Friday Fives

Friday Fives

1. How do you take your coco? (marshmallows?) Ice tea (sweet?) your soda
(diet?)

I found a cool “Butterfingers” flavored hot cocoa mix last winter. Peanut butter, toffee, chocolate all in one. And forego marshmallows for cocoa and go for the marshmallow cream. Super yummy. I drink sweet tea. as they say down south, although I cheat. I put ” sweet and low” (the pink stuff) in my tea. I always have, even as a child. I was recently diagnosed with hypertension. High blood pressure. And so I am attempting to limit my caffeine. I am going to start drinking decaf ice tea during the day to see if it will help. It will probably cut my caffeine intake in half. I generally detest diet soda. But Coca-Cola now has a diet variety with lime flavor. Pretty yummy. An ice cold Coke with lime is pretty damn good.

2. What is your favorite television commercial (past or
present)

I loved the old Oscar Mayer commercials with some super cute kid singing the B-O-L-O-G-N-A song. Mason Reese, that was his name. I am a bit frightened that I remember that. And it isn’t more than just a coincidence, but I also enjoy the new Nextel commercials. The one with the emus running amok in Manhattan is my favorite, since my mom and Jim have a few emus at the ranch.

3. When was the last time you laughed so hard you had to
pee?

With this new blood pressure medicine, peeing is what I do best now. Pee, pee, pee, pee. But the last time I laughed so hard I had to pee was Monday evening. Mike Meyers was the guest on “Inside the Actors Studio.” It was a repeat of a special two hour interview and Meyers stole the show. He was so fricking funny, I literally had to run to the little boys room after the laughter. If you ever get a chance to watch it, do.

4. Dishes or trash? Fold or send out? Mow or vacume?
I do the dishes and leave the trash for my sister. I should send my shirts out. For laundry, if it can’t get hung up on a hanger in the closet, it stays in the laundry baskets. (one for skivvies, one for soxs. ) If I had a yard, I would be the one charged with the mowing. I am an excellent lawn mower. Fancy designs etched into the turf. Truly a work of art when all is said and done.

5. Diet Dr. Pepper or Red Bull?
Red Bull and vodka. Diet Dr. Pepper is good, but not really considered a staple. And frankly, what can be mixed with Dr. Pepper at the end of the day. Nothing.

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Government By Jedi

Too much nuclear waste material piling up around you? The cost of maintaining waste dumps got you down? Have no fear. The U.S. Department of Energy is pushing a bill through Congress to reclassify high level waste to avoid cleanup. If we don’t call it waste, well then, by gum – it isn’t waste. If it isn’t waste, then we don’t have to clean it up. And the problem is solved. That Bush, he sure knows how to govern.

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Is The Economy Crumbling?

I found this piece from Washington Monthly sobering. A long look at the economics of refinancing and the anticipated, yet dreaded crash resulting in a raise of interest rates. Interest rates are at the lowest they have ever been. And through the 1980s and 1990s, changes in the Fanny May and Freddie Mac federal home loan programs have spurned the growth of the mortgage broker industry – an industry that didn’t even exist 20 years ago. More homeowners exist now than ever before, owed in part to a home building boom and in part to a readily available chunk of “guaranteed” cash. Home buyers can shop around until a home loan is secured and home buyers are buying into larger and larger homes. They are also refiniancing at unprecedented levels and unfortunately, many have taken some form of an Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM). When those interest rates begin to rise, and they will rise, the system will be hard pressed to make those balooning payments. There will be no incentive to refinance at higher rates and many, many, many formerly happy homeowners will go into default. The article suggests that it isn’t a matter of if, it is a matter of when. And the Federal Reserve and its most prominent face, Allen Greenspan, have been giving Congress and Wall Street small, tell tell signs that the rates will be going up soon. As sellers begin to struggle to sell home, the home prices will tumble and a market spiral crash, along with the “jobless” recovery is anticipated. I have seen this argument before and many economic experts have compared the impending crash to the S & L bailout crisis of the 1980s.

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Meanwhile, In Iraq

This is a decent and thought provoking essay on the fallout from the image’s an actions of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal. Lots to ponder. Is this the act a few errant few (the individual) or the reaction by the masses (our society) to the anger felt after 9/11, or the anger felt at being in Iraq in the first place? Is it a systemic reaction of a military at odds with its civilian leaders? Does it portend of things to come, of a nation at the top of the world and yet not yet mature enough to carry the weight and responsibility on its shoulders.

Warning – Washington Post link, free registration required.

Warning - Washington Post link, free registration required.

Friday Fives

Friday Fives

1. Worst. Book. Ever.
Without Remorse, by Tom Clancy. Schlock, pure unadulatered schlock. I read every word. There are a number of very bad books and I tend to flock towards them. Ben Stein, oh he of Comedy Central, wrote a really bad spy novel that I bought at a thrift store. It is so bad I can’t even find the title on Amazon. I wasn’t impressed with Lie Down in Darness by Styron but will probably give it another chance now that I have matured passed my college days. And next, although it isn’t a book, it is a play, I must mention Shakespeare’s Coriolanus. It was tedious and lacked humility and reading it just made me bitter.
This really isn’t fair. I had to read a lot of stuff as an English major in college and I have a more concrete idea of “Worst.Author.Ever” compared to “Worst.Book.Ever.” The worst author ever is easy. Tom Clancy.

2. If you pick three films that you love that no one else seems to know, what would they be?
1. The Creator – Great performance by Peter O’ Toole.
2. Miller’s Crossing – The Best.Cohen Brothers.Movie.
3. The Great Train Robbery – Sean Connery, Donald Sutherland, Lesley Anne Down. Written and directed by Michael Crichton.

3. What’s the most unethical and/or illegal thing you ever got away with?
When I got laid off from a truck renting company’s customer service department, they kept paying me for 6 months. I left with severance and vacation pay and then still kept getting paid. I didn’t tell a sole. Well, except for my family and friends. They were worried about my spending, so I had to tell them all was well. But I never told my former employer, that’s for sure.

4. As usual, I’m running late for work. What do you do every morning before you leave home?
Look for my building ID badge! I have a pretty set routine: morning television news, shit, shower, shave, dress, breakfast (cereal, superfood, toast) and then assemble the day’s needs: celll phone, badge, keys, wallet, brief bag. NPR or CDs and off to the morning commute.

5. Write a haiku about how hot you are.

The ass is sagging

I turn 40-years this month

My wit keeps me hot

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The MisLeader

Many months ago, heck, almost a year ago, I said I would use this space to present reasons, resources and ways to defeat George Bush in the upcoming election. With the election just six months away, the debate is cranking up and us poor old voters need some steam to defeat the incumbent juggernaut.
Here are two links to help with that cause:

MisLeader, “an accurate daily chronicle for journalists of mis-representations, distortions and downright misleading statements by President Bush and the Bush Administration. Misleader.org is presented as a service of MoveOn.org, the on-line public interest group.”
and

Media Matters, a blog by former conservative operative David Brock. ” Media Matters for America will document and correct conservative misinformation in each news cycle. Media Matters for America will monitor cable and broadcast news channels, print media and talk radio, as well as marginal, right-wing websites that often serve as original sources of misinformation for well-known conservative and mainstream media outlets.” My favorite part of this effort is a continuing look at Rush Limbaugh and dissecting and disseminating the hyperbole he spouts each day.

and as always,

Talking Points Memo by Josh Marshall, a columnist and writer for The Washington Monthly.

I suggest those on the left or even leaning towards the left and away from the current administration take some time to use the above links to aid in heated political arguments with those supporting the GW Bush administration.

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“Kerry” oke!

Okay, music dudes, now you can support the presumed Democratic presidential candidate and party your night away at the same time.
We proudly point you here, in order to learn more about Kerryoke, a sing along fundraising schtick that is part the John Kerry presidential campaign.
This looks fun.

Link found at Metafilter.

Friday Fives

Friday Fives

1. How are your map reading skills. What is your favorite “Road trip” memory.?
I have pretty good map reading skills. I am an Eagle Scout, for crying out loud. Factor in my Army time and the few hikes I took to the hills as a boy and as a college student and I am confident that given a map and a compass, I can find my way home. However, it is always important to remember to keep the mountains to the west and know that on the west side of the great divide, rivers and streams run to the west. On the east side, it is just the opposite. But there is a place over in Clear Creek County where the river runs West and it really should run East. So just go figure. A fav road trip? It would have be the trip we took in the Army from Germany to London in a jeep. We got lost in Luxemborg, fell asleep on the Channel Ferry and nearly forgot to get out of the car and we had so little time that the site seeing tour of London lasted about two hours. Crazy, crazy trip.

2. Have you ever shoplifted?
Yes, I admit it. As a teen I used to “take” things out of Kmart. It was the easiest store in the world to rip off. A small town with a quaint naivete, they had no idea they were supplying me with a few cassettes and magazines. This didn’t last long. I wasn’t a career criminal or anything like that. It was over the course of about three weeks one summer. And eventually I had convinced myself that the entire world was on to me, that everyone knew I was a crook. It was against everything I was taught (did I mention I am an Eagle Scout?) Also, I have been known to take a glass or mug or two from a bar. That is probably shoftlifting as well.

3. What is your first thought in your head in the morning? What was your last thought last night?
First thought? “Cat, stop playing with my toes!” This happens EVERY morning around 3:30 a.m. Last thought? “What would I do with my lottery winnings?” A lottery ticket is a ticket to dream. And baby I have spent that fortune in my head on several different occassions.

4. What was your favorite children’s television show? What is it now (children’s show, that is.)
Favorite as a child: A tie between Zoom and The Big Blue Marble on PBS. Now: A tie between Bill Nye the Science Guy and Daria, both showing on Ngn.

5. What’s your zodiac sign? What year in the Chinese calendar were you born? Do you put stock in any of this?
I am a Gemini. Those that follow the stars tell me I am pretty textbook Gemini:
“Gemini is communicative, versatile, can be talkative, and is very curious. Curious, curious, curious… I?ll say it one more time – curious. Gemini energy loves to know how things work. And Gemini energy thrives on knowing what makes other people tick. And when curiosity gets the better of Gemini energy, Gemini may even say scandalous, shocking things or perform outrageous acts for no other purpose or reason than Gemini was “curious” and wanted to see what would happen. Gemini enjoys knowing a little about everything, and Gemini can be the penultimate “jack of all trades, master of none…” Now, of course, I also know that Gemini can get a bit upset over this notoriety and their alleged expertise in skimming the surface of subjects. But tell the truth… We both know it?s a reputation which has been honestly earned (don?t we, Gemini)? C’mon, you can’t kid a kidder! And one more important thing to know about Gemini… Hermes (Mercury, the ruler of Gemini), by some accounts, was the god who originally owned and wore the “Helmet of Invisibility.” This Helmet happens to be the very same Helmet of Invisibility more typically associated with the hidden god of the underworld Hades (Pluto, the ruler of Scorpio). Apparently Hades was merely borrowing the helmet from Hermes. So Mercury (the ruler of Gemini), like Pluto, revels in (and loves) working silently, invisibly behind the scenes. So, while Scorpio is the sign most notorious for being secretive, Gemini is certainly no slacker in the area of being secretive and keeping things under their hat.

I was born in the year of the Dragon:
“1916, 1928, 1940, 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988, 2000: People born in the Year of the Dragon are healthy, energetic, excitable, short-tempered, and stubborn. They are also honest, sensitive, brave, and they inspire confidence and trust. Dragon people are the most eccentric of any in the eastern zodiac. They neither borrow money nor make flowery speeches, but they tend to be soft-hearted which sometimes gives others an advantage over them. They are compatible with Rats, Snakes, Monkeys, and Roosters. ”

Yep, that’s pretty much me as well.

Friday Fives this week via Roy.

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The Mint Julep

It is time once again to break out your tin mugs, your mint, your muddling stick, some sugar and some bourbon and begin to craft the consumate Mint Julep, that timeless drink which after about two or so, just seems to drink itself. A tradition at The Kentucky Derby, the Julep. is deceptive. Deceptive in its simplicity, deceptive in its drinkability (that first sip is a doozy, but life is pretty much excellent by the last sip.) It is not, however, deceptive in its boozeability. Saturday is the running of the 130th annual Kentucky Derby. I offer this recipe now to give you time to gather the fixings to make your Saturday afternoon a good ol’ southern’un.


Mint Julep Recipe

crushed ice
many sprigs of mint
confectioners sugar
1tbs water
a good, decent bourbon whisky

Place about six leaves or so of the mint, sugar and water in a large tumbler. Stir and press until the sugar is dissolved and flavor extracted from the mint. Fill the tumbler to the top with crushed ice. Add the whisky to about a half inch from the top. Stir vigorously. The outside of the tumbler will frost over. Add a floater of rum (an absolute necessity to set the proper mood.) Add a few more mint leaves to float on top to nuzzle and add to the sweet smell of the beverage.

Step 5: Enjoy.