“Sure,” I replied. “If I know the song or can fake my way through it.”
“Juicy Fruit!” blurted out one of the guys at the back, to much laughter.
“The song in the commercial, with the skiing?” I asked.
“YEAH!” a bunch of them replied.
“Let me see,” I said, as I put on the accordion and unstrapped the bellows.
Not only did I manage to play the chords — not all that difficult; it’s essentially the same chords as The Who’s Can’t Explain — I even managed to remember most of the lyrics. In fact, so did a good number of people on the bus. Once they heard “Get your skis shined up”, something clicked in everyone’s heads.
In honour of that most strange request, I recorded a version in the rough-and-ready way I played it last night, and I’m sharing it with the world below. Enjoy!
The lyrics:
Get your skis shined up
Grab a stick of Juicy Fruit
The taste is gonna move ya
Move you up
Move you out
The taste is gonna move ya when you pop it in your mouth
Juicy Fruit – it’s gonna move ya
It’s got a taste that gets right through ya
Juicy Fruit – the taste is gonna move ya!
Gung Hei Fat Choy! It’s another Chinese New Year, and this one’s the Year of the Snake. It starts today and runs until January 31, 2014, after which we’re in the Year of the Horse (although some people in the UK and Europe may argue that the year of the horse is already upon us).
Some of the other animals in the Chinese zodiac get lots of love, such as the Dragon, whose year we just came from, or the Tiger. There are always stories about people either postponing or rushing business deals, weddings or even childbirths just so that they fall during those years. Dragon and Tiger are so respected that stuntmen in Hong Kong films — Jackie Chan and his ilk, who often performed with little or no safety equipment — described their way of living as lung fu mo shi, or “Dragon Tiger!”; a close North American equivalent might be “Kick-ass”.
On the other hand, the Chinese have the same opinion of snakes as Indiana Jones:
As with Western culture, snakes are also viewed with suspicion in Chinese culture, and the year of the snake is often associated with trouble. The last Year of the Snake was 2001, which is often associated with 9/11. I agree with comedian Lewis Black’s summary of that year:
So my review for 2001 the year is the same as for 2001: A Space Odyssey. It went on too long, it was hard to follow and you could only enjoy it if you were really, really stoned.
Also worth noting: the terrible event, Pearl Harbor (1941) and the terrible movie, Pearl Harbor (2001) both took place on a Year of the Snake.
The Year of the Snake before that was 1989, which was a year associated with a number of terrible things including the Loma Prieta Earthquake, the Tienanmen Square Massacre (although the Chinese government says it never happened), and Milli Vanilli’s album, Girl You Know It’s True. The previous Year of the Snake was 1977, the year Jimmy “History’s Greatest Monster” Carter took over as President of the United States, when James Dobson formed Focus on the Family, and when the Starland Vocal Band (a one-hit wonder with their single Afternoon Delight, which as a ten-year-old, I thought was about the arrival of the ice cream truck) won the Grammy for artist of the year.
This guy was born on a Year of the Snake:
(Whether that’s good or bad depends on your perspective.)
Not only does each year have an animal associated with it, but also a colour and an element from Wu Xing (Chinese philosophy):
So this year is the Year of the Black Water Snake, or as I like to call it:
I’m heading down to Parkdale tonight to catch up with a friend. I’ll have to wash my hands often and might need to take a preventative dose of Unpretentiousil so I don’t catch “The Hipster”.
While the ad above is droll, there’s something wrong with one of the symptoms of hipsterism that they list: “Making things at home that can easily be bought at the local supermarket”. If that’s a symptom, it’s one of self-sufficiency, financial savvy and often healthier eating.
One more sci-fi story (well, maybe two) for those of you who are stuck at home thanks to the great snowstorm of 2013!
Iron Man: Extremis was a story arc from the Iron Man comic books that ran from the start of 2005 until about mid-2006 in which writer Warren Ellis redefined Iron Man as “a test pilot for the future”. The story line introduced Extremis, a military nanotech serum that allows the brain to consciously command the body to rebuild itself to be superhuman. It’s not a new idea; my friend Cory Doctorow covered this territory in the short story 0wnz0red (which you can consider some bonus sci-fi). Of course, as with the best Iron Man stories, the technology is just window-dressing; what’s truly interesting are the ideas that get tossed about within the stories.
In Extremis, the Iron Man suit gets redefined as an extension of Tony Stark, but even more importantly, Tony Stark himself gets redefined. His Cold War/Vietnam origin story (remember, Iron Man was created in the 1960s) gets updated to Afghanistan — an idea later appropriated by the first Iron Man film. Another idea that found its way into the film is Stark’s discomfort with being an arms dealer, which gets covered in an uncomfortable interview for a documentary film, a meeting with his board of directors about their new smartphone, and a heart-to-heart with his tech-hippie mentor. The story is rich with ideas about mind-over-matter transhumanism, the world as a post-political corporate conglomerate, right-wing militia thinking, the ongoing march of technology, great inventors best being remembered for their chindogu, what happens when you go from “changing the world” to “selling out”, and most importantly, the raison d’etre for the Iron Man suit. Watch and enjoy!
Star Trek: Phase II does the impossible. Created by super Star Trek Fan James Cawley, who initially raised fund for this project through Elvis impersonation gigs, this series answers the question “What if the original Star Trek hadn’t been cancelled, and had new episodes with writing that was at least as decent, and with better acting and effects?” Even better, they’ve managed to bring in some of the old Trek writers and actors.
In World Enough and Time, a transporter accident mishap causes them to beam back a Sulu that’s from thirty years in the future. And who better to play older Sulu than the original recipe, George Takei? This one’s got everything: two Hikaru Sulus, the Romulans, Kirk hitting on women, an even more “down home” Dr. McCoy, way better spaceflight scenery and of course, Spock making sense of it all. Be sure to check out the other episodes — they’re all quite enjoyable.
Some more entertainment for you in case you’re trapped at home during the big snowstorm of 2013.
Here in North America in the early 1980s, we knew it as Star Blazers. However, in its native Japan, the anime series was known as Space Battleship Yamato. It’s one of those stories that was just waiting to be told in the form of a live action film, and in 2010 it finally happened. Here’s the trailer for the movie:
Being a fan of the old anime series, I got really interested in the film and waited patiently for a subtitled version to hit the streets. Now there’s one on the ‘net, and now you can watch the crew of the Yamato (or the Argo, as it was known in Star Blazers) make their last-ditch effort to get to the planet Iskandar, humanity’s last hope if they plan to survive an attack from the Gamilas (or the Gamilons, as they were known in Star Blazers). If you watched the anime, you’ll love how well they translated its look to film, from the costumes right down to my favourite thingy, the Wave Motion Gun.
(And yes, that’s a Steven Tyler song in the movie. Like many things, the Japanese like their rock on the cheesy side.)
Be sure to turn on closed-captioning (hit the CC button on the bottom of the YouTube window and under Translate Captions, select English).