106
   

WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
hamburger
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jan, 2006 04:29 pm
here is the "whale song" to go with walter's pix. hbg

PEARL JAM LYRICS

"Whale Song"

The sun was in clouds. The sun looked out. Exposed a trail of mist and spouts.
Ships followed the ancient lead. Deceiving friends under the sea.
Wow, imagine that? They won't fight back. I got a theory on that.
A whale's heart is as big as a car. A whaler's thought must be smudged by the dark.

They won't fight back. I'm sure they know how. Means they love or are too proud.
They won't fight back. I'm sure they know how. Means they love or too proud.
They swim. It's really free. It's a beautiful thing to see. They sing.

Hunters of land. Hunters of sea. Exploit anything for money.
I refer to anybody that takes advantage of what that is free.
They won't fight back.
It's only a thought that makes it seem right. What you don't see is because of your sight.

Take what you want. Kill what you can. That's just one way of the mind of man.
Take their lives. Sell their parts but there is not taking of their hearts.

If I was lost at sea. That harpoon boat in front of me. It's the whale I'd like to be.

They won't fight back. [x5]
They don't know how.
They won't fight back. [x3]
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jan, 2006 04:59 pm
ah, Walter. Thanks for hanging in until midnight, buddy. I like that song, incidentally.

hamburger, that whale song was much, MUCH better than mine. Thanks, Canada.

Speaking of Canada, what happened to depano? Was that his screen name?

And we haven't seen the sweet leilani lady as well.

Well, folks, they come and they go on our radio.

and speaking of robots, listeners, there was also a dance called the robot.

and to the mechanical men:

Devo



she was walking all alone
down the street in the alley
her name was sally
she never saw it
when she was hit by space junk
in new york miami beach
heavy metal fell in cuba
angola saudi arabia
on xmas eve said norad
a soviet sputnik hit africa
india venezuela (in texas
kansas)
it's falling fast peru too
it keeps coming
and now i'm mad about space junk
i'm all burned out about space junk
oooh walk & talk about space junk
it smashed my baby's head
and now my sally's dead

Razz
0 Replies
 
hamburger
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jan, 2006 05:30 pm
letty : i guess some people are drifting in and out of the scene ...
i think that's one of the nice things of being a poster (imposter ?) on a2k ... no time clock to punch, no attendance record being kept ... just drift along merrily !
"keep a song in your heart" ! hbg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jan, 2006 05:46 pm
Then there's always the Cape of Good Hope, hamburger. <smile>

Here's an altered song for the dispossessed:

Troll busters(altered lyrics)
Ray Parker, Jr.



If there's something strange in your neighborhood
Who you gonna call?
Troll busters!
If there's something weird and it don't look good
Who you gonna call?
Troll busters.

I ain't afraid of no troll
I ain't afraid of no troll

Well, partial lyrics, listeners
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jan, 2006 08:28 pm
and I must say goodnight, my friends:


"Smile Please"

A smiling face is on earth like star
A frown can't bring out the beauty that you are
Love within and you'll begin smiling...
There're brighter days ahead

Don't mess your face up with better tears
'Cause life is gonna be what it is
It's okay, please don't delay from smiling...
There're brighter days ahead

Bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum

A smiling face you don't have to see
'Cause it's as joyful as a Christmas tree
Love within and you'll begin smiling...
There're brighter days ahead

Love's not competing it's on your side
You're in life picture so why must you cry
So for a friend please begin to smile - Please
There're brighter days ahead

Bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum

Please smile for me

Bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum

Please smile for me

Bum - smile
Bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum
Bum bum di ti bum

http://www.womanlinks.com/images/smilingstretch.jpg

From Letty with love
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Jan, 2006 08:31 pm
whales and robots and trolls


oh my

Mr. Roboto
Styx

Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto
Mata au hima de
Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto
Himitsu o shiri tai

You're wondering who I am (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
Machine or mannequin (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
With parts made in Japan (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
I am the moldren man

I've got a secret I've been hiding under my skin
My heart is human, my blood is boiling, my brain IBM
So if you see me acting strangely, don't be surprised
I'm just a man who needed someone and somewhere to hide
To keep me alive, just keep me alive
Somewhere to hide to keep me alive

I'm not a robot without emotions, I'm not what you see
I've come to help you with your problems so we can be free
I'm not a hero, I'm not a savior, forget what you know
I'm just a man who's circumstances went beyond his control
Beyond my control, We all need control
I need control, We all need control

I am the moldren man (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
Who hides behind a mask (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
So no one else can see (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
My true identity

Domo arigato, Mr, Roboto
Domo, Domo
Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto
Domo, Domo
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
(Thank you very much oh Mr. Roboto
for doing the jobs that nobody wants to)
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
(And thank you very much oh Mr. Roboto
for helping me escape just when I needed to)
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
(Thank you thank you thank you)
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
(I wanna thank you)
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto
(Please thank you)

The problem's plain to see
Too much technology
Machines to save our lives
Machines de-humanize

The time has come at last (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
To throw away this mask (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
Now everyone can see (Secret secret, I've got a secret)
My true identity

I'm Kilroy! Kilroy! Kilroy! Kilroy....


Greenland Whale Fisheries
Pogues

In eighteen hundred and forty-six
And of March the eighteenth day,
We hoisted our colors to the top of the mast
And for Greenland sailed away, brave boys,
And for Greenland sailed away.

The lookout in the crosstrees stood
With spyglass in his hand;
There's a whale, there's a whale,
And a whalefish he cried
And she blows at every span, brave boys
She blows at every span.

The captain stood on the quarter deck,
The ice was in his eye;
Overhaul, overhaul! Let your gibsheets fall,
And you'll put your boats to sea, brave boys
And you'll put your boats to sea.

Our harpoon struck and the line played out,
With a single flourish of his tail,
He capsized the boat and we lost five men,
And we did not catch the whale, brave boys,
And we did not catch the whale.

The losing of those five jolly men,
It grieved the captain sore,
But the losing of that fine whalefish
Now it grieved him ten times more, brave boys
Now it grieved him ten times more.

Oh Greenland is a barren land
A land that bares no green
Where there's ice and snow, and the whalefishes blow
And the daylight's seldom seen, brave boys
And the daylight's seldom seen.


Toronto Sucks
Three Dead Trolls In A Baggie

I hate the skydome and the CN tower too
I hate Nathan Phillips Square and the Ontario Zoo
The rents too high, the airs unclean
The beaches are dirty, and the people are mean
And the women are big, and the men are dumb
And the children are loopy cause they live in a slum
The water is polluted and the mayors a dork
They dress real bad and they think they're New York
In Toronto, Ontario

(spoken)
You know, I think I hate all of Ontario
Oh ya me too

I hate Thunderbay and Ottawa
Kitchener, Windsor, and Oshawa
London sucks, and the Great Lakes sucks
And Sarnia sucks, and Turkey Point sucks
I took a trip to Ontario, to see Brian in Sarnia
He beat me up and he stole my pants and he put me on a tree
I went to see the Maple Leafs, and got hit in the head with a puck
I don't know even how they did it, i mean i was playing the organ at the time

Ontario, sucks
Yup, actually you know nowI really think about it, i think i pretty much hate every gosh darn province and territory in our country
Well except Albeta
Ya, ya I love Alberta
It's very nice, lots of cows and trees and rocks and dirt

but,
I hate Newfoundland cause they talk so weird
And Prince Edward Island is, too small
Nova Scotia's dumb cause its a name of a bank
New Brunswick doesn't have a good mall
Quebec is revolting and it makes me mad
Ontario sucks, Ontario sucks

Manitoba's population density is 1.9 people per square kilometer, isnt that dumb?
Saskatchewan is boring and the people are old
And as for the territories they are too cold
And the only really good thing about the province of British Columbia is that it's right next to us
Cause Alberta, doesnt suck
but Calgary does
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 08:09 am
Good Day to all.

Some of today's birthday celebs:

http://www.cyranos.ch/doppscfi.jpghttp://www.totalmedia.com/images/kojak.jpghttp://www.cardsquad.com/images/2005/09/benny%2520hill2.jpg
http://www.rogalandsavis.no/multimedia/archive/00633/domingo-hoyde_633022a.jpghttp://www.mailordercentral.com/rediscovermusic/images/RHA0035D.JPGhttp://www.superseventies.com/sw_babydontgethooked.jpg
http://www.radiofarda.com/images/photo/geena_davis_abc.jpghttp://www.sergioleone.net/dm-38.jpg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 08:14 am
Good morning, WA2K radio listeners and contributors. It's going to be a beautiful day here and that is a great beginning.

dj, we appreciate those two songs and the first one reminds me that Japan has created a robot that teaches folks to dance the robot, seriously. The point being that eventually, it will be used to help the elderly. Clever folks those Japanese.

I think, through dj's "Toronto Sucks", we have just received a geography lesson folks, in a wry and delightful way. Thanks, Canada.

I got a real smile from an e-mail that my sister sent to be about her young grandson who learned a new blessing:

AS I COME TO THE TABLE
I SEE MY GIRL FRIEND THERE
I BEAT UPON MY FATHER
BEFORE I TAKE MY SHARE.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 08:18 am
Well, there's our Raggedy, folks. Hey, PA, that is a lovely collage. I need to have a caffeine jolt before I comment, however.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 08:45 am
Okay, Raggedy,

I recognize Heracles(I think that is the Greek spelling of the Roman Hercules) and Kojak. Didn't some black guy reactivate that series?

Well, here's a song from Mac:


Artist: Mac Davis
Song: Baby Don't Get Hooked On Me

Girl, you're gettin' that look in your eyes
And it's startin' to worry me
I ain't ready for no family ties
Nobody's gonna hurry me
Just keep it friendly, girl, 'cause
I don't wanna leave
Don't start clingin' to me, girl, 'cause
I can't breathe
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
'Cause I'll just use you then I'll set you free
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
Girl, you're a hot-blooded woman-child
And it's warm where you're touchin' me
But I can tell by your tremblin' smile
You're seein' way too much in me
Girl, don't let your life get tangled up with mine
'Cause I'll just leave you
I can't take no clingin' vine
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
'Cause I'll just use you then I'll set you free
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
'Cause I'll just use you then I'll set you free
Baby, baby, don't get hooked on me
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 08:51 am
I will bring you your good mornin coffee, will you smile
If not now then have a sip or two and maybe in a while

I love you I love you in the good mornin and in the night
Every day I wait with you wherever we are it's all right

Here's your coffee, it may still be too hot, it is freshly brewed
I'll just pour myself a cup and then I will crawl in with you
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:10 am
Anthony Franciosa dead at 77
Actor starred in film 'Hatful of Rain,' TV series 'Name of the Game'


Friday, January 20, 2006; Posted: 4:14 p.m. EST (21:14 GMT)

http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2006/SHOWBIZ/Movies/01/20/obit.franciosa.ap/story.franciosa.ap.jpg

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Anthony Franciosa, whose strong portrayals of moody, troubled characters made him a Hollywood star in the 1950s and '60s but whose combative behavior on movie sets hampered his career, has died, his publicist said Friday. He was 77.

Franciosa died Thursday at UCLA Medical Center after suffering a massive stroke, publicist Dick Guttman said. The actor's wife of more than 35 years, Rita, and other family members were present.

Franciosa was part of a new wave in the mid-20th century who revolutionized film acting with their introspective, intensely realistic approach to their roles. Most of them were schooled in the method acting of New York's Actors Studio. They included Marlon Brando, James Dean, Rod Steiger, Shelley Winters and Paul Newman.

Franciosa was once married to Winters, who died last weekend.

From his first important film role as the brother of a drug addict in "A Hatful of Rain," Franciosa became known for his portrayals of complicated young men. He received a 1956 Tony nomination for his performance in the role he created on Broadway, then an Oscar nod. In 1957, the actor appeared in three other films, "This Could Be the Night," "A Face in the Crowd" and "Wild Is the Wind."

Franciosa's career continued in high gear with such films as "The Long Hot Summer," "The Naked Maja" (as Goya), "The Story on Page One," "Period of Adjustment," "Rio Conchos" and "The Pleasure Seekers."

The actor's behavior on movie productions became the subject of Hollywood gossip. The stories alleged fiery disputes with directors, sulks in his dressing room, outbursts with other actors.

"I went out to Hollywood in the mid-1950s," he remarked in a 1996 interview, "and I would say I went there a little too early. It was an incredible amount of attention, and I wasn't quite mature enough psychologically and emotionally for it."

Franciosa's assertive attitude extended beyond movie stages; in 1957 he served 10 days in the Los Angeles County jail for slugging a press photographer. His reputation contributed to the downturn in Hollywood offers, and his career veered to European-made films and television.

His first TV series, "Valentine's Day," cast him as a swinging New York publishing executive involved in numerous romances. It lasted one season (1964-'65).

In "The Name of the Game" (1968-71) Franciosa alternated with Gene Barry and Robert Stack as adventurous members of a Los Angeles publishing firm. In 1971 the producing company, Universal Pictures, fired him from the series, charging erratic behavior. He countered that the company had treated him badly and demanded that he take a pay cut.

The film on which "The Name of the Game" was based, "Fame Is the Name of the Game" (1966), is generally considered the first made-for-TV movie. It also starred Franciosa.

The 1975 TV series "Matt Helm," with Franciosa as a wisecracking detective, was canceled after half a season.

He was born Anthony Papaleo in October 1928, in New York City. He was 1 when his father disappeared, and the boy grew up tough in Manhattan slums. "Getting in the first blow was something I learned in childhood," he said in an interview.

After working in odd jobs and sometimes sleeping in flophouses, at 18 he attended an audition for actors at the YMCA. and was chosen for two plays. He later studied at the Actors Studio and the New School for Social Research. Adopting his mother's maiden name, Franciosa, he began getting roles in television and the theater. "A Hatful of Rain" made him a star.

Besides Winters, Franciosa was married to writer Beatrice Bakalyar and real estate agent Judy Kanter, with whom he had a daughter, Nina. His lasting marriage was to Rita Thiel, a German fashion model. They had sons Christopher and Marco.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:12 am
Hey, dys. What a lovely coffee break<smile> Thanks for the reminder of what it's like to be pampered. Is that yours?
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:14 am
Farewell to Tarwathie
Judy Collins

Farewell to Tarwathie
Adieu Mormond Hill
And the dear land of Crimmond
I bid you farewell
I'm bound off for Greenland
And ready to sail
In hopes to find riches
In hunting the whale

Farewell to my comrades
For a while we must part
And likewise the dear lass
Who first won my heart
The cold coast of Greenland
My love will not chill
And the longer my absence
More loving she'll feel

Our ship is well rigged
And she's ready to sail
The crew they are anxious
To follow the whale
Where the icebergs do float
And the stormy winds blow
Where the land and the ocean
Is covered with snow

The cold coast of Greenland
Is barren and bare
No see time nor harvest
Is ever known there
And the birds here sing sweetly
In mountain and dale
But there's no bird in Greenland
To sing to the whale

There is no habitation
For a man to live there
And the king of that country
Is the fierce Greenland bear
And there'll be no temptation
To tarry long there
With our ship under full
We will homeward repair

Farewell to Tarwathie
Adieu Mormond Hill
And the dear land of Crimmond
I bid you farewell
I'm bound off for Greenland
And ready to sail
In hopes to find riches
In hunting the whale
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:40 am
Paul Scofield
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

David Paul Scofield, CH, CBE (born January 21, 1922) is an English actor who was born in Sussex.

Scofield is not well-known to cinema-goers, despite having won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his role in A Man for All Seasons (1966). He began his stage career in 1940, and was soon being compared with Laurence Olivier. Although his range is considerable, he has tended to be selective, preferring classical roles to those which might have won him more popular acclaim. He has won several awards for his stage appearances, including a Tony for the original stage version of A Man for All Seasons, and was Salieri in the original stage production of Amadeus in 1979.

In 1994 he starred in Quiz Show, a film directed by Robert Redford about the quiz show scandal in the United States in the 1950s. Scofield played Mark Van Doren, father of Charles Van Doren, the man at the center of the scandal, and received a nomination for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. He has rejected the offer of a knighthood on three occasions, but was appointed CBE in 1956, and became a Companion of Honour in 2001.

He also did a superb narration job in a radio version of C.S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia, put out by Focus on the Family.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Scofield
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:42 am
Telly Savalas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Telly Savalas (January 21, 1924 - January 22, 1994) was a Greek-American film and television actor who fathered 8 children. He was nominated for an Oscar in 1963 in his first starring movie, Birdman of Alcatraz. He was also best known for his work on the Kojak television series, and for playing Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service.


Early life

He was the second oldest of five children born to Christina Savalas, who was a New York City artist, and Nick Savalas, a Greek restaurant owner, as Aristotelis Savalas in Garden City, New York. As the star of his own family, Savalas merely supported them until a crash that hit the Great Depression in 1929. He had his first job at age 8 in 1932, as a newspaper boy, while he constructed a shoeshine stand made of crates. When he entered Sewanhaka High School in Floral Park, New York, he initially only spoke Greek, yet he learned English and graduated in 1942. Telly Savalas gained life experience with a three-year stint in the Army during WWII, working for the U.S. State Department hosting the "Your Voice of America" series and then at ABC News before beginning an acting career in his late 30s.


Pre- and early television work

As first, executive director and then senior director of news special events at ABC, Savalas became an executive producer for the "Gillette calvalcade of Sports", where he gave Howard Cosell his first job. Savalas first acted on the TV show Armstrong Circle Theater (1959) and then on the series "The Witness" as Lucky Luciano, where actor Burt Lancaster "discovered" him. Savalas was cast opposite Lancaster's idealistic D.A. in the melodrama The Young Savages (1961). He moved on to play a string of heavies, winning acclaim and an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his performance as the sadistic Feto Gomez in Birdman of Alcatraz (1962). After portraying Pontius Pilate in The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965), he chose to remain completely bald and this signature look, somewhere between the comic and the ominous, stood him in good stead in the years that followed.

Savalas was memorable in The Dirty Dozen (1967), the seminal ensemble action film by director Robert Aldrich, and reappeared as a different character in two TV movie reprisals. He also appeared as star in two classics, Kelly's Heroes (1970), and The Scalphunters (1968), a western that revealed the absurdity of racism during the Civil Rights movement. His career was transformed with the lead role in the celebrated TV-movie The Marcus Nelson Murders (CBS, 1973) where the pop culture icon of Theo Kojak was born. Savalas polished his hard-boiled image to a brilliant sheen over the long run of Kojak (CBS, 1973-78). During those years, he co-bought racehorse Telly's Pop, recorded many albums, including "Telly" (1974) and "Who Loves Ya, Baby" (1976) and directed and wrote the film Beyond Reason (1977). After the very popular series ended, Savalas reprised the Kojak persona in several Kojak-based TV-movies, furthering his public canonization. One of Savalas' brothers, George Savalas (known professionally for a time simply as 'Demosthenes') played the character 'Stavros', a sensitive , wild-haired, quiet, comedic foil to Kojak's street-wise humor in an otherwise dark dramatic TV series.


Life after Kojak

Throughout his life, Telly Savalas was a charismatic leader, creative writer, director, and producer. He won the Emmy, the Peabody, and Golden Globe Awards. In 1990, the city of New York declared "The Marcus-Nelson Murders" as the official movie of New York City, and awarded Telly with the Key to the City. He was also a strong contributor to his Greek Orthodox roots through the Saint Sophia and Saint Nicholas cathedrals in Los Angeles, and was the sponsor of bringing electricity in the '70's to his ancestral home, Yeraka, Greece. His mother, Christina, was a world recognized contemporary of Picasso, and he himself released several records, the most remembered was his version of "If", that was #1 in Europe for 10 weeks in 1975.

Many people do not know that Telly was a world-class poker player, degreed in psychology; a motorcycle racer, and lifeguard. He appeared in over 80 movies. In his capacity as Producer for "Kojak", he gave many stars their first break, as Burt Lancaster did for him. He was considered by those who knew him a generous, graceful, compassionate man.


Character actor

Prior to being a successful movie star on the big screen, Savalas became one of the most charismatic and beloved character actors of all time during the late 1950s and the 1960s, where he made his very first guest-starring role on an episode of Armstrong Circle Theater, in fact, he appeared on the show, twice. He also made 54 more guest-appearances between 1959 - 1967 in most of these shows, Naked City, King of Diamonds, The Aquanauts, The Untouchables, Burke's Law, The Fugitive, Bonanza, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The F.B.I., among many others. He also had a recurring role as Brother Hendrickson on the popular crime drama series, 77 Sunset Strip, as his career already launched.


Acting career

Kojak

Undoubtedly Savalas' most famous role was that of the tough detective Kojak on television. Lt. Theo Kojak was a bald New York City detective who had a fondness for lollipops and whose trademark line was, "Who loves ya, baby?" Reportedly the lollipop gimmick was added in lieu of having the character smoke, a habit that fell out of vogue among TV series in the 1970s. He was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama series, two years in a row, but won the Emmy in 1974. He was also nominated for Golden Globes, four times in a year, and won between 1975 and 1976. In 1974, prior to starring on Kojak, he also became a singer. In 1978, after a 5 season run on the air, CBS decided to cancel the show due to low ratings.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telly_Savalas
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:44 am
You know, dj. Try as I might, I simply cannot recall that "Tony". Thanks, however, for the reminder, Canada.

Ah, edgar, another Judy Collins. Lovely, Texas.

Well, listeners, I suppose there's nothing much we can do about certain situations concerning our planet. It seems that I read that metals, etc. are being depleted at an alarming rate.

Quotes about Coffee:

Coffee
From Wikiquote
Jump to: navigation, search
Quotes about coffee




"Coffee should be black as hell, strong as death, and sweet as love." ~ Turkish proverbs
"No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness." ~ Sheik Abd al-Qadir
"Coffee leads men to trifle away their time, scald their chops, and spend their money, all for a little base, black, thick, nasty, bitter, stinking nauseous puddle water." ~ The Women's Petition Against Coffee (1674)
"Is it impossible to get a cup of coffee-flavoured coffee, anymore, in this country? What happened with the coffee? Did I miss a ******* meeting with the coffee, huh? You can get every other flavour except coffee-flavoured coffee!" ~ Denis Leary
"I like my coffee like I like my women- Black and Strong." - {Paul Howell} 2005
I believe humans get a lot done, not because we're smart, but because we have thumbs so we can make coffee. ~Flash Rosenberg
Decaffeinated coffee is kind of like kissing your sister. ~Bob Irwin
Coffee is a beverage that puts one to sleep when not drank. ~Alphonse Allais
Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar, and fat. ~Alex Levine
The voodoo priest and all his powders were as nothing compared to espresso, cappuccino, and mocha, which are stronger than all the religions of the world combined, and perhaps stronger than the human soul itself. ~Mark Helprin, Memoir from Antproof Case, 1995
He was my cream, and I was his coffee - And when you poured us together, it was something. - Josephine Baker
When we drink coffee, ideas march in like the army - Honore de Balzac
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:44 am
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Jan, 2006 09:47 am
Steve Reeves
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Steve Reeves (Stephen L. Reeves) (January 21, 1926 - May 5, 2000), was a bodybuilder, actor, and author.


Childhood

Born in Glasgow, Montana, Reeves moved to California, with his widowed mother Goldie, at the age of 10, after his father Lester Dell Reeves died from an accident. By the time he was 17 his interest in bodybuilding had led to his developing a Herculean build, long before the rise in general interest in the activity. After he was graduated from High School he entered the Army during the later part of World War II.

Bodybuilding

He won the following events:

* 1946 - Mr. Pacific Coast
* 1947 - Mr. Pacific Coast
* 1947 - Mr. America
* 1948 - Mr. World
* 1950 - Mr. Universe

By his own account, his best cold (unpumped) measurements at the peak of his bodybuilding activity were:

* Height: 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
* Weight: 216
* Neck: 18 1/2"
* Chest: 52"
* Waist: 29"
* Biceps: 18 1/4"
* Thighs: 26"
* Calves: 18 1/4"

Arnold Schwarzenegger's Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding states:

By [the 1940s] the distinction between lifting weights purely for strength and training with weights to shape and proportion the body had been clearly made. ... However, bodybuilding still remained an obscure sport. No champion was known to the general public--that is, until Steve Reeves came along. Reeves was the right man in the right place at the right time. He was handsome, personable, and had a magnificent physique. Survivors from the Muscle Beach era recall how crowds used to follow Reeves when he walked along the beach, and how people who knew nothing about him would simply stop and stare, awestruck.

Acting

After WWII military service, Reeves decided to try his hand at acting, after being told endlessly that he had the rugged good looks of a Hollywood star. After some intensive actor training, he came to the attention film director Cecil B. De Mille, who considered him for the part of Samson in Samson and Delilah (1949) but after a dispute over his physique, the part finally went to Victor Mature. Paramount considered Reeves for the title role of their upcoming film version of the Broadway musical Li'l Abner in 1958, but the part eventually went to Peter Palmer.

In 1954 he had a co-starring role in his first major motion picture Athena playing Debbie Reynolds' boyfriend, and the same year was seen in the Ed Wood film "Jailbait." In fact this is one of the few opportunities to hear his own voice as most of his later films were dubbed. Rumor has it that Reeve's appearance in Athena is what prompted Italian director Pietro Francisci's daughter to suggest him for the role in her father's upcoming Hercules movie. In 1957, he played the title character in Francisci's Hercules, which was released in Italy in February of 1959, and then in the U.S. in July of 1959. Following the U.S. release, the film was an enormous hit and created a new sub-genre of the sword and sandal film (also known as the peplum film): the 'Hercules' or 'strong man' movie. The film is now in public domain and can be downloaded from the Internet Archive.

From 1959 through 1964, Reeves went on to appear in a string of sword and sandal movies, and although he is perhaps best known for his portrayal of the Greek hero Hercules, in actuality he played the character only twice - in Hercules and the sequel Hercules Unchained (released in the U.S. in 1960). He played a number of other characters on screen, including Sir Edward George Bulwer-Lytton's Glaucus of Pompeii; Goliath (also called Emiliano); Russian hero Hadji Murad; Romulus, the legendary founder of Rome (opposite Gordon Scott as his twin brother Remus); pirate and self-proclaimed governor of Jamaica Captain Henry Morgan; and Karim, the Thief of Bagdad. Twice he played Aeneas of Troy and twice he played Emilio Salgari's Malaysian hero, Sandokan. He turned down a number of parts that went on to make the careers of other actors. He was asked to star as 'James Bond' in "Dr. No" in 1962 which he turned down as he did the role that finally went to Clint Eastwood in "A Fistful of Dollars" (1964). In 1968 Reeves appeared in his final film, a spaghetti western which he also co-wrote, A Long Ride From Hell fulfilling his wish to make a Western before he retired. His last on-screen appearance was in 2000 when he appeared as himself in the made-for-television A&E Biography: Arnold Schwarzenegger - Flex Appeal.

Later life

Later in his life, Reeves promoted drug-free bodybuilding and bred horses. The last two decades of his life were spent in Valley Center (Escondido), California. He bought a ranch with his savings and lived there with his second wife Aline until her death in 1989.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Reeves
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