Thursday, March 31, 2011

Friday, March 25, 2011

Bethella Paintball Photography

I've made logos for my Bethella Paintball Photography, to use them as discreet watermarks on my photos.

I know that not many people read this, but if you happen to read this entry, which one is the best?



Which logo do you prefer for Bethella Paintball Photography?
A
B
C
D





Web Polls

Monday, March 21, 2011

Interesting Rumour about Batman Castin

Taken from Filmonic.com

Joseph Gordon-Levitt will play Alberto Falcone in The Dark Knight Rises
Following news that Joseph Gordon-Levitt had closed his deal with Warner Bros. to join Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises Variety did some digging, and they found that Levitt may very well be playing Alberto Falcone a.k.a. The Holiday Killer.

The casting seems to back up what Gary Oldman said a few weeks ago about Nolan bringing the story back round to Batman Begins.

Speculation has run rampant regarding the role, with blogs pegging the part as The Riddler or Deadshot, but insiders tell Variety that Gordon-Levitt will be playing Alberto Falcone, the son of Mafia chieftain Carmine Falcone, the character Tom Wilkinson played in “Batman Begins.”

In the first film Carmine Falcone controls Gotham City’s underground world, flooding it with drugs and crime. Bruce confronts Falcone, who tells Wayne his criminal empire is invincible because it runs on fear. Bruce then decides to travel the world for several years, learning the various ways of the criminal underworld, and ends up training with Ra’s al Ghul (Liam Neeson) and the League of Shadows, becoming Batman.

In Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale’s 1996 miniseries Batman: The Long Halloween the plot involves a serial killer named Holiday. He targets Gotham’s crime families, with particular attention paid to the Falcone family. Falcone’s son, Alberto, confesses to all of the Holiday killings, in an attempt to be accepted into the family business. Alberto considers Gotham’s new wave of costumed villains (like the Joker) to be the future of crime.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Crazy, crazy Sheen rants.


“I’m tired of pretending I’m not a total bitchin’ rock star from Mars.”

“The nights I don’t sleep it’s because there’s a higher calling telling me to stand guard.”

“I am on a drug. It’s called Charlie Sheen. It’s not available because if you try it once your face will melt off and your children will weep over your exploded body.”

“The last time I took drugs I probably took more that anyone could survive. I was banging seven gram rocks because that’s how I roll, I have one speed, go. I'm different. I have a different constitution, I have a different brain, I have a different heart. I got tiger blood, man. Dying's for fools, dying's for amateurs.”

“Awesome. Awesome. Top Gun rockstar. Awesome.”

“I closed my eyes and made it so with the power of my mind, and unlearned 22 years of fiction … the fiction of AA. It’s a silly book written by a broken-down fool.”

“They'll wake up one day and realize how cool dad is. And, you know, signs all the checks on the front, not the back. And you know, we need him and we need his wisdom and his bitchin'-ness."

"I think the honesty not only shines through in my work, but also my personal life. And I get in trouble for being honest. I'm extremely old-fashioned. I'm a nobleman. I'm chivalrous."

"I have a 10,000-year-old brain and the boogers of a 7-year-old. That's how I describe myself."

"It's perfect. It's awesome. Every day is just filled with just wins. All we do is put wins in the record books. We win so radically in our underwear before our first cup of coffee, it's scary. People say it's lonely at the top, but I sure like the view."

Ummm... what?

Monday, February 21, 2011

Elderly birdwatcher pushed off Victoria cliff

Taken from the Ottawa Citizen

VICTORIA — An elderly birdwatcher was seriously injured Sunday afternoon when he was pushed off a 12-metre cliff in Victoria.

“It’s pretty tragic,” said Victoria police Sgt. Barrie Cockle. “He was just standing on the cliff minding his own business when, for some unknown reason, a younger man ran up the bank, which is a 40-foot cliff, and pushed the old fellow down.”

A 29-year-old man was arrested at the scene and is in police custody awaiting charges, said Cockle.

“We’re waiting to see how the elderly man is doing to see what we will do with the suspect,” he said.

A passerby rushed to the aid of the injured man and called paramedics, said Cockle. When the suspect continued to hang around, the passerby helped diffuse the situation.

“Initially, it was a bit tense,” said Cockle. “He’s done an amazing job here.”

A police boat was out on the water for training exercises when the call came in. Officers in the boat brought the injured man off the beach to another location, where an ambulance was waiting. The man was taken to Royal Jubilee Hospital.

“We don’t believe his injuries are life-threatening, but he’s badly hurt,” said Cockle. “When you’re in your 70s and you’re breaking bones, you’ve got serious injuries.”

What the heck?? What kind of d-bag does that??

Friday, February 18, 2011

Cannibal Britons drank from skulls

Taken from the Ottawa Citizen



A gruesome discovery in the Cheddar Gorge suggests ancient Britons indulged in cannibalism and drank from the skulls of their victims.

Scientists have analysed the remains of three humans - including a child of three - who appear to have been killed for food, butchered, and eaten. The bones showed evidence of precision cuts to extract the maximum amount of meat and the skulls were carved into cups and bowls.

The fragments, which are 14,700 years old, are thought to be the oldest examples in the world of skull cups and represent the first evidence of ritual killing found in Britain. At the time, humans knew how to bury their dead, meaning the remains are most likely the result of premeditated cannibalism.

"At the time, life was very tough," said Prof Chris Stringer, a palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum, who helped excavate the cups from Gough's Cave, in Somerset. "Cannibalism would have been a good way of removing groups competing with you and getting food for yourself.

"There was also a feeling that if you ate your enemy you gained some of his power."

"What is more sinister is that these were quite sophisticated hunter-gatherers - very like us," he added. "They could make tools and painted cave art. They also had quite complex burials for the people they were not eating, treating the dead with reverence."

Kinda reminds me of the comic Joel found and put it on Facebook: