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  • Gary Lee 5.00 pm on 27.02.2007 Permalink  

    Tyra Tyra Tyra 

    tyrasi10years.jpg

    So Tyra has been lecturing for the past year or so on her Talk Show about how wrong it is that today’s children are obsessed with looks through fad diets or plastic surgery. She even donned a fat suit and went “undercover” to see how poorly disadvantaged a “fat” person is treated by society. All these shenanigans to point out that big is beautiful and to be happy with who are, not who you aren’t. . blah blah blah.

    But once a tabloid comes out and calls Tyra Banks fat, the wannabe second coming of Oprah gets all offended and starts telling everyone she’s not THAT heavy and how she’s retired, so she doesn’t have to work on staying skinny as much. The real kicker is how she brought out her old pink polk-a-dot just to prove she’s still hot.

    Hey Tyra – We know you’re pretty! We know you got big boobs and big time curves! And now we know how important curves are to you and why the millions of girls around the world think it’s important, too.

    I agree that the world is a little bit easier if you’re an attractive person. The only problem I have with Tyra is how she comes off like a used car salesman by trying to tell everyone that it’s the inside that counts when it’s obviously not what counts the most to her.

     
    • Ed Lau 10.24 pm on 27.02.2007 Permalink

      I hate Tyra Banks just because she’s become too…Oprah…and I hate Oprah.

    • Nathan Drach 6.56 am on 28.02.2007 Permalink

      everything is about her. During black history month she said she was proud she paved the way for other black models. I sure that makes african-american women proud.

    • danielle 1.20 pm on 01.03.2007 Permalink

      she’s all mixed up… but america’s next top model is my guilty pleasure so i shouldn’t be talking.. lol

    • interested observer 3.28 pm on 11.12.2007 Permalink

      I saw a picture of her the other day where her hairpiece was coming adrift. She’s another phoney who doesn’t practise as they preach. She’s nothing special anyway without makeup. Celebrity status is all smoke and mirrors to fool the people who don’t have a mind of their own – which is pretty easy with such blank slates to play with.Even talking about such shallow nonentities is a waste of anyone’s time but it has to be said by someone I guess. Rant over.

  • Gary Lee 12.52 pm on 26.02.2007 Permalink  

    We Ain’t Paying no Stinkin’ $500 

    iphone.jpg

    When Apple announced the iPhone back in January, the intial reaction was a loud ovation and drooling faces from my fellow Apple Whores, er, Fans. Considering this was one of the most overhyped and anticipated gadgets in gadget history, the price point of $500 to purchase this piece of art looked like an obvious ploy for Apple to take advantage of those waiting 2+ years for this gadget.

    According to the online research firm, Compete, consumers (even early adopters) are going to have a hard time paying $500 for the iPhone. It must be noted that they only surveyed 349 people so this is not the best sample size to really justify the claim, but I think it’s a good representation of what I’ve heard from friends and colleagues about the pricing issue. Compete claims that $300 is going to be the magic number for the mass market to really drop their current calling plans and switch over to AT&T.

    Apple has become a master of practicing the “underpromise and overdeliver” campaigns. Just recently, they promised to deliver their New Airport Extreme Base Stations (their router for you non-Apple folk) at the end of February, but instead, surprised their customers by delivering them before the first week of February ended! Another example is when they announced the pricing of the upcoming AppleTV would be $399, but when customers went to purchase, they were being sold for $299.

    At the end of the day, I think the power of the market will eventually force Apple to lower the prices of the iPhones, especially since this is the one gadget Steve Jobs is gambling big on. With gains in the computer market share slowing down and the increased competition in the mp3 market, Steve is looking to hit another home run that will carry Apple for at least another decade.

    So, what do you think of the iPhone and how much would you pay for it?

    Courtesy: PC World

     
    • Dave 2.12 pm on 26.02.2007 Permalink

      hmmm lets see about $10,000.

    • Pink Deals 2.33 pm on 26.02.2007 Permalink

      Obviously, you’re an early adopter! hahaha!

    • digitalnomad 10.53 am on 16.07.2007 Permalink

      Get over it. It’s just a phone and an ipod put together. I would not consider buying it for the fact you are stuck with AT&T as a carrier.

      This is just another example of superior marketing. Plus, it will be junk in 6 months due to a newer version.

  • Gary Lee 11.16 am on 23.02.2007 Permalink  

    Help the Street Gang Out 

    angrystreetgang.jpg

    Along with growing up on Transformers, Smurfs, Small Wonder and Mcguyver, I remember the very first television show I was hooked on was Sesame Street on PBS. Of course, the only way my mom could get me to shut up and sit still was to plop me down in front of the tv. Thankfully, the tv was to high for me to reach and as a result, she chose to set the television to Sesame Street where I learned my numbers from Count Dracula, my manners from Big Bird, how to be a good friend from Bert & Ernie and how i couldn’t stuff a whole cookie in my mouth like the Cookie Monster! I really felt that Sesame Street had a positive influence on my life and I would expect no less of an effect on the children of today.

    With the ongoing war in Iraq and the concerns of how to fund the war, proposals to cut funding for PBS and NPR have again been proposed and I want to do my part in asking for your support to stop this from happening. I know this may not be news to many of you, but I hope this may rehash some motivation to do something. Here is a link to a petition that you can fill out to send to our senators and congressman to stop these cuts from happening – Click Here to Sign Petition

    Picture Courtesy of WayOdd.com

     
    • Nathan Drach 8.30 am on 26.02.2007 Permalink

      No to be vulgar, but F*#ck the government. I guess No child Left Behind doesn’t actually mean that in practice.

      Many of my childhood memories include mac ‘n cheese and learning from PBS. Where else do you learn that a black man, a large gay bird, a Hispanic women, and a purple vampire can all live in harmony.

  • Gary Lee 11.27 am on 21.02.2007 Permalink  

    Online Poker in the US begins Healing Process 

    At the end of September of 2006, Affiliates Marketing of Major Online Poker Companies took a dramatic turn for the worse as a bill to support the War on Terrorism was passed. Literally, millions of dollars came to a screeching halt as all the major Online Poker Companies – Party Poker, Paradise Poker, Titan Poker etc – began to pull out of the US Market.

    Just as reminder, the law that was passed affected mainly financial institutions that conducted businesses with offshore gaming companies. The US government has been trying for years to get a piece of the billion dollar online gaming pie. Since they can’t tax these companies because most of these companies are offshore – england, the caribbeans – they have been trying to pass any law that can shut these companies down to stop the flow of millions of dollars leaving the country. So, if you can’t stop the trucks of cash leaving the country, then go and control the gas stations (banks) fueling the trucks. Companies like NetTeller has been hit the hardest as their founders have been arrested, leading to the complete withdrawal of their services to US Customers.

    Of course, NetTeller was one of the first to go down in these “raids” as it was the largest provider of transactions between US Players and the Offshore Companies. As it has been almost 6 months since the law was passed, most of the gaming companies have discovered ways to still let US players play online poker. Companies like Sportsbook.com, UltimateBet.com and Bodog.com are slowly making a comeback using innovative ways of transferring money to allow US players to enjoy the fastest growing online game worldwide. If you were a US Party Poker or Paradise Poker, it’s going to be a long time until you can play on those sites as they are based in England and since Tony Blair and George Bush are best buddies, the two countries have an agreement to allow the United States to extradite anybody from England who violates US Laws. (Isn’t it amazing how fast England has lost all respect for itself?)

    So now that the industry is beginning to heal, it is time for the Affiliates to get back to work and start pumping US players back to these gaming sites. The past few years have seen some of the most lucrative affiliate programs in the history of the internet and now that this little bump in the road has passed, it’s time for Affiliates to resume their normal money making sites. I truly believe that there is no way the US government really wants to shut down all of Online Poker, but instead they want to regulate it like they have with horse racing to make sure they get some piece of the action. At the end of the day, past the illusions of fighting the War on Terror and immoralities of gambling, is that it is about the bottom dollar and who gets a piece of it.

     
    • Henry Morgan 1.37 pm on 21.02.2007 Permalink

      The Feds are going to shut down FullTilt and Bodog and Stars and everyone else. Then and only then maybe the new US Federal Online Gaming Licenses will be made available to US based (taxable) corporations.

      Why is this so unclear to everyone?

    • Pokerworldweekly.com 4.20 pm on 21.02.2007 Permalink

      Great post. I agree that I think things are about to turn for the positive. As long as the public wants to play they WILL find a way.

    • Gary Lee 4.52 pm on 26.02.2007 Permalink

      Henry – I agree with you that drastic measures will have to be taken to truly get a federal on gaming commission to oversee all that is going online, but I just don’t there are the resources available, plus the politics involved would be amazing to get through.

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