jess3 blogs,

about Danny Fink



Danny Finkelstein is havin a party tommorow night !.. (friday)



if you know him and where he lives.. come holla


DFink2117: i think tomorow night i'm gonna have a fiesta
DFink2117: yo you think i should have a big party tomorow?
DFink2117: as long as my parents shit don't get fucked up

about MBR progress

my MBR progress





comments:

GPdiddy81: damn...its hot man

UWpreppy: that is lookin really good jesse

MasTerLoc8: nice...

Ashlee Yvette: pretty :-)
Ashlee Yvette: make me one :-)

Dmpls128: you are so cool

Tenny727: looks good

FlorenceJbebe: thats tight

Drunken Al Qaeda: looks pretty nice

CounterLeon: looks good

Snuff703: thats hot

childsplay2k2: good work
childsplay2k2: *claps hands*

orMeganO: it looks nice

DFink2117: that looks like a penis sticking out of a pair of shorts
DFink2117: i thought it was a porn site for a second

imhaunted247: i am very impressed
imhaunted247: you should be very proud of yourself

Soundsinthepath: makin that loot i see huh




Dmpls128: ok so here's where i'm supposed to say something like "wow jesse you are getting SO awsome at this stuff" so i can make it on your website too:-P

about i like me that painting

JESS3

Aborigines : A Sotheby employee inspects a giant Aboriginal collaborative painting titled the "Ngurrara" canvas, in Sydney, prior to a two-night auction of Aboriginal paintings.

about horseys

JESS3

Nose above water : Wild Assateague ponies and foals swim in the Assateague Channel crossing to Chincoteague, Virginia, where several of the foals will be auctioned off to support the local fire department in the 78th Annual Pony Penning.

about SARSstock

JESS3

An aerial view of the 'SARSstock' concert at Downsview Park in Toronto on Wednesday, July 30, 2003. The large outdoor performance by 15 bands, headlined by the Rolling Stones, is expected to draw a crowd of 450,000. The event was conceived to help kickstart the SARS ravaged Toronto economy.

about do you remember that movie "the rocketeer "

JESS3

Felix Baumgartner has become the first person ever to fly across the English Channel without the benefit of an aircraft, gliding from England to France wearing only a specially designed flying suit

about Soldiers of Jah @ the 9:30 club

930.com

The Recipe
w/ Soldiers of Jah Army
@ 9:30 Club • Washington, DC
SAT. SEP. 6
$15.00

about hiiiooo missaaa tooommmaas

JESS3

http://www.major.jp

japaneeeesse majjjaaa leaaaguee basseeaaaballlllll
bada dada dun dun dunn dun dun dunnn

about spellbound movie

about so nifty

about phantom

http://www.phantom.net/

my boy Ronan from New Zealand.. showed me this site..

pretty fuckin slick design

about care for the bear

JESS3

Pelusa, a fourteen-year-old female polar bear, look through the bars of her cage at Mendoza's Zoo, some 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) west of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Tuesday, July 22, 2003. Pelusa, normally white, turned violet after veterinarians administered a drug to treat a skin's infection. Veterinarians said she should turn to her normal color within a month. (AP Photo/Walter Moreno-Los Andes)

about mm hmmm

JESS3

Hundreds of portable toilets are seen at Downsview Park in Toronto, Canada on Monday July 28, 2003 at the site of the upcoming Rolling Stones' SARS relief concert. The band will perform with more than 15 other acts as part of a concert that is expected to draw more than 450,000 people Wednesday. (AP Photo/CP, Kevin Frayer)

about nice background effect

JESS3

http://www.overture.com

nice clouds... on the homepage animation..

about why you break down my shitty wallll ?

JESS3

Mongolians wear different kinds of headgear during the Naadam Festival opening ceremony in Ulan Bator July 11, 2003. Naadam is the biggest event in the Mongolian calendar held on July 11 to 13, on the anniversary of the Mongolian revolution of 1921. Concerts, fairs and traditional sports like wrestling, archery and horse racing are held during the celebration.

about mikes in nyc


thats a pic from his phone he just sent me..
>my boy mike biked from dc to nyc, he left around july5th.. trippin.<

about trippin

JESS3

Opposition lawmakers rush to the chairman to stop the passage of a bill allowing Japanese Self Defense Forces to be sent to Iraq

about macromedia alliance

JESS3

it costs 800$ for a alliance associate

about traffik on the sundance channel

JESS3

35$



http://www.sundancechannel.com/on_air_event/?sContent=HiTech

TRAFFIK

From Thomas Edison's 1894 OPIUM JOINT to Ted Demme's BLOW, cinema has always been obsessed with drugs and drug culture. But few films have taken on the job of fully tracing out the financial, social, political, and medical problem created by the trafficking of drugs.

Ten years before Steven Soderbergh adapted the story for American audiences, the British Broadcasting Company (BBC) produced the six-episode miniseries TRAFFIK, which shows the complex connection between British politics, German law enforcement, and Pakistanti farmers. The three story lines knit the complicated the international supply and demand of heroin, tracing it from the poor poppy growers in Pakistan to the smugglers who bring the product into Europe to the British students who end up as addicts. But the traffic flows in more than one direction. There are also the profits that stream back to Muslim Fundamentalists, not to mention the foreign aid that Western governments throw at the third world in hopes of stemming the drug traffic.


Sundance Channel airs the original BBC mini-series July 8 - 13 at 9pm, and then a marathon on Sunday July 27, beginning at 1pm.

i saw a ad for this on tv.. i did some research...
i found this article


The Sundance Channel is calling it "two-way traffic," and it may be the coolest programming stunt of this sweltering summer: "Traffic," Steven Soderbergh's spellbinding 2000 Oscar winner about the international drug trade, followed by "Traffik," the equally spellbinding British miniseries from which it was adapted.

More than just 8 1/2 hours of terrific drama, though it's certainly that, this premium-cable double header offers a unique opportunity to compare a British TV production to an American film version that runs less than half the length of the original.

As someone with a distinct bias for the long and complex over the short and direct, I was surprised, after finally catching up with the six-hour "Traffik," to find myself even more impressed by the Soderbergh movie than I was two years ago - though, in this case, "short" runs to a not exactly stingy and far from uncomplicated 147 minutes.




Produced in 1989 by Britain's Channel 4, "Traffik" - which uses the German spelling because much of it is set in the notoriously drug-friendly port of Hamburg - was first seen here the following year on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre." Many public TV affiliates aired it again last summer, though Milwaukee's Channel 10 did not.

Bill Paterson ("Wives and Daughters," "Crush") plays Jack Lithgow, an ambitious cabinet minister charged with stanching the flow of heroin from the poppy fields of the Middle East through the ports of Europe and onto the streets of London, Belfast and Edinburgh. A tough-minded Scot who's been mentioned as the next prime minister, Jack is also, as he is about to find out when the story opens, the father of a bright, beautiful, well-educated heroin addict, Caroline (Julia Ormond).

Interlocking with Jack's story are those of Fazal (Jamal Shah), a Pakistani poppy farmer who, after his crop is destroyed by the government, comes under the influence of a dangerous drug lord; and Helen (Lindsay Duncan), the English wife of a German heroin importer who, in a matter of days, remakes herself from a pampered pet into a murderous tiger protecting her cubs and her den.

It's breathtaking to watch screenwriter Simon Moore and director Alastair Reid fill their giant canvas with dozens of intriguing figures - profane German cops, scruffy British junkies, a civilized Afghan heroin manufacturer, a loathsome Pakistani drug kingpin, a nervous Mexican lawyer - without ever losing sight of the three at the center.

An even bigger achievement is their persuasive depiction of the war on drugs as a battle that is unwinnable on the supply front, calling for an all-out attack on the demand side by providing immediate treatment for the millions of Carolines in virtually every Western city, as well as preventing the creation of future users.

And, of course, there's the newfound relevance of the Middle Eastern plot thread, filmed on location in Pakistan, with its intimations of daily misery and unrelenting desperation willfully ignored by the West. "Traffik" didn't foresee Sept. 11, but it recognized some of the seeds of it.

The American "Traffic," which lost the best picture Oscar to "Gladiator" - to which the only appropriate reaction is unprintable - did bring trophies to Soderbergh for direction, Stephen Gaghan for adapted screenplay, Stephen Mirrione for editing and Benicio Del Toro for supporting actor.

Though all three Steves did heroic work on the adaptation, it's a revelation to discover just how much the plot, the dialogue and even the staging owe to Moore and Reid.

If you recall the stunning scene in "Traffic" where the chief witness in the drug trial, Ruiz (Miguel Ferrer), gets served the same room-service breakfast twice, you'll be struck by its virtual shot-for-shot resemblance to the same five-minute sequence in "Traffik."

The Yanks keep two of the three core characters but move the action to Tijuana, San Diego, Washington, D.C., and Cincinnati; change the drug to cocaine; and streamline the story.

Still, in just 2 1/2 hours, it's astonishing how much stellar work they get from so many actors: Catherine Zeta-Jones as the luxury-loving Brit (here married to a Mexican-American importer); Del Toro and the Academy-ignored but equally deserving Don Cheadle as dogged drug agents; Tomas Milian as the suavely satanic Gen. Salazar; Ferrer, Luis Guzman, Amy Irving, Dennis Quaid, Erika Christensen, Topher Grace; as well as dead-on cameos from Benjamin Bratt, Salma Hayek, James Brolin and, eagerly impersonating themselves, the likes of Orrin Hatch, Barbara Boxer and Charles Grassley.

"Traffik" has only two important things that "Traffic" lacks: the engrossing farmer subplot, which quite literally looks at the roots of the drug trade; and, more to the American film's detriment, a credible performance in the role of the national anti-drug czar.

Hollywood slickster Michael Douglas as a Midwestern judge turned federal official? Please. In contrast, the low-key Paterson inhabits his role fully and, in the final turn of events, when fatherhood trumps political self-interest, convinces utterly.

Following Friday's airing of "Traffic," Sundance will show the first two hours of "Traffik," with the miniseries continuing Aug. 16 and concluding Aug. 23.

At 8 p.m. Aug. 28, the cable channel reverses the order with a showing of all six parts of "Traffik," followed at 2 a.m. by "Traffic."

about M.A.M.E. M.U.A.W.A.H.A.H.A.H.A.H.A.H.A.H.A.

JESS3

http://www.gamecabinetsinc.com/plans.htm

this company sells plans (that include.... Ultimate Arcade I features a classic arcade cabinet design, custom 2-player control panel, slide-out keyboard drawer, and a backlit marquee.) to build your own M.A.M.E. cabinet.. if you dont know what that is . its a arcade game emulator that lets you use any computer as a arcade powereer thing.. so for 60 bucks and some wood and the controllers and the computer you can build yourself a arcade machine that will play any arcade game.. or any emulator works too, i have nes, sega, turbo graphix (bonks adventure is tight), super nintendo, atari... etc... im gonna do it.. holla

about Last Night - soldiers of jah concert @ whitlows

http://www.whitlows.com




http://www.sojamusic.com/



last night was fuckkin awesome !, alexis, pat, nick, eric and I.. went to whitlows and saw soldiers of jah army play.. it was fuckin amazing !!!... soldiers rocked ! and i saw so many ppl from Arlington, !!!! it was amazing... i must of seen 30 ppl i went to wakefield and hb with...

tonight we are seein them again hopefully in adams morgan @ tomtoms, they are playin from 9pm to 2am... hollla


Album Review By Reggae-Review.com:


Add to the ever-growing list of impressive home-grown American roots reggae talent the band Soldiers of Jah Army (SOJA). This group of Washington DC-area youths, all only in their early 20s, performs with a confidence and proficiency well beyond their years, and on Peace in a Time of War, they present roots fans with a gift from above that may set a new benchmark for US reggae. Although thus far they have not really reached beyond the Mid-Atlantic region of the US, the quality of their material rivals nationally renowned American acts like John Brown’s Body and Groundation. Their music is full-band, live-instrument roots (except little or no horns; trust me, though, you don’t miss it) performed with a sincerity that comes through in their flawless performances. Their message is righteous and unifying, their tone ranging from fiery exhortations with slight dancehall strains ("Brothers and Sisters," "Creeping In," "Reality," "Forgive Don’t Forget") to muted, introspective odes with acoustic guitars and/or African drums ("Look Within," "True Love," "Rasta Courage," "Jah Atmosphere," "Mother Earth"). Lead singer Jacob Hemphill (insert your own hemp joke here) has a remarkable voice and passionate delivery seemingly made for roots reggae. He transitions effortlessly from a slightly raspy Marley-esque growl to a smoother, almost Ali Campbell-like wail that is mesmerizing. The songwriting too is amazingly strong and consistent, the quality not letting up until the last couple of tracks – which doesn’t dampen the experience in any way. I could pick any number of tunes as standouts, from "Non Partial Non Political" to "True Love" to "Look Within" to "Reality," "Rasta Courage," "Jah Atmoshpere," and "Revolution." Peace in a Time of War is truly a breathtaking, awesome showcase for SOJA’s talent. Although it isn’t their debut (this is their third release to date), this set could – and, if there is any justice, should – serve as their coming out party. It is a major statement that bodes well not only for the group’s potential, but also for the future of the American reggae scene.

about i like this sites top graphic

http://www.ingmoneymentor.com/

good use of graphics

about Rosie' Bday

happy bday RosiE ~~~~~!!

about Red Hot Chili Peppers Concert info

JESS3

Red Hot Chili Peppers
Nissan Pavilion, Bristow, VA
Sat, Sep 06, 2003 7:00pm

about nice portfolio site

about beach background

http://www.imarobot.com

imagine this background effect on my linz warhol series ? hmmmmm

about kinda cool half keyboard

JESS3

You type with your left hand, just like you would on a normal keyboard.

Except, the spacebar also works like a shift key. Holding it down gets you the letters of the missing half of the keyboard.

Hitting the spacebar alone still types a space

about npfc.org

http://www.npfc.org/

click the link on the right, and view ther video work, amazing stuff.. truely

about the DC Flash User Group (DC-FUG)



the DC Flash User Group (DC-FUG) Tuesday July 22nd from
7pm - 9:30 pm at Henninger Arlington.
"Dynamic Functionality in Flash MX," by Chris Avore.

Please contact Erik Muendel at erik@brightlinemedia.com if you
have any questions, or call 703-739-2424 x210.

Dynamic Functionality in Flash MX:
Enhancing the Flash Experience for User and Developer

Potential clients often seem to have numerous preconceptions about the
projects they want built, and often times those preconceptions can be
based on misunderstood information. One of the more frequent
misunderstandings is that Flash-built applications are difficult, if not

impossible to maintain, update, and edit once complete.

This discussion will demonstrate typical development-cycle uses of the
dynamic capabilities of Flash MX and how these features can streamline
production and maintenance of a simple application.

Topics addressed:
Preloading Flash Movies Loading and displaying dynamic, external text
Loading and displaying dynamic, external photos Flash Combo Box
Component

Sample application:
Simple Photo Gallery

Chris Avore has been designing and developing Flash applications since
1998 for a variety of clients and sectors. He currently leads an
e-learning application development team at KEI Pearson, where he is
responsible for developing the design and interaction of a Flash-based
military health care training system.

Chris also continues to generate new business for his corporate
identity, Erova Studios LLC, through which he consults with numerous
small corporate businesses, design firms, and associations, ranging from

Johnson and Johnson, to Dupont.

Chris's services often include usability testing, web-based marketing
and branding, accesibility optimization, content production and
interface design.

Recognized as Macromedia Certified Flash MX Professional, his Flash site

is available at www.erova.com.

The July 22nd meeting will be held from 7pm - 9:30 pm, at Henninger
Arlington. Henninger is located at 2601 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA.

They are conveniently located within walking distance of Metro's Orange
Line Courthouse Exit (2/10 of a mile west on Wilson Boulevard). The
facility also has off-street parking and metered street parking. These
meetings are free and open to anyone interested in Flash. No RSVP
necessary. This is a secure building. There will be someone at the door
between 6:45 and 7:20 pm to let you in.

Next Meeting:
August 19th - "Tips and Tricks" and "Undocumented features"

about Graffiti artist stages exhibition

JESS3

Graffiti artist stages exhibition

Britain's No 1 graffiti artist, whose anti-establishment images can be seen on walls and bridges throughout London, is staging his first British exhibition.



The cult figure, known only as Banksy, has brought his work from the streets into a gallery in Shoreditch for an exhibition called Turf War.

DJ Dan Pepe and Jamie Oliver were among the celebrities who flocked to the opening night to see the artist's work at first hand.

It included live animals including pigs with police stripes painting on their sides and a cow with Andy Warhold-style pictures of Andy Warhol painted all over it.



His graffiti features subversive images such as a riot police officer with a smiley face, the Mona Lisa firing a rocket launcher and the words "Designated Riot Area" at the foot of Nelson's Column.

The exhibition runs until July 21. The address is available at the artist's website.

about 50 CENT,SNOOP,BUSTA RHYMES,SEAN PAUL & FABOLOUS

JESS3

ROCK THE MIC 2: 50 CENT,SNOOP,BUSTA RHYMES,SEAN PAUL & FABOLOUS
1st Mariner Arena, Baltimore, MD
Thu, Aug 14, 2003 6:30pm

about /cuisine.co.nz/

/cuisine.co.nz/

get your recipes did

about subdisc.com/

about eccentris.com

about ..::style boost::..

about the skin factory

JESS3


http://theskinsfactory.com/

custom interface design.. hot shit

about frosch studio

about pics from my parents trip to the motherland (New Zealand)









about 3-D Rides Back to Save The Day

JESS3

LOS ANGELES
ALWAYS frantic to revive the sense of magic that greeted the first motion pictures, Hollywood is taking yet another chance on one of the movies' most enduring challenges: 3-D.

On Friday, Robert Rodriguez, the Texas-based director who started with bloody shoot-'em-ups but has moved in recent years to family fare, is offering "Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over," the latest installment in his series about secret agents' children who go into their parents' business. And no less a light than James Cameron, who ventured into 3-D earlier this year with "Ghosts of the Abyss," an IMAX documentary, vows that he is now hard at work on his long-awaited first feature film since "Titanic." All he will say about his new project is that it, too, will be shot in 3-D.

"Whenever Hollywood is at a point where things are getting desperate, 3-D seems to be the first rabbit they try to pull out of the hat," said Robert Thompson, professor of media and culture at Syracuse University.

Perhaps desperation is too harsh a word for the nervousness now spreading through the studios, but it's not far off.

The big-budget franchise films — the sequels, prequels, remakes and the like — that have proved to be the most reliable bets for studio executives in recent years are suddenly not performing as the marketers and the numbers-crunchers expected, from "The Hulk" to "Charlie's Angels 2: Full Throttle." Both box office revenue and attendance are down significantly this summer, despite a steady churn of these movies.

The computer animation that created a revolution in special effects, allowing directors to recreate ancient Rome or insert an army of 10,000 at the click of a button, had been helping to keep franchise fever alive. But now there is a growing sense that audiences have seen what this new technology can do, and nothing deflates Hollywood hype faster than "been there, done that."

A result is that the heavily courted under-25 audience has become apathetic, some might even say discerning. So perhaps 3-D will do the trick. "Three-D has always been something we, in the audience, have been particularly interested in," said Jeanine Basinger, chairwoman of the film studies department at Wesleyan University. "Let's face it, those of us who are film nuts want to get up there in the picture."

Mr. Rodriguez, putting the finishing touches on the new "Spy Kids" at a post-production facility in downtown Hollywood one recent afternoon, said it was a new camera system invented by Mr. Cameron, in alliance with Pace Technologies and Panavision, that first drew him to the idea of working in 3-D.

To get that three-dimensional effect, each scene must be shot with two cameras — mimicking the pair of eyes that give viewers their depth perception — and then projected with the two images overlapped. Special glasses, with either the decades-old red lens and blue lens or newer polarized lenses (used by IMAX), unscramble the images and create the illusion that things are popping off the screen.

The problem had been that it was difficult to adjust the focal depth between the two cameras while filming. Moviemakers had to guess, and really didn't know how close they had come until the film came back the next day. "It was like painting blind," Mr. Rodriguez said.

Now, with digital videotape, moviemakers can watch a monitor and see exactly what the cameras are seeing. And Mr. Cameron's lightweight, dual-camera system allows an operator, looking at that real-time image, to adjust the focal depth simply by twisting a knob.

One result, Mr Rodriguez said, is that a 3-D movie can be shot in a matter of weeks. Mr. Rodriguez got his movie into theaters only six months after he started working on it, even though 90 percent of "Spy Kids 3" contains 3-D images, and almost all of those involve computer-generated effects. And he did the whole thing for about $37 million, just what "Spy Kids 2" cost.

ANOTHER problem with previous 3-D movies using the anaglyph red-and-blue glasses — as Mr. Rodriguez's film will — is that the tinted lenses distorted the colors on the screen. He said he had gotten around that by setting his 3-D scenes inside a video game (into which the heroes are sucked by an evil genius played by Sylvester Stallone), and then using unrealistically bright, computer-generated hues to make it seem as if the color distortions were part of the movie.

It is said that when audiences saw the first dramatic motion picture — "The Great Train Robbery" — they gasped in shock, and some fainted. It didn't take people long, though, to realize that the speeding trains and leaping lions would not actually pop out of the screen, no matter how realistic they seemed. So filmmakers began almost at once to find ways to break through that final barrier. The anaglyph process, for instance, was developed in the silent-film era. Another company, Teleview, overlapped two negatives to give a 3-D effect in a short film released at Christmastime in 1922.

Something called the Spoor System was used to inject 3-D into a 1930's short called "Campus Sweethearts" and a 3-D movie became one of the top attractions at the 1939 New York World's Fair. But it was not until 1952 and the release of an unlikely blockbuster called "Bwana Devil" that 3-D became a craze.

Using the anaglyph system, "Bwana Devil" had crowds lined up around the block to see spears fly off the screen. Copy-cat movies were made by almost every studio, including the 1953 releases "House of Wax," "Hondo" and "Kiss Me Kate."

But the craze died as fast as it began. Alfred Hitchcock spent much of 1953 shooting "Dial M for Murder" in 3-D, but by the time it came out in 1954 audience interest had waned so much that it was released almost everywhere in old-fashioned 2-D.

There have been several attempts to resuscitate 3-D in the intervening years, from "13 Ghosts" in 1960 to "Friday the 13th Part 3: 3-D" in 1982 and "Jaws 3-D" in 1983. None caught on.

"In its 50's heyday, 3-D was a desperate attempt by the Hollywood studios to provide novelty to battle off the nemesis of television," Mr. Thompson said. "Now the return of 3-D is a desperate attempt to provide novelty again, but this time the enemy is the industry's own aesthetic inertia."

Mr. Rodriguez says he thinks that such skeptics will be proved wrong as it becomes clear how the new technology at last makes 3-D more realistic — if filmmakers can justify the screen-popping images.

"One reason 3-D burned out in the 50's is that those movies felt so forced, with everyone aiming things at the camera," he said. "To make this work, filmmakers will have to do better at the storytelling part."

about my parents return ! ...from new zealand...

about Police Jail Drummer and His Cat

the yahoo! story



NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York City transit police prowling the subway for scofflaws jailed a month-old kitten this week.



"Gizmo," a black and white kitten, and its owner, Angel Melendez, were placed in a city lockup early on Tuesday after an officer cited the 35-year-old subway musician for having an uncaged animal inside the subway system.


The incident was the latest example of what critics say is a ticketing blitz designed to help the cash-strapped city. Recently, officials fined a man for sitting on a milk crate and ticketed a woman for talking loudly to her neighbor.


Officials deny increased ticketing and statistics show the number of summonses has not risen.


Melendez was playing plastic drums in Manhattan's 14th Street station when police issued him a summons for having the kitten on a bucket next to him, lawyer David Kapner said. The kitten was sound asleep.


According to the criminal complaint, the arresting officer wrote he "observed the defendant in close proximity to a cat, which was on top of an upside down bucket, not enclosed in a container ... the defendant knew he was not allowed to possess a cat not enclosed in a container inside a subway facility."


Melendez and Gizmo spent 40 hours in separate city lockups before a loving reunion on Wednesday afternoon.


"She's like my baby. I didn't want to leave her alone at home," Melendez said.


A Manhattan criminal court judge on Wednesday sentenced Melendez to time served.

about Paris Hilton

JESS3

Socialite Paris Hilton holds her pet chihuahua Tinkerbell as she and Nicole Richie (L) discuss their new reality series 'The Simple Life' with television critics during the Fox television network presentation at the Television Critics Association Summer press tour in Hollywood July 18, 2003. The series features Hilton and best friend, Richie, daughter of singer Lionel Richie as they head from Los Angeles to live and work on a family farm in Arkansas. The show premieres August 13,

about Bastille Day

JESS3

Fireworks explode behind the Eiffel tower, specially lit with thousands of lights, to celebrate the closing of Bastille Day, France's national holiday, July 14, 2003. Thousands earlier lined the city's Champs Elysees for the annual military parade.

about typecon 2003

JESS3

http://www.typecon2003.com


from the site..

TypeCon2003 builds on the foundation of previous events, offering four full days of workshops, presentations, and panel discussions. More than 65 of the most respected names in the type, design, books arts, new media, and education fields make up a stellar cast of speakers and workshops leaders.

This year’s conference offers a rich mixture of contemporary and historical programming. Letterpress printing, the history of wood type, sign painting, calligraphy, and glass gilding are among the traditional arts in focus at TypeCon2003. The program explores the latest in digital font production tools and techniques, typography for the screen, typographic education, online type news and discussion forums, and much more.

about check out how the other half lives... THE NEW YORK SOCIAL DIARY

does being rich mean you have to look really dorky...??

JESS3

James and Whitney Fairchild / Tony Ingrao, Randy Kemper, and Dominique Browning



courtesy of Natasha Fedoseyev
yes, yes ....what, what

http://newyorksocialdiary.com

about my stats have been the highest ever the last 2 days

JESS3

112 visitors today!!!!!!!

about Fuse Takes Aim at MTV

http://www.rollingstone.com/news/printer_friendly.asp?nid=18363&cf=7990

New network lives for rock videos
We feel like MTV felt twenty years ago," says Marc Juris, the president of Fuse, a small but flourishing cable channel that's staking its future on a simple idea: Music television should play music videos. So far, the results are encouraging: Fuse more than doubled its reach to 31 million households in the last twelve months, though that's a long way from the 86 million homes MTV reaches or the 49 million households of MTV's music-video spin-off MTV2.
Fuse, which debuted in 1994 as a tiny U.S. offshoot of the Canadian music station MuchMusic, hired TV vet Juris away from American Movie Classics last year to overhaul the network. His plan: aggressively target twelve- to thirty-four-year-olds with interactive video shows, including the high-concept IMX, through which viewers can monitor their online trades of "shares" of bands on a stock ticker while watching videos.

Fuse has been emphasizing metal, hip-hop, punk and emo. "The good thing about the channel is that it is seriously concentrating on rock music," says Linda Ferrando, senior vice president of Atlantic Records. Ferrando credits Fuse's support of Taproot for the metal band's near-gold sales. Pete Loeffler, lead singer of alt-metal band Chevelle, agrees. "[Fuse] really supports rock music," he says, "our fans always say they saw us on there."

Fuse's competition doesn't seem worried. "That 'Where are the music videos on MTV?' thing," says David Cohn, general manager of MTV2. "I'm not sure anybody's that fussed about it except Fuse. And you notice Fuse never mentions MTV2." Still, the channel recently made a failed attempt to lure Fuse's breakout-star VJ, Juliya, for Headbangers Ball.

Fuse programming essentially centers around music videos, a strategy that MTV all but abandoned after learning it was difficult to get ratings with music clips. To date, ratings for Fuse have been decent -- though not great enough to kill the infomercials that still populate the channel.

Juris remains optimistic, citing the success of iTunes as his inspiration. "I believe that we've seen the beginning of a revolution in how music is distributed and disseminated to people," he says. "We want to be a part of that."


http://fuse.tv
more music, less crappy tv

about hiiiioooo missssaaa tommmassss

JESS3

Women's lingerie maker Triumph International Ltd's promotions model Tomomi Kudo shows off the Hanshin Tigers Bra, made in honor of the western Japanese baseball team The Hanshin Tigers, at an unveiling in Tokyo, July 16, 2003. Developed with passionate female Tigers' fans in mind, the bra has the Tigers' mascot Truckee as its main design motif, and comes with shorts and a detachable 'tiger's tail,' and will go on sale in a 500 set limited-edition from August 15 for 10,000 yen (about $85). The Hanshin Tigers, the current Central League leader, are hoping to capture their first pennant in 18 years.

about dog drinks water.. water drinks dog

JESS3

A 5-year-old Labrador-greyhound mix named Bambi beats the heat July 13, 2003, by charging sprinklers in a dog run at Centennial Hills Park in Las Vegas, Nevada. The National Weather Service said that the Las Vegas Valley missed the all-time high of 113 degrees (45c) Sunday by one degree after tying the record of 114 degrees (46c) on Saturday. The temperatures are expected to remain above average through this week.


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Bobby the penguin sits with a bowl of apples on a dining table made of ice in Old Billingsgate Market in London, July 16, 2003. The table was part of an ice house made of 30 tonnes (30,000 kg) of ice which took five weeks to sculpt and which will be used as a display area for one day by the Samsung home appliances company.

lol

about Down under

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: The Spanish synchronized swimming team performs their routine during the preliminary at the 10th FINA World Swimming Championships in Barcelona.

about Meowlingual

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Japanese cat Komachi (L) meows at American Shorthair Mick as they are held with the mock-up 'Meowlingual' device, which is can translate various meows into over 200 human words, at an unveiling in Tokyo, July 17, 2003. Toymaker Takara Co, which last year developed a hit 'Bowlingual' communication gadget for dogs, is planning to start sales of the 'Meowlingual' in November for 8,800 yen ($75). REUTERS/Eriko Sugita

about overage4design

about if your not from america and your lookin at this.... send me a email jesse@jess3.com

yesterday was my highest traffic report since i started site tracking.. 102 unique visitors!
people from france greece uk.. yeahhh

see for yourself

http://www.nedstatbasic.net/s?tab=1&link=1&id=2303812

about http://www.conduit.co.za/


south african design group.. ther reel is fuckin hot shit

about new version of jess3 is online

in honour of 2advanced.coms version prophecy.. here is jess3 2.2

2advanced.com

about A Dot-Com Sing-Along

JESS3
By ABBY ELLIN


IN the late 1990's, Steve Fishman, a journalist with no previous business experience, set out to see what the new economy fuss was all about and — oh, yes — to make $1 million along the way.

This was a time, of course, when making a million didn't seem particularly hard; all that was needed was a really good idea. Mr. Fishman was assigned by New York magazine in 2000 to set up an Internet business and to chronicle his adventures; the magazine gave him $3,000 to start. He came up with the notion of a hip-hop karaoke service, to be delivered online, and tried to make it work. The resulting book is "Karaoke Nation: Or, How I Spent a Year in Search of Glamour, Fulfillment and a Million Dollars" (Free Press, $25).

Along the way, our hero learns some business lingo (including "business plan" and "stickiness," or staying power) and meets luminaries of the music and Internet business worlds like Russell Simmons of Def Jam records.

Like so many dot-com entrepreneurs, Mr. Fishman ultimately wonders what it's all about. "I was sure passion was the new fuel of business, and would be for years to come," he writes. "But passion in businesses — for business — seemed almost unintelligible to me."

He eventually sold his concept to another company and became a thousandaire, not a millionaire.

Do we need yet another tale about that not-so-long-ago time when business leaders were regarded as rock stars and people actually enjoyed going to the office — or, for that mater, even had jobs? Maybe not. But the story can be interesting and amusing when it comes from someone who was in the trenches, has a sense of humor and writes well. Mr. Fishman qualifies on all three counts.

about hahaha

JESS3

about Volkswagen, Apple team up in 'Pods Unite' promotion

http://maccentral.macworld.com/news/2003/07/15/vw/


By Peter Cohen pcohen@maccentral.com
July 15, 2003 11:00 am ET
Apple and auto maker Volkswagen announced on Tuesday a new promotion called "Pods Unite." People who purchase a 2003 Volkswagen Beetle sedan can get a complimentary Apple iPod.

The promotion will be featured in television, radio and newspaper advertising through the end of September. Visitors to Volkswagen dealer showrooms will also find displays showing off the new iPod.

VW buyers who take advantage of the promotion will receive a 15GB iPod and a "connectivity kit." The combination is valued at about $600, according to a statement.

Up to 25,000 VW owners will also be offered a US$50 Amazon.com gift certificate for test-driving the new Beetle with the iPod system, as well. Up to 25,000 Apple owners who take the test drive will similarly get a $50 gift certificate for use on Apple.com.

Volkswagen market director Karen Marderosian said that Apple and VW audiences are similar. "A group that embraces something different, simple and unconventional. We think this initiative represents a natural alliance of two like-minded brands," she said.

The promotion is available to U.S. customers only; it is not applicable to Beetle convertible models.
http://www.gimetzco.com/

fuckin cool graphic design>
JESS3

http://www.coxar.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/

read closely.....its not a error message




courtesy of natasha
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early christmas present ideas for me .. everyone..