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April 19, 2004
Bean Town
Watching the Boston Marathon right now and the announcers keep talking about how nasty hot it is in Bean Town today, blah blah blah. Half the people running are from Kenya. Does anyone else appreciate the irony of this? Posted by Amanda at 02:10 PM
April 17, 2004
What's Spinning
My friend Jason loaned me a copy of Erin McKeown's Distillation. Now I'm addicted, can't stop listening. Just a little different, it's folky and fabulous. I also just got a copy of Ben Fold's Sunny/16. And I like it, but it just doesn't hook me. Maybe later it'll strike me as a "soak it in/savor it slowly" kinda album. Posted by Amanda at 02:24 PM
Damn SPAM!!!
I hate spam. Not only has it basically taken over my Yahoo account, I think something has now attached itself to my weblog. Grrr. . . Posted by Amanda at 02:16 PM
April 15, 2004
untitled
like perfect words broken crayons filled with forgotten bits Posted by Amanda at 06:36 PM
lost
fingerprints on a windowpane a little girl whose childhood Posted by Amanda at 06:27 PM
April 13, 2004
Lenny Update
With much sadness I report that Lenny's new video has been rated 'X' and MTV refuses to air it. An edited version may come out later, but who knows when. bummer.
Posted by Amanda at 02:36 PM
Latest Ear Feast
I'm currently addicted to the new Godsmack album, Other Side. I'm not usually one for heavy metal, but they cut an acoustic album that's jagged and edgy like their other stuff. For some reason it just fits life right now. Posted by Amanda at 02:32 PM
Operations Exchange
"Do you care?" says Stuart. "Naw," replies Gabe, "We don't ask why questions. We're just here to learn how." Posted by Amanda at 02:25 PM
April 03, 2004
I Don't Have Enough Words
I don't have enough words to describe how many completely ridiculous/ironic things I've read about last week's mayhem at the Dallas Zoo. I've posted my favorite excerpts on the incident below. They were pulled from a newspaper in Toronto, Canada and one in Australia. Enjoy. *** A 300 pound gorilla escaped from its cage at a Dallas Zoo and savagely attacked three people including a three-year-old boy. The 13-year old gorilla, called Jabari, was shot dead by police marksmen. *** The 3-year-old boy suffered a series of bites and a collapsed lung in the attack. "One of the first things he said was, 'A gorilla tried to eat my head,'" said the boy's father. *** His mother said, "It just came out of nowhere." Witnesses reported some visitors had been tormenting Jabari before he escaped his 4000sq m enclosure. Cheryl R, 39, said a zoo worker was with her in the aviary exhibit area when the gorilla approached the group. She said the worker fled without trying to help her family. "I started throwing the kids over the fence where the birds were," Reichert said. Her neighbour's girl, Destiny Diaz, 8, was trapped when her shoe caught in the fence. She freed herself just as the animal approached. The gorilla chased Ms Reichert and four children down a stairwell. She said she pushed the children out the door at the bottom of the stairs and tried to shut it behind her, but the gorilla overpowered her. The gorilla pushed the door so hard it knocked her against the wall. "He tossed me around like a rag doll," she said. "I knew they were incredibly powerful. All I could think about was those kids getting out of there." She said the children escaped while she tried to pacify the gorilla. "We watch a lot of Discovery Channel," Ms Reichert said. "I didn't look him in the eye. I didn't fight back. I just yelled for help." *** "We don't know why they (police) didn't use a tranquilizer to take him down. It's definitely a real shame that they didn't," said Robin H, director of site services for the Toronto Zoo [where Jabari was born and lived until he was sent to Dallas at the age of 3]. "He really was a very sweet and non-aggressive gorilla." Officials said that, once outside the enclosure, Jabari roared at the crowd of children who had gathered to get a look at the animal, a 300-pound western lowland silverback gorilla. *** "He was basically a teenager. Gorillas become reproductive at around age 13, so displays from other gorillas or humans would have got him worked up," Ken explained. "His hormones were just as active as any teenager." Ken said Jabari was kept in a secure enclosure with surrounding walls up to almost 5 metres high. Kaemmerer said zoo officials and local police frequently help each other with training programs. Police get educated on proper procedures dealing with wild animals, and the zoo learns how to properly use firearms. *** In September, 1990, Markham resident Ryan Kellar, then 7, won first prize in a contest to name the then baby gorilla. He said he chose Jabari because it incorporated the letter "J" in homage to the animal's mother, Josephine, and the rest just "had a nice sound." Posted by Amanda at 12:11 PM
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