Southtier has more than just recipes, and to help you waste more time while waiting for that casserole to cook, Mahjong!!!!
Southtier has more than just recipes, and to help you waste more time while waiting for that casserole to cook, Mahjong!!!!




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I was amazed when I saw this up on Google Reader and thought it was a Southtier worthy post. How to perform the perfect store look fold aka the Japanese T-Shirt Folding Technique. I eventually found this video in english, however if you click through to youtube you should find some more examples.




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May 9
Posted by silli in the crafts, the environment, the fun stuff | No Comments

After making the chocolate truffle recipe, we needed a place to put them as a presentation idea. This is how we did it. It’s also a great way to recycle paper around the house to make something useful.
Making the cover for this box is incredibly easy, either use tissue paper to cover the truffles, or make the exact same box slightly larger to slip over the top.
To make the truffles follow this link.




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A buddy of mine sent this through to me, knowing my passion for everything Zombie related. Nicholas Daley from Utah in the United States posted the following on geekdo.com if you do go through to the link, send them a comment, what a project, and we hope they win again next year. All I can say is… I want one!

“Each year my work does a gingerbread house building contest between the departments. It took a little convincing but I got my team to build a Zombie themed house. Some of the girls were a little turned off at first, but once they saw how awesome this was looking, they started to contribute. The judging is on Monday and I think the odds are in our favor. Thanks, Flying Frog, for making such kick-ass sculpts. We couldn’t have done it without you”.

To see the rest of the AMAZING pictures, click here to go to the original posting.
Tags: christmas, gingerbread, house, living dead, romero, xmas, zombie




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Dec 3
Posted by the editor in the fun stuff, the movies | No Comments
The Bottom Line Christmas is a time of year for some great movie-watching, and this is a brief list of some of the best Christmas Movies and Specials of all time!




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Oct 30
Posted by the editor in the fun stuff, the movies, the music | No Comments

Over the years we come across songs here and there that really defines the Halloween October spirit, these are 5 of my favourites.
No.1 Dead Man’s Party by Oingo Boingo
Originally written for the Back to School soundtrack starring Rodney Dangerfield. If you ever have the opportunity to see this film, it was one of my childhood favourites, you also get the chance to see a very young Robert Downey Jr.
No.2 Thriller by Michael Jackson
Now I’m the biggest Michael Jackson ‘non’ fan out there, but you can’t steer clear of this song come Halloween. This video even has lyrics so you can sing along. You’ wouldn’t believe how many copies of this video is on you tube but blocked so you can’t embed them in other websites and blogs. Don’t remember but as far as I remember that’s Vincent Price doing the narration.
No.3 Little Shop of Horrors
This was a great film from the 80s, and the music was fantastic. Not really party music, but I love watching this anyway at this time of year.
No.4 Ghostbusters Theme Song by Ray Parker Jr.
We all loved this song and the movie. You’re singing along to it now aren’t you.
No.5 Monster Mash by Bobby ‘Boris’ Pickett & The Cryptkickers
Really can’t leave this out either, saving the most obvious for last. If you can think of somethig we’re missing, please do leave your suggestion for next year.
No.6 Ghost Town by The Specials
The song is currently ranked as the 90th greatest song of all time, as well as the best song of 1981, by Acclaimed Music. The perfect accompaniment to your Halloween Shindig.
No.7 I’m Your Boogie Man by KC and the Sunshine Band
Not really ‘Boogieman’ in the term of a Halloween monster, but still appropriate nonetheless.
Tags: halloween, itunes, music, october, party, playlist, spooky




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Oct 15
Posted by the editor in the fun stuff, the health, the products | No Comments

The model featured in the Ralph Lauren Photoshop stick insect outrage – in which she was Photoshopped to within an inch of her life – claims she was sacked by the company for being “too fat”.

Filippa Hamilton suffered such an extreme digital makeover in an ad for the fashion company that BoingBoing was prompted to gasp: “Dude, her head’s bigger than her pelvis.”
Photoshopped model’s pelvis actually bigger than her head
Ralph Lauren quickly threw DMCA takedown notices at BoingBoing and PhotoshopDisasters for exposing the folly, but subsequently decided to apologise. It said in a statement: “For over 42 years, we have built a brand based on quality and integrity. After further investigation, we have learned that we are responsible for the poor imaging and retouching that resulted in a very distorted image of a woman’s body.
“We have addressed the problem and going forward will take every precaution to ensure that the calibre of our artwork represents our brand appropriately.”
Hamilton, 23, now claims she was in fact ditched by Ralph Lauren back in April, before the offending image surfaced, because she was “too large”. She said: “They fired me because they said I was overweight and I couldn’t fit in their clothes anymore.”
The model, who is 120lb and 5ft 10in tall, said she decided to go public after she saw the snap of her Photoshop-ravaged frame. She told the Today show: “I saw my face on this super-extremely skinny girl, which is not me; it’s not healthy, it’s not right.”
Ralph Lauren issued a further statement on Tuesday which claimed Hamilton was a “beautiful and healthy” woman and that her dismissal was “as a result of her inability to meet the obligations under her contract with us”. The company explained that the terms of the contract are confidential.
via Ralph Lauren stick insect sacked for being ‘too fat’ • The Register.
Tags: BoingBoing, fashion, Filippa Hamilton, hamilton, lauren, model, photoshopped, ralph lauren




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Oct 2
Posted by the editor in the fun stuff, the products | 1 Comment
Those of you who prefer to protect your kids from US scientific propaganda would do well to steer clear of McDonalds, which has apparently decided it doesn’t approve of the 1996 International Astronomical Union ruling which booted Pluto out of the league of planets.
Try this Happy Meal box for fairly damning evidence of Ronald McDonald’s opinion on the matter:
To recap, Pluto’s demotion didn’t go down at all well in some quarters across the Pond, which may have had something to do with the fact that the planet plutoid was discovered by Illinois native Clyde Tombaugh.
Earlier this year, the state ordered that “March 13, 2009 be declared ‘Pluto Day’… in honor of the date its discovery was announced in 1930″ and that as the body “passes overhead through Illinois’ night skies, that it be reestablished with full planetary status”.
Looks like a sponsorship opportunity for McDonalds, we reckon. ®
Bootnote
Thanks to shaken Brit Phil Tanner for the tip-off. He describes his recent trip to McDs with the kids as “a rare occurrance
”.
via Pluto still a planet, says Ronald McDonald • The Register.
Tags: fast food, happy meal, illinois, mcdonalds, mcds, planets, pluto, stupid, typo




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Munich city workers run Oktoberfest’s lost and found. The Fundbüro, as it is called in German, is famous for what has ended up there over the years, including a prosthetic leg, a wheelchair and a Superman costume.
MUNICH — Every visit to the Oktoberfest lost and found has a story behind it, but not every visitor can remember exactly what that story is.

Glasses waiting to be claimed.
Kikki Friedensburg let out a squeal of unconcealed joy on a recent afternoon at the sight of her scratched gray Samsung cellphone, which had slipped from the pocket of her traditional dirndl. It was, she conceded, hard to say exactly when over the course of a very long evening the phone had disappeared, because the 139-pound, 22-year-old student drank nearly 10 pints of strong Oktoberfest beer.
“I’d given up,” said a visibly relieved Ms. Friedensburg, who found her phone — and more important, the phone numbers of all her friends — in one of the drawers, carefully segregated by manufacturer, next to the umbrella stand that also held a pair of crutches and a fishing rod waiting to be claimed. “I just didn’t have it in me to start over with everything,” she said.
Many festival visitors do not even realize that there is a central lost and found, run by the city workers who run Munich’s year-round lost and found and reinforced by temps and interns from other departments. But the Fundbüro, as it is called in German, is locally famous for what has ended up there over the years, including a prosthetic leg, a wheelchair, a Superman costume, handwritten notes by the composer Johann Sebastian Bach and 15,000 marks in a soiled pair of lederhosen, eventually returned to the embarrassed owner who abandoned them.
But as the staff must tell teary-eyed teenage girls every year, they do not keep track of lost boyfriends.
The police, waiters and partygoers bring in the items discovered under the benches of the cavernous Oktoberfest tents, the biggest of which hold up to 10,000 singing, inebriated revelers. The half-dozen workers at the lost and found, some themselves clad in lederhosen and dirndls, peck away at old typewriters as they fill out the index cards detailing where and when the traditional Bavarian Janker jacket or brand-new iPhone was discovered, doing their best to bring order to disorder.
Oktoberfest proves that Germans can, in fact, loosen up and have fun. But they are going to have a system in place and prepare themselves for every eventuality first.
Preparedness turned into an unexpectedly significant theme at this year’s Oktoberfest after terrorist threats were made against the festival, part of an effort by Islamist militants to intimidate Germans over the country’s troop presence in Afghanistan ahead of last Sunday’s election. To discourage would-be attackers, the Munich police increased the number of officers to 700 from 400 and closed more streets around the party.
But the menacing intrusion of the outside world does not seem to have dampened the moods of visitors. Organizers estimated that in the first week of the two-week festival, which ends this Sunday, 3.3 million people, 100,000 more than in 2008, came to sample the products of the city’s famous breweries like Paulaner, Augustiner and the Hofbräuhaus. Among them they downed nearly a million gallons of beer.
Oktoberfest, which got its start with the marriage of Crown Prince Ludwig in 1810, is more than just an exercise in binge drinking and loud renditions of favorite songs like “Ein Prosit” and, somewhat improbably, John Denver’s “Country Roads.” Children dash from roller coaster to carousel rides and families dig into heaping plates of ox and chicken. But the party mood is dominant.
Strapping men in leather shorts with suspenders and brightly checked shirts and women in peasant dresses are ready to forget not just their troubles, but also their wallets and wedding rings, or as Stephan Weiler did, the keys to his apartment.
Like one of the characters in the recent hit film “The Hangover,” Mr. Weiler, 28, a bioengineer, was piecing the events of the previous evening together with the help of photographs on his digital camera. As he surveyed the white wall by the entrance studded with hooks bearing over a hundred keys, none of them his, he said he had not given up hope.
Employees said they were bracing for the coming final weekend, when thousands of people would descend on the lost and found to search for their missing objects, most operating under the false impression that it would be their last chance. In fact, the staff spends months working with consulates to return passports, banks to find the owners of A.T.M. cards and telephone companies to hand over the misplaced cellphones.
According to Maik Müller, deputy director of the lost and found, while only a fifth of all the roughly 5,000 objects lost each year are reunited with their owners, the rate of return for cellphones and wallets was between 60 and 70 percent. The remainder are auctioned off to help cover expenses or given to charities.
For Sam Sealy, 19, from Bellevue, Wash., it was relatively easy to prove ownership, since his passport was in his gray and blue backpack. An alert staff member actually recognized him from his photograph before he even made it to the counter to inquire. Mr. Sealy, who came to Oktoberfest while studying abroad in the Czech Republic, could not believe his luck, that not only his bag had been found but also his passport, iPod, camera and two $100 bills.
Mr. Sealy had to sign forms and hand over $60 to get them back — the fee is 5 percent of the value of the goods up to $725 and 3 percent after — but he said it was worth it. Praising German efficiency, Mr. Sealy said, “I’m amazed I went to a lost and found and actually found what was missing. That never happens in America.”
The stream of increasingly inebriated visitors as day turns to night can be trying for the staff at times. In one episode, a young man, unsteady on his feet, refused to leave but instead mumbled, “Nein, nein, nein,” for several minutes, before resting his head on the counter and switching to his first name, “Maximilian, Maximilian, Maximilian,” as though it were an incantation to summon his lost wallet.
An equally distraught and intoxicated young American man was escorted to the police by Tobias Wenk, 35, who works full time in the main lost and found, to get him help canceling the credit cards in his lost wallet. “We finished canceling them,” Mr. Wenk said upon returning to his station, “and the wallet was in his pocket all along.”
via Munich Journal – Raise Your Mugs to German Efficiency! – NYTimes.com.
Tags: beer, german, germany, lost and found, munich, oktoberfest




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The film depicts aliens living in a South African shanty town
Nigeria’s government is asking cinemas to stop showing a science fiction film, District Nine, that it says denigrates the country’s image.
Information Minister Dora Akunyili told the BBC’s Network Africa programme that she had asked the makers of the film, Sony, for an apology.
She says the film portrays Nigerians as cannibals, criminals and prostitutes.
An actor from the film said that it was not just Nigerians who were portrayed as villains.
The Malawian actor, Eugene Khumbanyiwa, plays a gang leader with the nickname of Obasanjo, also the surname of former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo.
The film is about alien refugees who set up home in a South African shanty town called District Nine.
It is a loose allegory about apartheid and recent violence by South Africans against foreigners.
It’s not like Nigerians do eat aliens
Actor Eugene Khumbanyiwa
Ms Akunyili said it clearly took aim at Nigerians.
“We feel very bad about this because the film clearly denigrated Nigeria’s image by portraying us as if we are cannibals, we are criminals,” she said.
“The name our former president was clearly spelt out as the head of the criminal gang and our ladies shown like prostitutes sleeping with extra-terrestrial beings.”
Soweto residents tell Jonah Fisher how the District 9 filmmakers hired them
‘It’s a story’
The information minister said she had ordered the Nigerian film and video censors’ board to ask all cinemas to stop showing the film and to confiscate it.
“I have also formally written to Sony Pictures Entertainment, the company that produced this film, demanding an unconditional apology for this unwarranted attack on Nigeria’s image,” she added.
She also said she had asked them to review the film with a view to remove “all offending portions that injured our image as a nation”.
Ms Akunyili said said Nigeria was now hitting back with a policy of “rebranding”, after allowing the international community to define the country based on the behaviour of “[a] few criminals”.
She said that Nigeria’s Nollywood film industry was also being pressed to help portray Nigeria in a better light.
But Mr Khumbanyiwa said Nigerians in the cast did not seem worried by the portrayal of their country.
He suggested that the film, which depicts people wanting to eat aliens to gain the superhuman powers, should not be taken too literally.
“It’s a story, you know,” he said. “It’s not like Nigerians do eat aliens. Aliens don’t even exist in the first place.”
via BBC NEWS | Africa | Nigeria ‘offended’ by sci-fi film.
Tags: africa, akunyili, aliens, cannibals, district 9, District Nine, district9, Dora Akunyili, eugene khumbanyiwa, film, Malawian, movie, nigeria, nigerians, Obasanjo, Olusegun, shanty, South African




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