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Something odd happened today: as I was buying a muffin & orange juice at a nearby cafe, I bumped into the lady who looks after my building. She introduced me to the cashier, and pointed out that we’re neighbours. She lives in the unit next to mine, and I would have never recognized her.

Ah, big-city anonymity…ain’t it grand?

sidebar

By the way, the ‘recent consumption’ section of my sidebar has been wonky in Internet Explorer (I never use IE anymore, so it didn’t occur to me to check…I know, I know, I’m a bad coder), so I’ve messed with it a bit. It doesn’t look great now, but at least it works in either browser. I don’t have time to do a proper fix, so it’ll just have to stay ugly.

How to relax

Last night we chilled and watched a couple of movies: The Incredibles (imdb | rotten tomatoes) and The Motorcycle Diaries (imdb | rotten tomatoes). Both suited my mood; first a light and fluffy animated, and then pensive road movie.

Both also lived up to expectations. The Incredibles was as well animated as any Pixar release, but played a little darker and more adult than their previous features. Started a little slow, but picked up steam as it went. Same goes for The Motorcycle Diaries; it took a good 30 or 40 minutes to really get going, but became surprisingly gripping somewhere around northern Chile. I admit to knowing very little about Che Guevara, but I think that helped me here. I actually wish I’d had no idea who he was; it would’ve been fascinating to find out that he went on to do what he did in Cuba.

Sometimes its hard to be an American

Rick Segal, an American VC executive living in Canada, writes a pretty thoughful post about what it’s like to be an American these days. The comments, as you’d expect, get a little personal as the quality of the arguments declines. I actually met Rick once or twice when I was a vendor doing some work for his company; I was young (and a lowly vendor), so I was pretty intimidated by him. He was obviously very smart, but in situations like that you don’t pick up on the fact that someone’s thoughtful…he just seemed scary. So it was a bit of a shock to read a post like this.

Sometimes its hard to be an American

Dear Ticketmaster,

I don’t know who built your profiling system or who your analytics provider is. But I implore you, fire them. In the past year or so I have used your site to purchase tickets for the following events: Neko Case, The Pixies, The Fiery Furnaces, Celtic FC vs. AC Roma, and The Arcade Fire. Based on those purchases, as well as my alert preferences (‘Alternative Rock’, ‘Basketball’, and ‘Plays’), you sent me this last night:

To: radioDan
From: Ticketmaster Canada
Subject: Don’t miss Backstreet Boys

At this point I am not pleased. But then I see your twenty suggestions, and it’s all downhill.

  • Backstreet Boys
  • Bruce Springsteen
  • Bill Gaither
  • Ben Harper & the Innocent Criminals
  • Destiny’s Child
  • George Carlin
  • Gigantour: Megadeth and Dream Theater
  • David Gray
  • David Spade
  • Death From Above 1979
  • Queen – It’s a Kinda Magic Tour
  • Dwight Yoakam
  • Roger Hodgson(Formerly of Supertramp), with a Symphony Orchestra
  • Glasgow Rangers Vs.dinamo Zagreb
  • Blue Man Group At the Panasonic Theatre
  • Trisha Yearwood
  • Spirit of the West
  • En Vogue
  • Michael McDonald
  • Ten Tenors

Now, the only events on here I would even consider seeing are Bruce Springsteen, Ben Harper, George Carlin, Blue Man Group and the football match. But Harper’s out ’cause he’s playing at the Kool Haus (check your profile; I haven’t seen a concert there in five years…should tell you something.); likewise Carlin at Rama. And since you know I bought tickets to see Celtic last year, what’re the odds I’ll want to go see Rangers this year, what with them being mortal enemies and all? So you’re left with the Boss and the Blue Men, and I’m not sure how Springsteen qualifies as alternative rock.

Seriously, fire them.

Father's Day

Last night I realized that Father’s Day is only a few days away and I still haven’t made the CD for my Dad that I planned. I hurriedly burned it last night (it’s a lot easier now that all my music is on my hard drive…no more shuffling cds around). Here’s the lineup:

  1. The Shins – “The New Slang”
  2. The Black Keys – “Girl Is On My Mind”
  3. The Arcade Fire – “Neighbourhood #4 (7 Kettles)”
  4. The Hidden Cameras – “Fear Is On”
  5. The Heartless Bastards – “Runnin'”
  6. Damien Rice – “The Blower’s Daughter”
  7. Petra Haden – “I can See For Miles”
  8. Damien Jurado – “I Can’t Get Over You”
  9. The Long Winters – “Bride And Bridle”
  10. Great Lake Swimmers – “I Will Never See The Sun”
  11. The Ditty Bops – “Sister Kate”
  12. The Kings Of Leon – “Molly’s Chambers”
  13. Keren Ann – “Chelsea Burns”
  14. The Dandy Warhols – “Not If You Were The Last Junkie On Earth”
  15. Evan Dando & Juliana Hatfield – “$1,000 Wedding”
  16. Neko Case – “This Little Light”
  17. Jay Farrar – “White Freighliner Blues”
  18. Bright Eyes – “We Are Nowhere And It’s Now”
  19. Steve Earle – “The Kind”
  20. Bob Dylan – “I Was Young When I Left Home”
  21. Matt Pond PA – “Athabaska”

He won’t love it all — the Hidden Cameras, Petra Haden, Dandy Warhols and Kings Of Leon songs are less likely to impress him — but he’ll dig on the Damien Jurado, Bright Eyes and Matt Pond PA tunes. Shit, that a 62 year old grandfather would like any of these just proves how cool my dad’s taste in music is.

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I’m trying to count in my head the number of email addresses I’ve had over the years. As near as I can tell it’s between 25 and 30, and that doesn’t include anything throw-away…those are ones I’ve used.

I sent my first email in 1993, so I guess it makes sense that I’d have been around.