Thursday, January 31, 2008

London: Final Advice



If I can leave anything of value for Future London visitors, it's this:

REMEMBER, when crossing the street look RIGHT first, then LEFT, then RIGHT one more time.

This will help you avoid almost being killed 17 times, like I have.

Off to Italy in 2 hours!!!  Ciao!

~ J. Twice

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Blue is the Color!



Note to self: When inside of a Chelsea Pub filled with singing fans before a match, don't try to take a picture.  The song will quickly become about you, and a glass will be thrown in your direction.

That is one of many great memories I made (and learned) tonight as I attended my second English Premier League soccer match, this time Chelsea vs. Reading.

ABOVE: The last picture in the pub.  You can almost see a guy in the background start to give me the finger.  Brilliant.

BELOW: Glad to be alive outside!  And I was ONE OF THEM!


If yesterday's match at Arsenal was like watching the Dallas Cowboys, with the huge, pristine stadium and Nike contract, then Chelsea (located on the other side of London) would be similar to the Green Bay Packers -- a very successful franchise with a much more hardcore / blue-collar fanbase (or more like the Cleveland Browns if they ever won.)  Always a solid club, Chelsea was bought by a Russian Billionaire a few years back, who began pouring money (and superstar players) into the club, quickly making them one of Europe's best teams.

The pub I happened to be in -- called "SO BAR" -- just so (coincidentally) happens to be the birthplace of the club.  The fans taught me many other lessons before the game as well, most specifically that EVERYONE hates Tottenham.  They hate Tottenham (another English team) so bad, that half the songs were about Tottenham - and they weren't even playing them that night!  I don't know WHY they hate them, I just know that they do.  Ironically, many of Arsenal's songs the night before were also anti-Tottenham.  (During both games, the fans would start to stand and cheer, "if you're not with Tottenham stand up!")  But my favorite, as quoted by my good friend Jake Riddell (who became a Chelsea supporter in that very pub about 5 years ago):

"If I had the wings of a sparrow... If I had the arse of a crow... I'd fly over Tottenham tomorrow... and (bleep) on Tottenham below!"

I wish I could play what it sounded like, about 300 grown men singing song after song in perfect union, declaring their love for the club and its players... featuring such hits as:  "Que Sera, Sera... Whatever will be will be... We're going to Wim-ba-ley..."

As for the game itself, Chelsea -- despite missing 5 of its best players due to injuries and the African Cup -- played dominant, winning the game 1-0 and having about 10 solid chances to score.  The stadium was loud, and situated perfectly in the tidy neighborhood of Chelsea.

If finding "your" team is like trying on shoes, I'd definitely say that Chelsea fit better than Arsenal... and whether 'The Blues" are my team forever, I'm not sure.  However I do know that this is one experience I will not quickly forget!



~ J. Twice

THE Arsenal

THE Arsenal.  As in THE Ohio State University.

Last night I attended my ever English Premier League Football (Soccer) Match at Emirates Stadium, where Arsenal took on Newcastle… and was completely blown away.

Before my trip, I tried to purchase a ticket to this game via the internet… but it was completely Sold Out.  However, the positologist in me told me to just GO FOR IT… so I jumped on the “Tube” – London’s underground subway system – and headed to the Arsenal area, which is about 15 minutes northeast of downtown.  The trains were absolutely packed with fans, all wearing the traditional red in jerseys, scarfs, hats, and jackets.  I think every fan had a least 3 pieces of “Arsenal flair” and were already beginning the team chants.

Caught up in the mob exiting the station, you could just feel the energy of the fans.  We were soon weaving through the streets of a lower-middle class neighborhood, with makeshift Arsenal merchandising stands set up in front of the rows of flats along with a number of food vendors.  After 3 blocks, I caught the glowing red words, “Emirates Stadium” above the houses, and suddenly got goose-bumps.

The first glimpse of the stadium blew me away.  It is perhaps one of the best-designed, most high-tech stadiums I have ever seen – and it is dropped neatly in a normal London neighborhood.  The stadium honestly looks like an alien spaceship was hovering over the London superb and just decided to land. 

I went to the ticket office, but again was told the game was sold out.  Not discouraged, I began looking for scalpers.  Little did I know that in England, scalping is illegal (I think?) and you definitely do not see people out in the open just hawking tickets.  After 20 minutes, I still hadn’t found anyone, until a little Asian lady caught my eye.

“Are you looking for tickets?” she asked.  “Yes, just one,” I replied.

5 minutes later, I found myself sitting in the SECOND ROW of the Stadium for less than face value of a regular ticket!  Positology in ACTION!

The game itself was an amazing experience.  Arsenal won 3-0 (or 3 nil as they say)… and the atmosphere was unlike anything I had ever experienced at a sporting event before.  The seats are all so CLOSE to the action, and the stadium echoes with chants of fans and encouragement for their team.  The grass was immaculate - looked like a putting green - and as I mentioned this in the last post, any resemblance of Hooligans was not seen by me.

The songs were the best part.  English soccer fans can take any popular song or folk melody, and replace the words to sing about their team or their players.

“ARSENAL, ARSENAL, ARSENAL” to the tune of “Be kind to your web footed Friends”… or using the Latin tune Guantanemera to say, “There’s only one A-De-Bay-Or”… or just the silly chant:

“We are top-the-league, say we are top-the-league.”

The other cool thing is that they have a BETTING window at the game, where you can actually place wagers on who you think will score, when they will do it, and final match outcomes.  Ironically, the “Manager’s Bet” – a 3 to 0 Arsenal Victory with Adebayor (their best player) scoring first would pay out 105 pounds on a 5 pound bet.  And YES, that’s exactly what happened.

All in all - It was a great time… and I can’t wait to go tonight to see Chelsea!

 

~ J. Twice

Insider's (my) London
































My flight from Edmonton landed painlessly at London Heathrow at 12:30pm local time, or approximately 5:30am back at home.  Lucky for me, the flight wasn’t overly crowed and I was able to sleep spread out over 3 seats, which is always nice… and allowed me to ‘hit the ground running’ in London. 

I quickly caught the express train for downtown, and 15 minutes later I was in the heart of London.  I checked into my hotel room (where I can spread my arms and touch both walls at the same time – and ironically room #6, my Italian football number), dropped off my luggage, and set out to see what London is all about.

KEY POINT: London is really cool. 

That’s all you need to say.  As I write this blog, I typically labour (yes, labour with a “u” – I’m in England after all, so I should speak the Queen’s English) over all my sentences, making sure that they are all very witty and well put-together.  However, a description of London could be complete by saying that it’s just really cool.

The architecture is cool.  The people are cool.  The accents are cool.  The dental hygiene and overall level of physical fitness aren’t really cool but the fact they don’t really care is in itself cool.  The amount of green space and how the city flows together… cool.

HOWEVER, after spending less than 24 hours in this cool city, I have come across a number of ‘secrets’ that you might not know about London.  People in North America have a sort of London stereotype, yet there are some funny things I noticed… and that’s why you’re reading this blog now, isn’t it?  (That last phrase was designed to be said by someone with a British accent.)

Top Six Secrets of London

1. A POUND really weighs a POUND. 

We all have an idea of how much a pound weighs... but let me tell you - the actual one dollar coin (aka the British Looney... also known as THE POUND) -- weighs exactly that much! (In my professional opinion.)  I got my money changed at the airport, and was given 205 pounds (my weight, actually)... with the last 5 pounds coming in coins.

"These are heavy!" I exclaimed to the worker.

"Well... they are a pound now isn't it?" she replied.

And indeed it is.  (Just don't go try running around with a pocket full of British coins... and don't even think about trying to get a British Two-ney!)  

2. FISH & CHIPS: that’s FISH Singular.

Everyone talks about the world famous English Fish and Chips – so being in London I had to find out for myself.  After walking a half-marathon across this great city, I stopped into a little pub just north of Piccadilly Circus (which, for those of you scoring along at home, isn’t really a circus).  While most menu items were in the 3.50 to 5 pound range, fish and chips stood out at 7.95… however, I figured that I would be getting a large amount, so I figured it was no big deal.

When the fish arrived, wrapped in newspaper for authenticity, I discovered it was just ONE FISH... fish singular.  Which got my mind working -- perhaps that is why the plural of the word FISH (which happens to be from English origin) -- is just FISH... that way when you order fish and chips, they don't have to tell you how many you are gonna get!

3. LONDON leads the world in TEXT MESSENGING.

When I was in Japan, no 1 on the street looked u in the eye.  Now don’t jump to conclusions – it’s not because they were on average much shorter than me – it’s because it seemed everyone I passed was on a mission 2 get 2 where they were headed.  No 1 looks you in the eye in London either – because EVERYONE is TEXT MESSENGING! *

* The sentence above was written in text message form using numbers to substitute for words when possible.  That would take the average London person 18 seconds to type.  SAC. 

Now, almost all of my friends now “text” back in North America, but London takes it to a whole new level.  Billboard ads beg customers to enter a ‘text contest.’ The newspaper ‘letters to the editor’ were actually ‘text messages to the editor.’  I asked my waiter at the pub about soccer tickets, and he gave me his number and said TEXT ME.  I even saw 2 friends walking down the street together (ages 72 and 75 respectively) – and I think they were texting each other.

4. BIG BEN… not so BIG.

From all the pictures, you assume that BIG BEN is this monstrous tower arching high into the London skyline.  This is not really the case.  It is actually just the south tower of a very large building, probably no more than 7 or 8 stories tall, although the amount of detail in the architecture is extraordinary.  From now on I am going to call it MEDIUM BEN.

5. ENGLISH SOCCER FANS: The best sports fans in the world.

Americans like baseball.  Canadians like hockey.  The British LOVE soccer. 

Often, people think soccer fans and they immediately think HOOLIGANS.  I found out during my trip to the Arsenal-Newcastle match that this is the furthest thing from the truth.  I am going to devote an entire post to that match – however I must say that the fans were probably the high point of the experience for me.  They were SO knowledgeable, SO loyal, and so RESPECTFUL of the game.  I ran to use the bathroom during the first half and there WAS NOT A SINGLE PERSON on the concourse… and the attendance was over 60,000.  Everyone was watching the game, and would not even consider missing a moment.  It truly was amazing.

6. No late night fast food.

I’m not sure if this really is a secret, or even that insightful… yet it was the only heading that worked with my final London story for the day.  After the soccer game, I headed back to my hotel… but didn’t stop to eat because there were a number of cool places around my hotel that I had seen earlier in the day.  However, by the time I got back to the area – around 11:30pm – none were still serving food.  I figured I would just ‘tough it out’ – and seeing as I did eat ONE large FISH and some chips earlier.  However, I woke up at 2:30am local time with the biggest hunger pain I think I’ve ever experienced.  (And it was dinner time – 6:30pm – back in Edmonton).

Unable to sleep, I slipped on my flip-flops and headed out the door.  Across the street was a gas station: closed.  I walked 3 more blocks – nothing.  (As if on cue, a heavy rain began to fall).  A few more blocks – nothing.  (Rain now turns into downpour).  Remembering Victoria train station – I jog a half mile more to one of London’s biggest stations: nothing.  I stop to ask a few people, and am directed to a “kabob shop” that might be open about a block away.

And that’s how I ended up at 3am, eating my dinner soaking wet, wearing flip-flops, at a little joint called FLAMER’S GRILL. (Insert own sarcastic comment here: _______________.) 

THAT is what traveling is all about.

~ J. Twice


 

Monday, January 28, 2008

Boosting Off!


The Chosen Day has arrived and it is finally time to BOOST off to Europe!

The pun is obviously a reference to Booster Juice... where I have spent the last 15 months as the Marketing and Advertising Manager. During my time there - I learned many things - but especially one simple equation: FRUIT + JUICES = CRAZY DELICIOUS!  Seeing as there is a Booster Juice at the Edmonton Airport, I ordered my final Brazilian Thunder with Warrior Booster for the next 7 months and headed off.

Deep down, I am filled with many things -- excitement, anticipation, slight nervousness, and of course, an enormous longing for pasta.  But perhaps of all things I am looking forward to in this adventure - the largest one is just playing the game of football.  There is not a better feeling out there than being in the heat of the battle with 10 other guys... I hope my Elephant teammates are ready, because I'm coming to play!

Ironically, as I stopped in the bookstore to look for a novel, the featured book on the stand was a book called "Playing for Pizza" by John Grisham.  Interesting.

Well, the announcement for boarding was just made (I'm writing this in the boarding area of the airport) -- so I'm gonna go jump on my non-stop flight...

Next stop: LONDON!

~ J. Twice

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Sensational Sicily!

Word of the Day: TINGO!

Easter Island... Home of TINGO

I'm pretty much completely packed right now and am in the final stages of clearing out our office.  However, as you've probably gathered, I have a certain ability to get distracted right in the middle of doing something... such as posting a blog in the midst of cleaning.

That being said, I have a tendency to collect interesting articles and tidbits that can be used at a later time (this might be officially the 2nd 'later time' in my brief history of collection).  In one such article, I found a description of perhaps the coolest word I think I've encountered in a long time... the type of word I hope to learn in Italy and incorporate into my everyday life.
  
TINGO (Pascuense, Easter Island)

"To take all the objects one desires from the house of a friend, one at a time by borrowing them."

What is cooler... the fact that someone actually does this?  Or that it is done so prevalently on Easter Island that it would necessitate a word?  And what does it take to become a Tingo master -- leaving your best friend in shambles?  Also, it would cause some interesting situations - such as being sure that the only place you ever hang out with your friends is at THEIR house.  Perhaps one day I can travel to Easter Island and do a documentary on a Tingo Master.  That would be cool... unless he likes Video Cameras and wants to borrow mine.  SAC.

I hope there is a website that I can nominate Tingo for "2008 Word of the Year."  I will let you know how we do... although we might face some tough competition from BAKKU-SHAN - a Japanese word that literally means, "A girl who is pretty from behind but not from the front."

Ok - back to packing!

~ J. Twice


Saturday, January 26, 2008

MFC - Ya when i get back


Mixed Martial Arts is the fastest growing sport in the world -- with millions of new fans discovering a sport that now has boxing on the ropes.  I mean, who wouldn't want to watch two grown men kill each other until one is unconscious?  Maybe in a couple years, they'll even let us vote thumbs up / thumbs down whether we get to kill the loser (I wonder if anyone's done that before?)
  
Our TV production company - DUAL Productions - recently produced MFC Lucky 13 and MFC 14: High Rollers, two full-length Pay-Per-View shows for the Maximum Fighting Championship, Canada's Top Fight Organization.

Due to the fact that many of you may not have seen it, I thought I would post a video here to give you a better idea of what I do when I'm not throwing footballs.  I got to both direct and edit these shows ... and it gave me invaluable experience for the future.

On a side note, I would love to see a 64 man MMA tournament one day - like the NCAA College Basketball Tourney of Mixed Martial Arts.  Only instead of real fighters like Randy Couture, it would be all Movie Fighters.  Can you imagine?  Bruce Lee taking on Yoda from Episode II.  Chuck Norris vs. Neo from The Matrix.  Jackie Chan vs. "The Bride" of Kill Bill fame.  (Someone send me a bracket and it shall be posted!) 

As we're headed off to Italy, I personally can't be as heavily involved in the MFC's upcoming shows - but I wish Mark Pavelich and the boys there all the best! 

Also, a big thanks to Lalo & Five Stone Music for the killer music.  Enjoy!

~ J. Twice


Thursday, January 24, 2008

SAC: The new LOL


LOL or SAC?  You be the judge...

We all have pet peeves.  For some, it's bad drivers.  For others, it's chewing with your mouth open.  But mine is perhaps a little more far reaching -- touching all members of the growing community of text messengers that span the globe.  I'm talking about a little acronymn called LOL.

For those of you still "using CD's," "setting your VCR," or "unnecessarily using quotation marks," let me explain (although you do get bonus points for reading a blog.)  LOL is an internet / text-message / instant message acronymn that stands for 'LAUGHING OUT LOUD' and commonly used as a response to a joke or witty comment.  Let me give you an example:

FRIEND1: Hey man, whattup?
FRIEND2: Leaving 4 Italy in 3 dayz... cr8zy
FRIEND1: Sweet eat lots of meatballs
FRIEND2: LOL. Fo' sho'

Now, is the 'meatball' comment witty?  Yes.  Is it funny?  Yes.  But is it LAUGH OUT LOUD funny?  NO.  And that my friends, is where my beef lies.

Comedians - or people like me who just tell lots of jokes  - live for that LOL moment.  We work for it.  We strive for it.  We are rewarded by it.  Because let's be perfectly honest - it takes a LOT to make someone actually LOL.  I'm talking hit-in-the-groin-with-a-ground-ball funny.  I'm talking Bambulance or Felching funny.  That's LOL... not meatballs.  I mean, all it's doing is giving a bunch of mediocre comedians a false sense of confidence.  There's some very boring people out there with a 58% LOL ratio.  In fact -- LOL is the digital equivelant of the adult courtesy laugh (the one all people over the age of 18 give at cocktail parties and office water coolers after any joke/story told, regardless of its merit.)
  
And thus we come to SAC.  SAC simply means SMILING AT COMPUTER.  As you read this sentence, you are probably SAC.  SAC is what happens 95% of the time -- and that's ok.  It's good.  It preserves the authenticity of the LOL... while at the same time acknowledging the witty-ness of the sender.  We all need to use SAC more often.*

FRIEND1: Hey thanks for the ride last night
FRIEND2: Don't be silly - it was no prob.  What r u doing?
FRIEND1: Just gonna sit around and use Google Maps all day to look at my house, my parents house, and where I work.
FRIEND2: SAC. Holla at me later. And check out the Grand Canyon too.

Please -- do your part.  Please help spread SAC worldwide.   

KEY POINT:  LOL is not a term to be thrown around lightly.  When most of you say LOL, you really mean SAC.

And for those of you saying OMG or WTF, I know this post had nothing to do with Italy.  SAC.

~ J. Twice

* SAC also applies to phone text messages as well... simply because SAP is not as LOL.  By the way, the 2nd most underrated punctuation mark is the asterick.  It's as under-used as LOL is overused... but don't EVEN get me started on that!  

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Euro-FITTED!

two-faced (too-faist)
adj.
1. Having two faces or surfaces.
2. Hypocritical or double-dealing; deceitful.

This is my watch.  It is two-faced.  And if I had to choose a definition from above, I'd probably go with the first, that is, unless the time is off by just a fraction of a second, and then it would be undoubtedly the second.  What time is?  7?  Liar!  It's really 6:58... please stop being deceitful.  (Or as Jay-Z so eloquently states, "Even a broken clock is right two times a day..."  My watch is such, as its two-faced nature tells me the time in both Edmonton, Canada and in Catania, Sicily.  Plus, its Nike which means it's sweet.

That being said, the real reason my watch is two-faced is because it is part of my euro-fitting.  Euro-fitting also begs a definition, which I could not find in Webster's... so I will step up and offer my own:

Eu·ro - fitted (yoo-ro, phi'ted)
adj.
1. Being outfitted for travel to Europe
2. Dressing like a European (also see: European Poser)




As my departure date nears, I find myself doing my best to get Euro-Fitted.  Hence the sweet two-faced watch.  My wife has also been doing her part -- and thanks to the inspiration from George Contreras... American Football Coach / Newly-Minted Italian Fine Dresser -- she gave me a new scarf and hat for my adventure.

The scarf, which could be described as slightly 'metro-sexual,' is my favorite color - dark black (yes, i did just say dark) - and is made of the finest blend of 100% cotton.  This is a sure fire hit.

The hat is a paperboy style - a modern twist on the 30's classic.  I only hope I can be as industrious and profitable as those fore-runners to their under-age sweat shop current-day contemporaries.

However, the coolest thing about the hat is that it has the British Flag emblem on the top.  That is sweet... because now anyone in a helicopter can pick me out on a crowded street.  "Who's that guy?" "You mean the English one?


KEY POINT:  When going to England, make sure you wear something with a British flag symbol on it... that's so they don't know you are AMERICAN.

Also, be sure to check back on this blog often, because 6 months from now... you might not recognize me!

~ J. Twice

ps Thank you Christie for being my Euro-Fittin' accomplice!

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Cucina!



As the countdown reaches one week before our journey to Italy, Christie has been dazzling me with her best Italian dishes.  I must admit that its funny - when we were dating the last place she wanted to be seen was the kitchen, but now (and thanks to long mornings spent with Rachel Ray and Everyday Italian with Giada De Laurentiis) she's cooking like crazy!  

I'm sure the food in Italy is going to be spectacular -- and in fact, we've already had two people offer to give Christie authentic Italian cooking lessons in Sicily!  (translation: begin the season as a QB - end the season as an Offensive Lineman!)


The dish pictured here is her version of Pasta Bologna - a hearty mixture of onions, carrots, mushrooms, and spices cooked with red wine and cheese... YUM!!!

The other interesting thing I've noticed as I prepare to depart is how similar my current condo is compared to my new home in Aci Castello -- check out the pics!
































My final commentary of the day (and yes, Dad, I know I'm not in Italy yet so you think I'm just filling space with rhetorical babble until I get there.. but this is 100% certified interesting to me) is that it is reassuring how close Italian is to Spanish romance language reference here>.  I did take a little Spanish in school (and living in Tucson helped too - there are even places there where the Stop signs read, 'Alto!') so hopefully I shouldn't be too lost.  The reason I bring it up is that when I went to look up what 'Kitchen' was in Italian (so I could title this post), I learned that the word is CUCINA in both languages!  Alright... I know A word!  Now all I need is a few more and I have a sentence!  Giddy up!

~ J. Twice 

Friday, January 18, 2008

JJ's Book Club #1


I like to pride myself on learning new things.  I don't know if I'm particularly fond of the term "life-long learner" -- or using "extra" "quotation" "marks" in "general" -- but I definitely am always looking for something new and exciting -- and than passing it on to friends.

For those of you who know me well -- you know of my desire to one day write/produce major motion pictures, and I'm always drawn to stories of people doing interesting and extraordinary things, such as traveling to Europe to play football.  (just kidding).

That being said, I am going to make it a point throughout this adventure to share some books, films, and tv shows that I feel are remarkable -- that are a PURPLE COW.  (This is a term coined by author/blogger Seth Gobin in his book by the same name, in which he talks about the nature of remarkable things in business.)  According to Seth:

KEY POINT: Everyone has seen a million BROWN COWS.  But I bet if you saw a PURPLE COW you'd remember it!  To stand out in this world, you must be a PURPLE COW -- you must be remarkable!

Therefore, think of me as your virtual Steve Irwin, pointing out cool stuff as if to say Croikie!  We gotta strange one 'ere!  So without further ado, here's the debut members of JJ's Book Club:

JJ Book Reference #1:  ONE RED PAPERCLIP By Kyle MacDonald

Dude.  That is what I said about a hundred times while reading this book (all in one sitting).  One Red Paperclip tells the story of a guy who decided to start trading, beginning with a single red paperclip, for something that was bigger and better.  He began by trading the paperclip for a pen, then the pen for a stove, and so on... until 14 trades later, he had a house.  Not only that, but the adventure had led him to become a new person and to seek out adventure in life.  This book is extremely well written and has many "laugh out loud" moments.  In fact, it is about the closest thing to what I aspire my writing to be -- witty, articulate, and inspring.  REQUIRED READING FOR ALL POSITOLOGISTS.

JJ Book Reference #2: YES MAN!  By Danny Wallace

I read YES MAN! about 2 years ago... and after about 3 pages said to myself -- this would make an UNBELIEVABLE MOVIE.  Well -- for the 18th time in my life with a movie idea I was beaten to the punch -- as the major theatrical release starring Jim Carrey comes out in December 2008.  SO... why don't you go pick up a copy of the book right now, read it quickly... and then when the buzz starts to build in about 9 months you can casually turn to your friend and say, "man, I read that a while ago..."

The story of Yes Man! is remarkably similar to One Red Paperclip -- where the book's hero challenges himself to say YES to every question he is asked for an entire year.  (Again, not because he's crazy but because he is tired of living just an 'average' existance.)  While this does get him in trouble in some places (he does at one point have to make an exception to questions asked via spam email after receiving his 5th penile enlargement device)... it does lead him on an exceptional set of adventures that again leaves him a much better man than when he began.


In conclusion, I think the reason I am recommending these two books is so that you get a better understanding of who I am -- just like these guys -- I feel that I'm about to do some pretty cool stuff, simply because I'm opening myself up to the possibilities of what is "out there."  And if I can inspire any of you to do the same in your life, than it's all been worth it for me!

~ J. Twice