Monday, March 9, 2009
Sunday, February 1, 2009
some pastors love romero...
stayed with a nice pastor named mike who loves George Romero and Rob Zombie and gets lots of hate mail from angry Christians (he and i could really relate to one another...)
anyway, we watched a movie called called "Lord, Save Us From Your Followers" at his house that i thought was really, really good... check it out: http://lordsaveusthemovie.com/
10 days left in the tour.
anyway, we watched a movie called called "Lord, Save Us From Your Followers" at his house that i thought was really, really good... check it out: http://lordsaveusthemovie.com/
10 days left in the tour.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
still touring...
i'm on tour playing acoustic songs and reading from my books. Three weeks down, three weeks to go.
it has been amazingly fun so far, if you've come to see the tour, thanks!
i visited what is easily the best comic shop i've ever been to in austin texas (i guess texas isn't all bad...) it was called austin books and comics (simple enough).
i ate some chipotle. i drive a lot.
when it's abi's turn to drive i write songs... when i get back, Showbread is writing together before we go into the studio in April to record our new album The Fear Of God which will come out later this summer.
i'm in iowa. it is snowy and cold.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Saturday, December 20, 2008
meryy Christmas movies.
merry Christmas. it's the most wonderful time of the year. to truly celebrate, you MUST watch these movies and/or tv specials.
-Gremlins
-The Muppet Christmas Carol
-Opus & Bill: A Wish For Wings That Work
-Home Alone 1 & 2
-Ernest Saves Christmas
-Will Cinton's Claymation Christmas
-The Nativity Story
-Miracle on 34th St. (the remake)
-It's A Wonderful Life
-Jingle All The Way
-The Santa Clause (1, 2 & 3)
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Sly
i was always a bigger Arnold fan, so growing up, i missed a lot of Stallone movies. I had never seen a single Rambo or Rocky movie, sorecently we had a Rambo marathon and last week i had a Rocky marathon. They are both raw franchises.
Rocky movies are kind of like Jason movies, they stick to the same basic formula almost every time and it works.
Rocky- Raw
Rocky II- Raw
Rocky III- Okay
Rocky IV- Shame
Rocky V-Shame
Rocky Balboa- Raw
Most people I've talked to who are fans of the Rocky franchise think that part four is awesome for some reason. It has it's moments, but rich Rocky and the dancing robot butler are just too shame.
Rambo is also raw.
First Blood- Raw
Rambo: First Blood Part 2: Okay
Rambo III- Raw
Rambo: Raw
The "Most Raw" award for the Rocky series will have to go to the original while the same award goes to the fourth installment in the Rambo series... "Rambo".
Friday, November 14, 2008
a josh top 10 (graphic novels)
Let’s do my personal top 10 graphic novels. As always, this is one man’s opinion and isn’t worth any fuss. I do, however, urge anyone who isn’t really into comic books to give some of these a try and see what you think. Any Barnes and Noble or Borders has nice comfy chairs and books to choose from if you want to take an hour and give something a try.
10. Planet Hulk: The Illuminati, a secret gathering of the world’s most powerful “super” people including Charles Xavier and Tony Stark, forge a plan to rid the world of the increasing threat presented by the Hulk, aka dr. Bruce Banner. But their plan to shoot him into space leaves the Hulk on a vicious alien planet to which he ultimately becomes king. It sounds bizarre, I know, but it is a truly dynamic and epic story.
9. The Long Halloween: Batman, Gordon and Harvey Dent spend a year trying to bring the mysterious killer known only as “Holiday” to justice, but at what cost? This story is so well written it was ultimately one of a handful of comic inspirations for Christopher Nolan’s Batman films.
8. The Watchmen: Anyone who is into comic books will tell you that “The Watchmen”, written by Alan Moore, one of the most notoriously strange writers in the comic world, is one of the greats, and it is. It’s actually so complex and so engrossing that it’s hard to describe. It broke a whole mess of ground, set a new standard for the comic medium and to this day seems to be without peer in many ways. Movie looks cool too.
6. The Walking Dead (Vol.1): I was in a comic shop in California that had little index cards beneath popular titles to summarize the kind of book it was to new readers. The one under Walking Dead said something like: “A character driven post-apocalyptic zombie soap opera that is as addictive as crack”, and I’m not sure I’ve heard it described better. This is one of few books that leave even my wife hanging for the next installment like it was an episode of Grey’s Anatomy.
5. Bone (One Volume Edition): Most people describe Bone as “bugs Bunny meets Lord Of The Rings” and that’s kind of right, but maybe not enough. This is a 1,200-page epic that takes perfectly done elements of cartoon and adventure fantasy and smashes them together amazingly.
4. Captain America (Omnibus): Ed brubaker is one of the best writers in the comic world right now. What a blessing it is to have him writing Captain America. This collection gives you the first 20 something issues penned by Ed, a man who knows how to write Cap the way he deserves to be written, and who ultimately penned his death.
3. Civil War: One of the most enthralling events in the marvel universe. A government appointed “superhuman registration act” forces the countries heroes to reveal their identities and sign with the government to fight crime lest they face arrest and imprisonment. This splits the heroes into two groups, those who support the registration act, led by Tony stark aka iron man, and those who defy the government and fight for the right to serve the public on their own watch, led by the man himself, Captain America
2. The Dark Knight Returns: Again, this is one of the big dogs in the comic world and is largely responsible for taking Batman out of the world of the cartoon and camp and into a darker, grittier, cooler place. Like “Watchmen” this is an 80’s book that raised the bar high. Thanks Frank Millar.
1. The Maxx: (Vol.1): The Maxx is a beyond bizarre, hard to understand and even harder to explain epic 35 issue series about a homeless man who lives in a box and believes he is a superhero that defends his social worker in prehistoric Australia. Man is it cool.
10. Planet Hulk: The Illuminati, a secret gathering of the world’s most powerful “super” people including Charles Xavier and Tony Stark, forge a plan to rid the world of the increasing threat presented by the Hulk, aka dr. Bruce Banner. But their plan to shoot him into space leaves the Hulk on a vicious alien planet to which he ultimately becomes king. It sounds bizarre, I know, but it is a truly dynamic and epic story.
9. The Long Halloween: Batman, Gordon and Harvey Dent spend a year trying to bring the mysterious killer known only as “Holiday” to justice, but at what cost? This story is so well written it was ultimately one of a handful of comic inspirations for Christopher Nolan’s Batman films.
8. The Watchmen: Anyone who is into comic books will tell you that “The Watchmen”, written by Alan Moore, one of the most notoriously strange writers in the comic world, is one of the greats, and it is. It’s actually so complex and so engrossing that it’s hard to describe. It broke a whole mess of ground, set a new standard for the comic medium and to this day seems to be without peer in many ways. Movie looks cool too.
6. The Walking Dead (Vol.1): I was in a comic shop in California that had little index cards beneath popular titles to summarize the kind of book it was to new readers. The one under Walking Dead said something like: “A character driven post-apocalyptic zombie soap opera that is as addictive as crack”, and I’m not sure I’ve heard it described better. This is one of few books that leave even my wife hanging for the next installment like it was an episode of Grey’s Anatomy.
5. Bone (One Volume Edition): Most people describe Bone as “bugs Bunny meets Lord Of The Rings” and that’s kind of right, but maybe not enough. This is a 1,200-page epic that takes perfectly done elements of cartoon and adventure fantasy and smashes them together amazingly.
4. Captain America (Omnibus): Ed brubaker is one of the best writers in the comic world right now. What a blessing it is to have him writing Captain America. This collection gives you the first 20 something issues penned by Ed, a man who knows how to write Cap the way he deserves to be written, and who ultimately penned his death.
3. Civil War: One of the most enthralling events in the marvel universe. A government appointed “superhuman registration act” forces the countries heroes to reveal their identities and sign with the government to fight crime lest they face arrest and imprisonment. This splits the heroes into two groups, those who support the registration act, led by Tony stark aka iron man, and those who defy the government and fight for the right to serve the public on their own watch, led by the man himself, Captain America
2. The Dark Knight Returns: Again, this is one of the big dogs in the comic world and is largely responsible for taking Batman out of the world of the cartoon and camp and into a darker, grittier, cooler place. Like “Watchmen” this is an 80’s book that raised the bar high. Thanks Frank Millar.
1. The Maxx: (Vol.1): The Maxx is a beyond bizarre, hard to understand and even harder to explain epic 35 issue series about a homeless man who lives in a box and believes he is a superhero that defends his social worker in prehistoric Australia. Man is it cool.
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