Saturday, October 31, 2009

JORDAN AND ANDRE GRANTED QUICKIE INTERVIEW AND PHOTOSHOOT

JORDAN and Peter Andre were yesterday granted a 'quickie' interview and photoshoot deal with Okay! magazine.



A High Court judge said it was in the interests of both parties that the end of their pretend marriage be covered in page after page of full colour photographs and dramatic pull-out quotes.

Although neither was present for the hearing, both were represented by legal teams screaming obscene curses at each other on their behalf.

A spokesman for Andre said: "The deal includes a 200-word sidebar about how Peter is getting back to normal and returning to his daily routine of inventing strange new words and doing loads and loads of sit-ups on a sunbed."

Meanwhile Jordan is understood to be relieved that the article will not be dragged out over months as she has to devote time to finding someone to write her next book.

Her spokesman said: "Articles about divorce are never easy, but she really wants people to know that she has put the past behind her and is finally moving on with her nipples."

The pretend marriage fell apart earlier this year after one of the imaginary horses inside Jordan's head accused Andre of looking at a picture of a woman in a magazine whilst smiling. She immediately responded by running him over in her Humvee and posting two Ultimate Fighters at the entrance to her vulva.

Okay! reader Nikki Hollis said: "I can't wait to see pictures of their palatial child visitation room and glamorous divorce counselling sessions. Sometimes I look at my own life and cry until my throat's raw."

Thursday, October 29, 2009

FORMULA TELEVISION ...............

Its hard to believe that we as a species are willing to put up with watching the same TV show ad infinitum just because we are too stupid to simply switch it off .
I for one find that I read more and spend alot more time on the internet searching for information about subjects that I have an interest in . I dont want to end up eating pizza every evening while watching soap operas or nonsense reality shows while my brain quietly turns to mush .
I do remember formula TV from my childhood , but it wasn't every show , every evening .... obvious examples from my childhood were the American Cop shows that inevitably had the same outcome week in and week out . Lets take CHiPs as an example of these offenders .... every episode began with our heroes ( Jon and Ponch ) chasing but not apprehending the badies , part two usually involved them meeting two young women and the final part always had them catch the bad guys and the episode invariably ended with a cheesy joke . This was the formula for almost every imported cop show but at least we only saw each show once and only once a week .
I guess my brain was able to handle this formula as long as it didn't happen every evening with every show , once a night may have been my limit .
Then the once a night slowly morphed into twice a night and then into almost every TV show on every channel every night until I barely watch anything other than sport and news anymore .
If someone had told me fifteen years ago that I would be so fed up of watching episodes of Only Fools and Horses that I would switch over to watch a news channel , I wouldn't have believed them ........ but that is exactly the case now . Shows that were absolute classics have become anoyingly familiar and of course familiarity breeds contempt .
I also remember watching a programme called Takeshi's Castle ten years ago because the daughter of a friend of mine [ who was 9 at the time] thought it was hilarious ........ I simply gritted my teeth and thought " those Japanese have no dignity and no sense of what entertainment is " ..... and yet today there are programmes made in the UK and the US (Wipeout) which are based on this formula [
ABC’s “Wipeout” Television Show Subject Of Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Filed By Tokyo Broadcasting, Creator Of Takeshi's Castle/MXC Show].

Of course everything comes down to money in the end , the biggest return for the smallest outlay is the perfect formula for the corporations who control our lives , what could be cheaper than to use the public to make TV programmes for the public ?Its the collusium all over again except that instead of death , we revel in the ritual humiliation of people we believe we are superior to and when we get fed up of seeing the public ridiculed we simply turn to watching Z-list Celebs in ever more embarrassing situations in the hope that it will somehow reinvigorate their career's .
It all smacks of a lack of respect for peoples dignity and we wonder why the youth of today no longer respect not only their elders but anything at all .

Funny thing is ...... when I look at the stuff on Youtube .... I see loads of imagination , but instead of employing the young genius's of tomorrow , the powers that be simply steal the ideas and palm them off as their own ........ its such a shame .

We are such a moral species ..... we wont allow cigarettes to be advertized on TV , and alcohol is slowly being pushed out of the television arena ........ but we are quite happy to see people humiliated night after night and think that there will be no consequence whatsoever ....... McDonalds and Pizza Hut can still advertize in our living room even though we are all agreed that todays children have never been so obese ............. we are such idiots .

When the first episode of Celebrity Enema airs , I hope I'm way to busy doing something interesting to be bothered watching it !

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

FAST FOOD

McDonalds launches ‘Fat Patches’ for lazy eaters



High-street fast-food retailer McDonalds today launched a new range of fat patches for people who can’t be bothered to walk all the way to their local restaurant. The new patches release 100% saturated fats and additives, and allow the wearer to enjoy the complete McDonalds experience without leaving the comfort of their armchair or hoist.

Eileen Mahoney, 23 stone, said ‘Before these wonder patches were available I had to get dressed, have a shave and walk 200 yards to my local burger outlet where I would order 45 chicken nuggets, eight portions of fries, six milkshakes and five McFlurries for breakfast. Even going to the Drive-In Burger King meant walking to the car. Now I simply reach across to the fridge next to my armchair and unwrap a giant fat patch – it contains the same amount of transfats, modified starch and artificial sweeteners, without all that effort!’

Other fast-food outlets are said to be watching the latest development with interest. A spokesman for KFC said ‘This will not affect plans for our new ‘fat-laden chicken lardy-bucket by post’ initiative which we are launching in partnership with Amazon in an effort to deliver delicious fried chicken soaked in transfats with extra salt to buyers within eight days of ordering’.

.......... and also in the news this week

FAST food chain KFC is to be sued for animal cruelty after a swarm of mice was poisoned by a deluxe boneless box at its Leicester Square branch.

A court heard yesterday how dozens of mice were found badly dehydrated after vomiting for hours, while a colony of emaciated cockroaches was discovered just inches away from untouched piles of chicken-like produce.

The insects were subsequently removed to an entomology shelter in Sussex where carers are nursing them back to health.

Insect handler Nikki Hollis said: "It breaks your heart to see these wonderful little creatures in such distress. They obviously thought that at some point there would be something edible, but it just never happened."

She added: "One cockroach we've named Russell was all thorax and feelers, but we've started feeding him up on a diet of rancid milk and tiny spoonfuls of shite."

The RSPCA said: "Bovine drunken London tourists can puke spicy wedges through their eyeballs for all we care. But expecting innocent insects to eat barbecue twisters is cruel and unacceptable."

Environmental health inspectors were alerted to problems in the KFC branch after several people reported an unusual amount of flavour in the Zinger burgers.

Regular patron Stephen Malley said: "I normally bite into a KFC with a sense of resigned fatalism and a toilet within easy reach. But I noticed this one had nuggets of unusual piquancy that turned out to be a large bluebottle."

He added: "It appears that the Colonel's recipe, whilst still a secret, certainly contains insect legs and essence of rodent colon."

Noted animal welfare campaigner Carla Lane has called for a boycott on KFC for their animal cruelty, adding: "Subjecting countless dumb animals to lukewarm tasteless dreck is fundamentally wrong, as anyone who remembers Bread will no doubt confirm."

Monday, October 26, 2009

INTERNET RULES AND LAWS : TOP 10

from Godwin to Poe
The internet has matured into a world of its own, and like the real world, it obeys certain immutable laws. Here are 10 of the most important.

By Tom Chivers


Any internet user will know that the web, like the outside world (or “meatspace”), follows certain rules.
We take a look at 10, with the most well-known and widely used towards the top and some of the lesser lights lower down. If you know any more, let us know below.


1. Godwin’s Law

The most famous of all the internet laws, formed by Mike Godwin in 1990. As originally stated, it said: "As a Usenet discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1." It has now been expanded to include all web discussions.
It is closely related to the logical fallacy “reductio ad Hitlerum”, which says “Hitler (or the Nazis) liked X, so X is bad”, frequently used to denigrate vegetarians and atheists.
Common Godwin's Law appearances include describing women's rights campaigners as “feminazis”, comparing the former US President George W Bush to Hitler, or saying Barack Obama's proposed healthcare reforms are the new Holocaust.
In its broader sense it can be used to describe any situation where a poster loses all sense of proportion, for example describing New Labour as “Zanu-Labour” after Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwean political party Zanu-PF.
As well as the descriptive form, it can be used prescriptively: so if any poster does mention the Nazis in a discussion thread, Godwin’s Law can be invoked, they instantly lose the argument and the thread can be ended.
If this is done deliberately to end the argument, however, it does not apply. This codicil is known as “Quirk’s Exception”.

2. Poe’s Law

Not to be confused with the law of poetry enshrined by Edgar Allen Poe, the internet Poe’s Law states: “Without a winking smiley or other blatant display of humour, it is impossible to create a parody of fundamentalism that someone won't mistake for the real thing.”
It was originally formulated by Nathan Poe in 2005 during a debate on christianforums.com about evolution, and referred to creationism rather than all fundamentalism, but has since been expanded.
Poe’s Law also has an inverse meaning, stating that non-fundamentalists will often mistake sincere expressions of fundamentalist beliefs for parody.
Examples abound – one particularly difficult-to-judge site claims that “Heliocentrism [the belief that the Earth orbits the Sun, rather than the other way around] is an Atheist Doctrine”.
One that must, surely, be a parody is sexinchrist.com (WARNING: link contains adult material), a site that offers Christians advice on the rights and wrongs of such activities as threesomes and pubic shaving, among much more.
However, it is hard to be entirely certain, given the existence of christiannymphos.org (WARNING: link contains adult material), an apparently entirely serious site.
Here is an example of a parody site that embodies both Godwin's and Poe's Laws.

3. Rule 34

States: “If it exists, there is porn of it.” See also Rule 35: “If no such porn exists, it will be made.” Generally held to refer to fictional characters and cartoons, although some formulations insist there are "no exceptions" even for abstract ideas like non-Euclidean geometry, or puzzlement.
For obvious reasons it is not appropriate for lengthy discussion in a family newspaper, but the recent appearance of Marge Simpson on the cover of Playboy, pictured above, was a (very mild) example of the law in action, and going mainstream.
The spread of fanfic, slash fiction and hentai around the internet, as well as the rise of furries, are making this law more and more accurate every day.
The other 33 rules change frequently, except one and two, which are “Do not talk about /b/” and “Do NOT talk about /b/”, respectively, referring to a message board on the 4chan.org website.

4. Skitt’s Law

Expressed as "any post correcting an error in another post will contain at least one error itself" or "the likelihood of an error in a post is directly proportional to the embarrassment it will cause the poster."
It is an online version of the proofreading truism Muphry’s Law, also known as Hartman's Law of Prescriptivist Retaliation: "any article or statement about correct grammar, punctuation, or spelling is bound to contain at least one eror".
Language Log quotes the following example, from Paul Ordoveza’s How Now, Brownpau? blog:
"For too long, we linguistic pedants have cringed, watching this phrase used, misused, and abused, again, and again, and again. 'This begs the question...' [we hear], and we must brace ourselves as the ignoramii of modern society literally ask a question after the phrase."
While Mr Ordoveza’s point is entirely valid (“begging the question” is a logical fallacy, meaning to "beggar the question", or assume your conclusion in your premise – not to raise the question), the plural of ignoramus is ignoramuses.
It was apparently first stated by G Bryan Lord, referring to a user named Skitt, on Usenet in 1998.

5. Scopie’s Law

States: “In any discussion involving science or medicine, citing Whale.to as a credible source loses the argument immediately, and gets you laughed out of the room.” First formulated by Rich Scopie on the badscience.net forum.
This law makes little sense without a background knowledge of Whale.to, a conspiracy theory site which includes such items as the complete text of the anti-Semitic hoax Protocols of the Elders of Zion, as well as claims that Aids is caused by vaccination programmes, and that Auschwitz never happened.
It has been expanded by posters on rationalwiki.com to include any use of Answers in Genesis in an argument about creationism and evolution.

6. Danth’s Law (also known as Parker’s Law)

States: “If you have to insist that you've won an internet argument, you've probably lost badly.” Named after a user on the role-playing gamers’ forum RPG.net.
Danth’s Law was most famously declared in “The Lenski Affair”, between microbiologist Richard Lenski and the editor of Conservapedia.com, Andrew Schlafly, who cast doubt upon Prof Lenski’s elegant experimental demonstration of evolution.
After what is widely held to be one of the greatest and most comprehensive put-downs in scientific argument from Prof Lenski, Mr Schlafly declared himself the winner.

7. Pommer’s Law

Proposed by Rob Pommer on rationalwiki.com in 2007, this states: “A person's mind can be changed by reading information on the internet. The nature of this change will be from having no opinion to having a wrong opinion.”

8. DeMyer's Laws

Named for Ken DeMyer, a moderator on Conservapedia.com. There are four: the Zeroth, First, Second and Third Laws.
The Second Law states: “Anyone who posts an argument on the internet which is largely quotations can be very safely ignored, and is deemed to have lost the argument before it has begun.”
The Zeroth, First and Third Laws cannot be very generally applied and will be glossed over here.

9. Cohen’s Law

Proposed by Brian Cohen in 2007, states that: “Whoever resorts to the argument that ‘whoever resorts to the argument that... …has automatically lost the debate’ has automatically lost the debate.”
Has also been stated in the much longer version, "Whoever resorts to the argument that 'whoever resorts to the argument that... 'whoever resorts to the argument that... 'whoever resorts to the argument that... 'whoever resorts to the argument that ... 'whoever resorts to the argument that... ...has automatically lost the debate' ...has automatically lost the debate' ...has automatically lost the debate' ...has automatically lost the debate' ...has automatically lost the debate' has automatically lost the debate."

10. The Law of Exclamation

First recorded in an article by Lori Robertson at FactCheck.org in 2008, this states: "The more exclamation points used in an email (or other posting), the more likely it is a complete lie. This is also true for excessive capital letters."
It is reminiscent of the claim in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels that the more exclamation marks someone uses in writing, the more likely they are to be mentally unbalanced.
According to Pratchett, five exclamation marks is an indicator of "someone who wears their underwear on the outside".

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

WHAT EXACTLY ARE THEY SELLING ??



Is this advert suppossed to be " tongue in cheek " or is it simply immoral ?
...... and does any official body look at these adverts to check that they
aren't sending the wrong message to viewers who are easily influenced ?