The World’s 2,453,346th Blog Post About Twitter

Posted in Internet with tags , , on April 27, 2009 by Janna

I’ve had a Twitter account for several months now. And I barely use it. In fact, I used the Twitter for Facebook app so that my Twitter updates and Facebook status are always the same thing. I’ve been a Facebook power user for years, and as of yet didn’t have a reason to put any additional effort into also keeping up a Twitter profile. The only person I knew who actively used it was my brother, and that was only because all of his friends and co-workers used it, and it became a common form of communication for all of them.

Well, today I caved. I downloaded a Twitter app for my desktop (I’m currently using Tweetdeck because it also sends me Facebook status updates, but the window has to be so large! anybody have other suggestions?). I browsed a couple of coworkers’ “following” lists and found more people I knew and suddenly I’ve got a decent number of people to keep up on and I don’t want to refresh a Firefox page all day now that there’s actually content for me to see. Still not on par with the massive Facebook newsfeed I’ve got to follow, but I can see it getting there someday.

But mostly I decided to finally commit to Twitter because it appears it’s going to be around for quite some time as an internet-use standard. As I use the desktop app I realize it’s become less like blogging and more like an instant messaging tool, except you’re broadcasting your messages to everyone. This feels similar to when everyone got on the AIM and/or MSN bandwagon, eight or nine years ago. Except that there is only one Twitter. I wonder when some crazy, renegade alternative micro-blog network will pop up and cause a battle a la AIM-MSN (though those battle lines were mostly geography-based) or Facebook-MySpace (which drew divides among education and age levels). What will separate Twitter users from the others, and what new must-have internet communication and networking tool will come along in a few years to replace them all?

Football Movie Madness #2: The Express

Posted in Football, Football Movie Madness, Movies with tags , , , on April 25, 2009 by Janna

Tonight’s entry in my quest to watch way too many football movies: The Express, yet another film based on a true story about football players overcoming racial barriers.

One of the first things I noticed were all the beautiful scenes shot on location at Syracuse University. It made me totally jealous; there aren’t any movies about Trojan Football! Why can’t somebody make a cinematic love letter to USC?? (oh, wait, that’s what Love and Basketball is for) But those scenes, as well as all the gameplay involving awesome old-fashioned football uniforms (Kansas in baby blue!), made me realize I have yet to experience East Coast football and really, really old sports programs. I think sometime in the relatively near future I’m gonna have to get myself to an Ivy League game or something else involving a rivalry or stadium nearly as old as the sport itself. Hopefully I’ll avoid the crazy, redneck, beer-throwing West Virginia fans portrayed in the movie, who reminded me a lot of… crazy, redneck, beer-throwing Notre Dame fans. Maybe I’ll watch Rudy next week…

It was in the scene right after that West Virginia game that the movie’s main character, Ernie Davis, was shown with a mysterious bloody nose, and then I suddenly remembered how this story ended in real life – Davis died of Leukemia just a year after graduating from Syracuse. But I was brought back to a much happier place shortly thereafter when the Orangemen were offered two different bowl games, and got to decide through (gasp!) a team vote. Oh, how I long for simpler times.

They of course chose to face off against #2-ranked Texas and their superstar player, supposedly the only other team in America that could bring down our heroes, who had been ranked at the top for the entire season.  And then they powered over those jerkoff Longhorns and won the game and the national title outright, and rode off into the sunset, as they rightly should have (what? I’m not projecting or anything).

Well, they did win, but not before enduring something that more resembled hockey, what with all the punches thrown and all. This was because of the three black guys playing for the Orangemen, which didn’t sit so well with all those white people from Texas. Of course the developing civil rights movement was a major theme in this, the movie about the first black man to win the Heisman trophy, but it was maybe even too much to handle, mostly due to Ernie’s totally blatant goal of being a great black athlete and inspiration to all – football’s Jackie Robinson. Not one of those modest, reluctant heroes, oh, no.

But, maybe he was just a man who knew his destiny all too well. He did win that Heisman trophy and get a ton of signing money, got an awesome Forrest Gump-style doctored photo shoot with JFK, and died young to boot – a Hollywood-perfect real-life hero. Come to think of it, why exactly did it take 45 years for this movie to be made?

Football Movie Madness #1: Remember the Titans

Posted in Football, Football Movie Madness, Movies with tags , , on April 20, 2009 by Janna

College Basketball is over. My season tickets are already purchased. This weekend’s NFL draft will just serve as a painful reminder that people like Mark Sanchez won’t be back for college football this fall.

Only 135 days left until kick-off.

To tide me over through this horrible time of year I call “Baseball Season”, I decided to take on a project I miserably failed to do last year: watch a crapload of football movies. Hopefully this will get me excited about next season, or gain a new perspective on and appreciation for sports cinema. Or just provide additional motivation to get more than one movie a month from Netflix.

So, I started with a list. Browsed some websites, perused Netflix’s suggested movies, etc., and came up with 25 movies to start with (and I am very open to suggestions for movies to watch!). That’s gonna be one or two movies a week until I can’t close my eyes without thinking of underdog stories, dramatically-timed injuries, heartwarming endings, and bone-crushing simulated football action scenes. I’m gonna hope that by the end I can’t recognize every stadium ever used and re-used as a film location, but there is a distinct possibility I will have gained that ability.

First up, in no particular order, was Remember the Titans, a classic by which many more recent football movies are judged, and which I’ve seen many times but not very recently. Filmed in Georgia, apparently, and starring lots of people I didn’t even remember were in it – Ethan Suplee, a very tiny Hayden Panettiere, and Donald Faison as the same character he plays in everything he’s ever done.

It was a good movie overall. It’s one of those films that’s great the first time you see it, but it gets so over-hyped and over-played that it means nothing to you for a long time, until you end up like me and go without seeing it for something like six years, and then it’s fresh and entertaining again. At least up until near the end, when I remembered that this was one of those team-captain-gets-permanently-injured movies, and it felt unoriginal and unnecessary, even though it was based on a true story. Then about ten minutes later I realized it only seemed that way because I’m pretty sure this movie started that whole trend.

But all-in-all, a good football movie; it’s easy to see why this is one of the “definitive” films of the genre. It’s got it all – a period soundtrack, drama within the team, evil-doers with really bad sportsmanship, etc. It was a good one to start off my football-movie-watching journey.

Stay tuned as I tackle (ha!) more films, and please send me any movie suggestions you think I should include in my list!

I Apparently Moved to the Right Neighborhood

Posted in Cell Phone Photography, LA Fun with tags , , , on March 22, 2009 by Janna

I ventured out yesterday afternoon, armed with my cell phone camera, to hit up the post office and take some pictures of a couple sights I’d unexpectedly caught while on the bus. First, the result of some nerdy little local vandals:

ray-ct

Second was a local liquor store on Colorado Blvd. that always had USC signs above the door and the like, but apparently upped the degree to wish the owners wanted to express their allegiance. This wall used to be pretty blank but a few weeks ago this big mural popped up out of nowhere:

usc-mural-cropped

Still no word on why they’ve started adding a powder blue background to it.

My favorite part, though, is what I can only assume is Trojans-only parking near the door:

trojans-parking-only

How I Became a Real Basketball Fan In Just 48 Hours

Posted in Sports with tags , , on March 21, 2009 by Janna

Well, it seems to be one of those times of year where my generic, topic-free blog turns into a little sports blog again. For not being much of a basketball fan, I’ve sure been obsessed with it over the last couple of days. Sure, a good bit of that probably stems from football withdrawal or just being overly competitive with my prediction bracket against all my friends (it’s never about money, always bragging rights), but after my Deadspin adventure Thursday night, I was really thrown into the thick of it.

I researched the teams, got myself caught up on all the stuff I missed not watching enough basketball over the past few months, and then I really really watched the game. I found myself (gasp!) enjoying watching basketball, with the same level of craziness I do watching football. I’d watch two games at once thanks to CBS’s streaming video, I’d plan my meals around tip-off times, and once it was all done, I virtually watched it all over again on SportsCenter for three hours at the end of the day.

I’ve been a bandwagon basketball fan come tournament time before, but this year it’s a totally different story. This year, I feel really determined to watch more basketball next year, all season long. I’m gonna pay attention to all the teams, become a little bit of an expert, just like I do for football. I’m gonna add all those little mid-major “basketball schools” to my repertoire of colleges about which I know all sorts of mundane facts, mostly involving the history of their mascots. So maybe next year I’ll have a half-decent prediction bracket that’s not just based on geography- and football-related biases. And I’ll beat significantly more of my friends, not just Barack Obama.

Janna’s Liveblog Adventure – Post-Mortem

Posted in Internet, Shameless Plugs, Sports with tags , , , , on March 20, 2009 by Janna

Woooooooooooo!! I survived! And I drank a lot of Jones Soda in the process, so I’m a little hyper.

Liveblogging was quite the adventure. First, I went out for St. Patrick’s Tuesday evening so didn’t get the email telling me I was doing the Deadspin liveblog until something like nine hours later, so I went into a panic and quickly got some work stuff rearranged and confirmed my spot in the “liveblog army” (32 NCAA Tournament first-round games, 32 different livebloggers). Then stayed up way too late Wednesday night poring over Barack Obama’s prediction bracket, trying to learn obscure facts about UCLA and Virginia Commonwealth University, and digging up photos of Jorma Taccone (so, no different than any regular night, right?). If you read the Deadspin post, that makes a little bit of sense.

Today, I woke up late, barely managed to get to work on time, got berated by a very angry customer (whatever, I survived), and talked a friend into driving me home so I could be sure to get there in time for tip-off. I was given magical privileges to log into the Gawker blog editing system, which made me feel kinda special. I don’t know if I had the ability to poke around and edit other people’s posts, I quickly decided against tempting fate and trying that out, for fear of permanent banishment and the end of my blogging life as I knew it (I can still log in! I wonder how long that’ll last).

I was given some quick instructions, which included “just keep typing” and that I might want to turn off comments to make things easier. I had the option of either using Cover It Live, a liveblogging system, or manually updating posts as I went along. I actually really wanted the challenge of reading comments and even (gasp!) interacting with commenters, so I went the old fashioned way of manually updating posts. This worked out fine, except there were moments when I lost way too much time making the timestamps show up in bold when I just wanted my posts to show up right away. Basketball is a really fast-paced sport, so if I didn’t get a comment posted quickly enough, it might not be relevant 30 seconds later.

I’m a much, much bigger football fan than basketball fan, so I was worried how I would fare in that regard (hence way too much research). I could’ve done worse, I guess. But, I played to my strengths: a quick pace, attempting to be funny, and paying too much attention to things like the pep band and mascots. I didn’t even look at any of the day’s other liveblogs. For one, I didn’t have time, and I knew I wouldn’t need much in the way of inspiration. Through my experience getting silly comments posted on Deadspin’s “Hugh Johnson Project” and reading the blog daily, I knew my audience. And through my experience trading snarky barbs with friends over IM during other sporting events or episodes of 90210, I basically had the quick, funny comments thing down. Mostly I just worried that I would cave and have total writer’s block once the whole thing started.

Well, somehow, it worked! Luckily nothing huge or relevant had gone down during the day, so the blog intro I wrote 24 hours prior (in case I didn’t have any time before the game started) worked fine. However, the game started 15 minutes late, and I found myself out of half my pre-written material before the game even started, of course. But just when I was starting to get worried, a really awesome basketball game happened! The game literally went down to the final seconds, so I never ran out of things to write about. The amazing amount of caffeine in my system no doubt contributed to my ability to pay attention to a game on TV, keep up on the reader comments as they came in, look up other scores and random junk on the internet, and somehow in between it all, keep writing blog entries.

I have to say, I rather impressed myself. I got some good reviews, entertained myself, and got some great experience and exposure for my li’l blog here. Check out this lovely chart detailing site visits over the past several weeks:

picture-4

Finally, it should be noted, that I was the only female liveblogger of the whole event. HA!

March Liveblog Madness! – Updated

Posted in Internet, Shameless Plugs, Sports with tags , , , on March 19, 2009 by Janna

Hey SpaceCowgirl.net readers (that’s right, all three of you)!

Please do check out my liveblog of tonight’s NCAA Tournament Opening Round game between UCLA and VCU tonight a little before 7 p.m. Pacific Time. It’ll be on the always fun and wholesome Deadspin.com.

Link to the liveblog: http://deadspin.com/5175636/ncaa-tournament-live-blog-6-ucla-vs-11-virginia-commonwealth

Yup.

Posted in Internet with tags on March 2, 2009 by Janna

So I was browsing WebMD today (I gave myself a pretty nasty curling iron burn, which I’m currently treating with cocoa butter lotion + vitamin E). I discovered on the left side of the page a little graphic linking me to the “Top 12 Health Topics” in a few categories. They were interesting.

Top 12 Topics for “Men”:

  1. Frequent Masturbation
  2. New Prostate Test
  3. Prostate Cancer Drug
  4. Getting “Wasted”
  5. Pancreatic Cancer
  6. Penis Facts
  7. Sex Mistakes
  8. Penis Enlargement
  9. Ejaculation Problems
  10. Most Common STDs
  11. Enlarged Prostate
  12. Low Testosterone

Top 12 Topics for “Women”:

  1. Alcohol Cancer Risk
  2. Best Diet?
  3. Cold vs. Flu
  4. Preventing Cancer
  5. Why Skip Sex
  6. Bladder Problems
  7. Universal Flu Drug
  8. Simply Potatoes Recall
  9. Why Hair Goes Gray
  10. Vitamin D for Colds
  11. Coffee Cuts Stroke
  12. Octuplets Controversy

The listing for “Children” was, sadly, completely boring.