9.28.2008

HNIC song by a friend...[http://ping.fm/xfSv1] - not bad compared to what's on there.

9.26.2008

Is Stéphan back on myspace? (http://ping.fm/kFKU0)

9.22.2008

News flash! "Texting while driving among the worst distractions: U.K. study" ... uh, ya think?!

9.18.2008

Hockey Night In Canada - Submission











Rob Richardson, composer.

Please visit site and vote!!!!
http://anthemchallenge.cbc.ca/mediadetail/330139

Erziehung ist organisierte Verteidigung der Erwachsenen gegen die Jugend. Mark Twain.

9.12.2008

TIFF08: I saw "Cloud 9" this evening... um, not quite what I had expected~

9.10.2008

tonight's movie is "A Woman In Berlin" (Anonyma – Eine Frau in Berlin) @ the Elgin

9.08.2008

wow, took Canada Post 9 months to return a piece of mail that was "rtn to sender-Jan/11/08"

9.07.2008

and they are off! It's election time ... now the fun begins.

amazon dot ca correspondence

Two Questions:
I have a book that is currently on back-order - with an expected release date of July 2008 - where is it? It's September, and your website still has a pre-order for a book that was supposed to be released in July. Can you let me know if you plan on having this book available within the next few weeks as I have been waiting to order it, but don't want to pre-order and not have any idea of when it will arrive. For all I know it could show up next year.
[Simon & Schuster Handbook for Writers (with MyCompLab NEW with E-Book Student Access Code Card) (Hardcover)
# Hardcover: 960 pages
# Publisher: Prentice Hall; 8 edition (Jul 14 2008)
# Language: English
# ISBN-10: 0205656323
# ISBN-13: 978-0205656325] which btw, is $51.74 USD at amazon.com, which amounts to $53.85 CDN; $82.CDN -> $75.USD - what is the difference and why such a big difference in price?

Second Question: When will you be carrying Doctor Who Magazine? Another product that I've been asking for - and while its available 45 mins south of where I live and across border control, I'd rather not pollute the air for one magazine, if amazon.ca will finally get with the rest of the world in the availability of products that are offered in every other international location. Who makes these decisions? Who can I lobby in government to make these changes.

Thank you, I really enjoy shopping here, and refuse to shop anywhere else for all my book/media needs for myself, family and now my work place.

signed, me.

This is not the first time I've requested Doctor Who, the last time I received some lame excuse about trade or something. I am getting sick of all the bloody gouging by Canadian corporations using every excuse in the book to get away with imposing fees for everything. I just realised that I've been paying PST on a service - my understanding has always been that GST is applicable to goods and services (such as food). PST on products. I guess I was wrong - esp in all my bills that I've been putting in for reimbursement for work - I've never put in for the PST.

9.06.2008

Native Dancer (Baksy)

I am going to attempt to write my little blurb without the usual copy and pasting of descriptions, so mind the errors.

This movie is by Kazahkstan director, Guka Omarova. It is based on the life of a local shaman or spiritual healer. The main characters are Aidai (Basky) and Batyr (who went to see Aidai to help his wife conceive their son). In the opening scene, the Basky is performing some ceremony on a woman. The camp or area that she lives in seems to be plucked down in the middle of nowhere with rolling mountains in the background. I can sense that her presence is very important as there are many people who come to visit, asking for help. She's a seer who is able to help locate the stolen cow of one couple, advises a mother of two that her husband did not run off with another woman but has been hit by a car and is dead. Batyr arrives on the scene with a man, hands tied, sitting in the back of his vehicle - his wifes' brother - a drunk and mischeivious individual who is being shipped back to somewhere. Aidai says to leave him with her, makes a home with her, hoping to train with her and make some cash out of it. Instead he shacks up with a 16 year old girl dropped off by her parents. Nice story so far, until the 'bad guy' enters the picture. He sees the land and envisions a gas station?! and casino and goes about buying the land of Batyr. The story ends somewhat tragically but not for everyone.

The director was present at last evenings' screening. She shared some of the background info via Q&A where we learn that the story is based on a real person, all the filming took place in Kazahkstan, and all the actors are local people. The 'real' Basky still lives today, is around 70 years old and receives many visitors to her home for healings. It has piqued my interest to possibly visit this place some day...

Now for the 'official description' by TIFF'08:
"Guka Omarova's fiery new feature sets witchcraft and the mob against each other on the dusty plains of Kazakhstan. Aidai (Nesipkul Omarbekova) is an elderly spiritual healer, a “Kazakh Baksy” who has the power to find a person's lost soul, heal the crippled and locate stolen cattle. For years, Aidai has been serving her local Kazakh community and living off the land of a rich businessman, Batyr (Farkhat Amankulov), who feels indebted to her because she helped his wife to conceive.

When local gangsters decide that Batyr's land would be a prime location for a petrol station and a motel, Aidai puts up a fight, as the land is what connects her to her spiritual powers. Ignoring threats from the gangsters, Batyr goes away on vacation, but when he returns Aidai has disappeared and his land has been excavated. He is furious, so when the petrol station burns down in a freak accident, it seems like just revenge – until his son is kidnapped. Devastated and at a loss, Batyr goes looking for Aidai's help.

Co-written and produced by the great Russian director Sergei Bodrov (Mongol), Native Dancer evokes the mysticism of fantasy and the thrills of a gangster film. Featuring strong, naturalistic performances, especially from Omarbekova (a real-life witch doctor), Native Dancer recalls the earthy visual style of Omarova's last film, Schizo, which played at the Festival in 2004. But with its hybridized genres, Native Dancer is far more epic in its scope.

In this highly accomplished work, Omarova has crafted a captivating story that astutely highlights the clash between old Kazakh customs and the new Kazakhstan. Aida Begic's Snow, also playing at the Festival this year, touches on similar issues. As capitalist forces begin to encroach on tradition, the first casualty is often a culture's most fundamental inheritance – land."

Source: http://tiff08.ca/filmsandschedules/films/nativedancer

j.

9.05.2008

Gott schuf die Katze, damit der Mensch einen Tiger zum Streicheln hat. Victor Hugo.

9.01.2008

I am aiming for one bag of stuff per day...well, atleast 4 per week :-)