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    • October 15, 2010 9:30 AM CDT
    • I actually did sleep in late today, but I forgot about it being Brick Day until I got to work. D'oh! Shoulda planned better. Anyway, I plan on trying to leave early today and hit my favorite neighborhood tavern for happy hour later. :)

    • October 15, 2010 9:28 AM CDT
    • In the late '90s, in Oakland, California, back when "East Bay" was widely recognized as Pig-Latin for "Beast", a band called the Gazillions took it upon themselves to revive a long-forgotten holiday, Brick Day.


      Jason Smith, the drummer of the now-defunct Gazillions, was asked after the purpose behind Brick Day, and he had this to say, "Don't you think we need more national drinking days? And I'm not talking about holidays that drive you to drink, like Christmas, or those holidays that are used as thinly veiled excuses to drink, like Cinco de Mayo or St.Paddy's Day. I'm talking about a holiday that clearly admits its mission statement — that you are meant to drink all day. "


      The Legend of Brick Day

      On October 15, 1879, Ezekiel Fairweather decided to give up his masonry business in Tuscon. He gazed out over his stock of bricks, neatly stacked in cubic yards, and mournfully repeated the word that proved his undoing: adobe.. adobe.. adobe.

      No one wanted his quality English brickwork in the burgeoning Southwest, preferring the indigenous form of masonry in the area. Having put all his money into establishing his brick factory, he had
      lost everything. So, he did what any sane man would do in the same
      situation — he headed for a saloon
      and commenced to get drunk. He walked in and sat down, pathetically
      clutching one of his bricks to his chest like a parson holding the Good Book. He set the brick down on the bar and ordered a drink.

      "Well there pardner," said the jovial bartender, "whachew got that brick fer?"

      Fairweather took in a deep breath, slowly lowered his glass, and said, "It's Brick Day, fuckface."


      Brick Day is celebrated annually on October 15 by calling in too sick to work, going to a bar, and drinking all day. Faithful celebrants (as opposed to shiftless drunks) are recognized by the brick sitting on the bar next to, or under, their beer (and a cheap beer, this is the East Bay Punk Scene, not some nancy CAMRA session). The headquarters for Brick Day celebrations is the venerable Oakland dive bar and cultural institution, the Stork Club.


      How to Celebrate Brick Day
      1. Sleep in late.
      2. Call in sick to work. (If you don't have a job, call someplace you might work, and let them know you won't be in.)
      3. Get a brick, maybe two (see below).
      4. Find a good dive bar, someplace with draught beer on special during daylight hours.
      5. When you order your first beer, set your brick on the bar.
        • If the bartender asks you why you have a brick, give him the ritual response, "it's Brick Day, and you should have one too".
        • If the bartender or anyone else at the bar doesn't know about Brick Day, give him a brick (if you brought an extra) and explain the Legend of
          Brick Day (proselytize for the cause).
      6. Drink yer beer. Have another, it's Brick Day. (If there is another weekday following Brick Day, go to work hungover, or DON'T GO TO WORK AT ALL.)

      References
      Brick Day is a fine excuse for a drink and a bit of tavern apocrypha, one that I was introduced to on October 15, 2000 at the Stork Club by J.Gorman (who later heckled me dressed as Raidan while I read the Second Coming from the stage, but that's another node). Both the interview excerpt with Jason Smith and the paraphrase of the Legend of Brick Day is from Katy S.Clair's 2001 article <www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2001-10-24/music/planet.html>

    • October 13, 2010 7:00 PM CDT
    • Geez, there's so goddamn many to list... I gotta go with the classics, though:

      Texas Chainsaw Massacre is an all time fave. I also really dig the campy goofiness of the second one as well.
      Night of the Living Dead, Hell, any of the Living Dead movies
      Zombie
      Black Christmas is legendary, but it feels wrong watching a "Christmas" movie at Halloween.
      Phantasm SLAYS and the sequels are campy sci-fi awesomeness in their own right.
      All the Evil Dead movies.

      I'm not a huge fan of really grimy, dark stuff like Last House on the Left or I Spit on Your Grave etc. I prefer my sleazy horror movies kinda ridiculous and fun.

    • October 13, 2010 3:14 AM CDT
    • Also, this one has sentimental value

    • October 13, 2010 3:07 AM CDT
    • The Blob starring Steve McQueen scared the crap out of me when I was about 4 years old and saw it at a drive-in. I enjoy it now for the sheer tackiness, and yet I always remember how it scared me all those decades ago.

      Also love the original Night of the Living Dead by George Romero.

    • October 12, 2010 4:49 PM CDT
    • I'd go with something by Dario Argento - Deep Red probably.

    • October 12, 2010 10:19 AM CDT
    • A few weeks ago I stumbles over "Alucarda", an Italian B-Movie with quotes like that:

      "That's it! A heliophobic demon! That's a sixth-category devil who hates light! He acts at night when the shadows protect him. We have do destroy him in order to free the girls. We must prepare... an EXORCISM!"

      Yeah!

    • October 10, 2010 9:13 PM CDT
    • @Sarah, That is one of the best lists I've ever seen! (adding Rossa Venezia to my list) I would recommend House Of Dark Shadows - 1970 (because I've only ever met a couple of other people that have seen it) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065856/

      SarahJayne said:

      Impossible to pick just one.

      I'm partial to very graphic/sadistic/degrading/psychologically disturbing violence. As long as it isn't bursting with bad cgi's (main detractor for most new horror). With that said...

      Tumbling Doll of Flesh, August Underground + August Underground Mordum, Inside, Men Behind the Sun, The Untold Story, Aftermath, Kichiku, Irreversible, Der Todesking, In the Highest of the Skies, Guinea Pig: The Devil's Experiments + Flower of Flesh and Blood, Rossa Venezia, Philosophy of a Knife, (Sympathy For) Lady Vengeance, All Night Long: Atrocity, Begotten, Murder Set Pieces (uncut version), Visitor Q, Salo (for the ending), Naked Blood, Eat the Schoolgirl, etc. etc.

      Some of these aren't horror movies per say, but they're definately all horrifying : ). And I'd only recommend them to people who don't flinch at Cannibal Holocaust.

      I enjoy the less disturbing stuff too though : P. Suspiria, Carnival of Souls, Black Sunday, Viy, Dementia 13, School of the Holy Beast, Dr. X, Eugenie de Sade, House, Opera, Straight Jacket, Vampyr, 2000 Maniacs, the Mystery of the Wax Museum....

      But I'll take Frankenhooker over any of 'em!

    • October 13, 2010 1:11 PM CDT
    • I always get skewered when I mention this because it’s one of the greatest movies of all time, but my friend and I walked out of Lost In Translation. I never walk out of movies. We paid good money and we were both pretty broke, too. Everyone we talked to either got angry or just smirked and said we “just didn’t get it.” Oh, I got it alright, I didn’t want it, but I got it! Two rich people fly half way around the world, live in luxury hotels, consume expensive booze and food, go to all these cool, exotic and spiritual places and they still just can’t be happy. Hitler did that to the people he put in concentration camps, didn’t he? Awwwww, poor little babies, they can’t be happy. Maybe they should try growing a soul just for kicks? That Scarlett Johannesburg has all the personality and acting ability of a houseplant, too. What a yawn festival. Next!

    • October 13, 2010 11:57 AM CDT
    • Here's some of my old rassling pictures with The Sheik....shot in 1986 at Exeter Ontario (little hick town 2 hours from Toronto where they still believed rasslin was real)...There was also a wrestling bear that nite that took on a few of the drunk rednecks who were brave (drunk) enough to face the bear. To end it, the bear and a drunk got tangled in the chain and the bear ran at full speed to the exit and down the main street of Exeter! Made the headlines and it's probably still talked about by the locals...no pics of that, i was laughing WAY too hard!!! http://mapleleafwrestling.4t.com/featuresmlwp/bearmanshow.html

      whatwave dave said:

      And if you dig Sabu, you'd love The Sheik. The Sheik, or The Noble Exhalted One as we always called him, is actually the uncle of Sabu and taught him the ropes (no pun intended) when Sabu was first starting out.
      The Sheik would throw fireballs, cut open opponents with a letter opener and draw blood, and do his own share of bleeding as well....whenever he rassled it was total mayham...Somewhere i've got some pictures of The Sheik that i'll try to find and post.



      Ruby Soleil said:
      Yes! That's right the Dudleys and the Hollys. Also New Jack, and Sabu-those guys did the most sick ass shit, oh and Al Snow, can't believe I didn't think of him first.


      whatwave dave said:
      Punk Rasslers........first one i can recall seeing was Chris Colt...dog collar, lots of black eye makeup, safety pins in his clothes, ear ring etc....this woulda been the early 80's or maybe late 70's.

      Kevin Sullivan sorta took this look and added some goth elements to it. Plus he had a bunch of followers like Bob Roop, Luna Vachon (RIP), Nancy etc to make sort of a punk/goth coven.

      Road Warriors were definitely a punk influenced tag team...plus they owe a lot to the Road Warrior/Mad Max movies, which in themselves were pretty punk influenced movies.

      Ruby, you might be thinking of the Dudleys, there was several of them in ECW...definitely white trash influenced, but then a lot of the ECW crew were.

    • October 13, 2010 11:37 AM CDT
    • And if you dig Sabu, you'd love The Sheik. The Sheik, or The Noble Exhalted One as we always called him, is actually the uncle of Sabu and taught him the ropes (no pun intended) when Sabu was first starting out. The Sheik would throw fireballs, cut open opponents with a letter opener and draw blood, and do his own share of bleeding as well....whenever he rassled it was total mayham...Somewhere i've got some pictures of The Sheik that i'll try to find and post.

      Ruby Soleil said:

      Yes! That's right the Dudleys and the Hollys. Also New Jack, and Sabu-those guys did the most sick ass shit, oh and Al Snow, can't believe I didn't think of him first.


      whatwave dave said:
      Punk Rasslers........first one i can recall seeing was Chris Colt...dog collar, lots of black eye makeup, safety pins in his clothes, ear ring etc....this woulda been the early 80's or maybe late 70's.

      Kevin Sullivan sorta took this look and added some goth elements to it. Plus he had a bunch of followers like Bob Roop, Luna Vachon (RIP), Nancy etc to make sort of a punk/goth coven.

      Road Warriors were definitely a punk influenced tag team...plus they owe a lot to the Road Warrior/Mad Max movies, which in themselves were pretty punk influenced movies.

      Ruby, you might be thinking of the Dudleys, there was several of them in ECW...definitely white trash influenced, but then a lot of the ECW crew were.

    • October 13, 2010 8:45 AM CDT
    • Yes! That's right the Dudleys and the Hollys. Also New Jack, and Sabu-those guys did the most sick ass shit, oh and Al Snow, can't believe I didn't think of him first.

      whatwave dave said:

      Punk Rasslers........first one i can recall seeing was Chris Colt...dog collar, lots of black eye makeup, safety pins in his clothes, ear ring etc....this woulda been the early 80's or maybe late 70's.

      Kevin Sullivan sorta took this look and added some goth elements to it. Plus he had a bunch of followers like Bob Roop, Luna Vachon (RIP), Nancy etc to make sort of a punk/goth coven.

      Road Warriors were definitely a punk influenced tag team...plus they owe a lot to the Road Warrior/Mad Max movies, which in themselves were pretty punk influenced movies.

      Ruby, you might be thinking of the Dudleys, there was several of them in ECW...definitely white trash influenced, but then a lot of the ECW crew were.

    • October 8, 2010 6:24 PM CDT
    • Punk Rasslers........first one i can recall seeing was Chris Colt...dog collar, lots of black eye makeup, safety pins in his clothes, ear ring etc....this woulda been the early 80's or maybe late 70's.

      Kevin Sullivan sorta took this look and added some goth elements to it. Plus he had a bunch of followers like Bob Roop, Luna Vachon (RIP), Nancy etc to make sort of a punk/goth coven.

      Road Warriors were definitely a punk influenced tag team...plus they owe a lot to the Road Warrior/Mad Max movies, which in themselves were pretty punk influenced movies.

      Ruby, you might be thinking of the Dudleys, there was several of them in ECW...definitely white trash influenced, but then a lot of the ECW crew were.

    • October 13, 2010 9:05 AM CDT
    • Cheers Jason, I work with a mixture: spray can and stencil, acrylics, oils, markers, watercolours, collage, screen print, pencil, Xerox. I'm not fussy, the piece I'm doing at the moment is only using red, blue and black biros.

      smart said:

      Hey Paul,

      I really like your work. What kind of media do you work with?

      jason

    • October 12, 2010 5:24 PM CDT
    • I've just uploaded a few bits of art to my photos. Have a look at my profile, lots of it is punk and monster inspired. Hope you like it.

    • October 12, 2010 9:47 AM CDT
    • Hey I need a piece of graphics work for my website, and I'd like to involve someone from the hideout.


      Basically, the top header at http://www.nixcomics.com needs to look more "comic-booky" and I'll pay someone $50 to get me a new graphic more in the style of an old 50s comic.  (I'd pay by paypal upon receipt and list you on the contributors page with a link to your other work on-line.)

      Send me a message here or email to ken@nixcomics.com if you'd be interested.  Be sure to include a link to your portfolio.

      Also, I'll be looking for people to do full stories for issue #2 soon.  That'll be pay work as well.

      Ken

    • October 12, 2010 9:20 AM CDT
    • It's important to give it plenty of time to ferment, maybe even pitching yeast twice. Also belgain yeast strains. Everyone I know that has brewed a big beer like an imperial stout has to let it ferment for months...

    • October 9, 2010 12:52 PM CDT
    • As the all swede wino, I might be... I suggest wine instead! Faster, better & stronger. Booze takes more work & usually you are being caught by the stench of it. And my experiments with strong beer is the same, the harder, the sweeter & the ferment/yeast taste is hangin in there. Also, did you try mead? Never did it myself, but you can crank it to quite some strength. Tobba at www.zorchproductions.com

    • October 9, 2010 12:07 PM CDT
    • Anyone have advice?


      I've only got around 12% a few times, and often it's poorly attenuated - too sweet. Brewing it warmer helps but it makes so many side fermentation products that hang around for more than a year of aging - very weird beers, barely drinkable.

      I hear one trick is using a bigger starter, and that does help some, but I feel like I'm still missing some tricks. I haven't tried filtering the beer or going gradual sugar additions yet. Do those actually work?

      It would be amazing to be able to make something like Avery's Beast or Samael, (as opposed to paying $9 for a 12oz), but its looking pretty hopeless at this point.

    • October 9, 2010 5:37 PM CDT
    • Hi, I am fairly new to the Hideout and glad to see y'all chatting comics. I have read a couple from your list (The Basil Wolverton being a total joy, Also Hate which i follow for the Buddy Bradley stuff but find the rest kinda hit and miss). I am on the look out for the Jacques Tardi book as have enjoyed other stuff by him.
      Today i bought X'ed Out by Charles Burns and am still digesting it a few hours after reading. Really great stuff i thought. When i heard his latest was going to be in full colour, i kinda shuddered thinking maybe some of the spooky, retro, horror movie atmosphere would be lost but the finished article was not a disapointment. The oversized format and binding has the feel of a Tin Tin book which is appealing. Then when you get reading you soon realise this ain't one for the kids. I am hooked with this first installment and hope more follows soon. I think his story telling suits the longer run volumes, giving him more space to let events unfold. I was a fan of Black Hole and it seems this is following similar themes (Fup Duck teen, druggy outsider experience). So yer, cant wait for more. Have you read it? Are you a fan?
      Another great recent read was the latest Love and Rockets volume (New stories No#3) To be honest, some of Beto's later stuff has lost me a tad (was a huge fan of the original Palomar stories) but this new run has him (in my opinion) on top form. I am enjoying the concept of the adaptations of B movies being told on the page. Then mixing that with the Fritz/Killer in real life stories. The greatest stuff however has got to be Jaimes latest. His drawing style just gets better and better. His lines are so clean and look effortless. The panels just flow beautifuly. Every character has personality and expression. The pages are such a wonder visually, then mixing that with his writing, which equally has that detailed efficiency. It's just an awesome read. The Brown Town story is totally top quality. It's heavy, break your heart themes but told with subtlety and skill. Then that story seeps into his current Maggie stories, man what can i say? Just a perfect read that confirms why i love the Comic format so much.
      Well thats my rant over, would be great to hear your opinions on both books if you have read them? Also would be interested in further recommendations by yourself and other folk out there. Comic stores are few and far between in the UK, with decent stores being even harder to find. So it would be great to get the heads up on titles through the Hideout.

    • October 9, 2010 11:57 AM CDT
    • Ommegang Abbey
      Chimay Red and Blue
      Alaskan Winter Ale
      Young's Double Chocoalte Stout
      Saison Dupont
      and my "perfect with shot of Jager" beer is Schlitz in a can

    • October 9, 2010 11:46 AM CDT
    • Favorites:
      Old Stock - North Coast
      The Beast - Avery
      Old Viscosity - Port Brewing
      Scaldis Belgian Ale
      Ruination - Stone
      World Wide Stout - Dogfish Head

      What I can generally afford:
      Racer 5 IPA
      Old Rasputin
      Spaten Optimator
      ... hmm, I guess I'm not saving much money

    • October 9, 2010 9:16 AM CDT
    • Anyone play this or the original? I'm curious what is everyone's favorite "weapon".  I'm a fan of the lawnmower...