Tuesday, June 27, 2006
Daylight Robbery In Kaiserslautern
Against an Italian team of 10 men, the hopes of a nation were dashed in the dying seconds of injury time. An Italian player decided to dive over Australian defender Lucas Neill as he lay on the ground after a mistimed tackle. To the amazement of everyone except the Italian team, the referee called a foul resulting in a penalty kick which Franseco Totti calmly sent to the back of the net.
To me, first came the shock, frustration and then reality hit home: The Soccerros were being sent home. I can calmly say, we was robbed. The Australians controlled the match and dominated the ball. Their only crime? Failing to score in the 92 minutes and 50 seconds before the penalty kick was awarded. It was BS. I don't think it was fair. A match this crucial should not have been decided by such a bad decision.
Techspolder said it accurately: "As predicted, the Azzurri resorted to method acting instead of playing football and were rewarded by a match-deciding penalty from referee Cantalejo."
The Socceroo's can hold their head high. They held their own against Japan, Croatia, Brazil and now Italy. We are world beaters and I'm sure we'll be back in 4 years to make amends.
Have your say/vent your frustration on djho.blogspot, because the world is dying to know.
I'm out like the Socceroo's,
DJ Ho.
Sunday, June 25, 2006
AUSSIES RULE! Italy is going down tomorrow night!
I rolled outta bed at 5am, only to see in the second minute Mark Viduka hack down a Croatian player. Srna scores from a amazing freekick which an outstretched Zeljko "I won't take Schwarzer's place again" Kalac cannot stop.
Craig "Give Me" Moore equalised when one of the Croatian players did a "Maradona hand of God" touch on the ball. The ball was struck well, but i think for me it was more relief than anything that we scored.
We're Wild About Harry! - Kewell finally proves his worth after a lackluster tournament. If he had missed that......well I dont want to think about it!
Viduka gets mauled by Josip "Three Yellow cards" Siminic, who is actually an Aussie. The ref had a shocking game. How could you miss the fact that a player has 3 yellow cards?
BRING ON THE ITALIANS!!!!!!!
Saturday, June 24, 2006
Catching the bus?
So when I heard my brothers talking about the "Bus Uncle" and the mania it has spawned off in Hong Kong, I had to check it out. As it happens, a very public altercation occured on a public bus and was filmed by another passenger with a high tech mobile phone. It was put onto a Hong Kong version of Youtube and then quickly found itself on the real Youtube. Check it out here.
It involves a young man tapping an older man in front of him (who is on a mobile) to keep his voice down. The older guy explodes and uses the phrase "You have pressure, I have pressure" and "It is not settled" during the arguement. This has now become the catchcry of HK TV shows and there are been remixes made with HK pop stars like Edison and Sammi Cheung!
In fact, Park N Save, a big supermarket outlet like Woolies have incorporated it into their ads. Even crazier, is that there is a new Street Fighter 2 ad by Capcom that uses the phrase "You have pressure, i have pressure" (see below). And to top if off, it even has a Wikipedia entry with a full breakdown on the characters, incident including social-physological analysis!!!
To be honest I didn't read too much into the incident, just more suprised at the anger of the old man and the popularity of this clip (then again Honkies do have some weird trends). I really felt for the young man, cause that could have easily been me. Normally I mind my own business when I'm on public transport and I hate using my phone when I'm in public. I just feel that its so impersonal and can't talk properly. Maybe it's a deep rooted fear in disturbing other people.
Youtube, Blogs, Wikipedia
I more amazed at the popularity of Youtube in spreading this clip. I'm been fan of Youtube ever since someone sent me a video about 4 months ago. And don't get me started on Wikipedia! People call it the Web 2.0 era. Whatever you call it, there's been a internet revolution. It's all about customised entertainment, sharing and collaborating information online.
If I don't know something, I'll look up Wikipedia. If I want to listen to a song, I can download it off i-Tunes (if i feel like paying). In the mood for the latest epidsode of PrisonBreak? Download it as a torrent. Feel like watching something funny or a highlight reel? Use YouTube. If I want to read about something quirky, entertaining, or wish to tell the world something? I'll write something on my blog or read someone's blog.
Welcome to the new era.
I'm out like Croatia from the World Cup,
DJ Ho.
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Blog Loyalty
Perhaps its in the marketing. The emotional attachment we have to certain brands. We swear by it. Perhaps its in the way that it makes us feel good inside - that intrinsic feeling. The way that people notice and gives us respect and acknowledgement for wearing that brand.
Brands that we are loyal to usually are consistent in their quality, pricing and final delivery We usually know what we are getting. That's why Starbucks coffee always taste the same (bland!). Ok, bad example.
It's the same with blogs. It's just like any product, commodity, service out there. Blogs have a market that consists of you, you and anyone else out there in the blogosphere. In a way, our readers are our customers. Our service/product is the information we disseminate. The bloggers pump out the entries and the readers consume them. You laugh with us, you cry with us, you experience our greatest highs and lows, depending on what we tell you.
In a way, the best blogs out there are very much like the very best brands out there. They differentiate themselves and are good at what they do. Often they have a particular style or focus, whether it'd be fashion, food, hip hop, sports, politics or even the most trivial of things. There might be a number of reasons why they have become so popular. It could be that they are very entertaining, humorous, refreshing, or able to develop an intimate connection with the reader. Whatever it is that they have, over time these particular blogs have built up a loyal following and have expanded in readership.
In many ways it is very similar to "brand loyalty" but I call it "blog loyalty". Unlike last time's use of the phrase "agile corporation", I did a google and wikipedia search and there's only one person who seems to have been using it or laid claim to developing that phrase. I don't want some guy who's written 3 books selling on Amazon.com claiming he came up with that word!
Anyways, back to the matter at hand. Usually, a blog's most dedicated readers have been down with us since day 1. Our friends, family, associates, co-workers, uni friends. It's exactly like any small business - we attracted the closest ones to us, because these were the only people interested in what we have to say/sell!
But it got bigger than that. The online community took it to the next level. The global nature of the internet, its ability to reach people from the US to the Ukraine, from Germany to Ghana, Brazil to Bankstown. The fact is, anyone and everyone can read your blog, especially people who you dont even know! By word of mouth and exploration, we stumbed into a new world filled with ideas, dreams, passions, criticisms and comments.
There are millions of blogs out there. But we keep coming back to the same ones. Partially because they belong to our friends or people we know. But even if they do, the fact that it belongs to someone we know can only sustain our interest for so long. Again, we might come across another blog but what draws us back is "blog loyalty". It's that quality of the blog that brings the reader back time after time and makes them our biggest advocates to other people.
Blog loyalty - you heard it here first!
I'm out like Tim Cahill's anonymity,
DJ Ho.
Saturday, June 10, 2006
The Genius
* Spent most of the day fighting through packed traffic in Hurstville Westfield carpark. It took an hour and half to park the car, buy two kilo's of chicken wings, and get out of the carpark. Ridiculous I tell you - it took 15 mins to even get out of the carpark! Hurstville on a Saturday is just too packed. There are issues of overcrowding, bad Asian driving, and just too many cars.
* Will post up pictures of the GZA v DJ Muggs concert @ Home Nightclub from a month ago when I get a chance. Let's just say waiting til 1am on Thursday night (working night) til GZA came out was ridiculous and then idiots fighting at a $70 hip hop concert:
I've just discovered my favourite verse on the Cold World track:
Those who try to flee they hit the vertebrae, increase the murder rate/
Similar to hit men who pull out techs and then/
Drop those who act like thai flows from Mexican/
Rabbit, like recipients cashin checks again/
Back to the motherf*ckin spot on Lexington/
* I've hand written quite a few entries whilst on the train ride home, just can't be stuffed typing them up. Will do it after my assignment is handed in.
I'll do a proper post (and put more thought into it) when I've finished my assignment.
I'm out like peace in East Timor,
DJ Ho.
Tuesday, June 06, 2006
It's cold, its wet and its dark.
Excellent documentary on last night on SBS: "Freestyle, the art of rhyme" which had a nice section on the freestyle rapper Supernatural. I missed watching him twice this year, once because I left the Mos Def concert at midnight and i didnt go to watch Scribble Jam which Supernat also hosted.
I'm out like good weather,
DJ Ho.
Sunday, June 04, 2006
Another subject = new assignment = more procrastination
I got the formula down pat.
I just cruise most of the semester, spend two weekends doing the assignment, and cram in the few days leading up to the exam. It's proven throughout 5 years of university studies.
If someone would like to do my assignment due in 8 days, I would be so grateful. Unfortunately, I've just waited one of those two weekends.
I'm out like the Phoenix Suns,
DJ Ho.