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Torridon River, Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland, United Photo Mugs
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Torridon River, Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland, United Kingdom, Europe.
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Amazing Grace: The Pipes and Drums and Military Band of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
List Price: $7.99
Sale Price: $24.25
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Tracks Include: Amazing Grace, Paloma Blanca, Moonliner Rock March, Turn On The Sun, The Highland Cradle, Brazil, Going To Pitlochry & More.
Tracks Include: Amazing Grace, Paloma Blanca, Moonliner Rock March, Turn on the Sun, the Highland Cradle, Brazil, Going to Pitlochry and More.
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Glengarry Glen Ross: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Sale Price: $23.95
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Glengarry Glen Ross: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack! TRACKS: 1. Main Title - Wayne Shorter; 2. You Met My Wife - Wayne Shorter; 3. Plot - Wayne Shorter; 4. Street of Dreams - Little Jimmy Scott; 5. You'd Better Go Now - Shirley Horn; 6. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows - Take 6; 7. Prelude to a Kiss - Bill Holman Big Band; 8. Easy Street - Georgie Fame; 9. Day Dream - David Sanborn; 10. Tear Filled Skies - Joe Roccisano Orchestra; 11. Blue Skies - Al Jarreau; 12. Blue Lou - Joe Roccisano Orchestra; 13. In the Car - Wayne Shorter; 14. Don't Sell to Doctors - Wayne Shorter; 15. Blue Skies - Dr. John; & 16. Nyborgs - Wayne Shorter.
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Bach 2000 Light (Without Sacred Cantatas)
List Price: $849.98
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The Bach renaissance--which began in earnest in the early 19th century thanks to the efforts of Felix Mendelssohn and others--inspired an endeavor of far-reaching significance. It led to the founding of the Bach Society in 1850, with the goal of gathering and publishing the composer's complete works, and thus set into motion one of the great projects of musical scholarship. That effort has continued and been refined throughout the 20th century, ultimately influencing not only our perception of how to perform early music but fundamental ideas of musical history, evolution, and reception as well. Teldec's mammoth Bach 2000 box set represents a kind of culmination of that original attempt to come to terms with Johann Sebastian Bach's unparalleled legacy. This set brings together performances recorded over the last several decades--a small percentage of the recordings are previously unreleased--of all the extant works determined by modern scholarship to be authentic. There are also some pieces the authorship of which is still in question and a few now deemed "inauthentic" but familiarly associated with the composer. Bach was a prodigious reviser of his compositions, and alternate versions of a particular work have been included "where the changes seemed sufficiently important," such as the glorious Magnificat. No doubt manuscripts will continue to be unearthed here and there in various archives (Bach 2000 contains, for example, the "Neumeister chorales," which were rediscovered in 1984), but the set does not represent the many fragments of music that consist of just a few bars; however, there are some reconstructions of lost concertos (such as one for three violins reconstructed by Christopher Hogwood from an extant concerto for harpsichords). Of course a truly comprehensive recorded edition of every note Bach wrote remains a utopian impossibility--about one-third of his cantatas, for example, have not survived. Even so, the dimensions of Bach 2000 are staggering. With its 12 boxes comprising 153 CDs, the set can be compressed into fewer boxes to save shelf space yet is still about ten times as long as the Ring cycle. (It should be noted that the packaging--using thin cardboard sleeves for the CDs--is distinctively unattractive.) That adds up to just under 160 hours of music--but a lifetime of discovery. Each box (grouped according to genre) contains a booklet with excellent notes on individual works and--for all the choral works--texts and translations. Tracking indexes are useful and thorough. Also included is a profusely illustrated hardbound volume of 24 Inventions, in which journalist Wolfgang Sandberger uses the composer's biography as a peg for some enigmatic and fascinating musings on the meaning of Bach today. The presiding philosophy behind this project and its approach to musical interpretation can be largely ascribed to Nikolaus Harnoncourt, a true musical pioneer and galvanizing force of the "period performance" movement. Harnoncourt's epoch-making recordings of the sacred cantatas (using, for instance, boy sopranos and choristers according to the practice in Bach's time) with the Concentus musicus Wien and colleague Gustav Leonhardt comprise the first four volumes here (those who already own them can turn to the Bach 2000 Light edition, which contains everything sans the cantatas). These recordings--which were not remastered for this set--have long been controversial and are notably uneven, embracing some magnificent accounts as well as others that lack fire and seem clearly underrehearsed. But Harnoncourt is one of the most fascinating conductors of our era, and his interpretations amply bear out his assertion: "I have never felt that Bach worked in a routine manner, that he repeated himself in his works." Harnoncourt--who has articulated many of his ideas in his book The Musical Dialogue--displays his gifts as a cellist in a remarkably probing performance of the Cello Suites (originally recorded in 1965) and in his concertizing for a number of chamber works. For\ the St. Matthew Passion, you get Harnoncourt's groundbreaking earlier account from 1970, while his 1986 recording of the sublime B Minor Mass is also represented here (the St. John Passion included is Harnoncourt's 1995 acount). Other artists included are colleague Gustav Leonhardt, whose thoughtful if occasionally dry harpsichord artistry is heard in the Goldberg Variations as well as in the concertos and chamber music. The harpsichord is in fact used throughout in preference to piano for the keyboard works. Ton Koopman (himself the conductor of an ongoing complete cantata series and of the Easter Oratorio included here) performs the organ works, including some newly recorded offerings, while Il Giardino Armonico's well-known high-energy account represents the Brandenburg Concertos. Violinist Thomas Zehetmair is exceptionally compelling in the unaccompanied sonatas and partitas, and the Concentus musicus Wien--again under Harnoncourt--perform a superb Musical Offering that richly repays frequent listening. The result of Bach 2000 as a whole is an aptly encyclopedic grappling with the infinite legacy of this most compendious of composers, whose works are on one level a summation of all the styles available to him. Bach was once thought to represent a "terminal point" (to use Albert Schweitzer's famous formulation), the end of an era; today he is at least equally recognized as a fertile source of inspiration for composers since. To be sure, individual recordings of particular works will be found to be preferable, and it would be misguided to consider Bach 2000 any kind of "final" or "definitive" word. Instead, it's an indispensable starting point that represents a monumental achievement for our own contemporary understanding of Bach. --Thomas May --This text refers to the complete edition of this title
Volume 1, 11 Discs Secular Cantatas App. Sacred Cantatas; 11 CDs; Koopman, Harnoncourt, Koopman, Goebel and others Volume 2, 14 Discs The Sacred Vocal Works Masses,Magnificat, Passions, Oratorios; 14 CDs; Harnoncourt, Koopman, Corboz and others Volume 3, 7 Discs The Motets, Chorales & Songs Kirnberger Chorales,Schemelli Songs, Quodlibet Volume 4, 16 Discs The Organ Works; 16 CDs; Ton Koopman Volume 5, 11 Discs The Keyboard Works (I) The Well-Tempered Clavier, English & French Suites, Partitas etc; 11 CDs; Curtis, Ross, Wilson, Ruzickova Volume 6, 11 Discs The Keyboard Works (II) Goldberg Variations, Toccatas, Fugues, Italian Concerto, etc; 11 CDs; Staier, Barchi, Leonhardt, von Asperen, Baumont, and others Volume 7, 13 Discs The Chamber Music Violin Sonatas & Partitas, Flute Sonatas, Works for Lute, Art of Fugue, Musical Offering, etc; 13 CDs; Harnoncourt, Pianca, Tachezi, Brggen, Zehetmair, and others Volume 8, 10 Discs The Orchestral Works The Concertos & Orchestral Suite; 10 CDs; Il Giardino Armonico, Harnoncourt, Leonhardt
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![True Grit [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51S6SXC9ZYL._SL160_.jpg) |
True Grit [VHS]
List Price: $9.95
Sale Price: $1.94
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A wonderful/rueful running gag in El Dorado involves the Edgar Allan Poe line "Ride, boldly ride" being mangled by toupee-wearer Wayne into "Ride, baldy, ride." Two years later, in True Grit, Wayne put the joke in italics by donning an eyepatch and several inches of girth to play cantankerous territorial marshal Rooster Cogburn. Critics belatedly noticed that he could be a marvelously entertaining actor, and Hollywood finally gave him the Oscar they'd failed to nominate him for in Red River, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, The Quiet Man, The Searchers, et al. But make no mistake: True Grit is a splendid movie, with lovingly textured storytelling and sturdy characters, Henry Hathaway's finest high-country action set-pieces, intoxicatingly ornate frontier language, and a couple of formidable bad guys (Jeff Corey's Tom Cheney and Robert Duvall's "Lucky" Ned Pepper). It's a compliment to say that, from a technical standpoint, the movie could have been made any time in Hathaway's 40-year career, yet its feeling for the reality of violence ceded no ground to The Wild Bunch, released around the same time. Still, the film's most sublime passage falls between bursts of gunplay: Rooster sitting on a hilltop at night recounting his life story, as John Wayne metamorphoses ineluctably into W.C. Fields. --Richard T. Jameson
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![Flirtation Walk [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21W36GBEV8L._SL160_.jpg) |
Flirtation Walk [VHS]
List Price: $19.98
Sale Price: $7.75
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[1934 - Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, Pat O'Brien - black&white - 95 minutes] A musical romance about a soldier stationed in Hawaii who is assigned to chauffeur the General's high spirited daughter around. After an ill-fated romantic evening with her at a big Hawaiian luau, he goes to West Point to forget her. But four years later she sings her way back to him. Includes a chorus line of 100 island dancers, Hawaiian music by Sol Hoopii and his Orchestra, and the song "He Mana'o Ko'u Ia Oe" by George Kainapau. Nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award.
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![Glengarry Glen Ross [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51S2V1ZW1GL._SL160_.jpg) |
Glengarry Glen Ross [VHS]
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $0.95
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Like moths to a flame, great actors gravitate to the singular genius of playwright-screenwriter David Mamet, who updated his Pulitzer Prize-winning play for this all-star screen adaptation. The material is not inherently cinematic, so the movie's greatest asset is Mamet's peerless dialogue and the assembly of a once-in-a-lifetime cast led by Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, and Alec Baldwin (the last in a role Mamet created especially for the film). Often regarded as a critique of the Reagan administration's impact on the American economy, the play and film focus on a competitive group of real estate salesmen who've gone from feast to famine in a market gone cold. When an executive "motivator" (Alec Baldwin) demands a sales contest among the agents in the cramped office, the stakes are critically high: any agent who fails to meet his quota of sales "leads" (i.e., potential buyers) will lose his job. This intense ultimatum is a boon for the office superstar (Pacino), but a once-successful salesman (Lemmon) now finds himself clinging nervously to faded glory. Political and personal rivalries erupt under pressure when the other agents (Alan Arkin, Ed Harris) suspect the office manager (Kevin Spacey) of foul play. This cauldron of anxiety, tension, and sheer desperation provides fertile soil for Mamet's scathingly rich dialogue, which is like rocket fuel for some of the greatest actors of our time. Pacino won an Oscar nomination for his volatile performance, but it's Lemmon who's the standout, doing some of the best work of his distinguished career. Director James Foley shapes Mamet's play into a stylish, intensely focused film that will stand for decades as a testament to its brilliant writer and cast. --Jeff Shannon
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Glengarry Glen Ross
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $4.99
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A group of sleazy real estate men face a high-pressure stress as they are put in danger of getting the ax by their hard-driving bosses.System Requirements:Starring: Al Pacino Alan Arkin Alec Baldwin Ed Harris Jack Lemmon and Kevin Spacey. Directed By: James Foley. Running Time: 100 Min. Color. This film is presented in both "Widescreen" and "Standard" formats. Copyright 2002 Artisan Entertainment.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: R UPC: 012236114505 Manufacturer No: 13286
Like moths to a flame, great actors gravitate to the singular genius of playwright-screenwriter David Mamet, who updated his Pulitzer Prize-winning play for this all-star screen adaptation. The material is not inherently cinematic, so the movie's greatest asset is Mamet's peerless dialogue and the assembly of a once-in-a-lifetime cast led by Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, and Alec Baldwin (the last in a role Mamet created especially for the film). Often regarded as a critique of the Reagan administration's impact on the American economy, the play and film focus on a competitive group of real estate salesmen who've gone from feast to famine in a market gone cold. When an executive "motivator" (Alec Baldwin) demands a sales contest among the agents in the cramped office, the stakes are critically high: any agent who fails to meet his quota of sales "leads" (i.e., potential buyers) will lose his job. This intense ultimatum is a boon for the office superstar (Pacino), but a once-successful salesman (Lemmon) now finds himself clinging nervously to faded glory. Political and personal rivalries erupt under pressure when the other agents (Alan Arkin, Ed Harris) suspect the office manager (Kevin Spacey) of foul play. This cauldron of anxiety, tension, and sheer desperation provides fertile soil for Mamet's scathingly rich dialogue, which is like rocket fuel for some of the greatest actors of our time. Pacino won an Oscar nomination for his volatile performance, but it's Lemmon who's the standout, doing some of the best work of his distinguished career. Director James Foley shapes Mamet's play into a stylish, intensely focused film that will stand for decades as a testament to its brilliant writer and cast. --Jeff Shannon
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Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Torridon River, Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland, United from Robert Harding
Sale Price: $24.99
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Photo Puzzle, Torridon River, Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland, United. Torridon River, Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland, United Kingdom, Europe. Chosen by Robert Harding. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pieces printed on RA4 paper at 300 dpi. This item is shipped from our American lab.
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Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Autumn view along Torridon River and Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, from Robert Harding
Sale Price: $24.99
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Photo Puzzle, Autumn view along Torridon River and Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands,. Autumn view along Torridon River and Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland, United Kingdom, Europe. Chosen by Robert Harding. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pieces printed on RA4 paper at 300 dpi. This item is shipped from our
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Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Torridon,Glen Torridon from Robert Harding
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Photo Puzzle, Torridon,Glen Torridon. Torridon, Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Highlands, Scotland. Chosen by Robert Harding. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pieces printed on RA4 paper at 300 dpi. This item is shipped from our American lab.
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Hazed and Confused Part Two.. Interview With Indy Legend Miss Chiff
Good Morning, Afternoon and Evening and welcome yet again to another fun packed edition of Hazed & Confused. Since the last article the Indy scene seems to be in full swing, with quite a few events held over the past few weeks and future events being booked.
CZW recently held their tenth anniversary show in The Arena, Philadelphia.
Quick results from the event are as follows:
1. Drew Gulak defeated Little Mondo
2. Sami Callihan defeated Jon Dahmer
3. Adam Cole and Tyler Veritas won the "Old vs. New" Tag Team Gauntlet
- The order of entrants, and order of elimination is as follows:
- The S.A.T. defeated L.J. Cruz and Izzy Kensington
- 2.0 defeated the S.A.T.
- Cole and Veritas defeated 2.0
- Cole and Veritas defeated A.M.I.L.
- Cole and Veritas defeated GNC (Gacy and Colon)
4. Sabian defeated Ego Fantastico
5. Drew Blood defeated Pinkie Sanchez
6. The Best Around and El Sexisto defeated 2 Girls 1 Cup and Lord Everett Devore
7. Devon Moore defeated Ruckus
8. Ryan McBride defeated Carter Gray to retain the Jr. Heavyweight Title
9. The H8 Club defeated Brain Damage and Deranged in a Fans Bring The Weapons Match
After seeing this on DVD, it had to be one of the most brutal matches in CZW's history.
The H8 Club took advantage early, using, believe it or not, a machete to carve and gouge at the eye of Deranged, rendering him useless, and allowing them to gain a virtual 2-on-1 on Brain Damage.
The H8 Club finished Brain Damage with a huge Superplex off the top through a barbed wire laden door, propped on chairs.
What happened next was to the surprise of everyone in the Arena...
10. Sami Callihan defeated Brain Damage to become the NEW CZW Iron Man Champion
Callihan stormed the ring with Referee Nick Pappagiorgio wrapped up in a blanket over his shoulder, and shoveled the unwilling official into the ring.
With the threat of a chair and further aggression, Pappagiorgio sanctioned an immediate match up, where Callihan picked up the H8 Club's scraps, added a few more unneeded blows, and pinned an already beaten Brain Damage to win the Iron Man Championship.
11. Drake Younger defeated Eddie Kingston in a No Rope Barbed Wire Match to retain the CZW World Heavyweight Championship
Also, for those who have been following my articles, you will know that I keep mentioning the Chikara run tournament, King Of Trio's coming up at the end of March, well all 16 teams have now been announced and are as follows:
1. The Masters of a Thousand Holds (Mike Quackenbush, Jorge "Skayde" Rivera & Johnny Saint)
2. The Osirian Portal (Ophidian, Amasis & Escorpion Egipcio)
3. Incoherence (Hallowicked, Delirious & Frightmare)
4. Team PWG (El Generico, Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson)
5. The Future Is Now (Lince Dorado, Helios & Jimmy "Equinox" Olsen)
6. The Death Match Kings (Necro Butcher, Toby Klein & Brain Damage)
7. The F1RST Family (Arik Cannon, Darin Corbin & Ryan Cruz)
8. Da Soul Touchaz (Willie Richardson, Trauma & Marshe Rockett)
9. Team CZW (Beef Wellington, Pinkie Sanchez & Greg Excellent)
10. The Cold Front (Al Snow, Iceberg & Glacier)
11. F.I.S.T. (Gran Akuma, Chuck Taylor & Icarus)
12. The Roughnecks (Brodie Lee, Eddie Kingston & Grizzly Redwood)
13. Team Uppercut (Claudio Castagnoli, Dave Taylor & Bryan Danielson)
14. Team EPIC WAR (Austin Aries, Tony Kozina & Ryan Drago)
15. The UnStable (Vin Gerard, STIGMA & Colin Delaney)
16. Team DDT (Kota Ibushi, KUDO & Michael Nakazawa)
Quite an impressive collection of teams there and pretty hard for me to pick a favorite to win the tournament, with most of the teams having a very good chance at doing so. Though I imagine I'm not the only one hoping to see a "HEAD" Shot in the tournament.
So anyway, I decided to do something different and special from the other articles here at TWG and after some thinking I decided that it would be great to actually interview an Indy wrestler.
So with nothing to lose, I sent an email out to my personal favorite Indy wrestler, Mike Quackenbush, and much to my surprise he agreed to answer a few questions for me and some suggested by other people at TWG.
Due to his work and schedule however, the answers are fairly short but I hope you will agree with me that Quackenbush doing this interview for me is nothing short of awesomeness.
So without further delay, an interview with Quack...
Thank you Mike for joining me on Hazed & Confused, hopefully you're the first of many exclusive interviews.
Most of my readers will know you mainly from Chikara and some as the current NWA Junior Champion.
I have asked some of the games members to think of questions to ask you, and we have quite a mixed bunch..
We'll start off with some wrestling based ones and finish off with some random questions...
So without further delay on with the questions...
1) Did you have any major setbacks starting in the business?
--The fact that I wasn't properly trained when I had my earliest matches was a huge setback. I was never going to be taken seriously or get a chance to work in a real company until I got some legitimate training.
2) What has been your personal favorite match so far?
---I am very fond of my match with Claudio Castagnoli from the 2006 edition of the Ted Petty Invitational.
3) Who have you had the most fun wrestling against and teaming with?
---Claudio brings out the best in me. I enjoy teaming with Jigsaw, or any of my trainees, really.
4) Have you ever been "star-struck" when meeting other wrestlers around the world?
---I was a little bit when I wrestled El Hijo del Santo. He has a magical presence about him.
5) How do you feel on the way CHIKARA is going?
---I think we are doing a great job of altering the accepted status quo in the wrestling business, and we're doing it very quietly, but effectively.
6) With the upcoming King Of Trios, which team would you like to compete against more?
---I'd very much like to lock horns with the PWG or DDT teams.
7) If WWE offered you a contract, but it meant giving up working at CHIKARA, would you take it?
---I wouldn't accept a WWE contract no matter what it said or stipulated. Even if Vince McMahon came over and agreed to wash my car and gave me the original Max Moon costume, I wouldn't sign.
Who are your main "travel buddies" when going to different shows?
---Because most of my non-CHIKARA engagements involve flying rather than driving, I tend to travel by myself. It's pretty rare that I road trip by car these days.
9) Have you ever gotten "stage fright" before a match, and how did you overcome this?
---I used to get that quite a bit. Just butterflies in the stomach, so to speak. But I probably haven't experienced that in ten years or so. No one makes me more nervous to wrestle than Jorge Rivera, though. The odds of being able to go hold-for-hold with him are just about zero.
10) Do you ever see hardcore fights coming into CHIKARA?
---Maybe a satire of the cliches of garbage wrestling, but that's probably about it.
11) How do you feel on Ring Of Honor and their recent TV deal?
---It's too soon to know how it will affect them. In two or three months, we might better understand what will come of it.
12) Who, out of your current students, could be the next star?
---Any and all of them, really. Each has their own unique potential.
13) If you could have one match against any wrestler, dead or alive, that you haven't fought before, who would it be?
---I think I get asked this in every interview I've ever done, and I like to change up the answer. So let's say Owen Hart this week.
14) Finally, what advice would you have for anyone looking to get into wrestling?
---Get trained by someone reputable, with good international contacts, unless you want to languish in obscurity for years and years. That's what happened to me.
And now for some less serious questions asked....
15) Do you fear Chuck Norris?
---Of course.
16) Burger King or McDonald's?
---McDonald's. Not even close. BK is for jabrones.
17) Favorite band and/or song?
---I'm a big They Might Be Giants fan. Probably have more TMBG Cd's than any other in my collection.
18) If you were President, how would you deal with the current economy crisis?
---I have never felt so ill-equipped to answer a question. Pass?
19) Have you heard about the bird?
---I have heard that the bird is the word.
20) Favorite Video Game?
---I love playing the Fire Pro series, and on my PC, I used to be addicted to a game called Freedom Force, a few years back.
21) Have you ever worn a Tutu?
---I am fairly certain I have not.
22) Favorite all time movie?
---That's tough. I'm a big fan of just about all superhero movies, going back to the 1978 Christopher Reeve Superman film. I've probably watched "Glengarry Glen Ross" more times than any other movie. Maybe "UHF."
23) Favorite TV show?
---I never miss an episode of "Lost." I also really enjoy "The X-Files" and "Fawlty Towers."
Well thank you very much Mike for your time, we here at TWG very much appreciate you doing this interview with us today. All the best to you this coming year with Chikara and with other matches you may have around the world.
Now just how great was that? But thats not all my readers, no, Ive been a busy bee and have secured another FOUR Indy Wrestlers for interviews. So in the coming weeks I shall be bringing you interviews with:
Shimmer & NWA Womens Champion, Ms Chif
CZW wrestler, and part of my last article, SeXXXy Eddy
CZW wrestler and BLK Out member, Sabian
Chikara wrestler and member of "Super Smash Brothers", Stupefied / Player Dos
Though by the time you read this, the Ms Chif interview should be already done, but if anyone has ANY questions at all for the others, please leave a comment below and I shall do my best to ask them your question when the interview is done. I would like to thank you all for reading this week, my apologies for the delay in articles but I hope that the interviews more than make up for it.
Until next time.... this has been Hazed & Confused.
About the Author
http://thewrestlinggame.com/wrestling/articles/hazed_confused_2.asp
What is your favourite quote from a book or movie?
I have two. The first is from Hunter S Thompson's book Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: "There he goes -- one of God's own prototypes -- a high powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live and too rare to die." - Duke
The second is from the movie Glengarry Glen Ross: "I subscribe to the law of contrary public opinion. If everybody thinks one thing...then i say bet the other way!" - Ricky Roma
Smee: "You complete me!"
Komarovski in Dr. Zhivago
"There are two kinds of men and only two. And that young man is one kind. He is high-minded. He is pure. He's the kind of man the world pretends to look up to, and in fact despises. He is the kind of man who breeds unhappiness, particularly in women."
Glenbard parent series to tackle Internet issues
Not long ago, the social networking site Facebook launched a redesign that forced users to reset their privacy settings or be in danger of having their information open to anybody. But even with a profile set as private, Anastasia Goodstein says personal information still could get out.
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