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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: combjelly who wrote (555731)3/17/2010 8:35:24 PM
From: one_less3 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578633
 
Nothing needs to be 'tried' you snake bellied liar. You are snared in your own deceit. I had little to do with it except in documenting your disgusting conduct. I doubt anyone cares but you and you seem obviously tittilated by drawing attention to it, again, and again, and again. What a sick freak you are.

The case has been proven, substantiated with irrefutable facts, and referenced repeatedly over the past day or so as you continually call attention to it. Case closed, but we can continue to let you bask in your humiliating shame as long as you call for it. What a pathetic sicko you've become.

Evidence: Message 26389562

There isn't likely to be a single person who posts here and who still doesn't know what a lying scum you are, or what a sicko you are for bringing attention to it over and over again ... who do you think you are kidding?



To: combjelly who wrote (555731)3/17/2010 9:24:44 PM
From: jlallen6 Recommendations  Respond to of 1578633
 
Of course. I have shown you are a lying weasel

Why do you pinheads have to lie so much?



To: combjelly who wrote (555731)3/19/2010 12:19:38 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1578633
 
The Universe Up There

By NEIL GENZLINGER

American space-flight technology has certainly changed in the almost 50 years since Alan Shepard went aloft, and so has filmmaking technology. But “Hubble 3D,” the latest Imax space movie, makes clear that one science has stood stubbornly still: that of the voice-overs for these types of documentaries.

“Hubble 3D,” which records a trip made in 2009 by the space shuttle Atlantis to repair and modify the telescope, is dazzling to look at of course. But such ponderous, cliché-heavy narration. Leonardo DiCaprio delivers it, which might lead you to expect something moderately hip; instead it’s that same old leaden drone, which back when space flight was new perhaps conveyed suitable awe but these days just makes you feel as if you’re in a junior-high civics class.

The Imax format, thankfully, makes it easy to block out all those “billions” — number of stars, number of light years — that Mr. DiCaprio is dutifully intoning and instead turn things over to your eyes, just letting them feast. An interesting fly-through effect gives the illusion of traveling across the universe, going deeper and deeper into space just as Hubble’s gaze has done. And the concluding image of a giant web of light, a sort of compilation of all that Hubble’s eye registers, is something to see.

HUBBLE 3D

Opens on Friday nationwide.

Produced and directed by Toni Myers; narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio; director of photography, James Neilhouse; music by Micky Erbe and Maribeth Solomon; released by Imax and Warner Brothers Pictures. Running time: 40 minutes. This film is rated G.