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Name: Chris
Country: United States
State: Illinois
Birthday: 12/13/1974
Gender: Male


Interests: Hobbies: Cars, Video Games, Animation, Hockey, Comics, Collecting, Cigars, new gadets/technolgy. Likes: Imported automobiles, Autobaun, More horse power, Padrons', Animation that doesn't assume the audience is stupid, Pizza. Dislikes: Domestic automobiles, traffic, Automatic transmissons, Cheap cigars, People who think animation is only for drooling 5 year olds, Tripe. Will work for: Food, Good conversation, Just because, Peace and quite. Favorite book in the bible: Job, followed a close second by Isaiah.
Expertise: Telephone, CCTV, Custom car audio installs, 2D & 3D animation
Occupation: Artist
Industry: Entertainment


Message: message meEmail: email me
Website: visit my website


Member Since: 7/21/2004

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Chloe pics as promised

As promised more pics of Chloe.

I surprised her with the camera one night after I got home late from work.
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Just sitting on the couch.
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One of her major past times is watching her move her own feet.
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I know this one is in soft focus but I just love the smile.
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The girls having fun while daddy surfs the web at work ;)
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Not even three months old and she has already had her first day at the race track.  Too bad the cars were a bit too loud for her.  A friend of ours is giving Fruits and Kiddo some pointers on how to trouble shoot a electrical problem.  Notice how focused kiddo is on what he is doing.  That's my girl. 
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Thursday, July 16, 2009

Road Trip

Hey all.  Well with the baby and all I have been rather tied up lately.  But something cool happened this past weekend.  I got to go with some of the nice folks from Harvest on a road trip.  P. James and P. Kevn lead a group of about 80 motorcycles with about 100 riders from the Elgin campus up to a youth camp ground in Lake Geneva.  Fruits took kiddo on a play date so I was a single rider.  Hmm, maybe it is time to invest in a side car so we could go as a family next time?

My morning started out at about 7:30am when I got my bike out of the garage and I started out on the road.  The weather looked pretty sketchy but I was hopeful that it would improve.  As a just in case I brought my rain gear and a change of clothes.  Roads were quiet and rather empty so my hour ride to where we were meeting was rather enjoyable.  It is so nice to ride when most of the drivers are still at home.  Too bad that is a rare occurrence where I live.  Anyways, I stopped and got gas before I met up with everyone and made it with about 10 minutes to spare.  Everyone was already lining up in formation so I just followed suit. 

After a rather informative but lengthy run down of the rules and overview of the ride everyone sattled up and got ready to head out.  The line of bikes wound through the parking lot like a game of snake and slowly we made our way out of the campus.  Sadly we didn't even make it to the driveway before someone had a crash.  Some older guy on a old school gold wing somehow swapped places of his front and back wheels, causing him to slide backwards through the grass and down a hill.  With some physical effort we got the bike back on the driveway and aside from some mud packed into the engine bay and a broken mirror, he and the bike were ok.  So we finally headed out weaving and winding the rural and offbeats roads of IL and making our way north.  I was a little nervous riding with a group this large for two reasons.  One I have only ridden with a group of about 3 or 4 others and more than half of the people going with us have never ridden as part of a group.  Praise God that everyone followed directions for the most part and everything went smoothly.

Only thing that I saw that was bad is the moron who was in front of me.  When you ride in a group it is typical to ride in a staggered formation.  If you are in the right hand portion of the lane, the person directly in front of you rides in the left hand portion of the lane, and so on.  The fool in front of me liked to pay more attention to the scenery than what was happening in front of him.  So huge gaps would form between him and the rider in front of him.  That's bad because cars usually like to worm their way in there and that could be dangerous with a large group.  And he also liked to take both hands of of the steering and fly his arms in the wind Dicaprio "king of the world" style.  It is bad form to pass the person in front of you in formation and I felt safer with me keeping my distance from this idiot from behind instead of passing in front and hoping that he doesn't roll up my koolie.  I was next to this guy for about 2/3 the way up there.  When we got to Geneva and rode through an area with a lot of uphill and downhill turns he had difficulty handling his bike and stalled it a few times.  The last time I passed him up and left him far behind.  He was in the left hand protion of the lane and making a lefthand turn.  He didn't down shift and stalled the bike.  So the he stands it up and continues on straight oblivious to the fact that is running off the road and cutting me off.  I then adjusted my turn and went to his inside and passed him.  In my mirror I could see that he rolled right off the road and into someones lawn.  Oh as a FYI neither him or his wife wore any protective gear outside of sunglasses.

One thing that they did that I had never seen before was use blockers.  Since our group was so large the law let us block off intersections and the group would run stop signs and red lights.  Every time we would approach a turn I would hear this big roar from behind and this big Harley would blast on past everyone.  When I would get up to the turn I would see that person sitting in front of traffic blocking it so we could all move on through.  It was really quite impressive.  At one point we had to merge onto the highway and all the blockers formed a V to move cars over to the outer lanes so we could all merge safely on together.  I felt bad for the last guy blocking on the highway because he was perpendicular to the road and fully blocking the lane.  If someone in a big truck decided not to cooperate and move over he would have been in big trouble.  One part that was kind of fun was when we reached the downtown area.  We ran into a police officer and told him where we were going.  So he then blocked off the road himself and radioed for help.  We had cops blocking the intersections the whole way through the downtown area.  I felt like the president.

Once we got to our destination we were told we were going to get a pinic lunch.  Crappy sandwiches and warm soda came to mind but I was starving so I didn't care.  To my surprise it was a catered picnic lunch and the food was amazing.  The best baked beans and the most amazing broccoli salad I have ever tasted, plus brats and burgers.  Once lunch was done P. James shared a little about what God is showing him in his life and how he was doing with his illness.  The staff there is always so encouraging about fellowship and always encouraging people to reach out.  After that we all went our separate ways home.  The entire trip was about 220 miles for me and I rolled into home base a little after 3pm tired and with a sore koolie.

Here is the group as we waited for some stragglers to catch up.  You can see my bike right (the gray one with the hard luggage and my helmet by the front wheel) in the center there.  Mine was one of the few non-Harleys on the trip.
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Same grouping, but from a different angle.  Again my ride is on the far right.  I am parked next to the idiot who liked to let go of his handle bars.
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P. James and P. Kevn leading us with their daughters riding along.  I am the second dot from the left in the back.
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Riders point of view
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A photographer followed behind us in a truck to take photos obviously.  This is his point of view of the group.  This is only about half of us.  At the light is a down hill that everyone else disappeared behind.  The view of the entire group at once was an awesome sight to see.
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OK this is a little gross but on the way back I cut through a few farms and I kept hitting these large bugs that either bounced off my visor like a rock or exploded in a big greasy bloody mess.  I tried to get a good photo of all the big insect smears on my visor but they didn't come out very well.  In this one at least you can see one of the big bug smears.
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More pics of kiddo coming soon


Friday, June 19, 2009

One of the coolest and saddest things I have ever read

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Pixar grants girl's dying wish to see 'Up'

Company sent DVD so Huntington Beach girl, 10, could watch it.

THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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To find out how readers worldwide are responding to Colby Curtin's story click here .

HUNTINGTON BEACH – Colby Curtin, a 10-year-old with a rare form of cancer, was staying alive for one thing – a movie.

From the minute Colby saw the previews to the Disney-Pixar movie Up, she was desperate to see it. Colby had been diagnosed with vascular cancer about three years ago, said her mother, Lisa Curtin, and at the beginning of this month it became apparent that she would die soon and was too ill to be moved to a theater to see the film.

After a family friend made frantic calls to Pixar to help grant Colby her dying wish, Pixar came to the rescue.

The company flew an employee with a DVD of Up, which is only in theaters, to the Curtins’ Huntington Beach home on June 10 for a private viewing of the movie.

The animated movie begins with scenes showing the evolution of a relationship between a husband and wife. After losing his wife in old age, the now grumpy man deals with his loss by attaching thousands of balloons to his house, flying into the sky, and going on an adventure with a little boy.

Colby died about seven hours after seeing the film.

With her daughter’s vigil planned for Friday, Lisa Curtin reflected about how grateful she is that Pixar – and "Up" – were a part of her only child’s last day.

“When I watched it, I had really no idea about the content of the theme of the movie,” said Curtin, 46. “I just know that word ‘Up’ and all of the balloons and I swear to you, for me it meant that (Colby) was going to go up. Up to heaven.”

Pixar officials declined to comment on the story or name the employees involved.

THE PREVIEWS

Colby was diagnosed with vascular cancer on Dec. 23, 2005 after doctors found a tumor in her liver. At the time of her death, her stomach was about 94 inches around, swollen with fluids the cancer wouldn’t let her body properly digest. The rest of her body probably weighed about 45 pounds, family friend Carole Lynch said.

Colby had gone to Newport Elementary School and was known for making others laugh, family friend Terrell Orum-Moore said. Colby loved to dance, sing, swim and seemed to have a more mature understanding of the world than other children her age, Orum-Moore said.

On April 28, Colby went to see the Dream Works 3-D movie "Monsters Vs. Aliens" but was impressed by the previews to "Up."

“It was from then on, she said, ‘I have to see that movie. It is so cool,’” Lynch said.

Colby was a movie fan, Lisa Curtin said, and she latched onto Pixar’s movies because she loved animals.

Two days later Colby’s health began to worsen. On June 4 her mother asked a hospice company to bring a wheelchair for Colby so she could visit a theater to see "Up." However, the weekend went by and the wheelchair was not delivered, Lisa Curtin said.

By June 9, Colby could no longer be transported to a theater and her family feared she would die without having seen the movie.

At that point, Orum-Moore, who desperately wanted Colby to get her last wish, began to cold-call Pixar and Disney to see if someone could help.

Pixar has an automated telephone answering system, Orum-Moore said, and unless she had a name of a specific person she wanted to speak to, she could not get through. Orum-Moore guessed a name and the computer system transferred her to someone who could help, she said.

Pixar officials listened to Colby’s story and agreed to send someone to Colby’s house the next day with a DVD of "Up," Orum-Moore recalled.

She immediately called Lisa Curtin, who told Colby.

“Do you think you can hang on?” Colby’s mother said.

“I’m ready (to die), but I’m going to wait for the movie,” the girl replied.

THE MOVIE

At about 12:30 p.m. the Pixar employee came to the Curtins’ home with the DVD.

He had a bag of stuffed animals of characters in the movie and a movie poster. He shared some quirky background details of the movie and the group settled in to watch Up.

Colby couldn't see the screen because the pain kept her eyes closed so her mother gave her a play-by-play of the film.

At the end of the film, the mother asked if her daughter enjoyed the movie and Colby nodded yes, Lisa Curtin said.

The employee left after the movie, taking the DVD with him, Lynch said.

“He couldn’t have been nicer,” said Lynch who watched the movie with the family. “His eyes were just welled up.”

After the movie, Colby’s dad, Michael Curtin, who is divorced from Lisa Curtin, came to visit.

Colby died with her mom and dad nearby at 9:20 p.m.

Among the Up memorabilia the employee gave Colby was an “adventure book” – a scrap book the main character’s wife used to chronicle her journeys.

“I’ll have to fill those adventures in for her,” Lisa Curtin said.


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Me learning

OK, well with parenthood I have had time to reflect on the sudden changes in my life while trying to sooth a infant in the middle of the night.  Here are a few things I have noticed. 

1. New borns could really care less who you are, just as long as you suit there needs
2. New borns have no concept of courtesy, they don't care how long they keep you up on a work night.
3. Baby's grow almost frightening quick.  It is wise to remind one self to appreciated the time now.
4. Lack of sleep and appreciation are directly proportional.  Less Sleep=Less Appreciation
5. It is one of the coolest things in the world when your child develops to the point that she recognizes you. 
6. A lot of people will ask you about your baby with the intention of them really having the excuse to talk about their own children.
7. I have no idea how single parents can possibly raise a child without help.  And teen parents a just plain screwed.
8. There is a dizzying amount of gadgets and crap available for baby's and toddlers.  Most of which is useless.
9. Oddly BMW and Triumph do not sell clothing for anyone under the age of 10.
10. It is an impossibility to get anything done when only one parent is available to watch a new born.  Then when the second parent becomes available to help, still nothing gets done because the first parent collapses.
11. Friends dropping off food in the first month is a life saver
12. Neighbors have some weird habits at night.  Don't believe me?  Stare out a window in your house at 4am and you will see.
13. My health and well being is no longer of interest to anyone.  Just the baby's
14. 5hour energy really does work
15. Once the baby arrives, short term memory shrinks to the length of a gold fishes memory.  About 3 seconds.

And since no one is really going to read this entry I will just post new pics of the baby since that is what everyone came to see anyways.

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After her bath at night.

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Not sure why she makes this face when I am burping her.  And no I am not choking her.

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I guess this is the Italian in her.  The Chinese comes out in the way she eats.  The German comes out when she goes to sleep when I sing addition tables to her.

♪ one plus one is two ♪
♪ one plus two is three ♪

Don't know why but she loves it.  But this is a good thing because I don't know any lullaby's, and I can only sing the national anthem so many times.


Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Microsoft Forefront Sweepstakes Widget

I just posted this Microsoft Forefront Sweepstakes Widget for 500 credits. You can earn free credits too!

I added a new pic below:)



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