The Burger King Diet

October 24, 2008

When the scale displayed 22% body fat at the beginning of this year, I figured that the time for a weight loss initiative had finally arrived. I wasn’t close to getting obese yet, but seeing how I was into my 30s now (when weight is notoriously harder to lose), and seeing how my physical weight had increased 25lbs since I had met Victoria (a gain I can squarely blame on Lair crunch time), I felt like I should reverse the trend while there was still time. Not through a fad diet, mind you. Through lifestyle changes.

Of course that meant eating more consciously, avoiding most fast food restaurants etc. I actually go to Wendys on a regular basis – their grilled chicken sandwich has honey mustard dressing instead of mayo, and substituting the fries for a side salad isn’t a bad deal at all. But I hadn’t been at a Burger King for ages. Until today, when I had to go to the Best Buy in Marin City, and didn’t have much time to find anything else to eat. There’s a Burger King right there, where my coworkers and I had some fun times several years ago – feeding burger meat to the eager pigeons (if you needed any more proof that pigeons are basically rats with wings, here it is). So I figured sure, why not? Maybe I’d forgotten that I once liked the place! So, picture me…

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R.I.P. Gwen

October 19, 2008

gwen budgie R.I.P. Gwen

icon sad R.I.P. Gwen That’s the third bird we’ve lost in two months. I’m starting to doubt our ability to take care of them anymore.

The Two Types of Indiana Jones Movies

October 18, 2008

indy4 crystal skull poster The Two Types of Indiana Jones MoviesI wasn’t one of those people who hated Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull when it arrived in theaters last May. It had numerous problems for sure, but I was happy to disengage the rational side of my brain and go along for the ride. Now that the movie is available on Blu-ray, I’m finding that Indy 4 is actually growing on me. Once you know where the story is going and don’t care too much about how logically the parts of the movie connect, and once you’re already prepared for the movie’s questionable parts (*cough* fridge sequence *cough*) it’s easier to appreciate the moment-to-moment action and the set pieces in Crystal Skull. And there’s some good stuff there! The “ant arena” is a pretty brilliant concept, for example. Sure, the CG ants look somewhat fake, but the scene is a great variation on the traditional creepy crawler sequences featured in all previous Indiana Jones movies. The ants are also a clever way of creating a “ring of death” around the inevitable big fist fight. The motorcycle chase is well done, as are the cemetery scenes in Peru. (Mutt’s Tarzan moment in the jungle still sucks, though; and the sword fight doesn’t feel any less tacked on.)
I was surprised to find myself going back to the movie multiple times. Not giving it undivided attention, mind you, but using it as a background distraction while working on other things. Like a certain Quake level that I have affectionately started referring to as “that one“.

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Wisdom from Matchbox Twenty

October 15, 2008

Sometimes you’ll find truths that resonate with you at the unlikeliest of places. For example this one by Matchbox Twenty’s Rob Thomas, talking about their song “Unwell”:

I’ve come to one conclusion, and that’s… In 31 years I’ve found out that everybody in the world – everybody in the world is a little bit fucked up, okay? And it’s okay, it’s okay – when you’re young, when you’re young you think it’s just you. You’re at home, you’re trying to hide it, you figure maybe you’ll grow out of it, maybe sooner or later you’ll get like all of the other people. And what you don’t know when you’re young is that it’s everybody, man! Everybody is a little bit fucked up. And so as you get older, as you get older you have two kinds of people: you have the fortunate people, who realize it early on, man, and they let their Freak Flag fly, and they have a good time, and they…they don’t think too hard about it, they don’t take themselves too seriously. And then there’s those poor bastards on the other side, that are still trying to play it cool, man. Every day: “I’m not fucked up!” So this song goes out to all the wonderfully enlightened people in Atlanta here tonight who know that it’s okay to be a little bit fucked up every now and then.

Found on Matchbox Twenty’s live DVD. Which has terrible sound quality but is still fun to listen to when it comes up in the iPod shuffle.

BBelief 2008 – The stage is set…

October 15, 2008

dp000004 544x340 BBelief 2008   The stage is set...

One of the challenges has actually been to not add too much detail to various areas. It’s nice that today’s computers are stretching Quake’s limits, but the composition quickly becomes too busy. If think that that first shot is stretching it. What do you think?

dp000007 544x340 BBelief 2008   The stage is set...

First Wedding Anniversary

October 13, 2008

It’s already been a year since Victoria and I got married! Please excuse the temporary lapse in blog updates as we travel around Sonoma and Napa, enjoy the occasion and eat our remaining wedding cake icon smile First Wedding Anniversary

first wedding anniversary 408x544 First Wedding Anniversary

Snapshot

October 12, 2008

Cyber-stalking help, October 2008:

Reading… Anathem (Neal Stephenson). Hard to get into, but it’s picking up steam.
Watching… Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles (Season 1). 49ers games.
Playing… Nothing. Waiting for GoW2, Fable II and Fallout 3!
Looking Forward To… Maui vacation icon smile Snapshot One more month…
Hoping… that the Phillies sweep the Dodgers to win the NLCS! Well, I just want them to win the series, but a sweep would be sweet.
Finishing… Beyond Belief 2008. I think. Current VIS time on Intel DualCore 2.6Ghz: 13 hours…

Rating “Cyberfilms” (Part 5)

October 9, 2008

cyberfilms book02 Rating Cyberfilms (Part 5)Welcome to the final installment of Rating “Cyberfilms”! This has been a lot of fun, but it’s also turned out to be much more work that I initially expected. Mostly because the reviews kept getting increasingly longer, I guess I can’t just write a couple of paragraphs on a story. We’re finishing the series today with George R. R. Martin’s Nightflyers and H. P. Lovecraft’s Herbert West: Reanimator. To learn more about the series and to see previous reviews, read parts 1, 2, 3 and 4!

Nightflyers (George R. R. Martin)
1980
Score: A+

Robert Jaffe adopted this story into the movie of the same name. It was directed by Robert Collector and starred Catherine Mary Stewart, Michael Praed and John Standing.

She put an arm around him, stroked him, coaxed him. “The esperon will give you range,” she said. “Feel it, feel yourself grow stronger. Can you feel it? Everything’s getting clear, isn’t it? “Her voice was a reassuring drone. “Remember the danger now, remember, go find it. Look beyond the wall, tell us about it. Tell us about Royd. Was he telling the truth? Tell us. You’re good, we all know that, you can tell us.” The phrases were almost an incantation.

He shrugged off her support and sat upright by himself. “I can feel it,” he said. His eyes were suddenly clearer. “Something – my head hurts – I’m afraid!”

“Don’t be afraid,” the psipsych said. “The esperon won’t make your head hurt, it just makes you better. Nothing to fear.” She stroked his brow. “Tell us what you see.”

The telepath looked at Royd’s [holograph] with terrified little-boy eyes, and his tongue flicked across his lower lip. “He’s -”

Then his skull exploded.

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Religion, Myth and Games

October 6, 2008

As expected, Bill Maher’s new documentary Religulous is stirring up strong reactions from supporters and opponents of religion alike. I probably won’t watch this movie because it seemingly aims to prove a predetermined point: that religion is ridiculous. A more bipartisan effort might have tried understanding why people subscribe to a religion, and what the religious belief adds to their lives.

But I don’t think that a discussion of the validity of organized religion will lead to a fruitful result, anyway. As game developers, understanding why religion plays such an important part in many people’s life can help us, though! Because religion is myth. And understanding myth can help us to create games that connect with the audience on a deep emotional level.

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Rating “Cyberfilms” (Part 4)

October 2, 2008

cyberfilms book02 Rating Cyberfilms (Part 4)Cyberfilms is a collection of 11 sci-fi short stories that were turned into movies at some point. Movies that, with the exception of Total Recall, I have never seen. So I cecided to review each story on their own merrits, and let you know if I could see a movie in each story. Today we have two rather well-known entries: Johnny Mnemonic and Enemy Mine. I didn’t end up liking either one too much, though icon wink Rating Cyberfilms (Part 4) To read about some stories that I did like, I suggest visiting parts 1, 2 and 3 of this series. Or wait for the weekend, when I will review the final two stories from this book. Anyway, on to this week’s reviews!

Johnny Mnemonic (William Gibson)
1981
Score: D

Johnny Mnemonic was adapted by the author and turned into the film of the same name, directed by Robert Longo, and starring Keanu Reeves, Dina Meyer and Ice-T.

Yep, that’s me giving William Gibson’s story a D. I didn’t understand it. It might be a great tale, but the density of information that Gibson crams into every sentence and description is staggering. And unfortunately, it is done in such a way that my brain can’t follow. Gibson’s writing just doesn’t create any images in my mind, and an entire action scene might be over before I even realized it. Or understand what just happened.

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