CROPSY’S CRYPT: Happy Birthday to ME?

by jim mccoy on December 29, 2011

In belated dishonor of my birthday, a gift for you goober gobbling cretins, a review for the classic 80′s stalk and slash HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!Happy Birthday to Me is a riddle with no real answer.  the film makers present a mystery to the audience but there is no real way for the viewer to connect the dots in the story or guess who the culprit is that’s slaying the “in crowd” of the posh and privileged Crawford Academy, so don’t try.  Don’t use your grey matter; revel in the visceral delights and scares of the slasher film, but don’t play a guessing game with the movie.  you will lose, loser.  we are merely expected to ride the film to the end and find out through a twisted Scooby-Do like reveal who the killer in the film is.  Ignore the red herring-a-thon as well.  They’re just there to tease you.  Just pay attention to all those matching blue scarves.  Let yourself be drawn into the awe of the movie’s one special effect; a lightning bolt.  ZAAP!  Woah.     the “in crowd” that find themselves the target of the killer in the film are a bunch of snotty brats and ego stroking donkey dicks.  and they threw a rat in a beer!  Blasphemy; ruining the golden nectar of the gods with rodent flesh; that wasn’t a Guinness assholios!  They also like to dangerously drive drunk over separating bridges, and generally place social status above all other qualities in a person.  if this film had one ongoing theme it’s that the pursuit of social status as an empty, and sometimes dreadfully harmful endeavor.      these “in-crowd people choose to define themselves by the reaction other people have to them.  this is a common folly as people, like most animals, are fickle, simple minded, selfish creatures likely to form snap opinions of others based on irrelevant and often filtered information, thus rendering the benchmark of social standing useless at best.  That’s why I prefer to be defined by the Cat-fish man monster from ZAAT.  Social standing and the quest for popularity is a pursuit that the sociopath excels at and the foolish abide by.  the tragedy that unfolds for the main characters alive by the end of the film is something that could have been avoided had these people not placed such importance on how popular they are, or what kind of clique they fall into. Happy Birthday to Me is a film with all the classic slasher trappings.  Scenes in the film were shot on Phoneix Bridge, giving you Upstate NY’ers another reason to check it out, so pretend it’s your putrid spawn day and party it up with a deadly double dose of Happy Birthday to Me.

CROPSY’S CRYPT: Happy Birthday to ME?

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Chris Paul trade: Can the Clippers become LA’s team?

by jim mccoy on December 29, 2011

Everybody’s talking basketball in Los Angeles, but for perhaps the first time ever, it’s not about the Lakers.

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That’s because the lowly Clippers, the perennial stepchild of the city’s basketball scene, have locked up a trade for Chris Paul, the most highly coveted free agent point guard of the NBA offseason.

Paul wasn’t a bargain: The Clippers acquired him, along with two second-round draft picks, from the new Orleans Hornets in exchange for guard Eric Gordon, forward Al-Fariq Aminu, and Minnesota’s 2012 unprotected first-round draft pick.

But by most accounts, it was worth it. NBA experts are already predicting that Paul’s addition to the Clippers will catapult the franchise, which has been embarrassingly inept for most of its existence, into a title contender with ticket sales to compete with its local rival.

The change would be welcome: throughout their 40-year history, the Clippers have been the NBA’s resident joke. The franchise has only had six winning seasons in its entire existence, and only two since moving to Los Angeles from San Diego in 1984. The oldest NBA team never to have appeared in the league finals, the Clippers haven’t made it past the first round of playoffs since 1976, when they were the Buffalo Braves. to make matters worse, they share the Staples Center with the Lakers, a franchise that boasts 16 NBA titles, 16 Hall of Famers, and a fan base littered with A-list celebrities.

But this season, roles may be reversed. Paul, a sixth season player who has established himself as one of the best point guards the league has ever seen, will be joining up with Blake Griffin, the power forward who was a first overall draft pick for the Clippers in 2009. in his first season, Griffin was a human highlight reel, averaging 22.5 points per game, winning the league’s Slam Dunk Contest, and becoming the first man unanimously voted Rookie of the Year in over two decades. Griffin alone made the Clippers worth watching. But Griffin and Paul, along with guard Chauncey Billups, forward Caron Butler, and center DeAndre Jordan, will lay the groundwork for them to become championship contenders. Adding to the intrigue is that the Lakers nearly had Paul: last week, NBA commissioner David Stern blocked a deal that would have sent him there, saying that the agreement was unfair to the small-market Hornets.

In rounding out their roster, the Clippers have a better chance of making Blake Griffin a permanent Clipper and attracting even more marquee players to the organization. That’s great news for the team, in terms of both basketball and business.  As of this morning, season ticket packages for the Clippers were sold out, and CNBC is reported that the average price for an individual ticket has risen from $268.32 to $303.88 since 7:45 this morning. That’s a $35.56 increase in a matter of hours.

Chris Paul trade: Can the Clippers become LA’s team?

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It burns when you watch this

December 29, 2011

Hi there. I’m here today to talk to you about a new STD. It’s very serious and very gross. It’s called “Virgin Diaries.” If you are a person with eyes, a semi-functional brain and nothing to do on a Sunday evening, you may have already been infected with this dangerously unsexy virus. What is it? [...]

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ToP 10 Bollywood ‘B’ Grade Babes

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