Tuesday, February 26, 2008
for all you Beatles fans out there...
http://view.break.com/456738 - Watch more free videos
how adorable is this little kid! i totally stole it from the modern age, but it was too cute to ignore.
enjoy!
countrywide quest for the perfect milkshake
SNL parody of there will be blood with some no country for old men and juno thrown in for good measure....from 2/23/08.
i've mentioned how i'm kinda obsessed with there will be blood....right?
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
we all love scientology....right?
i'm going on the assumption you have already seen tom's crazy pro-scientology rant.
here is the just as hilarious response.
guy fawkes masks?!? LOVE IT.
my favorite is the ice cream truck turned surveillance van...
more about project chanology from the wikipedia web site:
"Project Chanology is a protest against the Church of Scientology by the Internet-based group Anonymous. Project Chanology also refers to a website of the same name, used by the group to chronicle ongoing and planned actions by Anonymous, who state they are "everyone and everywhere", with "no leaders". The project was started in response to the Church of Scientology's attempts to remove material from an exclusive promotional interview with Scientologist Tom Cruise from the Internet in January 2008.
The project was publicly launched in the form of a video posted to YouTube, "Message to Scientology", on January 21, 2008. The video states that Anonymous views Scientology's actions as internet censorship, and stated the group's intent to "expel the church from the internet". This was followed by distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDoS attacks), and soon after, black faxes, prank calls, and other measures intended to disrupt the Church of Scientology's operations.
In February 2008, the focus of the protest shifted to legal methods, including nonviolent protests, and an attempt to get the Internal Revenue Service to investigate the Church of Scientology's tax exempt status in the United States.
Reactions from the Church of Scientology regarding the group's actions have varied. One spokesperson stated that members of the group "have got some wrong information" about Scientology. Another referred to the group as a "pathetic" group of "computer geeks". Some detractors of Scientology have criticized the actions of Project Chanology, asserting that they merely provide the Church of Scientology with the opportunity to "play the religious persecution card". Other critics of Project Chanology's actions questioned the legality of their methods."
here is the just as hilarious response.
guy fawkes masks?!? LOVE IT.
my favorite is the ice cream truck turned surveillance van...
more about project chanology from the wikipedia web site:
"Project Chanology is a protest against the Church of Scientology by the Internet-based group Anonymous. Project Chanology also refers to a website of the same name, used by the group to chronicle ongoing and planned actions by Anonymous, who state they are "everyone and everywhere", with "no leaders". The project was started in response to the Church of Scientology's attempts to remove material from an exclusive promotional interview with Scientologist Tom Cruise from the Internet in January 2008.
The project was publicly launched in the form of a video posted to YouTube, "Message to Scientology", on January 21, 2008. The video states that Anonymous views Scientology's actions as internet censorship, and stated the group's intent to "expel the church from the internet". This was followed by distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDoS attacks), and soon after, black faxes, prank calls, and other measures intended to disrupt the Church of Scientology's operations.
In February 2008, the focus of the protest shifted to legal methods, including nonviolent protests, and an attempt to get the Internal Revenue Service to investigate the Church of Scientology's tax exempt status in the United States.
Reactions from the Church of Scientology regarding the group's actions have varied. One spokesperson stated that members of the group "have got some wrong information" about Scientology. Another referred to the group as a "pathetic" group of "computer geeks". Some detractors of Scientology have criticized the actions of Project Chanology, asserting that they merely provide the Church of Scientology with the opportunity to "play the religious persecution card". Other critics of Project Chanology's actions questioned the legality of their methods."
Friday, February 08, 2008
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