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“You Know What I Call Guys Like You?”

One of my favourite moments from That’s 70’s Show, and even more so since the divorce.

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My New Online Read: Whisky Advocate Blog

Whiskey party! Whoo!

An actual whiskey-tasting party I had the good fortune to stumble into back in March.
My thanks to Max Valiquette for letting me join in!

How did I go on for so long without knowing that there was such a thing as the Whisky Advocate Blog?

Banner for "Whisky Advocate Blog"

If you enjoy whiskey in its many forms, whether Scotch, Irish, bourbon and what-have-you, this regularly-updated blog on all things whiskey should be right up your alley. I’ve got it bookmarked now!

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Cinco de Mayo Means Many Things to Many People

To me, Cinco de Mayo is exactly six months after my previous birthday and six months before my next. It means other things to other people:

Pie chart: "What Americans think Cinco de Mayo is"

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The Trouble with Dating at My Age

Sometimes the conversation goes like this:

Guy: "So I'll pick you up around 10?" Liz Lemon: "At night?"

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Toronto Comic Arts Festival This Weekend!

TCAF Banner

If you’re looking for something interesting, fun, inexpensive and unusual to do this weekend in Accordion City, you might want to check out TCAF, the Toronto Comic Arts Festival. It’s a celebration of comics, graphic novels and other forms of “serial art” (to use the coinage by Scott McCloud, author/illustrator of Understanding Comics). It’s been going on all week, but the really big stuff is happening this weekend at the Toronto Reference Library, and it’s free to attend! The Reference Library is right on top of Bloor/Yonge station, so if you can, save yourself some parking hassles and take the subway. (Or if you can, bike there — Bloor Street’s a great bike route.)

Among the artists you can meet are Bryan Lee O’Malley, creator of Scott Pilgrim (now a major motion picture!):

Diagram of relationships in the Scott Pilgrim comic books

Alison Bechdel, creator of Dykes to Watch Out For and the Bechdel Test for movies (Does the movie have two named women in it? Who talk to each other? About some topic other than a man?)

Excerpt from "Dykes to Watch Out For"

And one of my favourite comic artists, Kate Beaton, creator of Hark! A Vagrant!

Kate Beaton's Wolverine send-up

I’ve already got plans for today, but I’m going to try to catch some of it tomorrow.

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It’s Friday!

…and you know what that means:

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RIP MCA

Adam Nathaniel Yauch — whom you probably know better as MCA from the Beastie Boys — died earlier today. There’s no word yet on the cause of his death, but he’d been battling cancer since 2009, and the Beasties’ concert schedule has had to be rearranged over the past couple of years because of it.

Yauch joined his friend Michael “Mike D” Diamond’s punk band call the Young Aborigines in 1981, which then renamed itself to “The Beastie Boys”. The final member of the trio that we know and love as the Beasties, Adam “Ad Rock” Horovitz would join them in 1983, and their progression from punk to hip-hop began. The transformation was complete when their album Licensed to Ill (I wore out two vinyl copies of this album; I still have my CD) was released in 1986. By 2010, the Beasties had gone on to sell 40 million copies of their album worldwide and influence countless groups in a number of musical genres from hip-hop, punk, funk, jazz and alternative rock. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame earlier this year, but Yauch wasn’t able to attend because of his illness (the Beasties read a letter he’d written to the attendees). Fellow inductees the Red Hot Chili Peppers dedicated their induction performance to Yauch.

Under the pseudonym “Nathaniel Hörnblowér”, Yauch produced a number of Beastie Boys videos and went on to direct the 2006 Beastie Boys concert film Awesome; I Fuckin’ Shot That! and the 2008 basketball  documentary Gunnin’ for That Spot. He also co-founded the Milarepa Foundation (they’re behind the Tibetan Freedom Concert) and the New Yorkers Against Violence concert, whose proceeds when to victims of 9/11 who were unlikely to get help from any other organization.

According to Wikipedia, Yauch received the Charles Flint Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters from Bard College, the college he attended for two years, in 2011, “in recognition of a significant contribution to the American artistic or literary heritage.”

I think I’ll close with this bit from Paul Revere:

Now here’s a little story I’ve got to tell
About three bad brothers you know so well
It started way back in history
With Adrock, M.C.A., and me – Mike D.
Been had a little horsy named Paul Revere
Just me and my horsy and a quart of beer
Riding across the land, kicking up sand
Sheriff’s posse on my tail cause I’m in demand
One lonely Beastie I be
All by myself without nobody
The sun is beating down on my baseball hat
The air is gettin’ hot the beer is getting flat
Lookin’ for a girl I ran into a guy
His name is M.C.A., I said, “Howdy” he said, “Hi”

“Now my name is M.C.A. I’ve got a license to kill
I think you know what time it is it’s time to get ill
Now what do we have here an outlaw and his beer
I run this land, you understand I make myself clear.”
We stepped into the wind he had a gun, I had a grin
You think this story’s over but it’s ready to begin

RIP, MCA, and thanks for all the great music.