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Thursday, 21 February 2008

Tuesday, 08 January 2008

  • Asian-American Gladiators!

    Sunday night was the premiere of the NEW American Gladiator.  The show still has its over-the-top Gladiator personalities.  They're all so tacky - Titan, with his All-American nice-guy persona (come on, ladies, stop the fighting); Toa who breaks into sudden islander-esque chanting; Wolf, who howls every moment he gets; Fury, who kinda reminds me of Sheeva from Mortal Kombat III; Crush - the silent but deadly jouster; and of course HELLGA - the buff and buxom blonde-haired, blue-eyed representative.

    But what was exciting was to witness two Asians win the competition.  First up was Venus, who entered the competition as a replacement for another contender who injured herself in the first round.  So Venus was already behind by 8 points when she started to no fault of her own.  And when she got to the Eliminator, it was clear that she was getting exhausted as the race wore on.  In fact, her competition was almost to the finish line, were it not for that treadmill thing at the end.  So while her competitor attempted to ascend the treadmill for like the 50th time, Venus finally caught up and whizzed up the slope to victory.  She has the best darn quote I've heard in a long time: "I'm in so much pain, I can hardly breathe, but I am so friggin' happy and excited to be here!"

    Next was Molivann Duy, who I actually found to be very annoying, referring to himself as the Spider Monkey and constantly giving cheesy looks into the camera while fixing his glasses.  He was definitely a short guy compared to his 6 foot plus competition.  But during the Eliminator, he had the speed (then again, he was up against an older guy, so maybe the comparison is unfair...).

    Sorry to say it, though, I don't think Venus or Moli have a chance to win the final competition.  I really like Venus' attitude and such, but she's so small compared to the likes of the other contenders.  Moli is too cocky in my opinion (but who knows - that could be what gets him through...).

    My top choices at this point for American Gladiator?

    Anthony (the NY Fireman) for the men.
    Siene (the gymnastics coach) for the women.

Monday, 31 December 2007

  • Theme Verse for 2008

    God always seems to bring me a theme verse just in time.

    2005 - Matthew 6:33: Seek first His Kingdom and Righteousness
    2006 - Psalm 32:8: God will instruct me, teach me, watch over me and counsel me
    2007 - John 8:31-32: If I hold to His instruction, I will be free

    And for this year, He gave me this:
    The Lord is my portion.

    It's the center verse in a passage I have grown to love (Lam. 3:21-27):

    Yet this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope:
    Because of the LORD's great love
    We are not consumed,
    For his compassions never fail.
    They are new every morning;
    Great is your faithfulness.

    I say to myself "The LORD is my portion, therefore I will wait for him."

    The LORD is good to those whose trust is in him,
    To the one who seeks him
    It is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD
    It is good for a man to bear the yoke while he is young

    There's something about that entire passage that speaks to everything I need to know right now about God and my relationship to Him.

Thursday, 27 December 2007

  • BELGIUM

    OK - so someone from BELGIUM has been consistently reading my RSS Feeds.

    I'm just really curious - WHO are you?  HOW did you find me?  WHY do you read my blog?
    Send me a message or something...

  • Torn etc.

    Thanks for the responses:

    To Kana's point, I think I appreciate the fact that Facebook elicits more responses.  There are just more ways to interact with others beyond a "waiting for a comment" scenario.  Granted, per Robin's point, it can be on a very shallow level - like new apps, personality, music, etc.  But that's why I like it, because it becomes a sort of hub.  Rather than writing a xanga entry about a book, I can just use the iBooks app to write my review for people who care.  And the messaging/wall-to-wall feature makes for much better immediate communication than xanga messaging does.  Plus, who's to say I can't begin to bring some of the "deeper" stuff to my Xanga Notes section, amidst the shallow hubbub?

    Another thing I like about Facebook Notes is that you can Tag people who are in it, so they'll be notified of anything that is relevant/related to them.  Not to mention Tagging folks in photos for quick and fun viewing.

    So then the question becomes, am I blogging merely to get responses?  Well, kinda... yah.  I obviously blog with the intent for others to engage with what I'm writing.  Otherwise, I'd be content to stick with hand-written journals (I have me lotsa those as well!).

    I also think it's interesting to see who actually responded to my last xanga entry.  I can see similarities in the personalities of each of you, heh.  And those who aren't into the Xanga thing, obviously, didn't respond at all.

    I guess I might need to set some sort of guidelines in my mind as to what is Xanga-worthy and Facebook-worthy.  Or maybe my Facebook Notes are strictly for recounting events and other sundries of day-to-day life, while my Xanga is reserved for deeper thoughts.  But such a parsing seems so counter-intuitive to my nature to show all my faces at once.

    Hm... and I'm really curious as to whether the Xanga drought is due to the holidays or is really a trend in general...?  I wonder how Xanga feels about the decline, if in fact it is a company-wode phenomenon at all...

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