Now I'm not being racist at all here....but I have some serious issues with the way that some immigrant populations bring their dodgy standards of cleanliness to Australia.
To the filthy Pakistani who spits and drops litter in North Sydney. I hope I can one day spit in your lunch.
To the muslim family in the Grey Commodore at Jenolan Caves on Sunday - we saw you stop at the lookout and proceed to throw all of your food scraps and rubbish onto the ground. Within seconds we saw a gust of wind carry your rubbish into the valley. Nice one dickheads!
To the dickhead who leaves his cappuccino cup on the lawn next to the Stanton Library on a daily basis - one day I'm going to kick you in the head.
Oh yeh - nearly forgot! I also hate the fuckers who dump their ciggie butts on the footpaths and common areas in North Sydney. These disgusting things wash into the stormwater and end up in Lavender and Berry's Bay.
I've heard of fisherman catching fish in Sydney Harbour then cutting them open only to find ciggie butts in the fish. That can't be right.
Beyond this abstract title is hiding a powerful music and a concept.
The horse man is born and he gotta runs all over sydney to bring a hot and sexy vibes in your life
Special wink to the friends who loose their mind, their jacket, their cell phone, their lips as well in a hot party :)
Hotlegs music myspace link
We bring heat to your world and what we like is to share our music and energy. Make the people happy and hot, dancing all the night and warm together.
Reviews and comments are welcome
Booking djulians@gmail.com
Enjoy our music then and please support us ! Cheers
Submitted by BONITOSTAR on 2 September, 2008 - 00:47.
FOR ANYONE IN THE BUSINESS!!!!!!..I'VE JUST RELEASED MY ALBUM "BONITO STAR & FRIENDS..ON ARIESMUZIKLAB..IF ANY STAGE SHOW MUSIC PROMOTERS,OR FUNCTION ORGANISERS ARE OUT THERE!!!AND WANT TO TRY A NEW ACT..LINK ME ON MY MYSPACE LINK....MYSPACE.COM/BONITOSTAR1 ..AM AVAILABLE FOR ANY RADIO INTERVIEWS OR PERFORMANCES BY PA OR WITH LIVE BAND..I ALSO HAVE A "DENNIS BROWN TRIBUTE ACT..WHER I SING OVER BACKING TRACKS OF CLASSIC D BROWN SONGS SUCH AS 'QUEEN MAJESTY',' AIN'T THAT LOVING YOU',MONEY IN MY POCKET'..BUT TO NAME A FEW...IF YOU CAN'T DO SUMTHIN....BUT KNOW SOMEONE WHO CAN!!!...TELL THEM ABOUT ME OK!...Y'ALL HAVE A GOOD DAY!!..BONITO
Chaos, have no greater goal in life than to overrun and obliterate the Empire and Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning will give players a chance. One way is to utilize the Public Quests which put a group of players together with the same objective. In Chapter 1 you'll help eliminate Empire soldiers and even battle the beast of a great wizard. What else do you need to know? Take a look inside Ten Ton Hammer's guide and find out.With each conquest in the frozen lands of the north, the ranks of his army swell. With his mastery of magic, Tchar'zanek summons forth Daemons and commands them to share their secret knowledge of ancient and forbidden rites. It is through the whisperings of these abominable creatures that the Warlord learns of ancient relics of power scattered throughout the Old World. A plan begins to form in the twisted mind of the Champion. It is a plan that, if successful, will transform the lands of the Empire into a nightmare domain of Chaos and end forever the dominion of Men in the Old World.&
Time and PlaceStart Time:Saturday, October 4, 2008 at 10:00pmEnd Time:Sunday, October 5, 2008 at 6:00amLocation:YU NightclubStreet:Victoria StCity/Town:Sydney, Australia View MapGoogleMapQuestMicrosoftYahooContact InfoEmail:ignaciog@yu.com.auDescriptionThis October Long Weekend SWERVE Productions brings you:The Perfect Park Life Warm Up Party Comes To YUWith The Next Instalment of French Kiss .After claiming the number 1 Saturday night title in SydneyFrench Kiss Returns with "Residency Night"Your Invited To Come See 6 of Sydney's Newest & Freshest Talent battling it out on the dj decks to become a French Kiss Resident DJ .Come Down & Support Sydney's Newest TalentsNeon StereoProfond DjsMatt FormosaGeorge ReedKill The KidsJULIAN HOTLEGS (FRANCE) www.myspace.com/djuliansThese Talented Djs will be Headlined By The One & OnlyTOM PIPER ( Moulin Rouge , Ministry Of Sound , 3 Aria Chart Hits including Point n Clap )See it herehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAkeBWVFar8This October 4thGet
Marslounge is proud to present the finest of French House supported by our very own Mr Ben Kelly.
Sexy Soul Funky Vocals Club House music Kick Off @ 9pm with Ben Kelly
BEN KELLY (Pure Pleasure, Oxford Art Factory) JULIAN (Hotlegs Records - France) www.myspace.com/djulians NYCKS (Hotlegs Records - France) www.myspace.com/djnycks
Doors open at 7pm, free entry before 9pm, $10 VIP guestlist thereafter... RSVP as attending for VIP entry.
$10 cocktails until 10pm.
To reserve a private booth or function area call 02 9267 6440 or email mars@marslounge.com.au before 3pm Friday 31 October.
MARSLOUNGE 16 Wentworth Ave Surry Hills (Easy from corner Hyde Parc, Liverpool St & Oxford St)
Simply House is a monthly event that brings you a night of legendary house music with a selection of dj's that have formed a collection of historical dance music, a selection of classic tunes reminiscent of those early 90's nights from clubs such as Zoom, Club 77, Kinselas, The Freezer, The roof top, Skygardens and Bondi Diggers which played host to events such as The House of Decadence - Sundance - HothouseDouble Dipped - The DukeCrisp @ Mortons on sussex- MoontoonzBondi Diggers plush and flow Djs/artists that will be playing simply house over the coming months are :Dave Kirkpatrick Phil Simmonds Robin knight Nck FieldAndrew James Squidger Special GuestJULIAN MOJOS on Hotlegs (Paris - Fr)www.myspace.com/djuliansThis nights for you, whether you were you there at the beginning or you just want to experience the house music of the 90's join us in this intimate venue with friendly atmosphere as we bring you a decade of house music. $10 Guest list - $15 standardDress code: Passion not fashionAre you up for it
Submitted by rosierocks71 on 14 November, 2008 - 18:41.
I just arrived today on this site seeking fellow musos to rock out with in my band Old Men
With Retrievers the name coming from seeing so many old men andtheir dogs wanderign around Moonee Ponds where I used to hang out sometimes fuck knows why....I'd meet people there and stuff but it's all a blur...I live in St Kilda it's boring and depressing with everythign so expensive I have no social life!
Thus I am a muso and comic. Though the comedy leaves me a bit bitter at times...Ibelieve music has saved
my life I stand by that. As so many do. I brought a guitar which I can play not greatly but enough to produce something of a song...A rough grungy punk deidcation to the creepy guys who try to pick me
up on the 96 called 'I'm over it' I love it. It's the first song I produced on my own even if it is a bit rough
but it sounds cool that way.
anyway we shall see what the future may bring...... cheers Rosie one of many rosies.....
Hotlegs Records is proud to present : Hotlegs first album called "Groovearound". All superstar Deejays started out playing records in their mom's basement. So it's important to look for new up and coming talent. Recently we came across a group from Paris composed by Julian David B and Arthur Scop named HOTLEGS. Music is music and it could be accessed from anywhere and stay ecclectic.Their single "A Man Tonight" is out for downloads and a new album "Groove Around" is about to be released on beatport and more. Those are really good dance tracks getting played by established DJs. There's quite a lot of competition out there for DJs / producers. It's saturated by music lovers who wants to have their share of the glory. So to really stand out, you have to be exceptionally good.The Hotlegs are doing their own thing. They claim to have more to offer compare to other DJ/ performers out there. Plus they have really hot legs.
hi im a 21 yr old guitarist looking for a band influenced by kiss, led zep , aerosmith , motley crue, the doors, guns n roses, hendrix just looking for ppl intrested in the same stuff so make a band and do some covers or orginals
Submitted by runescape2gold on 27 December, 2008 - 18:59.
With control of the White House turning over in January and the impossibly long election of 2008 slipping into memory, there's a collection of political personalities we'll be hearing less from in the coming year — and whose frequent presence in the news cycle will be sorely missed.
We'll miss their unpredictability, their tell-it-like-it-is TV appearances, or their predilection for conflict and controversy. A few of them are political throwbacks, the likes of which may never be seen again in Washington.
Some of these figures may be back at some point: In politics, goodbye doesn't always mean goodbye. But there's no doubt this cast of characters won't be as ubiquitous in 2009 as it was in 2008, and the world of political theater will be the poorer for it.
Gov. Ed Rendell (D-Pa.): The famously off-message Rendell became a cable news fixture during the 2008 cycle, particularly in the six-week run-up to the Keystone State's Democratic presidential primary.
He's a reporter's dream: a powerful, plugged-in pol who actually speaks his mind. A staunch backer of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Rendell famously caused a stir when he told local media that "there are some whites who are probably not ready to vote for an African-American candidate" in Pennsylvania. Later, at the Democratic National Convention, Rendell soured the kickoff to his party's unity-fest when he complained about what he called the "embarrassing" pro-Obama tilt in the media.
He's the first to admit that his loose-lipped ways make him a liability in national politics.
We'll surely be hearing from Rendell again — he's already drawn post-election fire for saying homeland security appointee Janet Napolitano has "no life" — but he won't be a daily presence in our lives anymore. One more reason to look forward to 2012, or a Cabinet appointment that will catapult him back into the national spotlight.
Carly Fiorina: The former Hewlett-Packard CEO reinvented herself this year as a spokeswoman and adviser for the McCain campaign. By the end of the cycle, she'd carved out a role for herself that might be called "mavericky" — sometimes too much so for her candidate's comfort.
Fiorina was a valuable surrogate, on television and on the campaign trail, selling John McCain's economic proposals. But more than once she indulged in what might be called excessive straight talk, first voicing opinions on birth control that clashed with McCain's and later telling MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell that Sarah Palin was not qualified to run a major corporation.
Fiorina has already taken steps to an active role in public life, appearing on "Meet the Press" during David Gregory's first turn as the show's host. It remains to be seen how her performance on the campaign trail will affect her future political ambitions.
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean: Initially seen as a risky choice for chairman of the Democratic National Committee due to his volatile personality, Dean morphed into Lotro Gold of a bland partisan character during his time in Washington. His committee's fundraising numbers were often disappointing, but his 50-state strategy for party development is now seen as a success following the results of 2008.
Dean's departure from the DNC signals a fading of the personalities and debates of the 2004 election cycle, and underscores the sense that a new phase is starting for the Democratic Party. Still, there will always be a place in national politics for a smart, tart-tongued pol like Dean and it's hard to imagine that after a trailblazing presidential campaign and a term as DNC chair Dean will be content to return to a medical practice in Vermont.
Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska): When he lost reelection on Nov. 4, Stevens wasn't just the longest-serving Republican in Senate history and one of the GOP's most powerful members of Congress. He was also one of Capitol Hill's most colorful personalities, prone to public displays of emotion — usually anger.
In 2005, when Congress moved to strip Alaska of its beloved bridge to nowhere funding, Stevens vowed to resign from the Senate. In 2006, Stevens took to the Senate floor after Congress defeated an attempt to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, wearing an Incredible Hulk tie and threatening his colleagues: "I'm going to go to every one of your states and I'm going to tell them what you've done."
When Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) rose to counter Stevens, it resulted in what "The Daily Show" called a "coot-off." But with Stevens convicted of corruption and cast out by the voters of Alaska, it might be a while before Americans see another.
Vice President-elect Joe Biden: Once he's sworn into national office, the loquacious senator from Delaware will have to exercise a level of self-restraint that will not come easy to a man who has spent 36 of his 66 years in the United States Senate. He's off to a good start though, waiting 47 days before giving his first post-election interview.
That kind of discipline will be something new for Biden, whose proclivity for off-color and off-the-cuff remarks have led to his reputation as a gaffe machine. Anybody remember that "articulate and bright and clean" comment? How about "generated crisis"? Or "Barack America"?
We certainly do and, God love ya, we're going to miss the improvisations and spontaneity enabled by a safe Senate seat.
Vice President Dick Cheney: How many politicians, in either party, would respond to a tough question about public disapproval of foreign policy by asking, "So what?"?
And how many would tell a senior senator to "go f***" himself," as Cheney notoriously did to Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) in 2004? Proving his old-school ways, just last weekend the vice president said Leahy "merited it at the time." Now that's what we call straight talk.
For better or worse, Cheney has personified the cold-blooded, do-whatever-it-takes side of the Bush administration. Loathed by liberals and largely hidden from public view, the secretive Cheney's influence over the policies of the past eight years may never be fully understood.
He may not miss the political arena, but it will miss him, since it will likely be a long time before we have another vice president so seemingly insouciant about his public image.
Alan Colmes: After more than a decade as Sean Hannity's sparring partner on Fox News, Colmes is throwing in the towel. The "Hannity and Colmes" co-host has taken more than a few blows in his day, becoming an object of scorn not only for conservatives, but also for liberals who have called him a flimsy counterpart to his hard-hitting conservative rival.
America will miss Alan Colmes for a number of reasons. Like Cheney and Howard Dean, he seems tied up in a political moment that's passing. And after a dozen years with a prominent platform on national television, Colmes's personality still seems so undefined. Will we ever get a chance to know this man?
Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.): After teasing the media with musings on a possible 2008 presidential campaign (remember the incomprehensible Omaha press conference where he announced that he would later announce something?), Hagel passed on a bid and retired from his Senate seat at the end of his second term. Then, after a trip to Iraq with Barack Obama fueled speculation about a cross-party presidential endorsement, Hagel kept silent in the general election (though his wife, Lilibet, endorsed the Democratic ticket).
Hagel, whose friendship with McCain deteriorated as a result of disagreements on the Iraq war, may have one or two more political strip-teases in store for us. But by leaving the Senate, he's depriving the chamber of a true maverick, the rare pol who could draw mention as a vice presidential prospect for George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Michael Bloomberg.
Rep. William Jefferson (D-La.): We'll miss Jefferson, though not nearly as much as congressional Republicans will. No matter how many of their own were under an ethical cloud, they could always point to Bill Jefferson as an example of how corruption was a bipartisan pastime.
And let's face it — his case was a doozy, something even Nancy Pelosi once acknowledged. "Anybody with $90,000 in their freezer has a problem," she said in 2006.
Still, Jefferson soldiered on, winning reelection in 2006 and nearly pulling it off again in 2008. While the long shot who defeated him in Louisiana's 2nd District, Anh "Joseph" Cao, is himself a compelling story, it's hard to see how Cao could keep us as mesmerized as Jefferson.
Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Conn.): This was the year that Charlie Brown finally kicked the football. Ahab caught the white whale. Sisyphus got to the top of the hill. The impossible finally happened: After years of targeting him, Democrats defeated Chris Shays, the last Republican House member from New England.
With Shays gone from Connecticut's 4th District, the press will have to find a new token Republican moderate. And the media will need to look elsewhere for agonized public statements about contentious legislation and angst-filled pronouncements about the future of the Republican Party.
Speculation has already started about a possible Senate bid down the line, but Shays has said he doesn't "see [himself] running for any office." If we know Shays, he'll reconsider that statement — publicly — but unfortunately for now, the thoughful veteran legislator will be dropping out of public view.
Submitted by bobdogkid on 9 January, 2009 - 00:47.
When the immidiecy of moments combine and all is one again Speeding ,faster ,faster- as you are kareening on the edge of existence Will you remember what you did? What you said? How could I have changed to make this moment- remember itself In tone-in ressonance -in meaning In works and deeds and the moments between the pages that breathe and tell us there is something beyond this place in the world beyond outer space at the core of us all is a second - you've called and remembers I have seen all these places and kissed all your faces and I was once them and they were once me and birth and death --the epiphanny was the ticket to the next place we take us Love each other while you can beleive there is something beyond the wind hold your song in your hand and make your Last Stand For the people who loved us enough to save us