Anyways I thought I would point you lot towards the show. Go and watch it so they will make more of it cause I am eating it up so far.
Posted using TxtLJ
Edit: Let me add that the lighting and my phone camera do not flatter these four very hot ladies taking shots with me.

PostSecret is an ongoing community art project where people
mail in their secrets anonymously on one side of a postcard.

-----Email Message-----
I feel sorry for those who do think this was the time of their life. They have around 60 years after this without a better time.









-----Email Message-----
The trick isn't to make something others can relate to; but to allow others to witness what is in fact, a highly private moment.

-----Email Message-----
Dear Frank,
I am the author of one of this Sunday's secrets. My secret says, "None of the artwork made sense, but being there with you did." I, most regrettably, no longer am with the girl that inspired my secret--things didn't look the same to her as they did to me.
However, I persistently try to regain her affection. I do sweet things for her that make me wonder how I ever will be able to top them for the next girl (if there even happens to be a next girl). Frank, if you could only see this secret-inspiring girl. I'm convinced that she is the most beautiful person that I have ever seen.
So, I want to thank you for choosing my secret. Although it possibly may have been chosen for its broad appeal, know that you have helped some one on a very personal level. She has already discovered the secret. And that is one more sweet thing with which to win her over.











-----Email Message-----
Dear Frank,
I have been an avid follower of PostSecret for many years now. When I saw the tattoo a woman got of one of the secrets--"We accept the love we think we deserve"--I knew that I wanted a PostSecret tattoo, as well.
I waited patiently every week for the secret that jumped out at me, went to PostSecret events and followed you on Twitter.
I found my PostSecret quote, and the funniest part is it was written on the envelope in which their secret was contained, and yet, the minute I read it I knew it was mine. . .

More Secrets & Stories - Follow PostSecret on Twitter.
PENDANT PRODUCTIONS PROUDLY PRESENTS:
Cover art by Kristen Bays
for Pendant Productions
"Umket Industries Presents: The Dixie Stenberg and Brassy Battalion Adventure Theater, a serialized, full-cast audio adventure with one new episode every month. Available for free download in .mp3 format, or as a Podcast!
Also featuring an audio commentary track with the director and writer!
iTunes link:
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZSt
Podcast feed:
http://www.pendantaudio.com/dixie-podca
Download link:
http://www.pendantaudio.com/dixie.p
And STILL AVAILABLE:
Season One of "Dixie Stenberg and Brassy Battalion" on audio CD! Produced from the original master mixes with over five hours of content, including exclusive bonus features!
http://www.pendantaudio.com/store.p
Episode 35 - The Righteous Bushwack
The Beast executes its revenge while Brassy Battalion assaults the SCAR base!
Featuring the voice talents of:
Rene Christine Jones as Dixie Stenberg
Mark Zaricor as Frank McGuff
Steve Anderson as Reginald Billingsley
Jeremiah McCoy as Archibald Withersby
Pete Milan as Freudenberg
Scott Vinnacombe as Cornelius Robert Sims Pearson
Anthony Piselli as Joey Scalzetti
Chris Brittain as Thomas Galen
Perry Whittle as Benedikt Adarchenko
Alicia Laine Matheson as Lily LaRue
Melissa Hearne as Rose LaRue
Marleigh Norton as Iris LaRue
Tracy Hall as Violet LaRue
Melissa Johnson as Daisy LaRue
Megan Pressley as Buttercup LaRue
Kathryn Pryde as Geist
Justin Daube as Volker
Ara Pelodi as Ursula Unger
Mike Winters as Radulf Pelzer
David Alexander McDonald as Walther Falkenstein
Philip Weber as SCAR Trooper 1
David Ault as SCAR Trooper 2
Kristen Bays as the Umket Triplets
Bill Young as the Amazing Nowell
Elaine Barrett as the Robot
Amanda Fitzwater as Nebulon 2000
Sam Young as The Beast
Jeffrey Bridges as the Commercial Announcer
and Seth Adam Sher as your host
Special Guest Stars:
Jim Hamilton as Arnold Wilhelm
and Patrick Mahon as Gunter Wilhelm
Written by Jeffrey Bridges
Directed by Seth Adam Sher
Assistant Director Jim Hamilton
Edited by Marleigh Norton
Cover art by Kristen Bays
Produced by Pendant Productions
http://www.pendantaudio.com
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/penda
Thanks for listening!
This was originally written and published on July 5, 2002, which simultaneously feels like years and days ago.
When I was growing up, we always spent Fourth of July with my father's aunt and uncle, at their fabulous house in Toluca Lake.
It was always a grand affair and I looked forward to spending each Independence Day listening to Sousa marches, swimming in their enormous pool and watching a fireworks show on the back patio.
This fireworks display was always exciting because we were in the middle of LA County, where even the most banal of fireworks – the glow worms – are highly illegal and carried severe fines and the threat of imprisonment, should we be discovered by LA's finest. The excitement of watching the beautiful cascade of sparks and color pouring out of a Happy Flower With Report was enhanced by the knowledge that we were doing something forbidden and subversive.
Yes, even as a child I was already on my way to being a dangerous subversive. Feel free to talk to any of my middle-school teachers if you doubt me.
Each year, the older children, usually teenagers and college-aged, would be chosen to light the fireworks and create the display for the rest of the family.
I was Chosen in 1987, three weeks before my fifteenth birthday.
The younger cousins, with whom I'd sat for so many years, would now watch me the way we'd watched Tommy, Bobby, Richard and Crazy Cousin Bruce, who always brought highly illegal firecrackers up from Mexico.
I was going to be a man in the eyes of my family.
This particular 4th of July was also memorable because it was the first 4th that was celebrated post-Stand By Me and at the time I had become something of a mini-celebrity around the family. Uncles who had never talked to me before were asking me to sign autographs for people at work, older cousins who had bullied me for years were proclaiming me “cool,” and I was the recipient of a lot of unexpected attention.
I was initially excited to get all this newfound attention, because I'd always wanted to impress my dad's family and make my dad proud, but deep down I felt like it was all a sham. I was the same awkward kid I'd always been and they were treating me differently because of celebrity, which I had already realized was fleeting and bullshit.
Looking back on it now, I think the invitation to light fireworks may have had less to do with my age than it had to do with my growing fame . . . but I didn't care. Fame is fleeting . . . but it can get a guy some cool stuff from time to time, you know? I allowed myself to believe that it was just a coincidence.
The day passed as it always did. There were sack races, basket ball games and water balloon tosses, all of which I participated in, but with a certain impatience. These yearly events were always fun, to be sure, but they were standing directly between me and the glorious excitement of pyrotechnic bliss.
Finally, the sun began to set. Lawn chairs were arranged around the patio, wet swimsuits were traded for warm, dry clothes, and I bid my brother and sister farewell as I joined my fellow firework lighters near the corner of the house. I walked casually, like someone who had done this hundreds of times before.
As the sun sank lower and lower, sparklers were passed out to everyone, even the younger children. I politely declined, my mind absolutely focused on the coming display. I wanted to make a big impression on the family. I was going to start out with something amazing, which would really grab their attention. I'd start with some groundflowers, then a Piccolo Pete and a sparkling cone. From then on, I'd just improvise with the older cousins, following their lead as we worked together to weave a spectacular tapestry of burning phosphor and gunpowder for five generations of family.
Dusk arrived, the family was seated, and the great display began. Some of the veteran fireworks lighters went first, setting off some cascading fountains and a pinwheel. The assembled audience cheered and gasped its collective approval, and it was my turn.
I steeled myself and walked to the center of the large patio, casually kicking aside the still-hot remains of just-fired fountains. Casually, like someone who had done this hundreds of times before.
My hands trembled slightly, as I picked up three ground flowers that I'd wound together. My thumb struck flint and released flaming butane. I lit the fuse and became a man. The sparkling fire raced toward the ignition point and rather than following the directions to “LIGHT FUSE, PUT ON GROUND AND GET AWAY,” I did something incredibly stupid: I casually tossed the now-flaming bundle of pyrotechnics on the ground. Casually, like someone who'd done this hundreds of times before.
The bundle of flowers rolled quickly across the patio, toward my captive and appreciative audience.
Two of the flowers ignited and began their magical dance of colorful fire on the cement, while the third continued to roll, coming to rest in the grass beneath the chair of a particularly old and close-to-death great-great-great aunt.
The colored flame which was creating such a beautiful and harmless display on the patio was spraying directly at this particular matriarch, the jet of flame licking obscenely at the bottom of the chair.
The world was instantly reduced to a few sounds: My own heartbeat in my ears, the screams of the children seated near my great-great-great aunt and the unmistakable zip of the now-dying flowers on the patio.
I don't know what happened, but somehow my great-great-great aunt, who'd managed to survive every war of the 20th century, managed to also survive this great mistake of mine. She was helped to her feet and she laughed.
Unfortunately, she was the only one who was laughing. One of my dad's cousins, who was well into his 20s and never attended family gatherings accompanied by the same date, sternly ripped the lighter from my hand and ordered me back to the lawn, to sit with the other children. Maybe I could try again next year, when I was “more responsible and not such a careless idiot."
I was crushed. My moment in the family spotlight was over before it had even begun and not even the glow of pseudocelebrity could save me.
I carefully avoided eye contact, as I walked slowly, humiliated and embarrassed, back to the lawn, where I tried not to cry. I know the rest of the show unfolded before me, but I don't remember it. All I could see was a mental replay of the bundle of ground flowers rolling across the patio. If that one rogue firework hadn't split off from its brothers, I thought, I would still be up there for the finale, which always featured numerous pinwheels and a Chinese lantern.
When the show was over, I was too embarrassed to apologize and I raced away before the patio lights could come on. I spent the rest of the evening in the front yard, waiting to go home.
The following year I was firmly within the grip of sullen teenage angst and spent most of the festivities with my face planted firmly in a book -Foundation or something, most likely- and I watched the fireworks show with the calculated disinterest of a 15-year-old.
That teenage angst held me in its grasp for the next few years and I even skipped a year or two, opting to attend some parties where there were girls who I looked at, but never had the courage to talk to.
By the time I had achieved escape velocity from my petulant teenage years, Aunt Betty and Uncle Dick had sold the house and 4th of July would never happen with them again.
The irony is not lost on me, that I wanted so badly to show them all how grown up I was, only to behave more childishly than ever the following years.
This 4th of July, I sat on the roof of my friend Darin's house with Anne and the boys and watched fireworks from the high school. Nolan held my hand and Ryan leaned against me as we watched the Chamber of Commerce create magic in the sky over La Crescenta.
I thought back to that day, 15 years ago and once again I saw the groundflower roll under that chair and try to ignite great-great-great aunt whatever her name was.
Then I looked down at Nolan's smiling face, illuminated in flashes of color.
"This is so cool, Wil!” he declared, “Thanks for bringing us to watch this."
"Just be glad you're on a roof and not in a lawn chair,” I told him.
"Why?"
"Well . . . ” I began to tell him the story, but we were distracted by a particularly spectacular aerial flower of light and sparks.
In that moment, I realized that no matter how hard I try, I will never get back that day in 1987, nor will I get to relive the sullen years afterward . . . but I do get to sit on the roof with my wife and her boys now and enjoy 4th of July as a step-dad . . . at least until the kids hit the sullen years themselves.
Then I'm going to sit them in lawn chairs and force them to watch me light groundflowers.

Hi Alaska.
You are great. They laughed at you at first, but you proved yourself great.
My administration has accomplished much, including the ethics reforms we instituted against the unethical. As good conservatives, we eliminated personal luxuries. I do not have a jet or an entourage. I am not luxurious. I'm smiling broadly right now because it's so hilarious to think that I would be in any way greedy! Ha ha! In fact, I recently said thanks but no thanks to money! I resisted stimulus money! Coulda taken it but I believe Big Government spending is obscene.
But you don't hear much good stuff in the press anymore, do you?
When I became a national figure last year, partisan operatives tried to smear me as unethical. Their accusations were so silly! They once said I was unethical because I held up a fish in a photo! Can you believe it? Insane! And you know what? All these silly accusations cost the taxpayers money and time. And I can't get anything done because of all these dismissed charges that are in the past. It's crazy!
Some say: stay in office. Ignore these dismissed charges that are in your past. Stay in office, they say, and do nothing. But that would be the quitter's way. And because I am not a quitter, I am resigning my position. Hence, I will not be doing nothing, but rather, something.
When I am no longer governor I can truly fight for my state. And for my country. I will fight for people who are proud to be Americans. I cannot stay in office and allow your tax dollars to be obscenely wasted Obama-style on silly-billy federal indictments that the liberal media will focus on because they never focus on the nice things. Like our troops.
I recently visited our troops in Kosovo. They are great Americans. They care about what's important. They do not care about wasteful, partisan corruption charges that are totally bogus and in my past. Seriously, I was once told I was corrupt because I held up a fish! Just think about that the next time you hear something "bad" about me. Which you won't. Didn't mean to imply that. May we all learn from our troops. God bless them.
This decision has been in the works for a while. By the way, I want to thank Todd for flying here at the last minute. I also want to thank my spokeswoman who is in New York and couldn't get a flight back in time for this long-planned announcement.
I'm not leaving the court, I'm passing the ball! So our team can win! Go Alaska! Winners!!
In the words of General MacArthur, "I'm outta here."
A bell over the door tinkles as Johnny enters, moves immediately to the counter... where a rural faced MANAGER mans the cash register... there are large windows around the place so you can see outside. Several customers are eating.
JOHNNY: "I'm being abducted. The African-American man outside attacked me and forced me into his car. Don't look at him. Call the police. Um, State police. Not the county sheriff.
MANAGER: "Are you serious?"
The bell over the door tinkles again as Bruce enters...
JOHNNY: (switching subjects for Bruce's benefit) "And I'll take this... "
Johnny quickly grabs a bag of chips from beside the counter...
BRUCE: "You want to get a couple sodas to go?"
JOHNNY: "Anything you say, mister."
Bruce doesn't notice the attendant staring at him with scared eyes.
JOHNNY: (beat, focusing the manager) "Think you can ring us up now... "
As the manager looks back to Johnny, reaches for the chips to ring them up... on the exchange, RAMP TO JOHNNY FACE...
A JOHNNY FLASH - RUMBLING SURREAL CLOUDS ROLLING AT US
JOHNNY REACTS
ANOTHER JOHNNY FLASH - THE LITTLE BELL OVER THE DOOR TINKLES AS THE DOOR SHAKES... INCREASINGLY MORE VIOLENT...
CLOSER ON JOHNNY AS HE REACTS
ANOTHER JOHNNY FLASH - THE WINDOWS OF THE CAFE IMPLODE... GLASS FLYING EVERYWHERE... CUSTOMERS, THE ATTENDANT FALLING... CUT... DESTRUCTION... HORROR...
CLOSER STILL ON JOHNNY
as he realizes Bruce and the manager are looking at him curiously... And Johnny hates this... he hates this... he's thinking, again? He sighs, has no choice, glances at Bruce... then back to the manager and says quietly...
JOHNNY: "There's going to be a storm. A big storm, like a hurricane or a tornado... "
The man just stares at him, this has to be some kind of joke...
JOHNNY: "I'm not sure when. But soon. It will not be safe here."
BRUCE: "This is Johnny Smith. I've known him a long time. He has psychic abilities. Believe him."
MANAGER: "A minute ago, he told me you were abducting him."
BRUCE: (does a take, looks at Johnny who shrugs, I had to try) "He... told you... that... ?"
He laughs, embarrassed...
MANAGER: "Is this a rib? Did Wally at the car lot send you over here to... "
JOHNNY: "I know you don't believe me. But when the storm comes and it will come -- remember what I said.
Off the manager's confused and concerned face...
JOHNNY: "Don't wait. Don't think. Get everyone to safety right away. Please. People will die here if you do not take cover."
EXT. CAFE - DAY
As they come out... but Johnny is not the usual Johnny -- he's not into this... he doesn't want to be a hero... he feels more like a victim than a hero...
BRUCE: "Hey, this better be on the level because if you're just trying to get out of the intervention -- "
But he can see that Johnny is in a dark place... genuinely concerned... the internal pain that Johnny has been containing for months is moving to the surface...
JOHNNY: "How many times do I have to see something like this? How many people have to die in my mind before I go crazy?"
Bruce looks at him... and now Johnny makes eye contact with him...
JOHNNY: "Why do I have to live with these things? I'm a human being."
BRUCE: "Hey, you may have just saved lives back there... "
JOHNNY: "Too many lives to save. Too many lives I can't."
BRUCE: "Look, John... "
JOHNNY: "I can't... do this anymore. I can't have these visions in my head any more."
BRUCE: "So what do you want to do?"
JOHNNY: " ... "
BRUCE: "I mean about the storm."
**
This was the last script Michael Piller ever wrote for The Dead Zone. In retrospect, I think he must have known he wouldn't be able to take as active a hand in the show as he had before, and he took his last episode to try to wrap up his character threads. I think it turned out beautifully.
Matt Webb, mysterious Rotwangian wizard-engineer of Schulze & Webb, on design and what it means to be a 21st Century design unit, among other things. Pay attention. These are the people who get to have a say in how you get to live in the Western World.
”
(Automatically crossposted from warrenellis.com. Feel free to comment here or at my internet church at Whitechapel. If anything in this post looks weird, it's because LJ is run on steampipes and rubber bands -- please click through to the main site.)And. Where are you seeing your fireworks? We're going over to ida-lee park. They have good fireworks, and they have a concert and stuff before dark, so the waiting for sunset ends a little earlier. It's more like waiting for about 5pm.
Oh, and the firworks thing ends too late to do anything after. So, that'll be more sims 3 I guess. Argh.
This is the wrong holiday to have right now. It's "emphasize how poorly I connect with people" day, at a time when I feel confused about how I relate to people.
p.s. I lost almost everyone's phone numbers when I changed phones recently. If I should have your phone number, do me a favor and e-mail it to me. Also, indicate if you are open to text messages. I need to use my tools to communicate more.
- What do you do during the day on the 4th of july?
- Where are you seeing your fireworks?
- What is your phone number? (answer in e-mail, unless you want the world to see you phone number)
- are you open to text messages?
- are you open to text messages?
- Location:home
- Mood:
amused - Music:squawling bird
Originally published at VIEWS FROM THE LONGBOX. You can comment here or there.
To all of those who live and the United States like me a very happy 4th of July. Views is taking a holiday weekend because of the fourth. I would like to say it is because I am grilling out with family and friends but really I am working all weekend.
Anyway, here’s some Captain America in honor of the holiday.
See you all next week.
I imagine some are relieved! And others not so happy...well, you'll just have to follow me on Twitter is that's the case.
There'll be more blog posts, though.
ETA: And of course as I'm writing this post and sending it from SEMagic, the Twittinesis service kicks in and aggregates a bunch of Tweets. I figured it hadn't worked. Unfortunately it doesn't have the options LoudTwitter had, hence the lack of an LJ Cut.
- 08:04:31: RT @BBC_Earth: BBC Science&Nature: No safe haven for rarest antelope http://tinyurl.com/kne88l
- 08:09:08: RT @DSmith_Tucson: RT @nytimes Iran Says British Embassy Staff to Stand Trial http://bit.ly/YGWoK
- 12:09:01: RT @RayBeckerman RT @RawStory: New dinosaur species found in Australia http://tinyurl.com/n32nfs
- 19:19:15: RT @1littlefish RT @Buddhagyrl Phoenix AZ Kill shelter many killed 2day More on mon pls help them!http://bit.ly/47z2c6 http://bit.ly/N1KqB
- 19:40:48: RT @1littlefish: Everglades to be put back on U.N. Endangered List? - http://tinyurl.com/nktmp7
- 20:23:51: RT @1txsage1957: Tell Nike, Adidas,& Timberland to Protect the Amazon and the Climate http://is.gd/1lCxn
- 20:27:22: Okay...when I follow you because you seem interesting, don't respond by spamming me with DMs about hot to get more followers. KUNG-FU BLOCK!
- 20:31:26: RT @marksable: How much is this Michael Jackson memorial service going to cost this city? Isn't California bankrupt?
- 20:33:34: Today Sarah Palin ran outside, leapt on her horse, and galloped off in several directions.
- 20:54:33: RT @RawStory: Agribusiness may kill climate change bill http://tinyurl.com/n2tfg9
- 21:23:45: Humidity ramping, lightning closing in, looks like stormy weather...as always. My little plants are still alive.
- 21:34:31: @Hayley_editor Should be getting here any second then, as I'm in iron horse.
- 21:37:27: @PaulTobin Dear Paul - Suggest the titanium baseball bat to the head as a corrective measure. - Abby
- 21:39:24: Hrm, my Season 1 Simpsons set went walkabout...oh well, some day it'll turn up.
- 21:40:21: RT @greenmeme: NY Times: In Public Housing, Spreading the Gospel of the Recycling Bin http://tinyurl.com/mdsz67
- 21:46:19: @PaulTobin Hmmm...how to reprogram, then...
- 21:55:53: I arrived in Tucson on July 4th . If tomorrow replicates the monsoon that hit when i arrived, tomorrow will be a very wet day indeed.
- 21:58:50: @ctholyfield SoCal, or Los angeles? (Remember: Los Angeles has been described as "74 suburbs in search of a city.")
- 22:00:19: @ctholyfield If L.A. area, then areas like Canoga Park, Woodland Hills, even Burbank, Pasadena, Altadena, Glendale.
- 22:01:06: @ctholyfield I'd actually suggest http://maps.google.com or installing Google Earth.
- 22:01:45: @Hayley_editor It seems so here, as we had a small sprinkle, i think, and then it stopped; humidity feels like it's dropping.
- 22:02:08: RT @greenmeme: NY Times: Observatory: The Case of the Shrinking Sheep http://tinyurl.com/nw66fc
- 22:26:20: Self-Help may not be the panacea you hope: BBC - http://bit.ly/16rdwp
- 22:29:55: @ctholyfield Ah, okay. Well, try Escondido, Oceanside, Encinitas, Soledad, Solana Beach, all down towards San Diego....
- 22:31:52: @ctholyfield Lake Elsinore, Temecula, Sun City, Laguna Hills, Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente, Costa Mesa, Riverside, Perris
- 22:33:15: @ctholyfield The problem is that outside of L.A., San Diego, and Ontario we're talking about a bunch of little cities rather than suburbs.
- 22:36:45: @ctholyfield Yep. In that area everything's a suburb. Solana Beach is pretty pricey as I recall.
- 22:54:53: This is shaping up to be a long silent weekend for me. Guess I'll have to make some noise to compensate.
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