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Posts Tagged ‘park’

09.28
11

[audio] Typo Results In 10,000 Acre Wyoming Skate Park

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The Onion Radio News has been the most highly regarded broadcast news source in the world since visionary Onion publisher T.Herman Zweibel made the bold move in 1922 to shut down the popular Onion Telegraph News and focus on the then embryonic medium of radio. From day one Zweibel intended to employ this new technology for the public good, and for the first two years he devoted much of his airtime to denouncing silent film actress Louise Brooks.

Overnight, Zweibel’s vitriolic attacks gained sufficient listenership to attract wealthy sponsors like Campbell’s Liquid Beef and Spotto potato detergent. The financial success of the Onion Radio News led Zweibel to hire professional “pronouncers,” as they were called then, who were charged with the important task of reading items from the printed version of The Onion to fill time between Zweibel’s marathon anti-flapper rants.

In 1947, a polyp the size of a Concord grape on Zweibel’s vocal cords forced him to stop his nightly rants, allowing the Onion Radio News to finally become one of the first 24-hour news outlets.

Today the Onion Radio News, anchored by Doyle Redland, continues to inspire and inform millions of listeners around the world and has become the living embodiment of the power of the spoken news word.

08.18
11

Report: Apocalypse Actually Happened 3 Years Ago

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MENLO PARK, CA—Though the event went largely unremarked upon at the time, a report published Monday by the Kaiser Family Foundation has found that the apocalypse, or end of the world, occurred three years ago. “According to our data, the total collapse of all human civilization occurred on or around April 3, 2008,” said foundation representative Jodie Palmenterri, citing numerous instances of environmental disaster, humanitarian catastrophe, and economic ruin as unambiguous signs that the world had ended. “Those who have worried for years that human culture was headed toward calamity can rest easy, because it already happened. We are living in a postapocalyptic world. This is it.” Palmenterri went on to say that because the apocalypse does not resemble the eschatological predictions of any major religion, it’s safe to assume the gods have all forsaken us.

08.14
11

Seeing Eye Dog Really Blows Off Some Steam In Dog Park

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FORT COLLINS, CO—From the moment he was let loose in a local dog park Saturday, golden retriever and licensed Seeing Eye dog Biscuit reportedly blew off some steam by jumping up to lick people’s faces, urinating on smaller dogs, and chasing almost everything that moved across his field of vision. “At first he was calm as could be, just leading his owner to a bench and letting her take a seat, but as soon as that guide-harness came off, holy fuck, that dog just went goddamn ballistic,” said onlooker Ray Seward, 54, adding that Biscuit was “absolutely going to town” on every dog in the park. “That thing took off like a fucking rocket and sprinted the entire perimeter of the park six times before beelining directly toward this toddler and completely flattening her without even missing a step. Inevitably, the place cleared out, and then he just sat down and barked, nonstop, until he’d tired himself out.” Sources confirmed Biscuit was last seen calmly walking back to his owner, where he lay down at her feet and waited until she was ready to be led back home.

04.4
11

Maria Eglin Interview (Model)

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NinjaPimp’s Maria Elgin Exclusive Interview

Maria, how long have you been modeling for?
About 5 years.

What do you think people would most likely remember you from?
On-line contests.

By the way, how are you doing today?
If I were any better, I would be twins.

Your bio says you are 5’10″. Is it a modeling advantage to be a taller
girl?
Definitely!

I always try to do interesting interviews. Ones where the reader can learn a little about you girls. So, here is an insightful question. What is your goal in life?
To leave a lasting impression….To touch every soul I come in
contact with. To leave sunshine in my tracks….

Ok, now here is a more fun question. What was the last dream you had that you can remember.
I dreamed I was in the mind of a panther and walked in his
path thinking his thoughts smelling his smells, listening to his heart.

So the guys reading will know, what kind of modeling will you do and what won’t you do?
I have done all types of jobs from swimwear and lingerie ads
to dressing in character such as Xena Warrior of Wonder Woman. I won’t do nudes.

Then what was your most interesting photo shoot?
Shooting for a comic book character. Crazy costumes and lots of fun.

Maria EglinTell us about your TampaBaybes CD rom that I read about on their web page.
It is the coolest. These guys in Tampa approached me about it and we shot it in a secluded park and a cemetery. It has several action shots and candid moments along with a calendar and screen saver. It was a hoot to do!!

What models have you worked with and tell us about some of them.
I have been fortunate to work with sweet gals like Grace Grimes and Trisha Wilds. Also Rhiannon and Charissa Thompson. It is always fun to learn from the pros!!

Here are a few fun questions. :) Ready?
Sure!

If you could meet any person, who would it be?
Harry Houdini

If you were a type of Candy, what would you be and why?
A chewy gooey piece of caramel. It would take longer to eat me…..

See, this is kinda fun. What is your secret talent? Come on, I know you have one.
Well, I am not very talented but on occasion I like to write a little poetry or a short story.

Aliens, fact or fiction?
FACT

Breast Implants. What are your thoughts on them?
I think a woman should do whatever makes her feel sexy and warm inside. If larger breasts will help then so be it!!

Ok, a few last questions. When you have visited my pages, what do you think?
Awww… you know I think you are the coolest. I love your site.

What do you think of the people who e-mail you about your page?
I think I am so lucky to have the support of the fans on the net. They have all treated me so well. Big hugs to each and every one!!

Well, thanks for you time.

04.4
11

D-Ray 3000 Interview (Wrestler)

by admin ·

D-Ray 3000 (Don Crisis) Interview D-Ray 3000, Don Crisis
Exclusive Interview

D-Ray, how are you doing today?
I’m good.  I am just doing my thing! I’m kicking everybody and they momma to sleep!

How did you get your start in wrestling? Who trained you?
I started training with the Canadian Destroyer when I was 16!  I started wrestling when I was 18.  The day after my first match the Canadian Destroyer past away.  (Sept. 10, 2000)

Where are you working now-a-days?
Lately I’ve been wrestling in the mid-west and Canada.

Didn’t you first start wrestling as Crisis? Why did you change your name?  I remember seeing you in 2001 when you were still kinda knew to the wrestling scene.
Yeah when I started I was Don Crisis.  I own that name.  When I started with TNA, they told me I looked like Andre 3000.  I don’t look a damn thing like him, but hey… what ever works.  So they told me to think of something 3000.  They told me that I better have a new name within a few hours.  I didn’t know where to start.  Anyway, I was walking back to the locker room talking to myself.  “Something 3000, Something 3000.”  I walked into Christopher Daniels, he asked me what I was doing.  I told him that the office wanted me to come up with a name involving “3000.”  So the first thing he said was D-Ray!!  I said ok, thanks.  I went back to Jeremy Borash and I said, “how about D-Ray 3000?”  He said ok, great.  Later that night D-Ray 3000 was born.

What was it like wrestling in TNA?
It was great!  I had a good time there.  I have no other feeling.  I was making a living doing what you love!

What was your fondest match or angle in TNA?
It would have to be the time me and the Shark wrestled Glen Gilberti and Johnny Swinger.   Earlier that day me and the shark ran around the park doing promo’s.  They painted my face like a shark and I wrestled like that.   It was a good match, but it was a dark match so only the crowd in the arena saw it.

Can you tell us about the ‘fro? How long have you had one? We love it.
I just got lazy and I just stop cutting it,  My hair just kind of turned into a gimmick.  I’ve had the ‘fro since 2000.

Have you seen our website www.Afro-Squad.com? What do you think of it?
Of course I have.  I am a regular.  You guys have a really cool website!  You gotta respect the ‘fro.

We’d like to make you an honorary member of the Afro-Squad.  Is that cool by you?
Oh yeah. I’m down!  AfroSquad D-Ray 3000.  I like the sound of the SnowMan.

Who are your favorite wrestling opponents?
Wow, that’s a hard one to answer.  I’ve had so many good matches with so many good wrestlers!  It would take me a few days to single out one person.

Who are the biggest names that you wrestled?
Terry Funk, Brian Christopher. Damn, I wrestled a lot of big names.  I can’t remember them all.

What do you think of all the controversy in wrestling about drugs?
Drugs have always been around wrestling.  The media has nothing better to talk about right now.  I guess drugs in baseball ,people in the movies and music is getting boring.

What wrestlers do you look up to?
I’ve always looked up to Keiji Mutoh, Randy Savage and Curt Henning.

What would you like to do with your career in the next five years?
Hey like any other wrestler, I would like to make it back to the big time! WWE, TNA, Japan… it is all good.

What do you see yourself doing after you retire?
I don’t know, but I will be involved with wrestling in some kind of way.

Would you ever work as a promoter or booker?
Never say never.

Thanks for your time and good luck in your career.
Thanks!!!

02.26
11

Want to try night biking in Everglades park? Ranger will lead the way

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By Susan Cocking, Miami Herald

In Print: Sunday, February 27, 2011



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The heart of winter in South Florida may be the best season to explore the three national parks that surround the region: Everglades, Biscayne and the Big Cypress National Preserve.

Cool breezes, the absence of insects and lack of rainfall make hiking and biking comfortable. Yet there’s still enough water around to enjoy canoeing and kayaking in many areas. These expansive wilderness areas invite visitors to become adventurers — to paddle secluded mangrove creeks, follow trails used by bears and panthers, gaze at gators up close, and marvel at a cornucopia of birds that make winter homes here.

For first-time visitors not sure how to get around or what to look for, all three parks offer ranger-guided adventures, many of them free. One of the most popular is a 15-mile bike ride under the full moon at Shark Valley, the northernmost entrance to Everglades National Park. On a recent evening, 20 cyclists joined park ranger Eric Riordan on a three-hour ride along the park’s roadway used for cyclists, walkers and a tram. At 5 p.m., dusk was settling in. To avoid disturbing wildlife, the bikers carried no lights, only glow sticks worn on their backs to prevent collisions.

“I love what happens in national parks at night. It’s all different,” Riordan told the group. “This is all about using the senses.”

The first half of the ride followed a canal to a 50-foot observation tower. Along the way, cyclists encountered dozens of roosting birds: sleek black cormorants, snowy egrets, tricolored herons. Alligators seen in the canal and along the banks in daytime were nowhere in sight, burrowed in the muck for warmth, Riordan said.

A report that hundreds of roseate spoonbills were nesting near the park’s signature observation tower made some cyclists eager to pick up the pace. Along the way, the group made a few stops — to examine a gator hole next to a culvert pipe (the gator was absent) and to snap photos of great blue herons in mating plumage. In the silence, the wind through the sawgrass sounded like the ocean. By the time the group reached the 50-foot spiraling tower, the sky was dark. Though the full moon had not risen yet, hundreds of fluffy white shapes were visible in the nearby trees. Not spoonbills, it turned out, but wood storks.

As bicyclists began the return ride, the moon still refused to rise, but riders could make out the path from the distant glow of the Miami metropolis. Still, they were a bit disconcerted to pedal along in the murk, hoping no creatures would dart out. Following the glow sticks, they arrived at the park entrance with no mishaps.

After most of the riders had packed their bikes into cars and started home, the moon appeared. And the Everglades began to sing. Squawking herons, rustling sawgrass and cormorants burping like little kids formed a nocturnal chorus both dissonant and harmonic, just like the Everglades itself.

.if you go

South Florida parks

Through March, numerous ranger-led activities are offered at Everglades and Biscayne national parks and the Big Cypress National Preserve; reservations may be required. Fees range from none to about $35. Here’s a sampling:

Everglades: Shark Valley is off U.S. 41 (Tamiami Trail) about 19 miles west of Krome Avenue in Miami. Tours leave from Royal Palm Visitors Center, near the entrance, and Flamingo (about 30 miles from the main park entrance). Information: www.nps.gov/ever or (305) 242-7700. Tours at Flamingo: canoeing, bird walks, discovery walks. Royal Palm Visitors Center: bike hikes, hammock and trail walks, Nike missile site tours. Shark Valley: cycling, full-moon bike rides, tree island ramble.

Biscayne: Biscayne National Park’s Convoy Point Visitor Center, 9700 SW 328th St., Homestead. (Only one entrance by land.) Information: www.nps.gov/bisc or (305) 230-1144. Tours: guided canoe trips at Black Point, Jones Lagoon all-day canoe adventure.

Big Cypress: Big Cypress National Preserve’s Oasis Visitor Center, 52105 Tamiami Trail E, Ochopee, about midway between Miami and Naples. The Big Cypress Swamp Welcome Center is at 33000 Tamiami Trail E, Ochopee. Information: www.nps.gov/bicy or (239) 695-1201. Tours: swamp walks, canoe trips, hikes, off-road vehicle tours, bike ride and an evening boardwalk stroll.

[Last modified: Feb 26, 2011 03:30 AM]


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02.19
11

Las Vegas Neon Museum pays homage to iconic signs

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By Gary A. Warner, McClatchy-Tribune Newspapers

In Print: Sunday, February 20, 2011


Tourists can view old-school neon from Vegas in the “boneyard,” operated by the Las Vegas Neon Museum.


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LAS VEGAS

One of the hottest tickets in Las Vegas isn’t Cher or Celine, Blue Man Group or Cirque du Soleil. It’s a day trip to a gravel lot filled with scrap metal, miles from the Strip.

There, on Las Vegas Boulevard N, surrounded by a chain-link fence, is the latest incarnation of the legendary Las Vegas neon “boneyard.” It’s the kind of place where great signs of long-gone casinos and bars, motels and dry cleaners go to die. They are leaned haphazardly against each other and stacked in chopped-up chunks against walls. Dust, rust and daylight obscure the beauty of their once-lush oranges and blues, reds and greens that glowed in the night.

But this is a graveyard bent on a resurrection. The signs here are part of a new Neon Museum to open this year. Daily tours next to a neon-themed city park across the street often sell out.

“This is one of the few places where Las Vegas will celebrate its past instead of imploding it with fireworks,” said Justin Favela, the director of docents.

Las Vegas is rediscovering neon after almost allowing a fade-out along the Strip. Casinos ditched the touchy tubes of colored inert gas for the ease of fluorescent lights under flexible glass. Later came the harsh, flashing, stadium-style LED and LCD screens that fill the Strip from the Luxor to the Stratosphere.

Neon was born at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair and blossomed throughout the country, particularly in New York’s Times Square and parts of Los Angeles. It lit up Tokyo’s Ginza and London’s Piccadilly.

But it was Las Vegas where neon visually exploded. By the 1950s, visitors were greeted at the south end of the Strip with the neon-lit “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign. Neon splashed out from the Sands and Dunes, Stardust and Flamingo. On Fremont Street, neon turned midnight to noon around the Mint, Horseshoe, Fremont and Golden Nugget. The signs signaled that visitors had arrived in an adult playground. The neon cowboy Vegas Vic gave a thumbs-up and bellowed, “Howdy, pardner!”

Vegas’ ‘worst-kept secret’

The boneyard tour began last year when museum staffers went through the collection and selected 150 pieces to show tourists in informal tours twice a day. The cost: $15. Despite the obscure location, the tours are often packed. It’s a mixed blessing for the Neon Museum crew. They’re excited but also overwhelmed by interest in the tours.

“It’s the very worst-kept secret in Las Vegas,” said Bill Marion, a veteran local public relations executive and museum chairman.

“The neon of Las Vegas has both a national and international reputation and interest. We’re not even advertising, but we can’t handle the number of people who want to see it. When it opens up later this year, I think it will be one of the largest attractions outside of the Strip.”

Out front, a large sign spelling NEON sits above a desert-style city park. Favela said the sign is copied from the neon script of famous hotels — the “N” is Golden Nugget, the “E” from Caesars Palace, the “O” from the Horseshoe and the other “N” from the grand old Desert Inn.

Inside the gates, there are pieces of the old “atomic”-style letters from the Stardust, along with pieces of its successor, the massive sparkling Stardust sign. The oldest piece is a 1930s chunk of the Green Shack. Though listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it was torn down to make way for a Denny’s.

There’s the lovely swooping script from the short-lived heyday of the Moulin Rouge, the resort that broke the color barrier in 1955 (and was promptly shut down). Las Vegas would wait until 1960 to integrate casinos.

Some of the best examples are from long-gone motels. One of the most beautiful is for the defunct Yucca Motel, with bent glass yellow tubing that swirls into a version of the desert plant.

While neon is the main attraction, the boneyard has other fun pieces. A staff favorite is a golden lamp from the old Aladdin Hotel, where Elvis married Priscilla in 1967.

There’s also a mullet-wearing metal statue that once graced a pool hall and the massive, scary pirate’s face that topped Treasure Island. It fell victim to the end of Las Vegas’ attempt to recast itself as a family-friendly destination.

“They found out the whales — the big gamblers — didn’t like to be around kids,” Favela said.

Reflections beyond gambling

The star of the nighttime neon experience in Las Vegas is the Fremont Street “gallery.” The Neon Museum website has a walking map and list of the signs scattered about — nearly all within walking distance. Some of the earliest restorations, around 1997, were of a yellow lit lamp from the Aladdin. A glittering horse and rider from the long-gone Hacienda Hotel is high on a pole over the intersection of Las Vegas Boulevard and Fremont Street.

Some of the prettiest examples of neon aren’t involved with gambling at all. One of the small classics is from the old Flame Restaurant. The sign, from 1961, was for a restaurant that once sat near the Desert Inn (where the Wynn now stands). The Chief Hotel Court is the oldest restored sign, a 1940s classic from an old downtown motel.

Progress on saving neon hasn’t been so smooth. The Neon Museum has had no permanent home. The $100 million Neonopolis retail center, with a collection of its own neon signs, is dark and mostly empty. Just beyond is Fremont Street East, a new entertainment district meant to appeal to tourists and locals that features new and transplanted neon. The collections include a boomerang-style sign that says “VEGAS” and a martini glass. Stores and cafes in the area have struggled with the worldwide economic meltdown that hit Las Vegas especially hard.

Living legends remain

Not all the great neon of Las Vegas is in a museum. Hopefully the renewed interest in neon will keep some of the pieces from being hacked up and shipped off to a boneyard. The Flamingo is one of the few hotels on the Strip where neon is still the lighting of choice. The highlights are the two large corner pieces, which cascade warm pinks. In a crime against art, the city allowed a pedestrian bridge to Caesars Palace to be built a number of years ago that obscures the view of the best section.

The Holiday Motel, directly across from the Stratosphere Hotel near the corner of the Strip and Sahara Boulevard, is a candy-colored classic that has been kept up.

Neon Museum staffers are keeping an eye on neon they hope one day will come their way — bits of Circus Circus top the list. They also talked reverently about someday acquiring the signs from the Blue Angel, a one-star motel with five-star signs, including lots of white and blue neon, crowned by a statue of an angel in a blue dress on a pedestal.

One of the pieces of good news is the restored El Cortez. One of the city’s oldest casinos, it was operated by gangster Bugsy Siegel before he built the Flamingo beyond the city limits (a move that earned him a bullet in the face from unhappy mob financiers). The hotel recently installed a sign with retro neon script and an LED screen that advertises shows and deals.

It’s a bit of a shotgun wedding between the old and new. But if it saves neon from the glare of the casino Jumbotrons, Vegas Vic would probably give it a thumbs-up. If he could.

. IF YOU GO

Las Vegas
Neon Museum

The Neon Museum, on Las Vegas Boulevard N, offers tours Tuesday through Friday at noon and 2 p.m. On Saturdays tours are at 9:30 and 11 a.m. The minimum donation for tours is $15.

Reservations must be made at least a week in advance. No same-day appointments or walk-ins are accepted. Visitors must wear closed-toe shoes because of the gravel, some broken glass and exposed metal edges.

There are many rules about the tour, particularly the use of cameras and video equipment. You’ll be asked to sign a release form stating you won’t use the photos for anything but your private use — a policy that hasn’t kept hundreds of images from being plastered on the Internet. The museum is rethinking its policy.

For information and reservations, go to neonmuseum.org or call (702) 387-6366.

[Last modified: Feb 19, 2011 03:30 AM]


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02.13
11

Porn filmed in city park

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   Monument Island off Miami Beach has a growing reputation as a party spot. So much so that the City Commissioners wants to curb illegal drinking and disruptive parties at the city park.

   Well, the island’s reputation may get a little saltier because of a skin flick that was filmed there. Maybe few people in Miami Beach will see Island Adventure, but a lot more will read about it on MiamiHerald.com and in the Miami Herald.

   Now at issue is whether any laws were broken. The production company says no, that state laws prohibiting exposing oneself in public apply only if someone witnesses the act — and that no one did (unless you count the dozens of people who may view the video).

   Of course, debauchery isn’t new to the area (1972′s Deep Throat was filmed in Coconut Grove). Just last year, a Venetian Islands resident complained to the city that a charter boat for swingers was docked next door (the city is still looking into that issue).

11.7
10

Parque Amigos De Jose Marti (Photos and Story)

by admin ·

This week I decided to travel to Tampa’s Ybor City to enjoy the Cuban sights and sounds.  I had a great Cuban sandwich from Carmine’s.  For those of you in the know, Carmine’s is one of the top historic restaurants in Tampa.  The place exhudes class, and is an interesting to place.

Then I decided to hit the Jose Marti Park for a few photos.  I also saw the Casa de Paulina Pedroso.  (She’s one of Cuba’s great woman patriots.)  I stopped by Ybor Square, viewed the location of El Chino restaurant, and saw Ybor’s first fire house.  Here are some pictures from my venture.