http://www.paid-to-promote.net/?r=fahrizal Tattoo Q2: March 2010

April Fool's Day on the Web

As always, here's the running tally of April Fools Day things across the net.

I'll just leave this here


[source w/ 30 more, ads NSFW]

Whaleless in Berlin



To give you a little taste of the sort of artwork that will be featuring in the up-coming KETOS 2.1 show at the Civic Aquarium in Milan here is a video clip of an earlier Whaleless show, from when it travelled to Strychnin's Berlin gallery. My sculpture is the wall mounted piece in the glass fronted coffin that appears early on in the video. Although now the number of contributing artist has grown so I imagine that the latest version of the exhibition will be a lot bigger.

Plague Finger Puppets for Passover

As featured on yesterday's Colbert Report, you can buy these finger puppets at Bed, Bath, and Beyond that feature the 10 plagues that the Egyptians were visited with. Check out the puppets for boils, death-of-every-firstborn-child, and darkness. And that's not the plague of clowns, that's the plague of hail and fire.

Nothing says "There will be loud wailing throughout Egypt—worse than there has ever been or ever will be again" quite like finger puppets!

Whaleless in Milan



My Poorly Remembered Whale sculpture is continuing on its tour of Europe and will be shown in the upcoming Ketos 2.1 show as the Whaleless exhibition opens at its latest venue, the Civic Aquarium in Milan, Italy. The show opens on the 14th April, the same day as Milan Design Week, and closes on the 16th May. This will be the largest Whaleless show so far, with over 60 contributing artists.

Click here to see the wide range of artwork being shown, and to find links to more work by each of the exhibiting
Whaleless artists
.

If your Italian is up to much, you can check out details of the event on the
Milan Civic Aquarium
’s website (and maybe you can tell me what it says)

Whaleless Facebook Group

Flickr Seasonal Wheel


It looks like a glass bowl that would be sold at the art fair, but this image is a graphical representation of the frequency of different colors on flickr as seasons go by. Not surprisingly, that big chunk of white at the bottom is winter. More info on the [source page]

White Mischief - Tonight


I'm so excited about tonight's Great Exhibition event at Scala. The line-up looks amazing and it's just going to be the perfect excuse to get dressed up and have some fun. I'll be exhibiting my City sculpture and four of the carnival/sea side style cut-outs that myself and the photographer, Phil Sofer, previously made for one of the Victoria and Albert Museum's Friday Late Views. I'm also looking forward to finally meeting up with some of the people behind the event. Even though we've only conversed over the phone so far, I can tell that these people so love what they do.

WHITE MISCHIEF “The Great Exhibition” TOUGH LOVE PROUDLY PRESENT
A Birthday Extravaganza Celebrating Three Years of Neo-Victorian Entertaiments
WHITE MISCHIEF: “The Great Exhibition”
Saturday 27th March, Two Thousand and Ten, from 9pm until 4am, Scala, King’s Cross, London.
TICKETS: £25 on the door.

Welcome to the futuuurreeee

Ok, so apparently Chase has been rolling this out since 2007 [I saw one in Chicago this year], but we just got a new "Deposit Friendly ATM". And it's amazing. So let's say that you have to deposit a check. No deposit slip needed: you just put a stack of up to 30 checks into the machine and it reads the amount on each check.
Have cash to deposit? Just put up to 50 bills in a big humongous stack! Done! Our works great: I'm pretty impressed.

Did you know McDonalds once had McSpaghetti?

But that's not all...[more]

RBS Workshops







This week I’ve had loads of fun taking part in a couple of the schools workshops that the Royal British Society of Sculptors have been running in conjunction with their Found exhibition, currently showing at their Brompton Road gallery in South Kensington, London. As one of the exhibiting artists I was invited to come along and talk to the kids about my work and help out with the workshops. Although the sessions were each only about an hour long it was incredible what they managed to achieve. I never cease to be amazed by the creativity and sheer weirdness of children’s imaginations.

I got great photos of some of the kids and their amazing creations (which were even more amazing considering the time limits that they had to work under). However, because of the current climate and concerns over images of children appearing on the internet (unless everyone was just in the Witness Protection Program) I unfortunately had to drastically crop or omit some of the best images.

Anyway – this evening, from 6:30 onwards, I (along with two other sculptors, Susan Forsyth and Linda Johns) will be giving short talks about our work at the gallery and everyone is welcome to come along. But don’t worry, each talk will only be 15 minutes long so there will be plenty of time mingle and knock to back a few glasses of wine.

Me Then / Me Now

I found about this Young Me / Now Me site from Buzzfeed and it would seem that the original source site is here. Haven't looked though enough to 100% deem it safe for work, but seems to be so far. Go and browse through it. It's pretty fun.


This happens pretty frequently.

Me: Normally this apartment would rent for $900 per month, but our current special would bring it down to $750 per month if you were--"

Them: What do you include?

Me: We pay heat and water so you would only have to pay electricity.

Them: So you don't have any move in specials you can offer me?

Idioms

Whenever I show an international visitor around, I try to shy away from phrases like, well, "to shy away from" since I realize that they're not the most common phrases to learn when picking up a language. I also try to avoid saying things like "picking up" when I could say "learning" and try to avoid--for simplicity's sake--interrupting my sentences with extra clauses or asides.

But most of all, I try to avoid idioms. I liked today's Left Handed Toon about "Kick the Bucket" and other language's similar idioms. Click the comic below to be taken to the larger version.

I didn't really appreciate this photo until I spotted the guy in the photo

"American architect Bryan Berg photographed beside his world-record-breaking house of cards — a free-standing replica of The Venetian Macau, constructed over the course of 44 days using 218,792 individual playing cards."

[source]

Here's what Hilter would look like without his mustache


and here's a mustache without Hitler



[via]

Broadview Security (as seen on SNL)

Alright, so if you watched SNL yesterday you saw their parody of Broadview Security commercials. What you might not have realized is just how close to the actual commercials it was. Take it, Sarah Haskins!

Pet Fees

Like 90% of all apartments in the area, we charge a pet fee: $200 when you move in and then $20 per month. There's not really a good reason to it. I know you could say that cats often do more damage to carpet, but at the same time we don't charge someone for other factors that make them more likely to damage the apartments (kids that color on walls, clumsiness, smoking). But here's the thing. That $20/month you're paying? It doesn't technically go toward your security deposit. You're just paying an extra $20 a month for nothing.

The weird thing though, is I have had two people now that have called me and refused to rent from anywhere that would charge a pet fee on principle. It doesn't matter if our rent special puts our prices at $50 less than a competing community. They would rather pay $850 a month and no pet fee than $820 a month pet fee included. It doesn't matter that maybe we include utilities. They would rather pay for all their utilities than have utilities covered and a small pet fee charged.

Why theme is important in board games

Hey guys, I have an idea for a game. I made these colored circles and connected them. Let's take turns putting wood cubes on the circles until we run out of cubes to place. Then we'll take turns trying to move cubes into each others circles, rolling dice for just a few cubes at a time to figure out to see if either of us lose any cubes. But we won't roll for all at once: just a few at a time. And let's draw it out so that like every turn or so you get to put more cubes down.



MY CUBES ARE THE BEST AND MUST BE ON EVERY COLOR





[Image 1 source with more examples]

I Love Graphs

Graph below shows what happens to water useage when everyone holds it in until they can use the bathroom between periods of an Olympic hockey game.



[source] via GRR

Bible Pictionary - Making Pictionary more frustrating

Alright, so you've seen and played Pictionary, right? What's the most frustrating part of the game? Getting something you have no way of drawing. Usually though, that doesn't happen: if you get Mickey Mantle, you can at least draw Mickey Mouse, and a fireplace mantle and put em together even if you don't know he's a baseball player.

With Bible Pictionary, you can't really do that. Karen has a copy of this game that her family had got at a thrift store (played once and never again) and I've gone through it and pulled out the most ridiculously impossible-to-draw cards for your perusal.

What do you do, for example, when you get the Brazen Serpent card? Maybe your team is clever enough to say "serpent" instead of just snake, but how do you make him brazen?

I mean even if you know about Zebedee, Japheth, Batimaeus, or Jairus' Daughter, how do you draw them and how to you ensure that your teammates even know the referenced passage?

I mean how about Jehovah, a name for God. Ok, sure, you can draw God (like draw that painting of God creating Adam) but how do you get someone to say a name that touches on an aspect of God?

And how do you draw adjectives like Meek? Do you draw someone inheriting the Earth? And for that matter, how do you draw Beatitudes?

How about Lillies of the Field? It's a reference to Matthew:
"And why are you worried about clothing? Observe how the lilies of the field grow; they do not toil nor do they spin, yet I say to you that not even Solomon in all his glory clothed himself like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, will He not much more clothe you? You of little faith!"
So get to drawing! Draw Solomon in all his glory. Or flowers not toiling or spinning.

They also have these oddly-specific phrases like Jesus Calls Levi, Jesus Betrayed, and Thief's Cross, that would be easy to get people to understand but hard to get them to get the specific phrase they are looking for.

And I had to look up "Bar-Jesus," [here] something I thought was a misprint, but was actually the name of a false prophet (in some translations...others call him other names). Alright, so draw that. Oh and speaking of which, False Witness is a card too

Alright, you get the idea, so let me present you with the rest of the list I compiled (and there were even more names and places than I place below):

Baldhead, Nailprints, Twofold, Fourfold, Sevenfold, Sheepfold, Mespotamia, Talebearer, Bond-Servant, Aquila, Revelation, Cypress Tree, Myrtle Tree, Oak Tree, False Witness, Lillies of the Field, Stiffnecked, Persecute, Grape Cluster, Canaanites, Betroth, Raiment, Barbarous, Sepulchre, Consecrate, Wormwood, Temple Pinnacle, Bowl of Pottage, Outstretched, Gomorrah, Damascus, Pool of Siloam, Slow of Heart, Mount Hermon, Damnation, Inkhorn, Brood of Vipers, Babylonia, Lattice, Cold nor Hot, Pentateuch, Foal of a Donkey, Rye, Inlaid, Pillar of Salt, Eli, First Martyr, Widow's Mite, Spectacle, Sweet as Honey, Armholes, Fish Gate, Brimstone, Unknown Tongues, Aramaic [draw a language, really?], Alleluia, Coppersmith, Goldsmith, Silversmith, Golgotha, The True Vine, Cock Crowed [also Cock and Crowed have their own individual cards too], Time to Mend, Decline, Mephibosheth, Jochebed

Colored Pencil Wall



[source] via GRR

How Niagara Falls looks with the water off and on

Yes, they once turned off Niagara Falls. See source site for more info



Niagra Falls

Hairy Wednesday


Fetish, originally uploaded by Wayne Chisnall.

Just a quick reminder that you can get to see my Fetish sculpture (the one made out of human hair) this coming Wednesday at the opening of the Royal British Society of Sculptors’ new exhibition, Found, at their Gallery in South Kensington, London. And on Wednesday the 24th March I’ll be giving a short talk about my work with found materials. To find out the full details click on the e-flier below.

People are people too.

The always-entertaining Not Always Right posted the following conversation:

(Theme Park | Schaumburg, IL, USA)
(I am seating guests for a ride.)

Me: “Sir, I’m sorry but we can only fit two riders in a seat and four in a car.”

Guest: “It’s alright, the baby can sit in my lap.”

Me: “Sir, I apologize, but we don’t allow lap sitting either. It’s dangerous for the baby. The lap bar can seriously injure her if we had to do an emergency stop on the ride.”

Guest: “Wait, so you’re telling me that she counts as a person?”
This comes up a lot at my job too. You can have a maximum of 2 people per bedroom in an apartment and occasionally, I'll have people with a child that want to move into a one bedroom. I explain the policy and how there is a max of two people in that floor plan and they'll say "but she's only 3" and I'll say "she's still a person."

Give 'em the ol razzle dazzle


So back in WWII, German U-Boats were tearing destroyers apart so the US painted up some ships so that it was hard for subs to figure out the exact bearing of the ship.

[more]

This post makes me want to play Silent Service again.

The internet is for cat pictures: thoughtful edition


Nice try, Comcast

I got a letter today that said "Important information about your U-verse service" on the envelope and I figured maybe AT&T was letting us know about a channel switch or something like that. Inside, however, was a Comcast ad starting with "If you left Comcast because AT&T promised you a low price, I understand" and going on to trying to sell me a new deal.

So that's sneaky enough, right?

Well the letter goes on to tell me about how Comcast makes it easy to switch and how there are all these great things they can offer me. The price? $99/mo for twelve months. That's not surprising; it's the same Triple Play Package they were offering 2 years ago. Here's the exception, however. The old triple play package would go up in price after your 6 or 12 month introductory period. This new package, however, is a contract that you will stay with them for a minimum of two total years:
"After 12 months, monthly service charge goes to 114.99 for months 13-24
.

So basically, this direct mail advertisement is in response to the fact that AT&T raised rates by $5 and is inviting me to go for a guaranteed $15 rate hike down the line. And I would have to get phone service I don't need and pay the FCC fees for that (at least $5/mo). No thanks.

Hearing fractions of seconds in sound [quick link]

Yeah, the Olympics are closed, but the NYTimes has a cool interactive graph where they've made it so you can hear those small gaps in between winning and losing. They've compiled the times together so that each finishing time is a note
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/02/26/sports/olympics/20100226-olysymphony.html

Reminds me of this