hanging around the bus. AND, I also know that even though security says the musicians aren’t signing autographs, 9 out of 10 times they will for a smaller crowd. The smaller crowd was accomplished by the previously mentioned promises of incarceration. Within 5 minutes, security was back with Bret Michaels in tow and he proceeded to start signing autographs.

Thank God for speed dial.

Here’s a transcript, as close as to what I can remember, of what was said.

Lisa: Hello?
Me: Lisa, it’s Tera. I’m out by the tour bus and Bret Michaels is about 10 feet away signing autographs.
Lisa: WHAT!??!! Noooooooo
Me: Yes. Just Stay on the line, Ok? Stay on the line.

Bret Michaels starts walking down the row of people. When he gets to me, I shove my cell phone in his face.

Me: Bret, can you please say hi to my cousin, Lisa.
Bret: *takes the cellphone* Hi Cousin ...
Lisa: *as relayed to me later* Hi Bret ... I’m sorry I wasn’t there tonight.
Bret: We had a really awesome show. But it’s ok you weren’t here because I’m really sick. I told these guys I’ll be back soon and the beer is on me. So that’s the show you’ll want to make.
Lisa: I promise to be there!
Bret: Ok, hon. Bye.
Me: Thanks, Bret *taking back my cell phone which is now inoculated with Bret Michaels flu viri*


Dan and I head back to his car, all the while still talking to Lisa on the phone. Actually, it was more listening to her completely lose her marbles. She now owed me big time :) and while questioning my sanity, also marveled over the fact that I had the nerve to do it in the first place.

It was now close to 11 PM, and both Dan and I had to work in the morning, so we left for home.

Earlier, Dan procured a guitar pick for me, and I got the set list from off the stage. Add that to the 40+ pictures that I shot, and hearing my cousin totally spaz out, it was quite the entertaining evening.


November 26, 2004

Awesomely Bad Metal

"There's no crying in metal!!!"

-some nameless hack/comedian/whatever on Vh1's "Awesomely Bad Metal Songs", in reference to Cinderella's "Nobody's Fool"

November 23, 2004

Ultimate Geek Workspace

It's MINE... ALL MINE!!!

(ok fine, it's not really mine... but it all sits on my desk in my office)

On ICE???

BRRRRRRRR...

November 21, 2004

No, that's not my car

*Flame On!*

I spotted this in the parking lot outside my office. By the way, there has also been a "Mac User" car in the same lot. Though I haven't seen either since last semester.

November 20, 2004

We're going to have to see some ID before we can let you kids play dodgeball...

This article, Vestal lawsuit could put dodgeball on trial is from my local paper. To summarize, a 7 year old girl got hurt (fractured arm) playing dodgeball in gym class and now her parents are suing. They trotted out an "expert" witness who said that dodgeball was not an appropriate sport for children younger than 4th grade.

Wow.

I won't bother commenting on the absurdity of all this, because there's just way too many tangents to cover. Though it does give me an excuse to share some pics.

Take a look at this swingset....


It's located in a park in my hometown, some of you folks should recognize where. I played on that swing when I was a kid, my mother played on that swing when SHE was a kid... and yes, those are my daughters playing on the swings.

That swing set is about 15-18 feet high, with METAL chainlink attached to METAL seats. And as you can see from this picture...


It sits up on a small hill, that drops off a couple of pretty steep feet in the front. You know what's coming next.

When my friends and I played on that set we'd egg each other on with "higher!... Higher!....JUMP!"

And, So we did.

I'm also willing to bet most of us are still around to tell the tale and share the experience with our kids.

Just in case we didn't darwin ourselves out of the gene pool on the swing set, there was always (my favorite) the giant slide.


Big.

Metal.

And baking all day in the summer sun. (Notice the blinding glare in these photos?)


You risked life, limb and several layers of skin from your backside if you dared to attempt it in shorts. But first you had to climb up to the top (a good 20 feet in the air) on the metal GRATE rungs of the ladder. Which gave you plenty of distance to build up some serious speed before you went flying off the bottom, feet or bottom first into the dirt.

And yes, I know my daughters are wearing shorts in these pictures. Even after several disjointed 'rides' down the slide which were punctuated by the SQUEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAK of their little legs on metal hot enough to fry an egg, they were very upset when I announced it was time to leave.

They adjusted their wedgies, and pouted all the way back to the car.

Do you think they build playgrounds like this anymore? Of course not! Do you know why? Go back to the top of this entry and read the linked article.

Notice I didn't tell you the name of the park. I don't want someone to come along and ruin our fun in the name of 'safety' (aka litigation).


November 18, 2004

Explanation of the 'Quote Board'

Back on my old RR website, I had a 'Quote Board'.

I got the idea after seeing a 'live' version on someone's dormroom door. The concept was, the owner of the board would write the random funny things his friends and dorm-mates had said. I decided it'd be fun to have one online.

So now I'm resurrecting it on my blog. Here's some of my favorites from the old 'Quote Board'

"It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye, then it's just fun you can't see" - James Hetfield, Metallica

"One of the prettier bulbs on the tree, but not the brightest" - Me (about a guy I dated... briefly)

"Bought a 6 pack of those candy-ass fou-fou drinks. Maybe later I'll get drunk and take advantage of myself" - Mike H. (thought I forgot about that one, didn't you??)

"It sounded like a bushel of cats in a blender" - Mike H.

Screen Grabs - Mac vs PC

I spent the better part of the last hour trying to A) Get Photoshop Elements to stop CRASHING (quitting for you macfolks) and B) figure out how to make a screengrab on the mac (G5 - dual 2GHz processors, 1GB RAM, 160GB HD...AR! AR! ARRRRR!)

After several panicked emails to Mike H and IMs to Derek, I went to the Adobe forums and then trashed the PSE prefs. If it starts crashing again, you'll hear much screaming and gnashing off teeth emanating from my office.

Then there's the screen grab issue. On the pc, there's a nice little key on the keyboard that says 'PRNT SCRN'...PRINT SCREEN!! This saves a copy of your entire screen to the PC's clipboard. I then open a new file in Photoshop and click 'Edit < Paste'. Ta Da! And in just 4 steps!

On the mac, it's a different story. Apparently, there is no keystroke/shortcut to do a screengrab in OSX. You have to open the 'Grab' utility. Then I couldn't figure out how to keep PSE on top while I opened Grab. Finally, I got it to take a screen grab using the 'Timed Screen'. After 10 seconds, it makes the screen grab, then you have to save the file, and THEN you can open it in Photoshop. Seems a bit involved, doesn't it?

UPDATE: Derek sent me a link from apple.com that explained how to do a screengrab to the clipboard using SHIFT+CTRL+COMMAND+4 , and it worked! Though I feel like I'm putting some sort of left-handed vulcan nerve pinch on the keyboard...

Thanks to Derek and Mike for the help!

November 17, 2004

This isn't going to end well...

I just read this news story on cnn.com about ' Internet Hunting ' . Supposedly, this guy in Texas (*are you surprised??*) is going to set up a remotely controlled hunting rifle on his hunting ranch, which can be accessed by anyone via the web.

First off, understand that I'm not a warm and fuzzy-PETA-type person. My father was a hunter, mainly deer. If he shot one, we were eating deer meat kielbasa for the next 6 months (Good stuff!). So don't bother starting a massive flame war on my blog about control. Gun control is 'hitting your target'.

Anyways, this 'Hunting via the web' has got to be the dumbest idea that has made the major news sources. Which brings up the likelyhood that this is just a big joke like that 'Bambi-hunting' thing that was supposedly happening a while back in Vegas (don't ask).

Can you imagine being the poor schmuck working on the ranch who, after the 'web-deerhunter' makes a kill, has to go retrieve it? He better hope that internet hunters are smarter than some of the local hunters you read about in the newspaper on the first day of hunting season ("It was his own fault he got shot, driving around in that brown car with the white license plate"), or he'll be next on the virtual bullseye.

What also kills me (no pun intended) was this little bit of info which unfortunately gives you a clearer understanding of this guy's thought processes.

"The idea came last year while viewing another Web site on which cameras posted in the wild are used to snap photos of animals.

"We were looking at a beautiful white-tail buck and my friend said 'If you just had a gun for that.' A little light bulb went off in my head," he said."

Um, hello??? The first thing you think of when you see an animal in the wild is "SHOOT IT! SHOOT IT!" ????

Remind me to never visit Texas.

November 12, 2004

Idiots

"Make something idiot proof, and someone will make a better idiot"

-Seen on a bumpersticker

A true 'first lady'

“If I do what they want me to do, there will be nothing left of me.�

-Theresa Heinz Kerry

November 2, 2004

Election Night

"I bought enough munchies to last us through Election Night, or the Apocalypse. Which ever comes first."

-Me

Waiting...and waiting...

The polls in Pennsylvania, Florida and Ohio have been closed for an hour or two now and things are still too close to call. It looks like it's going to be a long night/week/litigation.

I sent the girls to bed a half an hour ago and Dan is sacked out on the couch. I'm going to try to stay awake for the live Daily Show.

Go Vote

Today, is November 2, 2004. If you haven't already, go out and vote.

For those who already have voted, thank you and you are free to b*tch and moan about those who wind up in office for the next four years.

See you at the polls!