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Misson

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Posts posted by Misson

  1. I recommend checking in with a local marine shop. When I was building the velociraptor prop (http://www.markck.com/images/props/PROPS_raptor.htm), I decided to make him fiberglass so he could remain outside (you have you lawn statuary, I have mine). The local marine ship knew all about fiberglass repair, sold me everything I needed and were very helpful, giving me loads of advice. I'm sure they'd be even better suited to advising you on boat repair.

  2. I got The Winston Effect: The Art & History of Stan Winston Studio last week and set everything else aside to delve into this one. Excellent! It's everything the POTC:AWE Behind the Scenes" book should have been. No gushing prose, but the good/bad/ugly of Winston's career with an explanation of the lessons he's learned along the way. Loads of pics of their work, behind the scenes photos and great shots of his make-up, animatronics and puppetry work. Good stuff.

  3. Phonetic symbols are still limited to the language in which we're speaking, so I don't think they'd help much. Besides the phonetics would change with the dialect, wouldn't it?

    Say, who the heck decided to spell phonetics that way? I mean, really!

  4. I received yet another unsolicited positive review of this movie. This one seemed to revolve mostly around the young actress lead. Something Fox. (Michael J. Fox's middle initial is actually 'A.' but he changed it because he didn't want teen magazines going on and on about Michael "a fox!" (You must be old enough to remember Family Ties in prime time to even grasp the idea that Michael J. Fox would be considered a fox.) Poor actress in Transformers...or maybe that's what she wants.

  5. recherché (adj.)

    1. Uncommon; rare.

    2. Exquisite; choice.

    3. Overrefined; forced.

    4. Pretentious; overblown

    Misson's persistence in switching user IDs to maintain Dread Pirate status is quite recherché. (You decide which meaning is implied.)

  6. I found this poll running on my mail site (of all places) and thought I'd throw it up here, apropos of nothing. Note: I am showing the poll exactly as I found it - pirates was not included. (So I am not including it either - otherwise I know how it'd come out... :lol: )

  7. I know something remarkably like Old English. Since I doubt the spoken language was ever formally recorded during its actual lifetime and the written language varied from the spoken (as it frequently does today), I can claim I wrote in the spoken version. :huh:

    Actually, when you decide to write in any dialect, you have a decision to make. You can write it so that it is as true to the actual annunciation of the words as possible, thus being absolutely accurate. Or you can write it in such a way that people can actually read and understand it, yet still manage to get the general flavor of the thing. Correct or comprehensible? Your choice. (The same argument could be made for re-enacting, if you think about it some.)

    I was writing a character who was Scottish in a fiction thread over at TheForce.net and I got so into making it correct that I couldn't figure out just what the heck I had said a week ago when I reviewed it. :huh: (I started keeping a dictionary for the character when it occurred to me that if I couldn't figure out out after I had written, most everyone else had given up long ago.)

    You know, I think I am still a mod over at the other pirate site. Last time I checked I was. Amazing...

  8. Toys R Us in my area has a cool PotC alarm clock, TV, DVD player and the remote looks like the compass, The chest of Davy Jones boombox, and a portable/personal DVD player that looks like the compass.  So love working at Toys R Us...I get to play with all the cool toys...

    I just stumbled across this stuff yesterday. Where was it when I was assembling my pirate-themed living room?

    The design is pretty neat on a lot of this stuff and isn't totally character-dependent. I found this site with a nice assortment of stuff, although I am not familiar with the site and don't necessarily recommend it or anything like that. It's just got a nice summary page of all this stuff. (It might even be an actual Disney site for all I know.)

    Hey, for those of you who are interested in getting this stuff, I received an email that says the Disney site is having a pretty neat promotion. 10% off purchases up to $75, 20% off purchases over $75 and 25% off purchases over $100 for this weekend only. From the email:

    Here's how to redeem your 10%, 20% or 25% Off purchase promotion:

      1. Place one or more eligible items in your Shopping Cart.

      2. Type the Promotion Code SUMMER into the Special Offers and Discounts field, then click Submit.

      3. The Promotion will automatically be applied, if eligible.

      4. Continue Shopping or Begin Checkout.

    10%, 20% or 25% Off Promotion Restrictions: * Offer expires 11:59 pm PT, July 8, 2007. Cannot be combined with other offers. Qualifying purchase based on pre-tax, post-discount amount and excludes Shipping & Handling charges, gift cards, animation art, Armani, Walt Disney Classics Collection, Disney electronics, DVDs, videos, CDs and cassettes, video games, CD-ROMs, You-Design-It merchandise, Wilsons Leather, Disney Couture and Nursery merchandise, books, sing-alongs, read-alongs, pre-sales, gift wrap and gift boxes and items not in stock. No adjustments to prior purchases. If any returns or exchanges cause the qualifying purchase to fall below the applicable purchase amount, we reserve the right to charge your credit card for the redeemed discount. Offer valid only on orders placed online at DisneyShopping.com and DisneyOutlet.com. Not valid on phone orders or purchases from Disney Store outlet or retail locations. Promotion Code may not be redeemed for cash. Promotion Code may not be sold, altered, duplicated or copied and will not be replaced if lost, stolen or corrupted. Use of Promotion Code is acceptance of its terms. Disney Shopping, Inc. reserves the right to cancel or modify this offer at any time. Void where prohibited.

    Looks like the electronics aren't included... :huh: Oh, well. (Geez, I sound like ad copy. :huh: )

  9. Oh, now this one is clever! I might even have clicked on it had they not made a couple of key mistakes I know to watch out for.

    From: "vintagepostcards" <bhsjv@peoplepc.com>

    Subject: You've received a postcard from a Family member!

    Date: Fri, 6 Jul 2007 00:15:07 -0700

    Hi. Family member has sent you a postcard.

    See your card as often as you wish during the next 15 days.

    SEEING YOUR CARD

    If your email software creates links to Web pages, click on your

    card's direct www address below while you are connected to the

    Internet:

    http://125... (a whole bunch of numbers I will not glorify by reposting them) ...95523

    Or copy and paste it into your browser's "Location" box (where

    Internet addresses go).

    PRIVACY

    vintagepostcards honors your privacy. Our home page and Card Pick

    Up have links to our Privacy Policy.

    TERMS OF USE

    By accessing your card you agree we have no liability. If you don't

    know the person sending the card or don't wish to see the card,

    please disregard this Announcement.

    We hope you enjoy your awesome card.

    Wishing you the best,

    Administrator

    The first thing I saw that raised my hackles was "Family member has sent you a postcard." Bad grammer. Often a sign of SPAM.

    Second was the term "Family member" itself. I have learned never to trust something that isn't addressed to you by name and, in this case, from an individual by name.

    The third was that the email address is a peoplepc.com addy. Most firms doing stuff like this would have xxxx@vintagecards.com or some such.

    The fourth was that the addres was a long (very long) string of numbers with no short cut URL name. Taken alone, that's not quite enough to completely dismiss it, but it's suspicious. I would have expected www.vintagecardios.com/card=xxyyzz or some such.

    Still...pretty clever. High marks to them for this one.

    "Okay, alright, important safety tip, thanks Egon."

  10. Wow! Now this is cool..

    Battle re-enactments as far back as the 16th century? Fascinating..

    "Mock skirmishes and military displays staged before audiences seem to have been quite popular in the C17th. On one such occasion in 1635 the London Trained Bands successfully demonstrated their prowess in front of the King, but things went horribly wrong when mingling with the public afterwards. Someone lit up a pipe near the gunpowder store and a stray spark caused an explosion that left a dozen dead and over fifty injured! This obviously didn't put anyone off though as in 1638 a stylised battle between Christians and Moors, entitled Mars hys triumph, was staged in London. Later, in 1645, Parliamentarian troops chose Blackheath on which to restage one of their recent victories, although still actively at war with surviving Royalist forces.

    "Fetes, pageants and entertainments (often with a historical theme) were staged in villages and great country houses throughout Britain in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. An early example took place in 1821, when the Duke of Buckingham staged mock Napoleonic naval battles on his lake at Wotton House for the amusement of family and friends, using boats and firing real cannon balls! These are occasionally dug up on the bank of the lake even today. The Duke of Newcastle later did much the same at Clumber Park, using a third scale frigate (eventually sunk by accident by boisterous children!). Victorian aristocrats would sometimes hold parties and dress up in costume and antique armour - for example, in 1840 Lord Glasgow organised a full medieval style joust at Kelburn Castle in Scotland."

    (From: http://www.eventplan.co.uk/history_of_reenactment.htm )

  11. That boy will have serious psychological repercussions from this..."And then...my mom posted photos of me naked in a pirate hat on the internet!" :lol:

    I just came across this one. It's one of my favorites:

    Baby_Mark_small.jpg

  12. That thought came up followed by which came first, the hollywood pirate re-enactor or the historical pirate re-enactor?

    Well, Hollywood started featuring pirates in movies as early as 1908. I suspect if you'd presented the modern idea of re-enacting to someone from that time period they would look at you sort of funny. Then again, young boys have been "playing" at re-enacting what their fathers and heroes did since time began. The stir that books like A General History of the Most Notorious Pyrates created in the early 18th century show that there was a lot of interest in the subject and it certainly danced in the imagination of many people. Casting about the 'net suggests that there is evidence of battle re-enactments as far back as the 16th century. Perhaps you should do a thesis on it.

    As for enacting fictional archaeological adventures...while it sounds sort of cool, it also sounds expensive. And there's the bother of finding all those caves and tombs and stuff to raid. RPGs may be a better route. (I once proposed building a bunch of movable walls and props to enact AD&D adventures. Then the pocketbook issue arose. So I just build haunted house rooms instead - similar but different.)

  13. Ok, here is a link to pirates for ya'.

    (From the Detroit Free Press review by Terry Lawson)

    "While it may not have the panache of the original "Pirates of the Caribbean," "Transformers" is just as much of an unexpected summer surprise. Not only is it full of way-cool machinery, epic robot fights and mind-dazzling effects, it also has more than its quotient of actual wit and fun."

    I notice he doesn't mention POTC 2 or 3. :lol: He says further on...

    "So here it is: Cool cars, giant robots from outer space, computer game mayhem and hot chicks -- everything 12-year-old-boys love in one movie. But it's the glee with which Bay and his army of technicians celebrate all of the above that transforms "Transformers" into something beyond an advertisement for the Hasbro toys on which the film was based."

    While Michael Bay can do some interesting stuff with action movies, I dunno. It sounds too much like a kid's movie to me. I'd rather see Ratatouille if I were going to shell out my hard-earned sou. Pixar trumps Bay in my book. (Or, better yet, save the sou and wait for both of them to come out on DVD and rent 'em from NetFlix.)

  14. Hey Honour, have you ever read the Shell Scott novels by Richard S. Prather? I think they're hilarious. Shell Scott is a would-be hard-boiled detective who gets into all kinds of bizarre situations. The books are goofy as all get out. With your grounding in noir detective novels, you'd probably find the humor all the more fun. Prather's Gat Heat is one of my favorite books in the series.

  15. Another [user ID I created] was a little kid named Timmy Spud who spoke entirely in irritating run-on sentences. (I think I saved some of his text to a file, but it's not on my laptop. If I find it on my desktop, I will post a sample.)

    I thought so. Here is a sample of the text. Note that I was trying to post as a 6 or 7 year old kid might - thus the lack of correct capitalization and punctuation. This is a much later post than when I first created this user ID. In the beginning of his forum life, I intentionally misspelled large and commonly misspelled words to make it more realistic. Since I posted this particular bit on a private board, essentially for the enjoyment of one or two people, I didn't do as much of that to make it more readable. ( :lol: This really is a bit more readable! Honest!) BTW, this is circa 2000 - thus the old toy references. (I apologize in advance to those of you who actually read this. lol: ;) )

    i went to kb with my friend eva and evas mom went and i only had five dollars to spend that was from my allowance and i earned it last week although i didnt clean my room very well because of all the toys on the floor but my mom gave me it anyway and said i better do a good job next time or i wouldnt get it but she always gives it to me and i was in kb and they had a lot of star wars stuff but mitch was looking at the dragon ball stuff and the pokemon but i only had five dollars so i was going to buy a r2 because i dont have one and i like r2 but obi is better because he beats maul and r2 saved the ship but it wasnt as interesting as obi and maul and the other guy that got killed and that was bad but obi got him back and was a hero and i wish i had a saber but not the fake one because i want to be able to fight the bad guys and use the force but i was looking at pokemon with mitch and they have james and ash and james is funny but i dont like jesse as much because she is mean and meowth if cool but so is obi and i was trying to decide to get an r2 or a james but i would have to borrow money for james at kb so i asked mitch and he wouldnt give me any so i reminded him that i new that he like jenny and i would tell eva except i cant talk to eva because i got in trouble but mitch didnt know and he said ok and i got james but i will get r2 next week when i go with my mom to toys r us and i know theres a bunch of them to choose from but one has a funny leg and the other doesnt but now james can fight obi and thats cool ok
  16. I may actually start Master and Commander soon. It's been sitting on my bookshelf for several years... (I really like the character of Dr. Maturin in the movie and am hoping for more of same in the books. I am sort of patterning my character after parts of him - with a pirate twist. With perhaps a bit of Captain Misson's ol' ex-priest pal Caraccioli thrown in for good measure.)

    You know, I have picked up and set down Master and Commander twice since posting that. I'm probably a third of the way through it. It's one of those books that's rich in detail - meaning it also moves quite slowly. It reminds me a bit of Ian Fleming's style of writing. There's good stuff in there, but it's buried under an absolute pile of old fashioned reporting-style text. If you glory in details, this is a book for you.

  17. :huh:

    True confessions time.

    Back when I first got on the net, I joined a Star Wars AF collecting site that was like the Old West. The members attacked each other individually, in groups, in sub-groups and what have you. Sometimes it was quite vicious. God forbid you should have an opinion that someone didn't agree with! It would regularly happen that one faction would get so pissed of at another faction that they would leave the forum and start a new forum! (Over action figures. :huh: ) There was one in-absentia administrator who showed up every few weeks or so and never, ever did much more than issue small warnings. It was a riotous place to start my forum career (I want to say this was in 1996 or '97...the site had no graphics when I started. They took way too long to load back then.)

    Anyhow, to protect myself, I created three user IDs: MarkCK, Barstool and something else that I don't recall. The third one didn't last long. I went wayyyy out of my way to make them unique in opinion and attitude, but I maneuvered them around the forum like a chessmaster to very, very subtly protect each other (if you're not subtle and don't limit your interaction between alternate IDs, you greatly increase the risk of being discovered). This proved to be so much fun that I started creating really bizarre user IDs with personality tics that would annoy the most stalwart. One spoke entirely in Old English. (No, I don't know why I did that. It irritated the shite out of the other posters, though.) Another was a little kid named Timmy Spud who spoke entirely in irritating run-on sentences. (I think I saved some of his text to a file, but it's not on my laptop. If I find it on my desktop, I will post a sample.)

    I eventually left that forum because it was so unruly and argumentative that the focus was often lost. I joined TheForce.net where they had regular administrators. (And where I created several other user IDs. My favorite was one named "stupid.") I hung around a bit at the old, unruly site because I had some friends there. As it happened, a huge fight erupted between some of my friends and another sect of users a few months after I left and they formed a secret forum. They eventually invited me to join and when I revealed that I had had (I think it was seven) user IDs they were astounded. I had done such a good job differentiating them that even my friends didn't realize I had separate IDs. The moderator of the secret forum so liked Timmy Spud that he insisted I post as him occasionally.

    I sort of grew out of it as I began to realize that reasonably good moderation and administration existed outside my first unruly experience. Here I only have these three user IDs and they all appear as the same person - me. They all have the same look and feel. (Actually, jess, you may even recall Caraccioli from the other pirate board. You may also recall why I created him...Foxe spotted it immediately.)

    So, in answer to your question: I don't know how many people I have in my head. I create new ones when the need arises. (Which it hasn't lately. I am creating ideas for my house instead.) I do have this book I am writing (well, 'not writing' would be more accurate just now) and it's interesting how you have to shift your perspective to give the various characters depth. In fact, when I fail to do that, they all sound like weak carbon copies of each other.

  18. Misson, or Captain Misson, is a fictional pirate from the pages of Captain Charles Johnson's A General History of the Pyrates. From Wiki:

    Misson was French, born in Provence, and it was while in Rome on leave from the French warship Victoire that he lost his faith, disgusted by the decadence of the Papal Court. In Rome he ran into Caraccioli - a "lewd Priest" who over the course of long voyages with little to do but talk, gradually converted Misson and a sizeable portion of the rest of the crew to his brand of atheistic communism:

        …he fell upon Government, and shew'd, that every Man was born free, and had as much Right to what would support him, as to the Air he respired... that the vast Difference betwixt Man and Man, the one wallowing in Luxury, and the other in the most pinching Necessity, was owing only to Avarice and Ambition on the one Hand, and a pusilanimous Subjection on the other.

    Embarking on a career of piracy, the 200 strong crew of the Victoire called upon Misson to be their captain. They collectivised the wealth of the ship, deciding "all should be in common." All decisions were to be put to "the Vote of the whole Company." Thus they set out on their new "Life of Liberty." Off the west coast of Africa they captured a Dutch slave ship. The slaves were freed and brought aboard the Victoire, Misson declaring that "the Trading for those of our own Species, cou'd never be agreeable to the Eyes of divine Justice: That no Man had Power of Liberty of another" and that "he had not exempted his Neck from the galling Yoak of Slavery, and asserted his own Liberty, to enslave others." At every engagement they added to their numbers with new French, English and Dutch recruits and freed African slaves.

    While cruising round the coast of Madagascar, Misson found a perfect bay in an area with fertile soil, fresh water and friendly natives. Here the pirates built Libertalia, renouncing their titles of English, French, Dutch or African and calling themselves Liberi. They created their own language, a polyglot mixture of African languages, combined with French, English, Dutch, Portuguese and native Madagascan. Shortly after the beginning of building work on the colony of Libertalia, the Victoire ran into the pirate Thomas Tew, who decided to accompany them back to Libertalia. Such a colony was no new idea to Tew; he had lost his quartermaster and 23 of his crew when they had left to form a settlement further up the Madagascan coast. The Liberi - "Enemies to Slavery," aimed to boost their numbers by capturing another slave ship. Off the coast of Angola, Tew's crew took an English slave ship with 240 men, women and children below decks. The African members of the pirate crew discovered many friends and relatives among the enslaved and struck off their fetters and handcuffs, regaling them with the glories of their new life of liberty.

    The pirates settled down to become farmers, holding the land in common - "no Hedge bounded any particular Man's Property." Prizes and money taken at sea were "carry'd into the common Treasury, Money being of no Use where every Thing was in common."

    So now you've all had your history lesson for the day. You can read the whole account here. The introduction by Maximillian Novak is quite interesting IMO.

  19. You've been mis-informed if you think you'll be surfing G-land in your lifetime.

    From https://pyracy.com/forums/index.php?showtop...pic=10404&st=0:

    "Let me get back to the rising sea level itself. We start with activist-inspired 20 foot rises in sea level. That is a wild prediction that has had to be tempered quite a bit since GW became more mainstream. (Although, as Mr. Inconvenient attests, still manages to rear its ugly head now and again.) By the 1980s, it had gone down to three feet. One group of GW scientists currently predicts the sea rise by 7 inches to 23 inches in the next 100 years. Quite a dramatic difference, eh?"

    (That last prediction is the current most agreed upon figure and it's based on current changes which are wildly unpredictable as the models that were used to generate these figures admit.)

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