Friday, August 5, 2011

Seattle Hempfest - You can be a volunteer - Free Marc Emery

Happy Friday! And for our lighter side, did you make it to Hempfest Seattle last year? If not, here's your chance to get there this year. You can even be a volunteer.


But before we get into that, a few HempHeadLines:
  • The New York Times Supports Medical Marijuana - urges New York’s Governor Cuomo to follow the lead of New Jersey and allow seriously ill New Yorkers to use marijuana to treat their illnesses
  • Gov. Chris Christie Puts New Jersey Medical Marijuana Back on Track
  • MPP holds Liberty Belle Ball Fundraiser at the Playboy Mansion
Now for the good stuff....

Seattle Hempfest: Volunteers Needed Aug. 19-21


I have to get this poster for Seattle Hempfest 2011, I used to have a couple of posters years ago by this artist (who's style is presented here). There are other posters to be available.

Massive lineup of bands and music at various stages around the area along the waterfront.

Many notable speakers lined up to talk.

On the political side of things:

FREE MARC EMERY

Canadian cannabis activist, business owner and philanthropist, Marc Emery, is being prosecuted by the United States Government for selling seeds across the United States border via mail order. Marc Emery has been extradited from Canada to Seattle, Washington, to enter a plea. Emery is expected to take a 5 year sentence in a federal prison, accepting a pre-arranged plea bargain in order to reduce the sentences of his two co-defendants.

We need to oppose the political persecution of our Canadian brother, Marc Emery, and let our government and the Canadian government know that nobody should go to prison for pot.

Go to: http://www.noextradition.net for more info on Marc Emery.

 Just a few things about Marc:

Marc Emery gave away all of the profits from his seed business to drug law reform lobbyists, political parties, global protests and rallies, court litigation, medical marijuana initiatives, drug rehabilitation clinics, and other legitimate legal activities and organizations.

• Marc helped found the United States Marijuana Party, state-level political parties, and international political parties in countries such as Israel and New Zealand.
• Marc has been known as a book seller and activist in Canada for 30 years, fighting against censorship laws and other social issues long before he became a drug law reform activist.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

2,000 voice strong choir

Hi. This is another interesting video and a fascinating concept. What if you had a few people get together to sing a song you wrote? What if you got them to get their friends, or simply strangers, and all of these people who sing well, and they started to sing your song in a strong chorus? What if you found a way to get many more people together to sing that song? What if this grew out of your control and somehow you found a way to control it, to blend it together, to make something, incredible?

Then what if there were a medium that allowed people to gather together, while apart, people who never met before, who could collaborate, and then you could put it all together as a modular collaboration and then once pieced together, you could play it for the world?


That is exactly what Eric Whitacre. He discovered this capability and he went with it, explored it and turned into something, amazing.

"So two things struck me deeply about this," Eric says in the video, "The first is that human beings will go to any lengths necessary to find and connect with each other. It doesn't matter the technology. And the second is that people seem to be experiencing an actual connection. It wasn't a virtual choir. There are people now online that are friends; they've never met. But, I know myself too, I feel this virtual esprit de corps, if you will, with all of them. I feel a closeness to this choir -- almost like a family"

"What I'd like to close with then today," Eric continues, "is the first look at "Sleep" by Virtual Choir 2.0. This will be a premier today. We're not finished with the video yet. You can imagine, with 2,000 synchronized YouTube videos, the render time is just atrocious. But we do have the first three minutes. And it's a tremendous honor for me to be able to show it to you here first. You're the very first people to see this. This is "Sleep," the Virtual Choir."

Check out this amazing story, Eric Whitacre's virtual choir, 2,000 voices strong. Be patient and listen to the whole thing because the story is entertaining and rewarding and in the end, you are indeed rewarded.

It is simply beautiful to behold.
So, go ahead, behold it.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Sensorium - Dinner you will never forget

I have had a rough week. I'm traveling, commuting, fixing things that are severely broken and exhausted. But I'm trying to keep up my end of things so, here are a few entertaining things to titillate your taste buds and first, to stroke your eyeballs a bit.

The Pendulum Wave Video. I love that one. Don't give up on it, it's pretty cool. Yes, all it does is swing around, but if you like that kind of thing, you begin to notice it messes with your perception.

For the more crazy experiences, there is this new Quantum Jumping thing. I have no idea. It's either really cool, or just nutz.

Then there is this one. Have you ever experienced food as pure experience? Sure, you've probably had a good meal. Maybe even an extraordinary meal. But this is something even a bit beyond that.

Executive Chef Bryon Brown

It's from a place in Washington D.C., called Sensorium. Check out their web site for some more interesting things. Sensorium is a culinary and sensory experience featuring creative atmosphere and cutting-edge production. Enjoy a 12 course tasting extravaganza brought to you by Executive Chef Bryon Brown, amidst an evening of delights, mysteries, and surprises for all five senses!

NPR did an article on them recently and it's best if you go there to view the video. As they put it: "
Dinner with a side of memory: A supper club extravaganza staged in Washington, D.C., this spring enlisted all the senses — and some actors and musicians, too — to enhance diners' experience and memory of the food."

Check it out. And have a nice week!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Hollywood Talent Agencies making sales recently

The other day I took a year's worth of Script Magazine and went through the Who Sold What To Whom monthly column. It's not a bad thing to have representation.



Here are the indicated Agencies who were representing the sales that were noted. I included my best guess at contact information. Some of these are relatively difficult to contact.
Ari Gold of Entourage

Monday, August 1, 2011

What is the average weight of Americans?

For my first blog of August, my birthday month, I'm going to take a look at our weight and our attractiveness, or beauty if you prefer. I like attractiveness because I've known people who strongly attracted my attention but they weren't so physically beautiful, but you simply couldn't help wanting to be around them. Some call that charisma, but I don't know. Some of those people didn't have what I would consider a charismatic personality, yet I found them quite attractive, they "attracted" my attention, with their mannerisms, their personality, maybe even how they moved, or simply looked at things (either physically with their eyes and / or body, or their conception of ideas).

Too esoteric? Okay, how about this then?

Have you noticed there are more overweight people around now than when you were a kid? It's America as an unhealthy, lazy, low self esteem entity. We have less physical jobs (cool) and more mentally challenging jobs (cool) but it all means we get less exercise, something that is a natural healing agent for stress, heart disease, insulin related illnesses and cancer (yes, cancer). Just about anything you can think of that causes us grief physically, can be helped or aided by exercise.


Of course it can go the other way, too much exercise can also kill you so a moderation, even a heavier than lighter degree of exercise, is healthy. But little or none is surely a killer. We need to seek more proper exercise, less improper diet and a less immediate satisfaction in our desires and daily life. Part of the issue is travel, work and time. We generally commute more, work longer hours and more stressful hours and have little time left for health and welfare (which includes, down time, family time and entertainment or decompressing time).

Overdoing a good thing: World's Biggest Body Builder

But the bottom line still is, we're fat, as a nation. The last thing we need are clubs and organizations trying to say being fat is "OK". This comes from the paradigm of "I'm okay being who I happen to be" and "it's okay to just be you". This comes from how unhealthy it is to stress out that you don't look like a supermodel or a body builder. Yes, it's okay to be you, but it's also okay to try to make yourself better than you are. There is a window of what is healthy and should be acceptable to each and every one of us. If you weight 900 pounds, you should not feel okay about you. If your muscles are flacid and you have trouble picking up a tissue, you should not feel okay about who you are (physically); and this lends itself to who you are (mentally).


It takes time, effort and mental strength (discipline) to keep in shape. It is good mentally (up to a point) to try to look nice, to be attractive. It needs to be stated however, that there is a sense of moderation involved here. And to be attractive, is a mixture of who you are as a person, your "personality" and who you are as a physical being (your physical aesthetic), all adding up to how attractive you are to others. Do people gravitate to you because you are neat, clean, perhaps beautiful in some physical way, and interesting? These things lead to attractiveness.

Everyone has a different ratio of the attractiveness variant. Some people can even be what many would consider as "ugly" and still be attractive. It's interesting to note that this usually means unattractive physically, but not unattractive in personality or in wisdom. You might be extremely beautiful, but if you are an extreme racist, or are simply a mean person, it will make no difference whatsoever how beautiful you are, I'm still going to move away from you. Pretty much, the same goes for how you smell.

So some of the things people say about finding someone physically attractive (appealing) falls down when you consider these other things.

Yes, I would prefer to be around people I find attractive, over those who I find unattractive. That is my prejudice and we all have prejudices. But it is generalizations of prejudice that get us into trouble. I'm prejudiced against some foods over others. I love ice cream, but I hate eating liver, especially poorly prepared liver. So it is with other such issues. Prejudice simply means that you have had experience with something before, and you have made up your mind. You have been punched in the face, and you find no instance in your experience, where you would find pleasure in it; so you avoid allowing yourself to be hit int he face.


You find you like being around someone who is beautiful but typically there is a caveat people forget to mention; that if that beautiful person has an ugly personality, or for the discerning, a slightly unintelligent, unknowledgeable or unwise manner, or how you move is unattractive, or whatever, you may prefer to be closer to someone who has all the same positive elements and none of the negative ones. And I don't really see an issue with that.

The issue comes in when you are mean (and sometimes being neutral can be mean) to someone because they are lacking in some way you have judged, then you are being a very unattractive person yourself. All that being said, I'd rather be around a person that was beautiful on the inside and ugly on the outside, than someone who is ugly on the inside and beautiful on the outside. Not only is beauty relative, it's no one single thing. It's the blend of who you are as a person.

So, in getting back to the fattening of America....

Measured average height, weight, and waist circumference for adults ages 20 years and over (from the CDC):

  • Men:
    Height (inches):  69.4
    Weight (pounds): 194.7
    Waist circumference (inches):   39.7
  • Women:
    Height (inches):   63.8 (5'3")
    Weight (pounds):  164.7
    Waist circumference (inches):   37.0
Think about that for a minute.

 The Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (HANES) of 1976-80, studied a sample of 20,322 Americans between the ages of 1 and 74. They collected all kinds of physiological data like height, weight, sex, race, blood pressure, etc.
Looking at just the adults (ages 18-74), they found
  • The average height of the men was 5 feet 9 inches, and their average weight was 171 pounds.
  • The average height of the women was 5 feet 3.5 inches, and their average weight was 146 pounds.
Getting any of this yet?

I don't know, I think we need to have more respect for ourselves, for our natural resources, for the jet fuel it takes to lug our fat butts across the skies, the more generally larger accommodations we now have to make for the morbidly obese as there are now so very many more of them, and so on and so on and....

The push button generation is dying out. Even video games are getting more interactive and health building. Even gamers are realizing you need exercise. It's always been my thought that if you want to do what you love doing, you have to take care of yourself so you can continue doing it. No matter what you are talking about. A more in shape body, leads to a more in shape mind; and it should be the other way around too.

Be all you can be. Be Smart. Be Brilliant. Be Beautiful.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Weekend Wise Words

Be Smart! Be Brilliant!

Since last weekend I did Aristotle, I thought this weekend I would do his teacher and mentor, Socrates.

Socrates 469 BC–399 BC
A few of Socrates pieces of Wisdom:

Thou shouldst eat to live; not live to eat.
[Although Ben Franklin is noted for saying this in his Almanac, it would seem that Socrates beat him to that obvious statement]

Think not those faithful who praise all thy words and actions; but those who kindly reprove thy faults.

Regard your good name as the richest jewel you can possibly be possessed of - for credit is like fire; when once you have kindled it you may easily preserve it, but if you once extinguish it, you will find it an arduous task to rekindle it again. The way to gain a good reputation is to endeavor to be what you desire to appear.

The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance.

If a man is proud of his wealth, he should not be praised until it is known how he employs it.

I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance.

The unexamined life is not worth living.

Do not do to others what angers you if done to you by others.
[sound familiar? kind of like the "Golden Rule" don't you think?]

And finally (for those of us who have been divorced once or thrice.... )

By all means marry; if you get a good wife, you'll be happy. If you get a bad one, you'll become a philosopher.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Mad Bears and Americans

No, not "Mad Dogs and Englishmen", in case you were wondering why my title (from Joe Cocker's live 1970 album) sounded a bit familiar. I figured someone would wonder that and it's so annoying that it's hard to concentrate on the article you are reading until you remember it, so, now that one person can relax.

I heard something that made me a bit nervous, on NPR. They said that there are between five and twenty Grizzly bears in the Cascades.

Do NOT do this
If you see a Griz, do not high five it. You may be thinking, cool, and cute, but he's thinking, hmmmm tasty, and yum.

I back packed alone in the Cascades for years always thinking, "No Griz, just black and brown bear."

Before those years of backpacking alone, I had search and rescue training. I've never been able to get lost in the mountain, I've always had excellent sense of direction and could never understand how people constantly get lost, but I guess if you're not used to the woods, it's not that hard.

My rifle club instructor in the late 60s said he was out with his family in the cascades and a bear was on a near by ridge. His family as picking berries. He had his 30-06. The bear was acting funny. Then he said it charged them. He told his family to run and at some point, he started firing at the bear.

Now, this guy was a great shot but the bear kept coming. He said he emptied the rifle into it and it finally dropped and slid to a stop, ten feet from him. He said he was pretty unnerved. He turned around and his oldest son, about 17 was standing there with a rock raised waiting to back his dad up if the shooting failed.

He said that they got a ranger and they checked the bear out together. They found that the bear had 19 .22 shots in its chest. So, someone was just plinking at the bear from a distance and it was probably pretty pissed of an in pain by time it say him and his family in its territory.

So, you never know what going on when you see an animal in the woods. Maybe it will leave you alone, or maybe its not in the right mind. Either way, I don't go in the mountains with anything less than a .357. It amazes me the people that give no thought to it.

So, if you do go into the mountains, go for it, but go forewarned, forearmed and fully aware and well, good luck.