May. 24th, 2003

silversolitaire: (bushed)
... that kinda sucks and thus I took the liberty to annotate it humorously.

1. You've ever ended a sentence with the word "PSYCHE". [O.o;;; What the hell does that mean?]
2. You watched the Pound Puppies.[*thinks hard* Are those these ugly dogs that you could "adopt" and they had this really tearjerking commercial that ran endlessly in stores and made my whine because I felt so sorry for them? Well I only know that, never saw the show]
3. You can sing the rap to the "Fresh Prince of Belair" [uhm, yes, but only because it's on constant rerun here. And uhm, isn't Fresh Prince from 1990????]
4. You wore biker shorts under your skirts and felt stylish. [heck no! I never wore skirts!]
5. You yearned to be a member of the Baby-sitters club and tired to start a club of your own. [Does the Masters of the Universe Adventurer's Club (MAC) count? Then yes]
6. You owned those lil Strawberry Shortcake pals scented dolls. [HaHAH! I had the Pieman, but I had no idea where he came from until some years ago]
7. You know that "WOA" comes from Joey on Blossom. [Uh noooo. It doesn't. And again, Blossom is 1990-ish. What the fuck is wrong with these people?]
8. Two words: M.C. Hammer [Yes? What about him? I know who he is? Does that qualify me? And again I would like to point out that I'm PRETTY sure this was a hit of the 90s. Okay, this test is all screwy.]
9. If you ever watched "Fraggle Rock". [Yes! Finally a point I can fully agree on!]
10. You had plastic streamers on your handle bars. [What the hell is this?]
11. You can sing the entire theme song to "Duck Tales". [Uh yes, but only because it's the only thing I can play on the piano, pretty much.]
12. When it was actually worth getting up early on a Saturday to watch cartoons. [I wouldn't say that. The shows sucked too.]
13. You wore a pony tail on the side of your head. [NO! Holy shit!]
14. You saw the original "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" on the big screen. [Yes!!!!!]
15. You got super-excited when it was Oregon Trail day in computer class at school. [O.o?]
16. You made your mom buy one of those clips that would hold your shirt in a knot on the side. [No! But she always bought this kind of shit for me and I didn't want it!]
17. You played the game "MASH" (Mansion, Apartment, Shelter, House) with friends at school. [yes, but only two years ago for the first time and I don't see why this is oh so 80s!]
18. You wore Jordache jean jacket and you were proud of it. [No.]
19. L.A. Gear..... [Uh no?]
20. You wanted to change your name to "JEM" in Kindergarten. [Who is JEM and why would I want to be called that?]
21. You remember reading "Tales of a fourth grade Nothing" and all the Ramona books. [No.]
22. You know the profound meaning of "WAX ON, WAX OFF" [No.]
23. You wanted to be a Goonie. [Heh yes, I admit.]
24. If you ever wore, fluorescent clothing. [uhm, no. I always had a taste, thank you]
25. You can remember what Michael Jackson looked like before his nose fell off... [LOL yes]
26. If you have ever pondered why Smurfette was the only female smurf. [I did, but only because I read this porn story when I first logged on the internet years ago and I realized what "blue balls" means...]
27. You took Lunch Pales to school. [No.]
28. You remember the CRAZE, then the BANNING of slap bracelets. [No o.o]
29. You still get the urge to say "NOT" after every sentence. [I don't, and this is Wayne's World and AGAIN, this is very much 90s!]
30. You remember Hypercolor t-shirts. [Yeeeeeees! LOL!]
31. Barbie and the Rockers was your favourite band. [Uhm, I didn't think they actually were a band... but I had the Midge and Rick of them.]
32. You thought She-ra and He-Man should hook up. [What am I, a sick pervert, or what? Besides, what about Teela then???]
33. You thought your childhood friends would never leave because you exchanged friendship bracelets. [No, I was never that dumb, and what does this have to do with the 80s? Kids still do that!]
34. If you ever owned a pair of Jelly-Shoes. [Uh no. Should I be grateful?]
35. After you saw Pee-Wee's Big Adventure you kept saying "I know you are, but what am I?" [Ooooh so this is where this is from! Aha! And no.]
36. You remember "I've fallen and I can't get up" [No? I feel dumb.]
37. You remember going to the skating rink before there were in-line skates. [Hah, yes. Okay, I can see that. I also remember a time before computers, imagine that.]
38. If you ever got seriously injured on a Slip and Slide. [...? I probably did. I always got injured.]
39. If you have ever played with a Skip-It. [Mow... I dunno...]
40. You had or attended a birthday party at McDonalds. [Yes, once! But HEY! This is NOT the 80s! There are STILL McD birthday parties around!]
41. You've gone through this list occasionally saying "This wasn't from the 80's!" [Dude yes, you suck, whoever made this.]
42. You remember Popples. [no.]
43. "Dont worry, be happy"[Eh yes]
44. You wore like, EIGHT pairs of socks over tights with high top Reeboks. [Urgh no.]
45. You wore socks scrunched down. [Only because my bother made me.]
46. "Miss MARY MACK MACK MACK, all dressed in BLACK BLACK BLACK" [Yea, up yours too. No.]
47. You remember boom boxes vs cd players. [I guess I do.]
48. You remember watching both "Gremlins" movies. [Urgh yes, and they scared the shit out of me. And HAH, Gremlins 2 was 1990, you sucker.]
49. You know what it meant to say "Care Bear Stare!!" [Huh... I guess, yes]
50. You remember watching Rainbow Bright and My Little Pony Tales [Nyahaha no! I already hated it then!... okay I lie. I always wanted a My Little Pony but my parents wouldn't support the hype caused by well-placed colorful TV ads during cartoon hours. So fuck you, Ponys, I never liked you anyway!]
51. You thought Doogie Howser was hot. [What am I, blind? And I really only know this show because Ull watched it and I thought it sucked ass. Besides, that show was 1989-1993, so it's distinctly more 90s than 80s]
52. You remember Alf, the lil furry brown alien from Melmac. [Okay yes, I do. No problem.]
53. You remember New Kids on the Block when they were cool. [Excuse me? Were they ever? They were THE epitome of uncoolness whehn they just started out and then they tried to be cool and failed miserably and then deservedly went down the drain. But yes, I remember them, period. I even went to a concert, I must admit, because I wanted to impress my best friend then and I was horrified, in all honest. I had never seen so many girls at the same spot then, screaming and fainting and I thought it looked extremely silly when those five boys suddenly started doing those odd dance moves in sync... *shudders*]
54. You knew all the characters names and their life stories on "Saved By the Bell", the ORIGINAL class. [No.]
55. You know all the words to Bon Jovi - SHOT THRU THE HEART. [Uh... I don't even know that song! o.o Does "Living on a Prayer" or stuff like that count too?]
56. You remember the Thundercats and transformers. [I do, actually. I also remember the Galaxy Rangers. God, they kicked ass.]

*hits scroll down repeatedly* That's it??? That's the end? Jesus, that sucked. Okay, I think I've pretty much established that either I'm a child of the 90s even though I went through the complete 80s but somehow they didn't impress me that much, or this test simply didn't get the facts straight and kinda jumbled around with the 80s and 90s. Or maybe both. Yes, both I'm pretty sure.

Okay, I'm bored.

P.S.: If anybody wants to enlighten me about the things I have no fucking clue about, please do!
silversolitaire: (huggle)

Ewan McGregor

By Anna David

There are those that think Ewan McGregor may be too good to be true.

After shooting to stardom as the heroin-addicted Renton in 1996's Trainspotting, McGregor embraced his independent side (in movies such as Brassed Off, A Life Less Ordinary and Velvet Goldmine) before being catapulted into the public consciousness by taking on the Obi-Wan role for Star Wars. By the time he sang his heart out in Moulin Rouge, he could do no wrong. And, in case his acting credits aren't enough, he also formed a production company, Natural Nylon, with old friends and fellow superstars Jude Law, Sadie Frost and Jonny Lee Miller. Then there's the matter of his production designer wife Eve (whom he met when they worked together on a TV show called Kavanagh QC in 1994) and their darling daughters, Clara Mathilde and Esther Rose.

The picture seemed almost too perfect. Then, as these things will, rumors surfaced that he was the man who'd come between Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise's 10-year Hollywood union. As McGregor and Kidman attended Moulin Rouge ceremony after Moulin Rouge ceremony, there were whispers that the two friends looked mighty friendly, indeed. Alas for the sake of the gossipmongers, the rumors turned out to be false. Fact is, Ewan McGregor is just good enough to be true.

As he prepares for the homage to sixties films, Down With Love (also starring Renee Zellweger) to open, he chats about being able to embody his idol Cary Grant, having to persuade producers to let him sing and the swinging bachelor pad of his day.

Your Down With Love character, Catcher Block, is extremely suave and debonair. How were you able to tap into that type?

I think the whole process was about reliving the films I'd watched as a kid almost. I remembered them all - Peyton [Reed, the director] sent me all the films that are kind of referenced and I knew them all, I'd seen them all many times - so it was just about getting back in touch with that. And when I'd read the script, I knew exactly what it was all about. And then I was just given a chance to be all my favorite actors on screen - [especially] Cary Grant.

And you had all the [suave and debonair] tools - the martini glasses -

[Interrupting with a laugh] I always come with my own tool.

What was your process of getting into the character?

The process into it was really hard. I'm finding this more and more as I go along. It's become part of my process to not imagine I'll be able to pull this off. It's happening to me more or less every time I start something I think, "I can't fucking do this one." And I've had to kind of realize that that's part of it. And in a way, that's what makes it so exciting. Because hopefully a few weeks [after thinking that], you're pulling it off.

But in this case, I came off a film I made in Scotland called Young Adam, which was really the polar opposite of this, and they were really back-to-back. I got home to London on a Saturday from that and I started rehearsing this on Monday. The film in Scotland was a very low budget dark erotic introspective film about a loner, a guy who'd given up his moral self, if you'd like. And here I was playing not camp but the opposite. The film in Scotland was totally inward looking and my character hardly said anything at all, and here I was playing a character that demanded you kind of slapped it on from the outside, if you like. The comedy in these sort of sixties movies is much more played than the way we would play in a contemporary romantic comedy, for instance, where you don't play the comedy. That seems to be a rule that I've had since I started acting: don't play the comedy. And here I was on set really really fucking playing the comedy. And for the first week of rehearsals, I really couldn't get into it. Because it's a style that really hasn't been explored since the sixties. I was delighted to see [when I saw the film] that it doesn't look like it's hard work but it was.

Catcher seems like a misogynist. He really seems to just want to use women.

Yea, he uses them to the best of his ability I think. But that was the point of the character. If anything, he's been slightly torn down. And it's much more fun to be that way on a film set than to be that way in real life.

Do you relate to the character? Did you have your days of being a player?

Well, we've all had those days. I was never a playboy because I could never afford the suits and all that stuff when I was up to no good. But I had my day I suppose.

Did you have a bachelor pad?

I did have a swinging bachelor pad once. When I did my first job, a television series called Lipstick on Your Collar (in 1993), I was living in the very far outer reaches of eastern London. It was the first time I'd ever been paid to act. And I rented a small one bedroom flat in Primrose Hill and it was the kind of apartment where all parties would begin and end. And very often me and my friends would meet on a Friday and it would be off and then they would all leave sometime on a Sunday night. It was my version of Catcher Block's bachelor pad. However, it was much more like a kind of realistic New York flat than the one in our movie.

The sets in the movie are spectacular.

They were beautiful. When we were watching it the other day, both sets - my apartment and Renee's apartment - both got rounds of applause. It was kind of like the old days in the theater - when the curtains would go back and you'd applaud the set. I like that.

Do you sing in the movie?

We kept hammering the producers to let us do a song. I mean, I couldn't believe we were having to persuade them to let us do one. I was going, "Look, I did Moulin Rouge and Renee did Chicago, don't you think you should put a song in it?" And they were like, "Well, we'll see." And it's like, "You'll see? What the fuck are you talking about? Let us do a song!" So eventually we ended up persuading them.

Is there a certain character in history that you'd like to play?

I think I'm still fascinated by soldiers and I think one of the reasons I wanted to do Black Hawk Down was to discover what makes a soldier able to do his work and how a man or a woman can keep their head together and operate. I got a flavor of what that might be when we all trained with the rangers. And I'm reading [David] Hackworth's book about Vietnam at the moment, Steel My Soldiers' Hearts.

Why are you so fascinated by it?

I suppose because I can't imagine pulling it off. And my brother's in the forces - he's a fighter pilot. And when I was younger, I used to be dismissive of it. I was a drama major, you know, so I wasn't into the war, the older I get the more fascinated I am by it.

Being in Black Hawk Down must have made watching the war coverage a different experience.

Yes, my wife kept reminding me that I'm not a soldier. (Laughs)

What about the movie you just completed, Big Fish?

It's a wonderful father and son story and I play the father. I play the young Albert Finney and Billy Crudup is the son. Tim Burton directed it and it couldn't really have been directed by anyone else. There's that beautiful Tim Burton fantasticalness about the stuff that I got to do. Jessica Lange and Albert Finney play the older husband and wife and Alison Lohmann - who's a staggering actress - and I play the younger husband and wife. Danny DeVito, Steve Buscemi and Helena Bonham Carter are also in it - it's quite an incredible cast.

Did you watch Tom Jones [to prepare for playing a younger Albert Finney]?

No, I was sort of expecting to watch a lot of Albert Finney movies and shadowing him and none of it happened. Because I leave [whether I do something like that or not] up to the director - it's his call, really. There was one specific mannerism that I copied and that was it. It was set in Alabama and we both did Southern accents.

When you have to do an accent for a movie, do you speak in the accent all the time?

No. I wish I had the guts to do that but I don't. I take my work very seriously but I can't seem to do that. So I work very hard on the accent and I use it when the camera's turning. But that's the way I work. There are actors who stay in character all day long and I admire them but I've never been like that.

Since taking on Star Wars, how has your life changed?

What's been interesting about it is that very little has changed - to my relief, I suppose. Because it was one of the things I wondered about before I decided to do it. I questioned it a lot because it's not my bag really, all that might have gone along with it. I certainly wouldn't ever like to get nailed down to playing one kind of part. I love being in the films. The only big thing that's changed is that children have seen me act and I don't think many of them had seen the films I'd made up until that point. [Laughs] I certainly hope not. And I love it when kids come to talk to me about Star Wars and ask me how my light saber works. I think the impression is that for six or seven years of your life, you're kind of Star Wars bound and if you're lucky, you get to do other jobs. I mean the reality that I spent four months making the first one and then three or four years later spent four months making the second one and I'm just about to start making the third one.

There was talk of bringing Moulin Rouge to Broadway. Any interest?

I'm very interested in doing theater, whether it be musical theater or not, I wouldn't know until I read something. I'm not sure I'd be interested in doing Moulin Rouge - I find the idea of going back, returning to a character, would be...I don't know what I would get out of it, seeing that I've already done it.


Article Copyright Celebrity News Service. All Rights Reserved.

silversolitaire: (silly)
Q: How many people does it take to change a light bulb in Usenet?

A: 1 to successfully change the light bulb and to post to the mail list that the light bulb has been changed.

14 to share similar experiences of changing light bulbs and how the light bulb could have been changed differently.

7 to caution about the dangers of changing light bulbs.

27 to point out spelling/grammar errors in posts about changing light bulbs.

53 to flame the spell checkers.

156 to write to the list administrator complaining about the light bulb discussion and its inappropriateness to this mail list.

41 to correct spelling in the spelling/grammar flames.

109 to post that this list is not about light bulbs and to please take this email exchange to alt.lite.bulb.

203 to demand that cross posting to alt.grammar, alt.spelling and alt.punctuation about changing light bulbs be stopped.

111 to defend the posting to this list, saying that, "We are all using light bulbs and therefore the posts **are** relevant to this mail list."

306 to debate which method of changing light bulbs is superior, where to buy the best light bulbs, what brands of light bulb work best for this technique, and what brands are faulty.

27 to post URLs where one can see examples of different light bulbs.

14 to post that the URLs were posted incorrectly and to post corrected URLs.

3 to post about links they found from the URLs that are relevant to this list, which makes light bulbs relevant to this list.

33 to collate all posts to date, then quote them including all headers and footers, and then add "Me Too."

12 to post to the list that they are unsubscribing because they cannot handle the light bulb controversy.

19 to quote the "Me Too's" to say, "Me Three."

4 to suggest that posters request the light bulb FAQ.

1 to propose new alt.change.lite.bulb newsgroup.

47 to say that this is just what this list was meant for, leave it here.

143 votes for a new list: alt.lite.bulb.

38 votes proclaiming the advantages in using vintage light bulbs.
silversolitaire: (Default)
Nr. 3, Ireland.

Hm the Ireland guy is very cute... reminds me of Stuart! ^_^;;; A lot actually... *drools* But the song is typically Irish... again. "Let's hold on together"... gah.

"Europe sings, Ireland wins" much? I don't think so XD.

LOL! The commentator just said "That title actually already won a couple of years ago as 'Fly on the Wing's of Love'!" Nyahahahaa! Oh well, they shouldn't be too strict! It's not THAT much alike.

[btw, in the rare case anybody is interested in my comments on the Eurovision contest you need to go to my LJ directly, since I backdated all entries since it was really clogging up the friends page. It was nice while it was on and I got immediate response, but now I want to clear up the place a bit more! ^_^;]
silversolitaire: (Default)
Turkey. Audience, stop frigging clapping >_<. We're not at the Oktoberfest. Hmmm.... I don't much like the song, to be honest. It's old school chart music, spiced up with some Turkish ethno sounds. A bit like Turkish Ricky Martin or so. Or Shakira, yes. Turkish Shakira is good. And again, I hate it when the show outweighs the singer.

URGH!!!!!! And now she's rapping. Yes, Miss Aishe-Shakira, you're soooo special.

And of course people have a fit when some pretty girls swing their hips. *grumbles*

*makes notes*
silversolitaire: (Default)
About Nr. 2, Austria... OMG!!!!!!! That guy can't be serious!!! I mean, the lyrics are awful already, but just the performance... he looks as if he had some sort of spastic disease. At least he stopped grabbing his crotch, even though "Michael Jackson does it. Madonna does it. Then I can does a do-ee-do it too".

Nr. 1... I already forgot what it was. Iceland... uhm. Well, dunno.

Malta. Hm, nice-ish, nice melody, but again nothing special. Methinks I have too high standards... heh.

I'm hungry...

Okay, there's really nothing I can say about this. "Don't let me fall apart, please don't break my heart, I love you."? What is this, Altavista Rhyme Machine?
silversolitaire: (Default)
Btw, I'm talking about the Grandprix de la Chanson Eurovision, short Eurovision or Grandprix. Looky here ==> clicku.

Bosnia & Herzegovina. Okay, this sounded a LOT better pre-recorded. Someone's way out of tune here. And wasn't she blond? At least she stopped trying to combine Barbie pink with sap green. My eyes, my eyes. Yup, that video was epileptism-inducing.

*thumps down* Me no likey. Fuck off already. Nobody wants to hear you go "Thank you!!! You're a great audience! You love me, you really love me!!!" x]
silversolitaire: (Default)
First question coming to my mind "Man or woman?"

Hm... nice ballad-style thingy. But you kinda wait for things to spice up and they never do. Also, it reminds me of something... ah, I know, Shakira "Underneath your Clothes" The beginning only. But she sings like her. Will you guys please stop ripping off Shakira???

*falls asleep*

Okay, sorta nice. When are the good songs coming again? *yawns*
silversolitaire: (Default)
Hm... I like this song, actually. It rawketh. And the dance movement is funny. "It's just a step to the left, and then a jump to the riiiiiiiiight, put your hands on your hips and pull your knees in tiiiiiiiiiiight. But it's the pelvic thrust that really drives you insaaaaahaaaahaaaaane." Rip-off! x] Okay, I'm joking... kinda.

My cynism scares me. I even make fun of songs I like.

When did they switch to English?
silversolitaire: (Default)
*eyes song suspiciously* I heard that before. Yeah, yeah, apart from the obvious Ricky Martin retort... Hm, what was the name of this guy? Ruben Gomez? "Always manana, tomorrow forever"? THIS is what it sounds like! Jawohl!

*crosses it out*

WTF? "I'm feeling alive when you stand close to me???"
silversolitaire: (Default)
Oh God... *hides*

What's the deal with the dancers? Did they have a shot of valium before the show? Okay, Lou is on crack and the dancers are on Prozac.

Plus, she stole my hair color, the bitch.

Let's be happy, let's be gay... oh yes. *is happy and gay and all that good stuff*

Well that was painful and unsatisfying. Can we do it again? Just kidding. Actually, it grows on you.
silversolitaire: (Default)
Tatu. NYAHAHAHA. Yeah, BOOOOOOOOOOH at you too! Serves you right, you jerks. And next time, take your fingers out of the light socket prior to the show! XD

What a satisfaction that is to see that others hate them too. And they suck singing live. *moons them*

One day they need to learn that shouting around, groping each others tits, having your tongue into the other one's mouth and pretending to be lesbian doesn't make you a good show-act.

BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOH!
silversolitaire: (Default)
One of those again. Okay, next song. *munches cornflakes* Uhm... either the mics are crap or she's too loud or she can't sing live or all of the above. And they stole the choreography from Croatia.
silversolitaire: (Default)
...

...

...

I'm speechless.

Now that was cheesy.
silversolitaire: (Default)
[this one's for you [livejournal.com profile] maantje! ^_~]

Okay, the bashinator is back after this short break. *cracks knuckles*

Hm... she's.. golden. And she's definitely too happy. Go away, you! But the song doesn't suck too much. I think we should change the rules. We give points for suckiness and the one sucking the least wins! Who's with me?

Anyway, back to Netherlands. The song is okayish, but she really should stop shaking her fist to look more insisting. It gets boring and is ridiculous. And did that fat woman in the back belong to the chorus or did someone from backstage sneak in there???
silversolitaire: (Default)
Uhm missy? Are we a half-tone too high? This is horrible! *stuffs broccoli into ears* Also, can you please explain to me why they chose the Latin rhythms when everybody else does it and has a lot more justification, ethnology-wise?

Ah, now she clicked. Ah, so good when the pain finally stops... ARUGH!!! Now she's off again. This time by a quarter tone. She's getting there...

Well, that sucked.
silversolitaire: (Default)
Ah, the Terminator song! "Hasta La Vista Baby!!!" Nyahahaha!

Well it started out weak, with that pseudo-opera-ish howling that sounded like someone held his balls in a tight grip, but now it gets better. My ears no longer hurt.

Oh well, it rocked. A little bit.
silversolitaire: (Default)
>_<; I'm typing and just listen. I think, wow sounds nice actually. I look up... and see Shakira. What the fuck is wrong with you people? *looks* Okay, she's wearing a dress... nice cleavage! XD Nice dress, too. I wish she wasn't blonde.

Okay, this song is nice. I likey.

... what? Don't look at me like that! I can be nice! ^_^;
silversolitaire: (Default)
Hmmm... slow... soft... ah... *relaxes a bit* Finally someone who doesn't shout and who doesn't spasm on stage and who doesn't need colorful costumes and a great show act. *sighs happily*

Hm, what a sunnyboy! *pinces his cheeks*

Okay, this song isn't really special, but it's nice. It's calming. That's nice for a change! ^_^; Reminds me of that song from La Boum... Cook da Books "Memory" or so. But hey, that's okay.
silversolitaire: (Default)
Someone's singing French? Oh wait, this is France! ^_^;

Uhm, no comments. It's okay-music.

Laaaaady, don't shock me with a sudden drumming-bridge that makes me think there's something cool going on and then just do business as usual!

Hm the strings are nice. Kinda The Corr-ish. But on the whole... boooooooooooring.
silversolitaire: (Default)
OOooooh Poland! * bounces* Been waiting for that.

Okay why does she get to wear the cool coat from the video and he doesn't??? Uhm, and too bad that the war ended, eh? Now those doves look kinda out of place, eh? XD

*folds in ears* Okay, you mustn't listen to the actual lyrics. Other than that... nice. LOL, he mixed up the German words!

XD!!!!!!! @ bro. "Okay, so he can't see any wars on earth from space, but he can see Star Wars from the side."
silversolitaire: (Default)
Hey, there's one I like. Latvia should have won, what?, three years ago. BrainStorm rocked.

Are those twins? Aw no. Too bad.

Nyahahhaa, Non-Twin #2, what were you doing? This looked like a multiple Saturday Day Night Life remembrance spasm!
silversolitaire: (Default)
Ah, good to see the Belgians solved the language problem by singing fantasy lyrics! XD

O.o;;; Uhm, the music is very nice, the instrumentation, too, but... what are those gestures??? Are they mimicking how to make their favorite dish? And that accordion player either has back problems or indigestion....

But all in all... they can stay. *nods* I likey.
silversolitaire: (Default)
Ohhh, I like this one. They're cool and the song is nice, too. Nice piano and instruments! ^_^ Hey, this is the kind of song I'd buy on CD. On the other hand, it pains me to know that the band split up... *sighs*

[I'll be backdating from now on, so I don't annoy the fuck out of everyone with my many posts.]
silversolitaire: (Default)
Hey, I like this one! What is wrong with me??? Maybe I learnt to take the pain and now I can abide more? XD

I like the "Have you ever known" bit. I don't like the way she's interpreting the song though. She songs like some reject-Tina Turner double.

But what's the deal with those neon discs? Should I actually be listening to the lyrics to get that? I think this is supposed to be a DJ... but does that make any sense? O.o; LOL
silversolitaire: (Default)
Ooooooh, Sweden! Been looking forward to that! ^____^ *listens*

Hm, it actually sounded better in the sneak preview... But it's nice. It has a definite beat and it sounds good. Uh... her back is kinda bent, isn't it? Heh...

Damn, I don't have anything to comment on! Oh well...

One more song to go...
silversolitaire: (Default)
And the pain is almost over... *exhausted*

O.O; Okay, who exactly said that you can always mix any tinge of pink??? This hurts my eyes! The top is tinged red and the bottom is tinged purple! OOOOOOOW! *covers eyes*

The song was... oh well. A song.

Hm... backdating of course caused my entries not to appear at all. But I guess it's only fair, so I won't bug the hell out of everyone and spam the friends pages... If anybody is interested in my comments they can check my LJ. Not that I think anybody is! XD

Yay, soon we're voting! I'm so curious! I have no idea who'll win! Just too much sucked! XD But there was also a bunch of really good songs. *nods*
silversolitaire: (Default)
Getting ready for voting!

Uh... the Swedes sounded a lot like the Slovenian title actually! O.o;;;

Hm, I liked (in no particular order):

Estonia "Eighties Coming Back"
Belgium "Sanomi"
Norway " I'm Not Afraid To Move On"
Greece "Never Let You Go"
Poland "Zadnych granic"
Croatia "Vise Nisam Tvoja"
Iceland "Open Your Heart"

If one of those wins, I'll be happy ^_^.

Dude, only 5 mins to vote???

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silversolitaire

February 2009

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