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Bossk

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10-Mar-2003
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13-Jan-2008
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Post
#102281
Topic
MANGLER BROS., INC. IS NOW CLOSED HERE
Time
Originally posted by: PSYCHO_DAYV
Originally posted by: Bossk
Originally posted by: PSYCHO_DAYV
BOSSK, I HAVE QUITE A FEW TMNT COMICS. I EVEN HAVE A REALLY NICE REPRINT OF ISSUE ONE IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO BORROW IT.


As much as I would like to borrow them, with all the crap I've got going on, I have no idea when I would be able to get around to reading them. And I hate holding on to people's stuff for too long. I always wind up feeling bad. Just like with OS X.3. I'm sorry about that one.

Thanks for the offer, but I'll hold off for now.



I KEPT TRYING TO CALL YOU TO LET YOU KNOW THAT YOU COULD JUST KEEP THE DISCS. I GOT A NEW SET WITH MY MAC MINI.


I sent those back to you well before you were calling me. Sorry, you keep calling when I'm either at work or doing something and can't get my phone. I didn't catch the number that you left on the last voicemail. Was it the same one that I normally try to call? Your message was garbled.
Post
#102296
Topic
The Pope
Time
Pretty interesting article with more information about the Pope's history as a youth and the whole Nazi party thing...

Quote

Pope's family saw Hitler as enemy

After 81 years, Rev. Georg Ratzinger thought he had lived through as much as a man could in a lifetime. He never imagined a turn of wonder: his brother, Joseph, becoming pope.

"More than 450 years, there's never been a German pope. And to think it is someone from our family," the older of the two Ratzinger brothers said Friday as he bustled about his apartment in this medieval city preparing for a trip to Rome for the inauguration mass.

For much of last week, Georg Ratzinger was at the center of a storm in Germany. First he maneuvered a media frenzy. Then he did his part to keep the record straight on the life and times of Pope Benedict XVI--and to prevent the tabloid press from dredging up World War II.

The new pope, a conservative theologian and former dean of cardinals at the Vatican, was described as "God's Rottweiler" so often in print that Georg Ratzinger felt a tug of protectiveness.

And when the Sun newspaper in Britain, the country's most popular tabloid, raised questions about the future pope's war years with a screaming headline: "From Hitler Youth to . . . Papa Ratzi," Georg Ratzinger patiently opened his doors to recount their lives as a lesson in understanding.

In a half-hour conversation, the courtly one-time choir director blurted out a one-word criticism of certain media accounts.

"Rubbish," Ratzinger said, rubbing his forehead.

Family despised Hitler

Joseph Ratzinger, 78, has written about his childhood during the rise of Adolf Hitler. He always acknowledged that in 1941, when the Nazis demanded membership, he joined a Hitler Youth group. Georg Ratzinger explained that he and Joseph, who realized early on that they wanted "a life at the altar," were raised in a home where Hitler was despised, in the pine-covered hills of Bavaria.

"My parents viewed him intensely as an enemy," Ratzinger said. "From the beginning, they saw him as an enemy. They thought he was anti-Catholic and anti-Christian, anti-religion." Their father was a police officer whose dislike of the policies of National Socialism spurred the family to move from village to village in southeast Germany. The family eventually settled in Traunstein, a Catholic stronghold near Munich.

On Nov. 9, 1938--Kristallnacht--Jews in Traunstein were attacked and driven from town. Anyone who challenged Nazi authority was intimidated and threatened. Dachau, a concentration camp, was a few miles outside Munich.

In the world that changed before their eyes, young people were drawn to Nazi youth groups, which were often the only source of recreation in rural Bavaria, Georg Ratzinger said. Many children were attracted by sports and music into joining the organizations.

That social element never appealed to his brother, Georg said. Joseph Ratzinger was a bookish boy who shied away from sports.

Later, both were taken into military service, first as youth guards, then soldiers. Neither of them, Ratzinger said, could see how to escape the times.

"He had no choice. You had to join or you were shot. It was a brutal regime. It was an inhuman dictatorship," Ratzinger said. "There was nothing good in it."

Neither Ratzinger fired a shot in the war, Georg said.

"I was a radio operator," he said, and young Joseph "didn't fight at all." His brother went from one unit to another as a guard known as a luftwaffenhelfer, "a helper to the air force." He maintained cannons, bullets, guns and other supplies.

`It was tough times'

The younger Ratzinger was drafted into a forced labor unit and then the army in 1944. He deserted the army within months and then, like his brother, was held for weeks by victorious American troops as a prisoner of war.

"It was tough times," Ratzinger said.

The flurry of interest in the new pope's war history has touched a nerve in Germany, particularly in a year that marks the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II. Franz Haselbeck, a longtime archivist for Traunstein, said some news stories seemed to ignore the reality of what a 14-year-old boy faced in Nazi Germany.

"Traunstein was like all other cities here at the time, not more and not less involved with the Nazi party," Haselbeck said. "You had such repression that you couldn't lead a normal life. No one could. I don't see how any normal boy could stand against it.

"To make something of this now--when [Joseph Ratzinger] wrote about it himself years ago--really, it seems ridiculous," he added.

Pope defended as a survivor

Abraham Foxman, U.S. director of the Anti-Defamation League, said he is, in one sense, heartened to see that questions are being raised about "the terrible memories of the Nazi era." But Pope Benedict XVI is a survivor of tyranny, Foxman said, and he should be valued as a man who saw the worst of humankind and spent the rest of his life pursuing something much better.

"The fact is he grew up in those times, and then this is how he chose to spend the rest of his life," Foxman said. "I think each one of us ponders: What if we grew up then? What would we have done? . . . Measure those years against the other 50 or 60 years of his life and make the judgment."

Georg Ratzinger has allowed himself a few judgments this past news-filled week.

"Anybody who writes such a thing must need something to write," Ratzinger said, sighing about the most sensational headlines. "And anyone who writes that . . . doesn't understand the times as they were."
Post
#102286
Topic
The Man Who Would Be Superman
Time
I just realized you could get a hi-res copy of the image and finally saw the diamond pattern that Commander Courage was mentioning. At least when viewed up close, the suit looks less rubbery and more like lycra.

Also, while looking at the huge mother image, I noticed how terrible the arch support in those boots is. Geez! That's just what we need... Superman with fallen arches! When he should be fighting crime, he's gonna be at the podiatrist's office! Some superhero.

Post
#102285
Topic
Girl Problem
Time
Being a person who was never great at asking girls out in high school and even worse at picking up on hints, I have since learned that many girls floated hints my way and I was just too dense to figure it out. Based on what they've told me about their hinting, it sounds like this girl is definitely dropping a few your way.

The best thing I can think to do is just suck it up and ask. That's all you can do. Catch her some time when she's alone (less chance of embarrassment) and just walk up to her. Don't ask about going out on a date. Just say something simple like, "I was wondering if you want to go get some coffee after school" or the like. If she says yes, use this as an opportunity to talk and get to know her. And make it about her. You obviously know a few things about her. Use those as conversation starters.

All you can do is ask and all she can do is say no. At best, she'll say yes. You won't know until you try and you'll regret it forever afterwards if you do not.

Good luck my young Padawan.
Post
#102282
Topic
For Transformers Fans
Time
That was cool, but I think it would've been cooler if they got the guy walking in the background to run like hell away or have some car crash on the street behind the bug. But still pretty sweet.

I wonder if that's how it will look for the movie?

The thing that I'm wondering about regarding this movie is that one of the sites I've read mentioned that Transformers have been fighting here on Earth unbeknownst to us for some time. Or at least that's how the movie may be working itself out. It said the wars may even be dating back to Biblical times. So, if Transformers are made to look like modern mechanical objects (VW Beatles, handguns, big rigs, tape players, etc.), how do they justify their appearances back in Biblical times as none of that stuff existed? Are they going to try and say that Transformers can evolve their appearance? If this is the case, then we start to wonder why the Transformers don't just morph into whatever the hell they want on an as-needed basis? If they can evolve their transformations, why not just become whatever suits you best when you need it? And, what the hell did they transform into back in Biblical times? A rock? The Holy Grail? Noah's Ark? Just brings up a whole new area of questioning regarding the movie.
Post
#102273
Topic
I have to write a Letter to George Lucas...
Time
Quote

Originally posted by: Trooperman
But all you George Lucas haters out there: would you change your mind if Revenge of the Sith turns out to be a masterpiece, he releases the OT on DVD, and then he makes SE's of the prequels, fixing all the stupid plot points, and denies that the original prequels ever existed?

I think that when he gets some time to really think about things, he'll release the OT on DVD. If there's one thing he is, he's very clever at marketing. I think he's just waiting and waiting for demand to build up, and he has no need to release it now, with his prequels. He needs a way to make money later on (despite the millions he has already).


The thing you don't understand is that I don't give much of a damn about the prequels. I'm in this for the originals. I've watched TPM and AOTC. I wasn't too keen on TPM and I enjoyed AOTC. But, to me, SW is the original three films released in 1977/80/83. That's all I want. I haven't purchased any of the prequels on DVD nor do I plan to (unless, GL releases all six in a box set and that's the only way I can get the original cuts of eps 4-6).

The hole in your argument is that he can fix the prequels all he wants to make everything fit together perfectly and get rid of plot holes and the like. However, people who don't like the new changes can refer back to their original DVD versions of TPM, AOTC, and, when the time comes, ROTS. You will have both versions on official LFL DVD releases. We fans of the original cuts of 4-6 cannot go back to any other version of the DVDs if we don't like the changes GL made to them in his 2004 DVD release. They don't exist at all officially. The only copies come to us thanks to some special people here on these boards. Very unofficially.

And, I, too, am thankful I didn't grow up on the Internet.
Post
#101967
Topic
Video Games - a general discussion thread
Time
Seeing all those consoles brought back some memories. "I had the TI-99 4A!"

I just think it would be cooler if he had the originals of each console. He has the PSX instead of the original PlayStation. He has the rereleased Atari 2600 (not the one from last year, but the second coming of the 2600 which actually looks like this past year's Atari) instead of the old wood panelled one. There may be others, but I'm not sure.
Post
#101965
Topic
I have to write a Letter to George Lucas...
Time
No, I won't deal with it. He made a conscious contribution to popular culture. Now he's denying these contributions ever existed. I think any recognition he was given for these contributions should be stripped away. Like my AFI comment in this thread. Because the film that now exists is not the same film and is no longer the great film in my mind. It's become a joke of its former self.

You have to have grown up with them to understand. I don't expect you to be able to sympathize.
Post
#101931
Topic
I have to write a Letter to George Lucas...
Time
Quote

Originally posted by: Darth Chaltab
Well. Shows you not to "give your childhood" to some purveyor of fictional adventures.


Yes, God forbid people have something they really, really like. Better than not having something to believe in. But, then again, you've never had anything during the course of your childhood with as strong-rooted an influence as SW. By the time you were born, SW fandom was still around, but not nearly as rabidly as it was when I was a kid.

Think about it... SW was the first hugely successful film to come out. And the first to have multimedia tie ins. No other film really had toys, lunchboxes, comic books, novels, etc. It was a first and we all bought in. Hook, line, and sinker. You would have been the same way if you were born in our era. And don't try to deny it. With all your friends buying in and talking and playing. It was a phenomenon that was difficult to escape. You never had anything like that. Every movie since you've been born has been hyped up and overmarketed. You had more of a choice. And that's why so few toys have done as well as SW.