Paul Pierce, the best player?

July 30, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under !!!Entertainment!!!

Finals MVP Paul Pierce, who recently spent three days at a ball camp in Madrid, is making, ahem, news about what he said to a Spanish reporter. The money translation, via RedsArmy: “Q: Is Kobe really the best player in the world? Pierce: I don’t think Kobe is the best player. I’m the best player. There’s a line that separates having confidence and being conceited. I don’t cross that line but I have a lot of confidence in myself.” Surprisingly, Spurs fans seem more upset by this than actual Lakers fans. (Update: OK, Lakers Nation is pretty upset, too.)

The World’s Worst Taxi Rides

July 28, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under General Information

From: Forbes Traveler

Lagos, Nigeria

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Visitors to Nigeria often end up exasperated by a culture of bribery, extortion and petty theft that can make even the simplest itinerary a challenge. Ominous-looking roadblocks can pop up anywhere and anytime in this kleptocratic environment, and it may take a small bundle of cash to get through. Yellow Lagos taxis are cheap and plentiful, but proceed at your own risk.

Tip: Work with your hotel concierge to find private transportation and stress-free routes.

Naples, Italy

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In the country that gave us Ferraris and Lamborghinis, aggressive driving is a given, and nowhere does it get crazier than in Naples, where your taxi driver may simply take to the sidewalks if he finds the streets too crowded. It’s the kind of place where “one way” really means “my way,” whatever your way happens to be at that moment. And when you step out of the cab, keep an eye out for motorcycle-riding purse snatchers who’ll think nothing of snapping your wrist to grab your Birkin bag.

Tip: Go private with Benvenuto Limos, or forget the whole thing and take a fast boat to Capri.

Caracas, Venezuela

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As is the case in many cities worldwide, Caracas’s white taxis are supplemented by an unregulated and un-insured fleet of unmarked pirate taxis which may identify themselves to you simply by flashing a paper sign that says “Taxi.” Don’t get in. You’d be better off strapping on a helmet and hopping on the back of a motorcycle taxi for a true Venezuelan thrill.

Tip: Check with your hotel for private cars, or stick to telephone taxi services such as the well-regarded Taxi Capital.

Moscow, Russia

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The new Russia’s anything-goes form of capitalism carries right over into the world of taxis. Indeed, anything goes, and anyone will pick you up if you stick out your hand. You’ll see plenty of metered yellow taxis, but you’ll also attract gypsy cabs—ordinary Muscovites who are simply looking to make a few extra rubles as they drive across town. If you don’t speak Russian, you may find it hard to haggle and could end up getting into an incomprehensible shouting match.

Tip: Book your trip in advance online at sites like Way to Russia, which offers services around $16 per hour, or www.limos.ru, which can provide a Czar-like ride in a Hummer.

Sao Paulo, Brazil

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A megalopolis of almost 30 million people (and growing), this Brazilian behemoth can be nearly impossible to get around at times of peak traffic congestion. Think of Los Angeles, only three times as big and crowded. The city’s white taxis are plentiful and efficient, but given the distances and the traffic, you could be in for a very long ride. Plan in advance for off-peak trips with Rádio Táxi Vermelho e Branco.

Tip: Do what the rich locals do, and stay above it all by taking to the air. Sao Paulo has helicopters and helipads galore, making it possible to hopscotch from airport to hotel to meeting without ever setting foot on the street—very Blade Runner. Investigate the high life with ATM Helicopteros.

Mexico City, Mexico

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Those green-and-white VW Beetles may be among the world’s cutest taxis, but sad to say, Mexico City is home of the “express kidnapping,” during which your taxi-driving thief will take you to an ATM, rough you up, and force you to withdraw money. The problem is so well known that the Department of State maintains a travel warning about it.

Tip: Only take taxis that you’ve contacted in advance or that you hail at a regulated taxi stand, called a “sitio.”

Baghdad, Iraq

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The 7.5-mile Qadisiyah Expressway from Baghdad International Airport to the Green Zone, sometimes referred to as “Route Irish” by American military forces, currently holds the title of the world’s most dangerous road. Taxis do exist in Baghdad, but few drivers will make this trip unless they really need the money. Well-heeled visitors (mostly journalists) have been known to pay more than $5,000 for a small armored convoy complete with four gun-toting bodyguards.

Tip: Stay in Jordan.

Bangkok, Thailand

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The problem in Bangkok isn’t with its colorful fleet of air-conditioned taxis and friendly drivers. The problem is how many of them there are, not to mention all the other cars, trucks, and buses clogging the narrow streets. Add the iconic three-wheeled tuk-tuks darting around all the other vehicles, and you have traffic chaos that will require true Buddhist detachment to endure.

Tip: Take to the water. Do your northbound and southbound traveling in a hired boat on the Chao Praya River. It’s fast, scenic, and not outrageously expensive.

Manila, Philippines

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In a city full of fanciful transportation alternatives–everything from rickshaws to wildly decorated jeepneys–the local white taxis appear boring by comparision. What won’t be boring is the fight you have with the driver when he refuses to turn on the meter (frequent visitors say it happens all the time) and instead tries to haggle for an unfair flat fee. Ask that he turn on the meter before you close the door and sit down. If he won’t, simply flag down another taxi and try again.

Tip: Hire a private car (as low as $20 per day), or try the reputable Avis Taxi (011-63-2-532-5758), which comes when you call and adds about 70 cents to the meter for the pick-up.

New York City

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Cab rides in New York can be glorious on a summer day in Central Park, or… the worst. Sure, things have picked up since the fictional Travis Bickle, played by Robert De Niro in “Taxi Driver,” was at the wheel. But the Big Apple is still notoriously unfriendly to visitors arriving by air. After their customs ordeal, travelers cabbing in from JFK will encounter gridlock on the notorious Van Wyck Expressway, a six-mile stretch of nightmarish congestion, plus the language barrier between passenger and driver (cabbies in New York are generally averse to English). Luckily, it’s a flat $45 fare, so no matter how long you sit (and sit), you won’t pay more.

Tip: Make the trip by helicopter in 8 minutes for $140 with U.S. Helicopter

What I love about Davao!

July 26, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under General Information

Who says you can’t have fun in cheap escapades?

* Organized day dive for only 999php

- inclusive of speedboat fare, weight belts, snacks, tanks and a dive guide and a personal copy of photo and video clips CD of the activity.

Destination: Different dive sites in Samal!

* Diving 101 Organized

- For beginners: inclusive of dive guide, well maintained scuba gear boat fare, souvenir wind and wave t-shirt, buffet lunch, and a personal copy of photo and video clips CD of the activity.

Destination: Talikud Island

*Barkadahan – 399php

-Organized island hopping for everybody, inclusive of boat fare, buffet lunch, and a personal copy of photo and video clips CD of the activity.

Destination: Talikud Island

Pictures here

Top 10 Historically Inaccurate Movies

July 25, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under !!!Entertainment!!!

Copy and pasted  from: yahoo entertainment

 

10,000 B.C.
Director Roland Emmerich is usually a stickler for realism (see: sending a computer virus via Macintosh to aliens in Independence Day). So we hate to inform him that woolly mammoths were not, in fact, used to build pyramids. Heck, woolly mammoths weren’t even found in the desert. They wouldn’t need to be woolly if that were the case. And there weren’t any pyramids in Egypt until 2,500 B.C or so.

 

Gladiator
Emperor Commodus was not the sniveling sister-obsessed creep portrayed in the movie. A violent alcoholic, sure, but not so whiny. He ruled ably for over a decade rather than ineptly for a couple months. He also didn’t kill his father, Marcus Aurelius, who actually died of chickenpox. And instead of being killed in the gladiatorial arena, he was murdered in his bathtub.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

300
Though this paean to ancient moral codes and modern physical training is based on the real Battle of Thermopylae, the film takes many stylistic liberties. The most obvious one being Persian king Xerxes was not an 8-foot-tall Cirque du Soleil reject. The Spartan council was made up of men over the age of 60, with no one as young as Theron (played by 37-year-old Dominic West). And the warriors of Sparta went into battle wearing bronze armor, not just leather Speedos.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

The Last Samurai
The Japanese in the late 19th century did hire foreign advisers to modernize their army, but they were mostly French, not American. Ken Watanabe’s character was based on the real Saigo Takamori who committed ritual suicide, or “seppuku,” in defeat rather than in a volley of Gatling gun fire. Also, it’s doubtful that a 40-something alcoholic Civil War vet, even one with great hair, would master the chopsticks much less the samurai sword.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

Apocalypto
This one movie has given entire Anthropology departments migraines. Sure the Maya did have the odd human sacrifice but not to Kulkulkan, the Sun God, and only high-ranking captives taken in battle were killed. The conquistadors arriving at the end of the film made for unlikely saviors: an estimated 90% of indigenous American population was killed by smallpox from their infected livestock.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

Memoirs of a Geisha
The geisha coming-of-age, called “mizuage,” was really more of a makeover, where she changed her hairstyle and clothes. It didn’t involve her getting… intimate with a client. In the climactic scene where Sayuri wows Gion patrons with her dancing prowess, her routine – which involves some platform shoes, fake snow, and a strobe light – seems more like a Studio 54 drag show than anything in pre-war Kyoto.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

Braveheart
Let’s forget the fact that kilts weren’t worn in Scotland until about 300 years after William Wallace’s day and just do some simple math. According to the movie, Wallace’s blue-eyed charm at the Battle of Falkirk was so overpowering, he seduced King Edward II’s wife, Isabella of France, and the result of their affair was Edward III. But according to the history books, Isabella was three years old at the time of Falkirk, and Edward III was born seven years after Wallace died.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

Elizabeth: The Golden Age
In 1585, when the movie takes place, Queen Elizabeth was 52 years old – Cate Blanchett was 36 when she shot the film – and was not being courted by suitors like Ivan the Terrible (who was dead by then). And though the movie has her rallying the troops at Tilbury astride a white steed in full armor with a sword, in fact she rode side saddle, carrying a baton. She was more of a regal majorette than Joan of Arc.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

 

The Patriot
Revolutionary War figure Francis “The Swamp Fox” Marion was the basis for Mel Gibson’s character, but he wasn’t the forward-thinking family man they show in the flick. He was a slave owner who didn’t get married (to his cousin) until after the war was over. Historians also say that he actively persecuted and murdered native Cherokees. Plus, the thrilling Battle of Guilford Court House where he vanquishes his British nemesis? In reality, the Americans lost that one.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

  

 

2001: A Space Odyssey
According to this film, in year 2001 we would have had manned voyages to Jupiter, a battle of wits with a sentient computer, and a quantum leap in human evolution. Instead we got the Mir Space Station falling from the sky, Windows XP, and Freddy Got Fingered. Apparently the lesson here is that sometimes it’s better when the movies get the facts all wrong.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Scientifically Inaccurate

July 25, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under !!!Entertainment!!!

Copy and pasted  from: yahoo entertainment
 
 

 

  

 

 

 

Armageddon
We could put together a long list of all the things wrong with Michael Bay’s feel-good ode to global destruction, but NASA has already and they counted at least 168 mistakes. But perhaps the biggest problem is that the plot itself — splitting a Texas-sized rock in two with a single nuke — has a Texas-sized hole in it. We don’t have a nuclear bomb anywhere near powerful enough to do the job. As strange as it might seem, this is a case of a Michael Bay movie not having a big enough explosion.

Independence Day
That mammoth mothership hovering over the earth in geostationary orbit would be doing more than just freaking out the world’s population. Because of its close proximity and mass — 1/4th that of the moon, according to the film — the flying saucer’s gravitational pull would cause massive tidal waves, volcanic eruptions and earthquakes. The aliens wouldn’t even have to roll out their anti-matter ray to blow up the White House — it would already be underwater.

Starship Troopers
Could a band of cave-dwelling, preverbal giant insects really have the sophisticated mathematics and technology to hurl a rock millions of miles through space to crash into Earth? Plus, 70% of the planet’s surface is covered in water, so they only had a 3 out of 10 chance at even hitting solid ground, let alone a major city like Buenos Aires.

The Day After Tomorrow
Roland Emmerich brought his trademark academic rigor to the realm of climatology and the result proved to be so silly that NASA refused to help with the filming of the movie. For one thing, it would require most of Antarctica to melt in order to submerge New York City to the level it is in the movie. If all the rays of the sun were directed at the South Pole, its ice would melt in about two and half years. This ridiculousness drove Duke University paleoclimatologist William Hyde to publicly state, “This movie is to climate science as Frankenstein is to heart transplant surgery.”

The Core
In the movie, the Earth’s inner core — a nickel-iron mass about 1500 miles in diameter — stops rotating, causing the planet’s magnetic field to collapse and microwave radiation from space to blast through the atmosphere. But microwaves aren’t affected by magnetism, and the radiation that comes from space is too weak to damage anything here. What’s more, if the core did stop rotating for whatever reason, we’d have more to worry about than that. The energy stored in the core would have to go somewhere, and the effect on the planet would be equivalent to five trillion nuclear bombs going off at once.

 

The Matrix
Much in the way of physics in the Matrix — like dodging bullets and running up walls — gets a pass because it’s all within a massive virtual world. But in reality, our supposed robot overlords are a bit dim. Humans are a remarkably inefficient energy source. Instead of turning the human race into Duracells, the machines would probably get more energy just setting those goopy people pods on fire.

Jurassic Park
Having a wildlife park full of dinosaurs would be a really cool idea if it weren’t for a few problems. No, not imperfect security or the possibility of spontaneous lizard sex changes. The problem is that it would be almost impossible to clone the dinosaurs based on DNA pulled from the guts of a 25 million-year-old mosquito. The dinosaur DNA’s double helix most certainly would have been broken down into individual chunks, mixing together with whatever else the mosquitoes might have eaten along with some of the insect’s own genetic material. Any creature constructed from that mess might be the stuff of nightmares, but probably wouldn’t look like a T. Rex.

Total Recall
The red planet’s gravitational pull is roughly 1/3rd that of the Earth’s. So if, for example, an Austrian bodybuilder were to visit Mars, he would be bounding across the room like Michael Jordan. Another problem: when exposed to the thin atmosphere of Mars, like bad guy Cohaagen at the end of the movie, you would likely suffer from a raging case of the bends and you would asphyxiate — both of which are plenty lethal — but your head wouldn’t bulge out and explode like an overused stress toy.

Outbreak
A monkey threatens a small town with a virus that kills everybody in less time than your average DMV visit, and only Dustin Hoffman can stop it. The trouble with a disease that virulent is it kills the host too fast to spread. Otherwise, we would be dead from the Ebola virus. Also, it generally takes longer to make a cure from monkey serum than it does to make a latte. Dustin Hoffman does look great in a hazmat suit, though.

 

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Indiana Jones has survived a lot of improbable adventures, be it fleeing ancient spherical boulders or fighting off cult members while dangling off a rope bridge. But few scrapes have tested the bounds of believability more than Indy’s escape from a nuclear bomb blast thanks to a lead-lined fridge. The problem is that, even if he didn’t get flattened, horribly burned or suffocated (kids, don’t hide in refrigerators), Indy almost certainly would have gotten a lethal dose of radiation from the fallout. And that’s a lot scarier than snakes.

 

Friday’s Lunch

July 25, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under My Interests

I was in the mood to cook today. So I prepared fish fillet in a tomato sauce. I love it because I was the one who cooked it hehehe.

Then I experimented bananas, apples, with marshmallows and cashew nuts in Nestle Cream. I wanted to put gummy worms but my brother VEHEMENTLY reacted.

I could not put the fish fillet in a tomato sauce picture because it looks like sh**.

 

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Kidnapped boy rescued

July 25, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under General Information

The boy Matthew I featured from my previous posts has been found and rescued begging for food at Sta. Rosa, Laguna.

The boy is now reunited to his father happily.

Wedding Daze

July 24, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under !!!Entertainment!!!

Definitely, we just don’t look across a restaurant and see the person we want to spend the rest of our lives with.

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The usual younger generation’s version of romantic comedy: senselessly funny. It is okay to be stupid if it is part of the system. However, deciding to grow old with someone you just met because you like doing stupid things with him is entirely what they basically say it: STUPID.

The characters were lame. I was just bored so I tried watching this film but was expecting funnier scenes. I did laugh though with the bus scene where they had this drama of feeling and listening  a woman’s tummy only to find out she was not pregnant.

I was also surprised about this actor whom I saw with a good role in Lake House as Keannu’s younger brother. Was he so desperate in his acting career that he accepted such a loser role?

The soundtracks were pretty nice though.

Kidnapped

July 23, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under General Information

Please help the family of this young boy , hope he will return safe to his family.

My pamangkin, Kuya Ken’s son Matthew, where we took the other half of the business namesake was abducted last night at Festival Mall in Alabang.

Name: Matthew” Chu-chu” David Samudio
Age: 3 Years Old, Can barely speak straight.
Address: 16 guyabano st umali rd. summitville subdivision putatan muntinlupa city 1770

He was last seen at Tom’s World Arcade in Festival Mall Alabang, around 8pm yesterday July 22, 2008 wearing Green Checkered Polo, Maong pants and Green Mr. Bean Slippers.

When we reviewed the surveillance camera in said mall, there was this chubby impoverished looking girl around 12-13 years old wearing a dirtied pink top with floral design and a reddish jogging pants who summoned my nephew and then whispered something to him, then my pamangkin who is very “bibo” readily took her hand as they went out of the said premises.

Guys, I need your help with this, if you know people in the media, police or government agency who might be able to HELP us locate my nephew, I’m begging you, please, please help us. Or at the very least, please pass this message to as many people as possible, who knows where the abductors might have taken him… Matthew is a very sickly kid, he rarely eats unless his yaya feeds him and he was about to have an operation for fluid in his right testis.

If there are any news or lead that can locate my nephew, please help us… Sobrang kawawa ang pamangkin ko, who knows how they are treating him…I dont want this thing happening to any kid so please help my nephew. PLEASE. You can contact my brother at 0923-638-4632.

Thank you so much and God Bless you!”

 —- Melka

Is This Really Miley?

July 23, 2008 by shenmue7754  
Filed under !!!Entertainment!!!

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miley cyrus candids

 

miley cyrus candids

 

 Taken from here

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