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A little of everything
Posted in Humor.
I discovered Tom Lehrer, a humorist piano player from the mid ’40s through the 60s, just now when reading The Ancestor’s Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution by Richard Dawkins (HIGHLY recommended book). Tom was mentioned in one of the captions for his song which is marked to play in the style ‘A little too fast’ (I Wanna Go Back to Dixie is the song).
This was one of the first songs I found on youtube, "National Brotherhood Week":
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIlJ8ZCs4jY
And there are plenty more just as entertaining!
There is more information about Tom Lehrer in a book I randomly found, Seriously Funny: The Rebel Comedians of the 1950s and 1960s. Google has a preview of Seriously Funny here.
Posted in Art, Humor, Random, Short Post.
Hamsters caught my attention when a friend showed me this picture:
from the site:
http://www.novaksblog.com/2007/08/26/stumble-on-sunday-3rd-part/
And in a search to find out just how much hamsters can really stuff into their pouches I came across these irresistibly cute videos:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfqNXADl3kU

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-l-jshNYkA
So then my brother purchased one for me for Christmas. She’s quite cute and usually entertaining, at least when she isn’t preoccupied with being ornery and/or escaping from her cage.
My cat hardly seems to notice her unless, for instance, she is climbing on her back. This usually makes my cat angry, but only if she sees the hamster in action and so knows what it is back there digging claws into her side. Or perhaps it is humiliating to have food items nest on one’s self.
Posted in Humor, Random, Short Post.
Kasou Taishou (In hiragana that would be かそうたいしょう, but see the footnote*…) has become one of my favorite Japanese shows. It has been around Japanese television for quite a few years, and I came across it while looking for videos where I could hear Japanese being spoken on YouTube, and there are many episodes on there now. The premise is that it is a gameshow in which anyone can enter. Contestants use costume and props in order to enact a scene of some sort, from every day things to imaginary situations; but the show format encourages a great amount of creativity in presentation, especially in visual ‘effects’ which might be easy to do with video editing but are in most cases quite elaborate when done ‘live’ in front of the small studio audience. So for instance a character might float in the air by means of being held up by people dressed in black who blend into the background (sometimes referred to as ‘ninjas’).
There is a panel of judges who dish out points based on how good they think the skit was. They seem to be quite generous and the point system does not seem to mean much – so long as they get over 14 points they are given a medal by a Japanese woman dressed as a bunny…There are reasons I have a soft spot for Japan, you know…
The show really needs to be seen to understood. If you are fluent in Japanese or able to figure out how to click on the links, the television station website for it is at:
http://www.ntv.co.jp/kasoh/past/index.html
Below are just a few of the skits that really stood out to me, but I could list plenty more!
| Conductor Orangutan | Scuba | Hot! | Cursed Room |
| Mogul Skiing | Chameleon | All Messed Up | Baseball World Record |
| Olympic Games Highlights | |||
* I’m very new to writing out Japanese, and the hiragana above doesn’t seem to pull up proper search engine results. It means something like, "masquerade prize" with the kanji choices 仮装 and 大賞 and a lot of help from the awesome translation site http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jwb/cgi-bin/wwwjdic.cgi . Apparently my choice of kanji is close, given the Japanese from Wikipedia: "欽ちゃん and 香取慎吾の全日本仮装大賞; Kinchan and Katori Shingo’s All Japan Costume Grand Prix"
Indeed His Great and Tasty Noodliness exists, and our lab was blessed with His appearance during a bake-out of the vacuum chambers. We have yet to encounter Real Pirates, but assume that our lab’s collective adherence to the observance and recognition of International Talk Like A Pirate Day has not gone without notice by His Tomato-Sauciness.

Indeed in these rare photographs one can see clearly His Noodly Appendages reaching out from under the foil wrapping as if to touch fellow Pastafarians with His Slimy Tomato Sauce.

Posted in Experiment, Humor, Short Post.