Archive for January, 2005

Vindictive *beep*

posted 1/21/05 by KOLD News-13 staff

On a Tucson woman’s Ebay profile, the headline reads, “Divorced and Finally Getting Her Due.”

Kim Dryden says after 17 years of marriage she felt neglected by her husband, who managed to spend their entire life savings on baseball cards and memorabilia.

Now, she’s taking it to him by taking his collection to Ebay.

“It’s all worth it,” said Dryden. “I just sit here and giggle through the whole thing going, ‘I’m going to so send this link to him and he’s going to scream!’ And there’s nothing he can do about it.”

Dryden says Mark Granieri spent tens of thousands of dollars buying sports memorabilia indiscriminately.

“Since that was so important, I’m going to sell the things on Ebay and gather up receipts and mail them to him,” she said.

Dryden says at one point he took her car and the last of their money and went to Cooperstown, the baseball hall of fame. W hen he got back, she was ready with divorce papers.

“Fanatic doesn’t even begin to cover it,” she said as she shuffled through thousands of cards from the 80s and 90s.

She’s got baseball books, clothes, caps, rare cards, complete sets, and it’s all up for grabs.

Interviewd by phone, Granieri says she won the memorabilia in the divorce. He admits he treated Dryden badly at times.

He says he is getting treatment in a 12-step program and has learned material goods don’t matter.

But that’s not what some collectors say.

“It’d be like tearing my heart out,” said Doug Adelberg, at a Tucson sports card show. “I’ve got cards I still have I won’t give to my son. I’ve given him the ones that aren’t any good, but I’ve got the other cards that are valuable and put those in a safe deposit box. My wife doesn’t even have the key.”

Every day, Dryden works to put more items up for sale.

“I have an entire climate-controlled storage shed full of stuff,” she said.

Dryden’s tale begs the question: Why did she stay in that marriage so long?

“He wasn’t a wife beater. He wasn’t a drug addict, so how hard can it be really?” she said.

She found out when she realized he was not only spending their disposable income, he was failing to pay bills.

“In a ballpark sense,” she estimates, “he probably spent 10 thousand dollars a year over 17 years.”

Granieri says he wants Dryden to have a good life.

She working on it.

Dryden says even if she sells everything in online auctions, she won’t get most of her money back. She has some valuable items, but many are not worth what her husband paid.

Still, she’s looking ahead, has plans to marry an old flame and start a new life.

The strangest thing

I was browsing the link backs to wetwired today and apparently we are being shown to a college class. Now myself being in college again for the first time in 5 years, it is even more interesting to me. Knowing what I know now, as opposed to what I knew back 5-6 years ago about creative writing and how blogs have changed and are continually changing our perception of the world around us, makes it a very exciting time to be doing this.

Aside from that it is all very puzzling to me to think that you are all sitting around in a class discussing this. Discussing this blog and how the writing style differs from one blog to another. In truth, I think very few bloggers aspire to be grand writers. More often they just want a place to vent.

Wetwired was started as a project back in ‘99 by several friends; myself and Finley being the main writers. Both of us with wishes to be aspiring writers years and years into the future. Today we have 4-5 writers of varying backgrounds and of varying posting habits. Mostly few and far between, but that aside from that we differ from most because we are a group blog. Not a single person posting personal information constantly, but several people posting ideas on things ranging from politics to religion to a strange fascination for midgets.

So welcome students, to the world of blogging: Wetwired style.

Class link is here.

Auschwitz in Memory

CNN

KRAKOW, Poland — World leaders are joining elderly Holocaust survivors in Poland to mark the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camp Auschwitz.

Before heading to the site of the main death factory at Birkenau, survivors and officials met in nearby Krakow on Thursday morning for a Holocaust forum, where they heard from one of the Soviet liberators.

“I would like to say to all the people on the earth: This should never be repeated, ever,” said Maj. Anatoly Shapiro, 92, who commanded the first troops who entered Auschwitz.

“I saw the faces of the people we liberated — they went through hell,” he said in a recorded video greeting from New York, where he lives. Shapiro was too ill to travel to the commemoration.

The forum at Krakow’s Slovacki theater opened with applause for Shapiro and three other Soviet army veterans who helped liberate Auschwitz on January 27, 1945.

Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski awarded one of the veterans, Yakov Vinnichenko, the Polish Officer’s Cross. Two others, Genri Koptev-Gomolov and Nikolai Chertkov, were awarded the Cavalry Cross of the Polish Republic, The Associated Press reported.

“These commemorations are intended to promote knowledge of Auschwitz as widely as possible and bring the truth about the camps to the younger generation,” Kwasniewski told Polish state radio, Reuters reported.

Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged to the gathering that anti-Semitism and xenophobia had surfaced in his country.

Tackling an issue the Kremlin has been accused of failing to confront directly, Putin said many in the world should be ashamed of new manifestations of anti-Semitism six decades after the defeat of fascism, AP reported.

“Even in our country, in Russia, which did more than any to combat fascism, for the victory of fascism, which did most to save the Jewish people, even in our country we sometimes unfortunately see manifestations of this problem and I, too, am ashamed of that,” Putin said to long applause.

Israeli President Moshe Katsav reminded the Krakow gathering that Auschwitz is now part of the European Union, which Poland joined last year.

“Auschwitz must be placed in the central place of collective memory of the reunited Europe,” AP quoted Katsav as saying.

U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney told the gathering that the Holocaust did not happen in some far-off place but “in the heart of the civilized world.”

“The story of the camps shows that evil is real and must be called by its name and must be confronted,” he said.

“We are reminded that anti-Semitism may begin with words but rarely stops with words and the message of intolerance and hatred must be opposed before it turns into acts of horror.”

Ukraine’s newly elected president, Viktor Yushchenko, was greeted with a standing ovation when he entered the hall.

He said he brought his children to the event and spoke of his father, a wounded Soviet prisoner of war who survived Auschwitz.

“This is a sacred place for me and my family,” Yushchenko said. “This is a place where Andrei Yushchenko, my father, suffered. There will never be a Jewish question in my country, I vow that.”

Candle lighting
Following the forum, the leaders, survivors and liberators are heading to the infamous rail siding at Birkenau, where they are due to light candles as part of the official commemoration ceremony.

In Brussels, members of the European Parliament stood in a minute of silence to pay tribute to the victims of the Holocaust and to mark the anniversary.

“Everyone is surprised such a thing happened, but it did,” said EU Parliament President Josep Borrell. “It’s difficult to pay just memory to it. It is a battle against the weakness of memory, something which should never happen again.”

The EU assembly then passed a resolution by 617 votes to 0, with 10 abstentions, condemning anti-Semitism and racism and paying homage to the victims of Nazi Germany, AP reported.

And in Germany, a Holocaust survivor warned his countrymen to be vigilant against anti-Semitism, particularly in the Muslim world. Arno Lustiger told German leaders gathered in parliament for the national Holocaust Remembrance Day that everyone must fight anti-Semitism, AP reported.

“The hate toward Israel and its people, the denial of the right to life of the Jewish state by the Arab-Muslim world, the violence against Jews and their institutions fills me with pain and anger,” Lustiger said.

“Anti-Semitism and particularly its Islamic stamp should not just be the concern of the Jews because forces are working in Europe that want to bomb our civilization back into the Middle Ages,” he said.

Parliament president Wolfgang Thierse called on Germans to fight continued anti-Semitism in Germany, especially in light of the regional resurgence of the far-right National Democratic Party — which took nearly 10 percent of the vote in elections in the eastern state of Saxony last year.

‘Death march’
Birkenau — the largest of the camps at Auschwitz — is where Nazi doctors decided which deportees would be sent to forced labor and which would be condemned to immediate death in the gas chambers.

An estimated 1.1 million to 1.5 million people, most of the Jews, were killed in the gas chambers or died of disease, starvation, abuse and exhaustion at Auschwitz.

When Soviet troops reached the camp 60 years ago, they found some 7,000 survivors, many barely alive.

The retreating Nazis had destroyed the gas chambers and crematoria and many of the barracks, and forced most of the remaining prisoners into the snow on a “death march” to camps further west.

Auschwitz is the most notorious of the death camps set up by Adolf Hitler to carry out his “final solution,” the murder of Europe’s Jewish population.

Six million Jews died in the Nazi camps, along with several million others, including Soviet prisoners of war, Gypsies, homosexuals and political opponents of the Nazis.

Academy Awards Nominations are out…

So, the OSCAR nominees are out.

“The Aviator” got 11 nominees.

“Sideways” got five nominations, including one for Thomas Haden Church (GO LOWELL!!!) for best Supporting Actor and Virginia Madsen for Supporting Actress.

Oh, and “Fahrenheit 9/11?” Big fat goose egg. Zero nominations, folks.

Heh. Maybe there is justice in this world after all…

Out.

In Memoriam: Johnny Carson, 1925-2005

It’s been noted that when a great entertainer or performer dies, ordinary people with no affiliation to those that have passed will grieve on occasion as if they knew the dead. In this case, most of us were damn close.

He was born in Nebraska, served in WWII, performed on radio and moved to California to pursue television work. When Jack Paar left “The Tonight Show” in 1962, Johnny Carson entered America’s homes and stayed there for three decades.

The bits were fun, the regular guests always seemingly on a friendlier note with him than any other talkshow. It was his monologue that made the show what it became- an institution. He spawned more clone talk shows with his format and was influential in late night more than anyone else. It’s been said that he was at more baby creations than anyone else (a joke that lived in infamy through many incarnations).

Most of this website’s readership is of the age that barely knew who Johnny Carson was, and if so only caught the latter end of his glory years. We didn’t really get to see the true genius of the man as it happened; instead, we see clips of his work cut down to mere moments. Personally, I watched the last couple of years of the Tonight Show that he hosted until his retirement. At that point, he left television and returned only once.

Recently, it was written that Carson had supplied jokes to the closest he has to an heir to the throne, David Letterman. Both Letterman and Leno (Carson’s heir to the Tonight show if not to his wit) plan on tributes Monday night to the one who gave the two men their starts in the industry.

There is a DVD set out in stores still of the Tonight show under his guidance. Pick it up sometime and take a look at it. You’ll see that while there are many today that call themselves talk show hosts, none can claim the role of the King like Johnny Carson.

Good Night.

Tsunami Relief

Yesturday Fnliii and I were listening to Sirius Satalite Radio and the DJ was talking about the song they were doing for relief. In case you didn’t know the song they have chosen to sing is Eric Claptons Tears in Heaven. Now Tears in Heaven was written about his son who fell out of hotel window back in 91/92. Call me crazy, but thats not exactly the best song for Tsunami Relief. The DJ agreed and stated she was taking calls now for your choice in songs.

Wetwired’s Suggestion for good sonds for Tsunami Relief would NOT be anything by the Beach Boys. Notably “Surf City USA.”

What songs would you guys suggest?

Welcome Germans or people in search of used condoms

previous image removed because some people like to whine about it being not suitable, what happened to telling the man to fuck off??Aparently when I posted the picture of amazon’s screw up - which I might ad I found via someone elses site, Design linked to it. Aparently through design a few germans read his page. And because of this, I have this strange influx of europeans on the site. BTW, I’m always on the lookout for WWII memorabillia.. (hint hint). So welcome used condom loving germans!

Ah…now this is funny

the reason you call *ell

Yes, thats dav1x. The guy up top in the red shirt drawn as a comic…

Say it ain’t so, Michael Moore????

NEW YORK

The boys at wetwired have a button maker

That’s right, Flirt in a Skizert… had made us a button. Actually its been made by her for a while I just haven’t had time to post anything about it. Anyway head on over there and maybe you too can get a free button. Make sure to comment lots cause shes a comment whore! j/k. We all are.

Inauguration Day Thoughts…

Several thoughts on this, the second Inauguration Day for George W. Bush.

1- Okay, admittedly it could have just been the audio feed but William Rehnquist sounded like he’s days away from death. I mean, he just looked and sounded horrible.

2- Hmm. Trent Lott as the emcee. Yeah, not too sure that’s a good idea given the last time he had to speak at a party…

3- Bush’s speech was good- not great, but good. It may be because they went through 23 drafts of it. I can’t think of anything that’ll hold up to that many levels of scrutiny. Still, he did deliver it well too.

4- The new Cadillac that he’s riding in? SWEET.

5- Once more, we’re seeing the Bush daughters in public. And once more, I’m convinced that Barbara is the hotter of the two.

6- Anyone else getting the feeling that some of the mentions of God today were thrown in just as a “Screw You” to Michael Newdow? If not, then it’s still cool. If so… one more reason I like the President.

Out.

This weeks installment of Just when you thought you were dumb already..

Oh Muh Gawd.

Stallone shoots for new Rambo

By 24 hours news services

Sylvester Stallone is set to make a new Rambo film — at the age of 58. The Hollywood star says he is ready to reprise his famous role in a fourth instalment of the hugely popular series.

Said Stallone: “We’re in the kitchen and we’re cooking. I’ve had meetings about this and it looks good. We’ll see what we can come up with.”

It is now rumoured that filming on ‘Rambo 4′ could begin later this year

stollen from mai

Pee in the snow…

http://pi.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/snow.html

Ok, so onwards. Today I’ve been cleaning out my blogroll, removing dead links and adding a few here and there. If you are linked to me and I don’t have a link back to you let me know.

2004 Year in Review

Thanks to Lemur Girl for this: Take the first sentence from the first post of each month of 2004. That’s your year in review.

January 01,Thursday, 2004: Photo editing
February 01, Sunday, 2004: The rain came down sideways as I grabbed my trench coat and put my .45 in my shoulder holster.
March 02, Tuesday, 2004: In the fall of 1835, many Texans, both Anglo-American colonists and Tejanos, concluded that liberalism and republicanism in Mexico, as reflected in its Constitution of 1824, were dead.
April 02, Friday, 2004: Just finished watching National Lampoon’s Vacation 20th Anniversary DVD, and I noticed a few things about the flick I hadn’t realized before.
May 01, Saturday, 2004: My dear wife: You get something twisted out of your insides by all this blood, filth and noise.
June 01, Tuesday, 2004: (Survivor blogosphere)Announced! head on over there and check it out.
July 01, Thursday, 2004: MJ and I are off to New Mexico over the 4th of July extended weekend.
August 02, Monday, 2004: Like a lot of stupid movie goers, I decided to see this movie opening night.
September 02, Thursday, 2004: You have one week left to live, what are your top five priorities?
October 01, Friday, 2004: So, I watched the first debate tonight. (and Happy BDAY MAGIK!)
November 01, Monday, 2004: Looks like Thanksgiving is right around the corner and with tomorrow being voting day, make sure you vote.
December 02, Thursday, 2004: BRIDE Victoria Anderson

Fluffer Goal

We’ve set our fluffer goal and we’ve almost acomplished it.

click to enlarge

#4, we don’t have too much further in our quest to be number 1!