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Saturday, 7 October 2006
Halloween Time
Mood:  spacey

Halloween is a time of rememberance. We remember not what we are, but what we were. On Oct/31 of every year, we all seem to penetrate through that black curtain of death and see what's on the other side. Often, it's not pretty, but it's our death, afterlife or fantasy.

Here are two websites that explore spooky realities: www.hclinks.org. and www.hellfun.com.

We're all creative beings and we've left our mark or something else somewhere.


Posted by qualteam at 3:09 PM EDT
Friday, 6 October 2006
The Family Musical Webpages
Mood:  lyrical

By putting a music player in "the footnote" of our Family Website, I placed a music player on each page of the site.

But don't dispair about listening to the same tune over and over again, any song on the player song list can be double chicked and a new song will load. There are 14 tunes listed; all rare oldies that you've probably never heard before.

Finding the right background music for your life can be difficult. Fortunately, I have over 1700 songs to choose from.

The "Family Musical Wepages" are found at www.daveandirene.ca.

If you've done slideshows or background music on your blog or website, let me know at qualteam@yahoo.com . This gives a whole new meaning to: "Get a Life".


Posted by qualteam at 1:47 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 6 October 2006 1:54 PM EDT
Thursday, 5 October 2006
Putting Some Sound On My Websites
Mood:  caffeinated

Over the last couple of days, I've been busy trying to embed "nature music" into some of my websites. It hasn't been easy because it's been hard to find a net company that stores MP3 in their proper MP3 format.

I also needed a player that played more than one track.

I found the ideal storage area at http://www.fileden.com/index.php and the ideal MP3 player at http://www.plebius.org/flashmp3player.

MySpace is noted for its incredible background templates and the one I liked just suited us to a tee. It was a rocky coastline that could be Newfoundland. I needed natural sound effects to spruce it up and I got those from  http://www.naturesounds.ca/.

The results are  http://www.myspace.com/qualteam
(i.e. My Newfoundland Webpage And Blog).

Hope you have fun with this material.

 


Posted by qualteam at 10:06 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 5 October 2006 10:37 PM EDT
Wednesday, 4 October 2006
Top Ten Teachers' Comments On Students

This is a list of actual comments on students that teachers sent out their parents.

 1. I would not allow this student to breed.
 2. Your child has delusions of adequacy.
 3. Your son is depriving a village somewhere of an idiot.
 4. Your son sets low personal standards and then consistently fails to
     achieve them.
 5. The student has a "full six-pack" but lacks the plastic thing to hold
     it all together.
 6. When your daughter's IQ reaches 50, she should sell.
 7. The gates are down, the lights are flashing, but the 
     train isn't coming.
 8. If this student were any more stupid, he'd have to be watered
      twice a week.
  9. It's impossible to believe the sperm that created this child beat out
      1,000,000 others.
 10. The wheel is turning but the hamster is definitely dead.


Posted by qualteam at 10:46 AM EDT
Tuesday, 3 October 2006
Muhammad Ali (aka Cassius Clay and Black Superman)

Occasionally, I'll put my best joke of the week on this blog. I found this while surfing.

"There was a song called "Black Superman-Muhammad Ali" by Johnny Wakelin & The Kinshasa Band. The main lyrics were:

Singing, Muhammad, Muhammad Ali
He floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee
Muhammad, the black superman
Who calls to the other guy I'm Ali catch me if you can.

Which brings to mind one fantastic story...

At the height of his fame, Muhammad Ali was settling into his plane seat when an air hostess came and gently reminded him to put on his seatbelt.

"Superman don't need no seatbelt", Ali snorted."

"Superman don't need no airplane", the hostess retorted, a winner by knockout.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Ali (Muhammad Ali)


Posted by qualteam at 10:55 AM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 3 October 2006 11:38 AM EDT
Monday, 2 October 2006
Childhood Fantasies Or Past Life Memories
Mood:  spacey

As a very young child, I remember reading a "Capt Marvel Junior" comic  like I was there. It was a story of people being changed into walking skeletons. This was the first time that mental "deja vu" happened in my mind.

Soon after I saw the movie, Peter Pan, I would sit by a window and wait for Peter's ship to come for me.

In the movie, "Hiawatha", I could experience what it felt like to be an Indian in the 17th century. I felt, I was there with Hiawatha and shared his hopes and dreams.

"The Robe" seemed to bring back memories of a close encounter that I had with an early Christian.

These recalls and/or highly imaginative moments occurred before I was 10 years old. There was no religious or philosophical idea that I was trying to prove. I just took it for granted that the human mind wasn't contained in one lifetime.

Mental triggers were set up that brought back buried memories. Ever since then, I've embraced the intuitive and mystical side of my soul. 

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Marvel,_Jr.  (Captain Marvel Jr.)

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/robe/ (The Robe With Victor Mature And Richard Burton)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiawatha (The Legend Of Hiawatha)


Posted by qualteam at 10:01 AM EDT
Updated: Monday, 2 October 2006 9:52 PM EDT
Sunday, 1 October 2006
Writing Contests

Although I am a writer, I've avoided writing contests. From what I've read, it seems that the judges' literary preferences take precedent over other considerations.

I've reproduced a blog entry from playwright and screenwriter, Charles Deemer who's been through this "meat-grinding process" as both a judge and contest many times:

"Young writers usually take contests too seriously. If they aren’t a finalist, they assume the fault is with themselves. Now it might be. Maybe they aren’t writing at a professional level yet. But it may be something else entirely! It may be that what they write does not connect to the particular judge. Period. Nothing more. Another judge may think their work is extraordinary. To get out of this quagmire, the young writer must learn how to be his/her own toughest critic and write to high personal standards. Then forget what everyone else says, judges or otherwise. Be your own toughest audience.

Contests are a mess -- and I haven’t even mentioned the influence of politics in the major awards. But doing well in contests is an important stepping stone in building a literary career. Winning a national playwriting contest as a graduate student changed my focus from fiction to drama. I’ve smiled all three times I’ve been an OBA finalist (before frowning when I didn’t win) – but actually, until I myself became a judge, until I met with two other judges who had fine credentials but very different tastes from my own, I didn’t realize that these affairs were mostly about the tastes of judges. Change the judges and you change the results.

So what’s a writer to do? Enter the contests the same way, the exact same way, you buy a lottery ticket. Because that’s what it amounts to. Contests are a crapshoot. In the beginning of a career, the credits from doing well in them are important even if the monetary reward isn’t much. Later, when you’ve outlived the need for a resume, winning or losing has no practical, only personal, consequences.

You’re going to win a few and lose a few in any writing career. Enjoy winning and don’t fret losing. Don’t take either – especially winning! – too seriously.

For every judge who thinks you’re hot shit, there’s another judge who thinks you stink".

Charles Deemer's Blog is found on the right side under "Favourite Blogs".


Posted by qualteam at 10:44 AM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 1 October 2006 11:18 AM EDT
Friday, 29 September 2006
New TV Series: Jericho
Mood:  a-ok

On the surface, this looks like a remake of the 1983 TV Movie, "The Day After", but it isn't. The Day After was a graphic depiction of a nuclear war and nothing was left to the imagination. (Please note that nearly 100 million Americans watched The Day After on its first broadcast, a record audience for a made-for-TV movie.)

Jericho isn't your usual disaster story. A bomb goes off from a distance in Denver, but you don't see any destruction. Even what lead up to the nuclear attack isn't made clear.

All communications are cut off from the world to Jericho except one solitary morse code radio signal.

This apocalytic vision has apocalytic mysteries that keep the audience dangling. How wide spread is the attack? Why are most communications down when there's satellites in orbit?

The story, so far, concentrates on a few heroic persons who are busy saving lives and finding shelter for Jericho's citizens from radioactive rainfall. 

Only the radio operator knows what the morse code message is and he lets the audience in on part of it.

Personally, I feel Jericho is a twilight zone type of story with multiple layers of mysteries. It looks and feels like the TV series, "Lost". It's a winner. Three stars.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_After (The Story Behind "The Day After")


Posted by qualteam at 11:59 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 30 September 2006 12:05 AM EDT
Wednesday, 27 September 2006
My Top Ten Romantic Movies

While on the theme of romance, I couldn't leave out my top ten romantic films of all time.

I love an interesting and complex relationship between a leading man and leading lady. Here are my favourites:

1. Casablanca/Humprey Bogart/Ingrid Bergman 2. To Have And To Have Not/Humprey Bogart/Lauren Bacall 3. It Happened One Night/Clark Gable And Claudette Colbert 4. High Noon/Gary Cooper/Grace Kelly 5. Maytime/Nelson Eddy/Jeannette MacDonald 6. Sleepless In Seattle/Tom Hanks/Meg Ryan 7. Ghost/Demi Moore/Patrick Swayze 8. Who's Afraid Of Virginia Wolf?/Richard Burton/Elizabeth Taylor 9. Annie Hall/Woody Allen/Diane Keaton 10. Wuthering Heights/Laurence Oliver/Merle Oberon

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/whos_afraid_of_virginia_woolf/ (Virginia Wolf)

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/maytime/about.php (Maytime)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/To_Have_and_Have_Not_(film) (Bogart and Bacall)

Tell me your favourites: qualteam@yahoo.com


Posted by qualteam at 10:15 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 27 September 2006 10:34 PM EDT
Tuesday, 26 September 2006
Slideshow Heading

I liked to thank the people at MySpace.com for the slideshow software which I'm now using.

While I used to have many pictures in my blog, I tapered this off because I was quickly reaching the 25 mg limit on my webpages.

I won't be using the same slideshow pictures over and over again. I'll probably change them once a month.

Tell me if you like this effect: qualteam@yahoo.com .


Posted by qualteam at 10:49 PM EDT

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