i was going to write it myself..but here it is!!
ristine
West Warwick, RI
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Judge it! |#13 Sunday Apr 12 I am disgusted by the ad too! In fact, I just tried to call BK corporation to lodge my complaint ( Their website only gives you phone numbers for media and costumer realtions, no email accounts. Hmmm, a great way to NOT document the discontented!) The ad is aimed at youth yet depicts women in a negative and oppressive fashion, It grossed me out to see the plastic burger “king” grinding with the sexually clad square bottoms. The song parady is STUPID and has nothing to do with the product BK is serving. I agree that this ad degrades women, desenstizes children and youth to the over-sexed message, and has nothing to do with selling their product. I am appalled and plan to get my message of outrage to them in any mode of communication that I can.
Outraged Dad wrote: As a Dad and a man I am outraged that Burger King would have so wantonly, recklessly, and callously perversely parodied Sir Mix-a-Lot’s glorious ode to the Twin Juicies, i.e., the magnificently cantilevered, properly rounded, 40” + female buns.
Is nothing sacred any more???!!! Only a sick, demented pervert could possibly be interested in a square bun. Shame on you, Burger King. It will take years of therapy to undo the damage you have done to toddlers, kids and pre-teens everywhere in their eventual impossible quest to seek a square b—u—t—t! You’ve not only ruined an anthem dedicated to the glory of the female derriere second only to 10cc’s “Fat-Bottomed Girls”, but warped an entire generation of males.
GESTURE HAS BACKFIRED
PEOPLE THAT HOLD THE DOOR FOR YOU WHEN THEY’RE LIKE 20 FEET AHEAD OF YOU. YEAH, ITS A NICE GESTURE BUT NOW I FEEL LIKE I HAVE TO RUN SO YOU DON’T STAND THERE FOREVER. GESTURE HAS BACKFIRED AND NOW I HATE YOU.(via dearworldwtf)
i found this bizarre blog while searching for a chi chi’s picture, the now defunct mexican restaurant where i celebrated my birthday from age 6 to age 11ish. every year my mom would ask me where i wanted to eat dinner for my bday and i would demand we went to chi chis. she would roll her eyes and say “brittany, you don’t even like mexican food”. and i didn’t. i ate a grilled cheese and fries everytime. BUT at chi chis you got to wear a most likely lice infested sombrero and have your picture taken while being serenaded by mexicans called in from washing dishes in the kitchen, all of whom most likely did not have green cards and were sex offenders. this kept me coming back year after year. finally i got to that awkward stage where i didn’t want ANYONE to look at me ever especially not while wearing a giant freaky hat and being sung a random made up bday song in spanglish and i never went to chi chis ever again. wikipedia is telling me it ended up infecting most of greater pittsburgh with hepatitis a, leading to the closure of all the restaurants in the u.s, so maybe i was on to something just sticking with the sombreros.
Typeface Inspired by Comic Books Has Become a Font of Ill Will
I TOTALLY AGREE WITH THIS ARTICLE! By EMILY STEEL Vincent Connare designed the ubiquitous, bubbly Comic Sans typeface, but he sympathizes with the world-wide movement to ban it. Vincent Connare Mr. Connare has looked on, alternately amused and mortified, as Comic Sans has spread from a software project at Microsoft Corp. 15 years ago to grade-school fliers and holiday newsletters, Disney ads and Beanie Baby tags, business emails, street signs, Bibles, porn sites, gravestones and hospital posters about bowel cancer. The font, a casual script designed to look like comic-book lettering, is the bane of graphic designers, other aesthetes and Internet geeks. It is a punch line: “Comic Sans walks into a bar, bartender says, ‘We don’t serve your type.’” On social-messaging site Twitter, complaints about the font pop up every minute or two. An online comic strip shows a gang kicking and swearing at Mr. Connare. The jolly typeface has spawned the Ban Comic Sans movement, nearly a decade old but stronger now than ever, thanks to the Web. The mission: “to eradicate this font” and the “evil of typographical ignorance.” “If you love it, you don’t know much about typography,” Mr. Connare says. But, he adds, “if you hate it, you really don’t know much about typography, either, and you should get another hobby.” Love It or Hate It Vincent ConnareBelow, a sampling of groups and products that cheer, jeer or just document the proliferation of the font. Ban Comic Sans on FlickrMr. Connare’s Flickr poolVeer’s Comic Sans T-shirtBan Comic Sans propaganda kitOnline petition to ban Comic SansMySpace group to ban Comic SansTypefaces convey meaning, typographers say. Helvetica is an industry standard, plain and reliable. Times New Roman is classic. Depending on your point of view, Comic Sans is fun, breezy, silly or vulgar and lazy. It can be “analogous to showing up for a black-tie event in a clown costume,” warns the Ban Comic Sans movement’s manifesto. The font’s original name was Comic Book, but Mr. Connare thought that didn’t sound like a font name. He used Sans (short for sans-serif) because most of the lettering, except for the uppercase I, doesn’t have serifs, the small features at the end of strokes. Mr. Connare, 48 years old, now works at Dalton Maag, a typography studio in London, and finds his favorite creation — a sophisticated typeface called Magpie — eclipsed by Comic Sans. He cringes at the most improbable manifestations of his Frankenstein’s monster font and rarely uses it himself, but he says he tries to be polite when he meets people excited to be in the presence of the creator. Googling himself, he once found a Black Sabbath band fan site that used Comic Sans. The site’s creators even credited him. “You can’t regulate bad taste,” he says. Still, he is tickled by — and trades on — his reputation. A picture signed by Mickey Mouse that was sent to Mr. Connare to thank him after Disney used the font in ads hangs in his house. His wife, Sue Rider, introduces him at parties as the father of Comic Sans. A friend of his claims to know someone who broke up with her boyfriend in a letter written in Comic Sans to soften the blow. But there certainly hasn’t been much money in it for Mr. Connare since Microsoft owns the font. Vincent Connare A beach towel using the typeface in Australia. Of course, there would be no movement to ban Comic Sans if it weren’t so popular. “We’ve been using that font for years,” says Peter Phyo, a manager at O’Neals’ restaurant across the street from Lincoln Center in Manhattan. “That is just the procedure. I wouldn’t know the exact reasoning. It also looks nice on the menu.” Mr. Phyo says he hasn’t had any complaints. The proliferation of Comic Sans is something of a fluke. In 1994, Mr. Connare was working on a team at Microsoft creating software that consumers eventually would use on home PCs. His designer’s sensibilities were shocked, he says, when, one afternoon, he opened a test version of a program called Microsoft Bob for children and new computer users. The welcome screen showed a cartoon dog named Rover speaking in a text bubble. The message appeared in the ever-so-sedate Times New Roman font. Mr. Connare says he pulled out the two comic books he had in his office, “The Dark Knight Returns” and “Watchmen,” and got to work, inspired by the lettering and using his mouse to draw on a computer screen. Within a week, he had designed his legacy. A product manager recognized the font’s appeal and included it as a standard typeface in the operating system for Microsoft Windows. As home computers became widespread, Comic Sans took on a goofy life of its own. Out to crush that goofy life is Ban Comic Sans, whose weapons include disapproving stickers, to be slapped on inappropriate uses of the font wherever they are found. bancomicsans.com The ‘Ban Comic Sans’ group slaps its stickers on uses of the ubiquitous font, such as a retirement-benefits document. Ban Comic Sans was conceived in the fall of 1999, when Holly Sliger was a senior at the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis, studying typography and graphic design. Designing a museum gallery guide for a children’s hands-on artifact exhibit, Ms. Sliger says she was horrified when her bosses told her to use Comic Sans. She told them it was a cliché, and printed out a list of other typefaces she thought better suited the project. They insisted on Comic Sans. “It was like hell for me,” she says. “It was everywhere, like an epidemic.” In the midst of the project, she met her future husband, Dave Combs, at synagogue one Saturday. He was a recent college graduate working as a graphic designer, and she knew he would sympathize. “This is horrible,” he remembers saying. She says, “That’s when I knew he’s the guy I would marry.” The couple did wed a year later and continued to gripe about the font. Vincent Connare A banner in Comic Sans typeface at Teatro Valencia in Spain. Mr. Connare says he first realized that the tide had turned against Comic Sans in January 2003, while studying for his master’s degree in type design at the University of Reading in Berkshire, England. He got an email from Mr. Combs asking for permission to use his photo for stickers, T-shirts and coffee mugs to promote “typography awareness” for the movement to ban Comic Sans that he and his wife had founded. Busy and distracted, Mr. Connare said OK. “It sounded a bit silly,” he says. He didn’t think it would amount to much. But the Combses had global ambitions. A map hangs in their daughter’s bedroom, marked with little red flags to show the dozens of locations around the world from which people have requested their stickers. “They’re like parking tickets,” Mr. Combs says. As the movement grew, Mr. Connare’s image became the logo for Comic Sans bashing. Mr. Connare eventually, in February 2004, asked the Combses to stop using his picture, and they did. Today, Mr. Connare sometimes speaks at Internet conferences, using 41-page PowerPoint presentations written in you-know-what. He talks with the Combses about creating an “I Love/I Hate Comic Sans” picture book together. The font has become so popular that it’s approaching retro chic. Design shop Veer is selling a T-shirt with a picture of human heart on it made entirely of tiny Comic Sans characters. Veer’s text: “Love it, love to hate it, or hate that you love it.” Write to Emily Steel at emily.steel@wsj.com
what color do you think is cool
im thinking of chiva necromonger and underworld and maybe patchwork eh?
vision insurance
not having any kind of medical/dental/vision insurance sure does suck when you are cross eyed like me. i just ripped my contact so i’m going to be looking for a job w/ 2 different colored eyes. maybe it will be a good thing though because most of the places i have applied it looks like there are a ton of freaky looking weird people working there and crack heads, so maybe if they got a job by looking weird i can get one with one light blue eye and one dark blue eye…until i have $$$ to get new contacts in a few weeks. i wish i lived in canada : (
IRONICALLY THIS SIGN WAS POSTED AT MY FRIENDS HOUSE, I WATCHED THEIR CHILDREN, NONE OF WHICH WERE TEENAGERS…BUT SURE ACTED LIKE THEY WERE..HOLY HELL IS ALL I GOTTA SAY…FUNNY SIGN!


