Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Heath Ledger.1979-2008


Was searching all day for the best journal coverage of his death. Film.com had an interesting coverage.But in the end, i decided to stay loyal with rolling stone.com and use their story.

Sundance: Shock


January 22, 2008 7:42 PM

The shocking death of Heath Ledger stopped all the usual yammering here at the Sundance Film Festival. It was a day that started with the Oscar nominations and news of the big sale of Hamlet 2 to Focus Features—the Sundance jackpot at last. And yet this afternoon, just after I finished interviewing Josh Peck and Olivia Thirlby, the gifted young stars of The Wackness , one of the hot films in competition, the news of Ledger's death in his apartment in Manhattan hit us like a cold slap. Thirlby sat quietly by herself collecting her thoughts. This was a huge day for the young actress, her film Juno in which she played the pregnant teen's bff, had just been announced as one of the five contenders for the Best Picture Oscar. Both Thirlby and Peck had just talked about where they'd like to be as actors ten years from now. Peck saying that he'd hoped to keep challenging himself to reveal something about the human condition, that acting if it was honest and fearless united us somehow as human beings. His remarks reminded me of my first meeting with Ledger seven years ago when A Knight's Tale put him on the Hollywood map. He and his blond ringlets became prettyboy poster art and he damn near choked on it. Not the movie, just the image branding. Like Peck and Thirlby, Ledger thought of acting as something deeper, a striving toward goal he'd probably never reach. Ledger told me then that if his only offers were for movie-star posing he'd bag the whole thing. Instead, he went on to capture the loneliness of the guarded heart— as a gay cowboy in Brokeback Mountain, as a heroin junkie in Candy. and as a fame-resistant Bob Dylan in I'm Not There. The last time I saw Ledger, just before he started on the role of the Joker in this summer's The Dark Knight, he wore the same crooked grin, the same drop-the-bullshit attitude. He knew acting as an adventure couldn't match being a father to his daughter Matilda Rose. As movie enthusiasts, we will all miss seeing Ledger push against the barriers in roles he'll never play. But the end of his life at twenty eight is the real tragedy. Here at Sundance, in the swirl of deals and Oscar buzz, priorities—at least for the moment—were set straight.
Peter Travers

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

existence of pot .

Normal people hate stoners for an understandable reason. Pot smokers are seen as dumb, narrow minded,child-witted shenanigans,who spend their days flying away their sorrows.They are believed to not contribute anything productive to the economy .However, Open-minded people and a few future-oriented pot-smokers themselves will disagree with this claiming that it is just merely a stereotype generalization from the dry-natured,anti-art society.Besides,who could explain whats going on in the 'abnormal'brain of a pot-smoking cracker other than the pot-smoker him/her/hiher self? .. The downpoint is that negative long-term effects are bound to fuck their brains up, and that these people will remain idealists and a dew will stand out to inspire and mislead future generations like how lennon and jim morrison created a global havoc.All the powerful influence popular culture has on the modern society.Is there a chance for pot-smokers to make it rich unless they make it big in the music industry OR by becoming drug barons?IS there really a real-life future to be proud of?If so,then the post-modern world is moving towards a deeper trend of a moral,secularised breakdown in the new age.

Lastly, on the down to earth side of life, we can say heavy weed-smokers are harmless,funny, people.At-least stoners are peace loving birds who hate war,which is not a bad thing.so dear friends, Do not smoke weed. everyday. enjoy the videos

firemen got stoned accidentally



pretty damn funny to me.


How america spoils the nation's stoner sub-culture


stoned reporter

Monday, January 14, 2008

A happy new year for the lonely losers

happy new year guys.feeling lonely? In need of Love? In need of a girlfriend?have the dreams of being an alleged lady-killer? Well, I might just have the answer to your calling of desperation. You sad fuck. But then again, no straight man can ever live without a woman. In many cases, Women,minus the a.

A dude named neil strauss, who worked as a reporter for rolling stone(still is) wrote a book called the game. Now, this book have existed for a couple of years now and guys my age and older might be familiar with this book.

Ladies and gentlemen , i present to you. Neil strauss. His book 'the game', should be in any bookstores. its a best-selling. a must have.

neil talking about his book on the jimmy kimmel show



one of his useful methods


one of his interviews


as you can see, i uploaded videos from youtube. theres tons of other videos . just type. You'll find out that Neil is an ugly fuck, If he can do it, so can you.! good luck losers! just did u a big fucking favor
later dudes.