Trailer Park Boys

All is right in the world: Tivo is saved by Comcast, Bernie Ebbers is going to jail, and most importantly, Trailer Park Boys Season 4 is released to DVD on April 12th.

Batman computer animation as Legos — well-done, too.

Did I say all is right in the world? Not so fast. Paul Wolfowitz is nominated for president of the World Bank, and the Senate gives authorization to open up ANWR for drilling.

Still, Trailer Park Boys Season 4 is released to DVD on April 12th.

Is America going broke?

Canadian mag MacLeans asks: Is America going broke? And to cheer you up, this beautiful John Coltrane-inspired animation. And then a kinda neat Montage-a-Google.

One more thing: piling your dreads under that knit cap makes your head look like a Jiffy Pop about to explode. Yeah, I’m talking to you, environmentalists. It’s time to keep up appearances.
Queer Eye for the Green Guy: The left needs a makeover in order to be taken seriously, starting with their appearance.

Roasty architecture

Yahoo! offers a top 100 Netrospective moments of the web. Number 16 is IMDb, one step below the dancing baby. Non-netrospectively, the BBC is ordered not to compete with commercial television and must instead focus on high-quality public service programming.

Beams of sunlight reflected from the hall have roasted the sidewalk to 140 degrees Fahrenheit, enough to melt plastic and cause serious sunburn to people standing on the street.
Symptoms prior to Walt Disney Concert Hall shimmering stainless steel panels receiving a good sanding

Ankle bracelets for law abiding immigrants — whaaaaa? Speaking of immigrants, Governor Schwarzenegger expresses support for adding 1 million solar power panels to California rooftops. Speaking of property, street gangs are now staking out turf on the Web., while Donald Rumsfeld is being sued by the ACLU and Human Rights First in his role with authorizing torture.

Let it die. Space flight industry officials donate $3 million to save Star Trek Enterprise.

Photographic remnants

An unnerving series of digital photos taken from a couple visiting Thailand during the tsunami: they died minutes later, but the recovered camera shows what they saw in the last moments.

The wave gets closer, its power more evident as it kicks up sand and mud and finally crashes onto the beach. “We were stunned — just out of the blue, an echo from the grave,” Pilet said. “What we saw in these pictures were the last five minutes of these people’s lives.”
From the individual who discovered the camera