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#17931 Re: Guns N' Roses » KICKASS preview of Bach's album » 948 weeks ago
Yeah, the solo may be the highlight. I forced myself to listen again. Just isn't my cup of tea. Maybe my evolving musical taste plays a role in the fact I think it sucks. Wannabe 80's rock does nothing for me. I don't care if its Baz, Vince Neil,etc. Those types need to either change with the times or fade into obscurity.
I will admit he did a great job promoting this shit. No one would have cared had he not hyped up the Axl factor.
Like I said, I still want to hear Axl's contributions, specifically Back in the Saddle. I can already tell I wont be buying this cd unless the other songs are a complete departure from this. If I choose to financially support this because of Axl, I guess I'll have to buy those 3 tracks online.
#17932 Re: Guns N' Roses » KICKASS preview of Bach's album » 948 weeks ago
This song is a steaming pile of walrus shit. Axl or no Axl. It sounds like a reject from Skid Row's first album, like a C grade Piece of Me. Dear Lord.
Granted, you cant judge the album on one song, but I pray to God I never hear this song again.
My interest in this has just plunged. Its the same old stale Bach we've been getting since the late 80's.
I still want to hear Back in the Saddle though.
#17933 Re: Guns N' Roses » KICKASS preview of Bach's album » 948 weeks ago
I haven't heard that yet. I was waiting until the finished product leaked, but I guess I'll download it and see what the big deal is.
#17934 Re: Guns N' Roses » Comparing Axl Rose to the greats » 948 weeks ago
Also, Cornell never really embraced the spotlight. That played a role in his popularity and overall legacy. Soundgarden was HUGE in the summer of 94 when Black Hole Sun became a hit. In fact, the song is really the last hit from the grunge era. Cornell shied away from all the publicity and they quickly did another video and just continued touring as usual.
#17935 The Garden » Human Trash In Pacific Ocean Now Continent Size » 948 weeks ago
- James
- Replies: 2
At the start of the Academy Award-winning movie "American Beauty," a character videotapes a plastic grocery bag as it drifts into the air, an event he casts as a symbol of life's unpredictable currents, and declares the romantic moment as a "most beautiful thing."
To the eyes of an oceanographer, the image is pure catastrophe.
In reality, the rogue bag would float into a sewer, follow the storm drain to the ocean, then make its way to the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch - a heap of debris floating in the Pacific that's twice the size of Texas, according to marine biologists.
The enormous stew of trash - which consists of 80 percent plastics and weighs some 3.5 million tons, say oceanographers - floats where few people ever travel, in a no-man's land between San Francisco and Hawaii.
Marcus Eriksen, director of research and education at the Algalita Marine Research Foundation in Long Beach, said his group has been monitoring the Garbage Patch for 10 years.
"With the winds blowing in and the currents in the gyre going circular, it's the perfect environment for trapping," Eriksen said. "There's nothing we can do about it now, except do no more harm."
The patch has been growing, along with ocean debris worldwide, tenfold every decade since the 1950s, said Chris Parry, public education program manager with the California Coastal Commission in San Francisco.
Ocean current patterns may keep the flotsam stashed in a part of the world few will ever see, but the majority of its content is generated onshore, according to a report from Greenpeace last year titled "Plastic Debris in the World's Oceans."
The report found that 80 percent of the oceans' litter originated on land. While ships drop the occasional load of shoes or hockey gloves into the waters (sometimes on purpose and illegally), the vast majority of sea garbage begins its journey as onshore trash.
That's what makes a potentially toxic swamp like the Garbage Patch entirely preventable, Parry said.
"At this point, cleaning it up isn't an option," Parry said. "It's just going to get bigger as our reliance on plastics continues. ... The long-term solution is to stop producing as much plastic products at home and change our consumption habits."
Parry said using canvas bags to cart groceries instead of using plastic bags is a good first step; buying foods that aren't wrapped in plastics is another.
After the San Francisco Board of Supervisors banned the use of plastic grocery bags earlier this year with the problem of ocean debris in mind, a slew of state bills were written to limit bag production, said Sarah Christie, a legislative director with the California Coastal Commission.
But many of the bills failed after meeting strong opposition from plastics industry lobbyists, she said.
Meanwhile, the stew in the ocean continues to grow.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is particularly dangerous for birds and marine life, said Warner Chabot, vice president of the Ocean Conservancy, an environmental group.
Sea turtles mistake clear plastic bags for jellyfish. Birds swoop down and swallow indigestible shards of plastic. The petroleum-based plastics take decades to break down, and as long as they float on the ocean's surface, they can appear as feeding grounds.
"These animals die because the plastic eventually fills their stomachs," Chabot said. "It doesn't pass, and they literally starve to death."
The Greenpeace report found that at least 267 marine species had suffered from some kind of ingestion or entanglement with marine debris.
Chabot said if environmentalists wanted to remove the ocean dump site, it would take a massive international effort that would cost billions.
But that is unlikely, he added, because no one country is likely to step forward and claim the issue as its own responsibility.
Instead, cleaning up the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is left to the landlubbers.
"What we can do is ban plastic fast food packaging," Chabot said, "or require the substitution of biodegradable materials, increase recycling programs and improve enforcement of litter laws.
"Otherwise, this ever-growing floating continent of trash will be with us for the foreseeable future."
How to help
You can help to limit the ever-growing patch of garbage floating in the Pacific Ocean. Here are some ways to help:
Limit your use of plastics when possible. Plastic doesn't easily degrade and can kill sea life.
Use a reusable bag when shopping. Throwaway bags can easily blow into the ocean.
Take your trash with you when you leave the beach.
Make sure your trash bins are securely closed. Keep all trash in closed bags.
Trash is also a problem in parts of San Francisco Bay. For an interactive map showing some of the worst locations, go to www.savesfbay.org/baytrash.
#17936 Re: The Garden » Self Esteem » 948 weeks ago
As far as perceiving how people are online, self esteem issues get tossed on the side. Online, people can be how they want to be without any limits or possible judgment by other people. Like Pasnow said, he has trouble talking in a crowd of ten, but I bet he could talk your head off in a chat room filled with a hundred people.
Its one of the reasons people get so tangled up in the online world. You can be how you really feel. There was actually a mainstream news article recently about how people are giving up in droves on personal relationships, friendships,etc. over their online world. This is an epidemic.
Self esteem issues do come out of some people online, the "internet tough guys" the perfect example of that. Other examples would be men who act like women or trolls.
#17937 Re: The Sunset Strip » The Video Game Console Thread » 948 weeks ago
Yeah, Nintendo is reclaiming the throne. I don't think anything can stop it.
I'm glad that Sony continues to get negative remarks everywhere. I don't hate Sony. Far from it. The first and second Playstation did great things for the industry. However, ps3 needs to be discontinued. It has been a clusterfuck from the beginning, and will never dig itself out of the hole they are in. They need to scrap it and start fresh with a new console. If/when they launch a new console, they need to let ps3 owners get a huge discount on it and start mending their relationship with its dying fanbase.
The atari name needs to be retired. Its not even really atari. Other companies have bought the name over the years. The name doesn't hold any power, influence, or mystique anymore, and its foolish to continue it.
#17938 Re: The Garden » Top 10 Running backs of all time elimination- Nominations » 948 weeks ago
Bumping for more nominations.
We'll start this tomorrow.
#17939 Re: The Garden » The Rise and Fall of Marion Jones » 948 weeks ago
No love for Marion here?
Shame shame shame........
#17940 Re: The Garden » The NFL 2007-08 Season thread » 948 weeks ago
How do you upset a team that scores 40 points a game? You don't. You think Washington can put up 45-50 points against NE?
I can understand you getting sick of the NE hype. I remember that hype surrounding the 98-99 Vikings and it was vomit inducing. They deserved some of that hype, but everyone went overboard with it.
NE is different than any other team that had the chance to go undefeated. They play in an era where there is mediocrity across the board. Teams that will likely go 8-8 have a shot at the playoffs.
Other teams in their position had alot of close games. NE blows out teams at will.
