Hulkettes

How’s this to go with your morning coffee?

Extremely crisp pictures of (Russian?) female bodybuilders. 

Safe for work, unless oiled, bikini clad women with more muscle than is aesthetically proper is somehow not work safe in your office.  Oh wait. Maybe it’s not safe for anything.

Still, remember you cannot unsee what you are about to see.

Female bodybuilders.

 

Saw it on Metafilter.

Nine Inch Nails

Saw these guys tonight, must say they have one of the coolest stage shows I have ever seen.

And the music wasn’t bad at all….  🙂

Thanks to the Thompson’s for the fun night.

Scrabble

I have mentioned xkcd before, it’s an absolutely brilliant web comic for nerds.  This recent comic made me simultaneously inhale coffee deep into my lungs, filling them with warm caffeinated poison at the same time as I emitted twin jets of steaming java from my nose.  It took several handfuls of paper towels to return my monitors to some semblance of order.  My keyboard probably won’t ever be the same.

I wasn’t going to post this to the blog since it’s slightly racy but Nikki convinced me that by the time the kids can figure out what’s going on in this comic they will probably appreciate the joke.  That’s the plan, anyway and if it backfires I’m blaming her for everything.

Love this guy.

 

**Update:

Since I am perfectly clairvoyant, have infallible meme radar, coupled with a keen sense of social trends, an article about xkcd appeared in The Globe and Mail today….  How’s that for good blogging?  Eh? Eh?

“So help me, gay baby”

Just read an interview with two of my favourite news anchors, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.  It’s typically hilarious, and incisive and it makes some typically good points about the US financial crisis, the presidential election campaign especially.

STEPHEN COLBERT: One of the things I love about my character is I can make vast declarations and it doesn’t matter if I’m wrong. I love being wrong. So my character can tell you exactly what’s going to happen: The Democrats are going to change everything. We’re going to have gay parents marrying their own gay babies. Obama’s gonna be sworn in on a gay baby. The oath is gonna end ”So help me, gay baby.” 
STEWART: Then they’ll head right over to the abortion mixer. There’ll be a dance, and then there’ll be a little tent set up outside, just in case anybody wants an RU-486. 

I didn’t know what the heck RU-486 was, either, so I added the link….

Check it out.

God Fearing Singles likely to remain so

The first line of the article sums it all up nicely:

Dwindling congregations and a lack of experience in relationships have left many churchgoers struggling to find a partner, according to clergy.

Nevermind just how the celibate clergy can really evaluate just what constitutes a “lack of experience”, apparently the solution to this thorny problem is to send those lonely Christians off to relationship workshops to give them “pointers”.

Peter Spalton, known as the dating doctor, said that churchgoers tended to be more reserved and could benefit from tips on how to appear more attractive.

Lessons include how to greet someone, how to hold good eye contact and how to judge whether the other person wants to be kissed at the end of the evening.

Whoa there padre!  Kissing on a first date?  What kind of a heathen organization is this?  Maybe some chaste hand-holding, properly chaperoned, but kissing?  Sounds a bit racy, don’t you think?

I’m joking of course, but the article doesn’t take itself too seriously (fortunately) and lists some of the Christian pick-up lines that users of a churchy on-line dating site submitted.  They are actually pretty funny.

‘Now I know why Solomon had 700 wives. He never met you.’

‘Is this pew taken?’

‘I just don’t feel called to celibacy.’

‘You float my ark.’

‘I didn’t believe in predestination until tonight.’

‘My parents are home, wanna come over?’

‘Is that a thinline, duo-tone, compact, ESV travel bible in your pocket?’

‘Let me sell you an indulgence – it’s a sin to look as good as you.’

‘How many times do I have to walk around you before you fall for me?”

‘I like to arrange the substantial Christian section of my bookshelf into alphabetical order. Coffee?”

‘The name is Will. God’s Will.’

Gold, pure gold.  Not the false idol kind, either.  Saw the link on Neatorama.

Ambient Awareness

Clive Thompson is fast becoming one of my favourite writers. He usually writes articles about video games that I will never get to play because my life is too busy. I just finished reading a piece he wrote about how our continual connectedness to our friends and acquaintances online gives us a sense of awareness and closeness to each other that was never possible before.  The short, often silly status updates and blurbs about our friends online seem silly and banal individually, but when added together gives us a sense of closeness and awareness to each other that is quite powerful.

This is the paradox of ambient awareness. Each little update — each individual bit of social information — is insignificant on its own, even supremely mundane. But taken together, over time, the little snippets coalesce into a surprisingly sophisticated portrait of your friends’ and family members’ lives, like thousands of dots making a pointillist painting. This was never before possible, because in the real world, no friend would bother to call you up and detail the sandwiches she was eating. The ambient information becomes like “a type of E.S.P.,” as Haley described it to me, an invisible dimension floating over everyday life.

It’s a fascinating piece on how Facebook and Twitter and other services let us keep and maintain lots of relationships that would otherwise wither altogether, and even gives us a heightened sense of our social network.  It’s like a sense of ESP that quickly becomes part of us and we notice keenly when someone stops participating, or drops off.  I love this, and while I’m a chronic laggard on actually participating in Facebook usage, I can honestly say that since I got the iPhone I have checked in to the feed far more regularly and I can see how this really works.  It’s cool, cool stuff, like discovering you had another set of ears.