Archive for October, 2007

Along Came Polly (Movie Review)

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

Over the past decade, Ben Stiller has displayed a propensity for producing blockbuster comedies, and Along Came Polly is a fun and enjoyable comedy. Although not on the hilarity level of There’s Something About Mary, Meet The Parents, or Zoolander - Along Came Polly is nonetheless a funny film (and it’s certainly better than the horrid Duplex fiasco with Drew Barrymore). Ben Stiller again plays the role of the nice guy, but this time with a neurotic twist. As a result, the audience still likes his character, just perhaps not as much as some of Stiller’s previous roles. But with some hilarious comedy sequences and good one-liners, Along Came Polly manages to keep its viewers entertained quite nicely…

Ben Stiller plays the role of Reuben Feffer, an insurance man who avoids risk in every aspect of his life. Measuring everything from the probability of falling through a sidewalk grate to the odds of a piano falling on one’s head, he calculates every decision he makes. Following his wedding to Lisa Kramer (Debra Messing), Reuben is devastated when (avoiding the risk of scuba diving), he catches his new bride having an affair with a scuba instructor on their honeymoon. Forced to reevaluate his life, Reuben determines that he needs to take on more risk in his life.

With the help of his friend Sandy, Reuben gets out into the public arena once again, where he runs into former junior high school classmate Polly Prince (Jennifer Aniston). Polly is the exact opposite of Reuben in almost every way, and he decides to pursue her so as to have more fun in his life. Everything goes well until Lisa returns hoping to win Reuben back, and Polly discovers that Reuben ran a risk analysis on their relationship, determining that Polly was a good risk to take. Now Reuben must decide what to do with his life…

Jennifer Aniston, in her role as Polly Prince, turns in another great performance as a leading character’s girlfriend (Office Space and Bruce Almighty). Playing a character whose attitude, demeanor, and life are the total opposite of Stiller’s, the two Hollywood mainstays are able to save an otherwise adequately written screenplay. Some of the more hilarious scenes involve Reuben’s has-been actor friend Sandy Lyle (Philip Seymour Hoffman) who continues to live off of his short-lived fame as “the kid with the bagpipes” in a 1980’s movie similar to The Breakfast Club. In one scene, Sandy also “sharts” (a fart that’s a little bit more than a fart), forcing Reuben to leave a party prematurely.

Overall, Along Came Polly is a fun and entertaining film that’s well worth the time spent. Although Ben Stiller and Jennifer Aniston have both made better films, it does have its high points. Movie-goers will find this to be a good, light-hearted romantic comedy with Jennifer Aniston and Ben Stiller stealing the show. Because of its headline talent and some good one-liners, Along Came Polly makes the cut as a highly recommended, must-see movie…

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a thedvdreport.blogspot.com movie review site where you can find more reviews like this one of the thedvdreport.blogspot.com/2006/02/along-came-polly-dvd.html Along Came Polly (DVD) Review.

Chappelles Block Party Is A Worthy Watch

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

The elusive stand-up comic with worldwide exposure known as Dave Chappelle recently produced a film that is part music-video, part documentary. Using his fame to give back to the community, Chappelle commissioned several buses to load up people from his semi-rural community and take them to New York City for the block party of a lifetime. Chappelle provides food, hotel stays, and transportation for the invitees, and the look on their faces as he invites them really can put a smile on your face. No tickets were on-sale for the concert; Chappelle kept it largely underground, only informing a few of the local neighborhoods about the performance.

Headlining artists at the super-secretive show included such hip-hop heavyweights as Kanye West, the Fugees, the Roots, and several other notable artists. The concert was provided free of charge by Chappelle to help give back to the people that supported him throughout his career, as well as providing a means for racial cohesion through the cross-section of races and ages of the people whom he invited.

The movie follows Chappelle as he gets the show together, handing out golden tickets to the show like a modern-day Willy Wonka. Part of the humor provided by the film is the expressions on the faces of some of the older white women who agree to make the trip to New York to experience something new. And that is exactly what Chappelle was hoping for; exposure of his favorite music to those who would not normally give it a second’s listen. The film provides a message of unity and hope, giving a very positive outlook on racial relations. Chappelle is his usual goofy self, providing one-liners and humorous allusions that keeps the audience in stitches between acts.

Those who love Chappelle’s sense of humor but are not fans of the hip-hop genre may not get what they were expecting in this film while Chappelle puts laughs in throughout the film, the focus is clearly on the music. The artists themselves put their best foot forward, showcasing various talents in the genre with their finest works. All in all, the film is well-suited for those already familiar with the artists that are involved or those who have an open mind towards new musical tastes. It provides an introspective look at the cultures and communities that separate us, and how our differences can help us to bind together.

Kadence Buchanan writes articles on many topics including

Create An Oil Painting Masterpiece From Your Photos

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

The tradition of portrait painting was prevalent prior to the development of photography. Royal and aristocratic families used to have paintings of family members from past generations. Couples that got engaged used to send portrait paintings to one another before their marriage. Photography has taken the place of portrait painting tradition. However, it is well known that photographs fade away with time, while an oil painting can last for many generations. The portrait becomes a souvenir for the family and an artistic item deepening the family roots. Your image becomes real for next generations and a beautiful moment in the present becomes a personal item decorating your house.

Painting an oil portrait is a task that requires a lot of skill and patience. Not many painters can create a portrait which reflects well the painted figures. Such an artwork painting can last about 1 week (depending on the size and complexity of the painting). Many of you probably think that they can’t afford such a painting. You probably think that it costs 1000s of dollars. Well… Truth is, that you don’t have to come from a royal family to have your own hand painted oil portrait hung on your wall.

Years ago, if we wanted to have an oil portrait of ourselves, we had to sit in front of the portraitist for hours and hours in order for him to complete the task. Today, all that is needed is to send some good quality digital photos by email to the painter, who prints them on an ʎ paper, or even better, uses a projector to project the photo on the canvas and your very own oil portrait is being born….

Today, if you want to have an oil portrait of all your family for example, you don′t need to send the painter a photo of all your family. You can send separate photos of each member of the family and ask the painter to put them together in one painting. You can ask for specific background, change clothes, hair or anything that else that you feel like. The sky is the limit.

The technology of today allows us to view our portrait online while it is being painted. The artist only needs to take a photo of it and send to us, so we can see it being created and tell the artist if we want him to change anything. This way, you can feel as you are taking an active part of your work of art.

While all this technology that makes the oil portrait painting easier and affordable, it may seem a bit less romantic to some of you. One thing I can assure you - the result is as romantic as it used to be hundreds of years ago.

The oil painting we create from your photo, becomes the most personal and unique gift you can give to your loved ones for their anniversary, wedding, birthday or any moment you would like to turn into a special one.

Texas Hold em Poker Basics

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

Texas Hold em Poker (also know as Holdem Poker) is a card game which you’ll take a few minutes to learn but many years to master. As a beginner you’ll want to learn the Texas Hold em Poker basics - the rules, hands rankings and types of texas hold em poker.

The absolute Texas hold em poker basics :
The game is played with a standard 52 card deck and there may be a minimum of two or a maximum of ten players per game.

Players are dealt two cards each, which are used in addition to the 5 communal cards to create the best possible 5 card poker hand.

The dealer begins the game by dealing two cards to each player this round is known as the ‘Pre-Flop’. The two cards dealt by the poker dealer are placed face down on the table – these cards are called the pocket or hole cards.

A round of betting occurs before the second round of cards is dealt. In this round the poker dealer places 3 cards face up on the poker table. This is known in Texas Hold em Poker games as the ‘Flop’. Each player now has an opportunity to bet or check.

By ‘checking’ you are choosing not to bet but you still remain in the game, checking is only allowed if there have been no bets placed before your turn in that round.

In the third round, the dealer places another communal card face up on the table. At this time there are 4 communal cards on the table, as well as 2 hole or pocket cards per player. Considering the current choice of cards in their hand and those open on the table, the players again place their bets. This round is known as the ‘Turn’.

In the final round before the ‘Show-down’, the dealer places the fifth and final communal card on the table, face up. And the players begin betting. This round is known as the ‘River’.

After the River, the remaining players begin to show their hands. Players may use any combination of their two hole cards and 5 communal cards to create the best possible hand. You may even use all five communal cards to create the best hand.

It’s best to play Texas Holdem Poker for free before playing for real. Spend a few minutes getting use to the game, you’ll realize how simple and entertaining this game really is.

Play Free Online Texas Holdem Poker now – it’s a great way to learn the game!

Stanley Majors is an experienced online poker journalist who writes articles on a range of poker topics. You can read more on texas-holdem-net.com/texas-hold-em-poker-basics.html Texas Hold em Poker Basics. Plus find other articles at texas-holdem-net.com Texas Holdem Net, which provide useful and factual poker information and insight.

Horror Of The War In Vietnamese Art

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

the concept of war has been a dominant theme throughout art and literature. Wars have been a part of the human experience that has been fought with guns and swords, and expressed with symbols and ideas. War and opposition to war have been represented throughout history by using the tools and texts of political science, sociology, history, literature, music, and the visual arts. The Vietnamese society has been no exception to the above.

Vietnam has a history as rich and evocative as anywhere on earth. The American War in Vietnam captured the attention of the West, but centuries before that Vietnam was scrapping with the Chinese, the Khmers, the Chams and the Mongols. Vietnamese civilization is as sophisticated as that of its mighty neighbor China, from where it has drawn many of its influences under a thousand year occupation. The Americans were simply the last in a long line of invaders who had come and gone through the centuries and, no matter what was required or how long it took, they too would be vanquished. Although the war has been over a long time, it has left deep scars on the minds of the Vietnamese people. The war artists have captured the historic moments on the canvasses.

Artists throughout history have depicted wars and Vietnam War belongs to this tradition. Official war artists, Vietnam veterans, interested observers and opponents of the war created Art from the Vietnam War. It also includes political and social cartoons and posters. The Vietnam War is a significant event of the American experience. Scholars have studied the war and its consequences, and artists of all genres have depicted it in their arts and paintings. Even though the conflict itself lasted from 1961 to 1975, the Vietnam War continues to be the focus of extensive scholarly as well as popular interest.

Many artists were actively against the war and used their art to express the horror and human tragedy of war. From the time of the war, some veterans and even their families have expressed their experiences of and feelings about the war in artistic form. The war artists have staunchly opposed the war and depicted its inhumanity through naked, flayed figures against raw linen grounds and scenes of U.S. soldiers attacking Vietnamese civilians. Dinh Q. Lê Chen, Liza Nguyen, Binh Danh, An-My Lê, Johnny Miller and Howard Henry Chen are among the few prominent artists who have been in direct relationship to the Vietnam War. Each artist explores the war recollection through parents, historical accounts from available publication, or even Vietnamese born with childhood experiences. The emotional memory of the war has been affected equally by the loss each one faced because of the physical damage inflicted by the war.

The Vietnam War profoundly influenced American Society and most accounts of the period dwell on the war’s domestic ramifications. The war is still a constant reminder to its citizens′ of its pains, through memorials, war cemeteries, bomb craters, flattened ancient ruins, discarded scrap metal, land mines, and hidden traces of dioxin in the soil. These artworks and monuments now form the bulk of the freshly revived tradition of

Digital Lag: Capturing a “Kodak Moment”

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

With digital cameras, capturing a “Kodak Moment″ has never been so easy… and so difficult.

It’s never been so easy because with our digital cameras we can basically snap away like madmen with a machine gun and see right there and then whether we′ve captured the moment.

But it’s also never been so difficult because of the annoying thing known as “shutter lag.”

Shutter lag is a digital phenomenon, and refers to the time between the moment that you hit the button to take the picture and the moment that the camera actually captures the image. Lag time can reach nearly 2 seconds! That’s like an eternity when trying to capture a moment. I mean I’ve seen my children go from laughing to crying in that amount of time!

Film cameras really don’t have any lag, but on many digital models (though not the more expensive SLRs), the lag is considerable. Considerable enough to mean the difference of capturing the moment and not.

The truth is, as much experimenting as you want to do and as much as you want to spend on equipment, taking pictures is all about capturing a moment. Miss the moment and it doesn’t matter what kind of camera you have.

I once went to a friend’s to see his wedding pictures. He showed me the pictures shot by a professional using the best camera, flash, lighting system and other equipment. Then he showed me pictures taken by friends and family with disposal cameras and average digital cameras. Though the professional took better quality pictures, the friends caught much better moments.

I’ll take a captured moment over quality any time. I recently went to a birthday party with my children. My youngest daughter was having a blast, smile painted on her face. I kept trying to take pictures of her, but when I looked at the screen, all I that was left was an arm or wisp of hair as she had moved away by the time the camera captured (or missed) the moment.

I believe without a doubt the #1 Rule in photography is Get the Shot. So what to do about this pesky shutter lag problem?

Digital cameras work by first pressing the shutter button half way to focus and then fully depressing to take the picture.

What you can do is if you know you are getting ready to take a picture is:

1. Turn off all automatic features like red-eye reduction

2. Focus on your subject a couple of seconds before you know you want to take the picture, track the subject, wait for your Kodak moment, and then…Bam…take the picture and capture the moment.

Andrew is a former journalist and like many others in their mid-thirties still trying to figure out what he wants to do when he grows up. At the same time, he loves to capture “moments” and tell stories through photos. He is the creator of dazzlingdigitalprints.com/ht.php?a=dazzlingdigital&b=EZN01HME DazzlingDigitalPrints.com - a web site packed with tips, reviews, advice and newsletter all to help you get best digital prints possible.

Poggi and the Cannibals [Part 2 of 3: The Cannibals]

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

“They will eat you,” said Victor, to Poggi, then un-expectant hope of deliverance from the cannibals in the deep jungles of Atalaya (by Satipo Jungle, in Peru) overwhelmed him but where would it come from?

“What can we do?” said Poggi (almost ready to run now, run where—in this dark deep jungle was a rhetorical question he brought forward to himself; it of course would be the unanswered question; statement-question).

There were perhaps, 200-native cannibals to the tribe, the Ashaninca. Now to be eaten out of his skin and perchance bones, his flesh, by these monsters, just didn’t seem right; yet he left his family on a quirk, idiosyncrasy, eccentricity, just up and left, that was it, no advise, or where he was going, just up and left and ended up in the jungle, journeyed to this land for whatever reasons, this hideous land of man eating primates, sinister as it was, it was: why, well, it has its own motivations, as I have said in the first part of this story.

So here he was, in the underworld of the jungle (the deep), the year was 1994, it would be a long year indeed; his nostrils filled with the jungle air; water falls running wild like unending corridors everywhere; sounds of water and birds everywhere. It was if anything, it was a strange new world undeniably.

Eccentric, perhaps he was, not a sin to be so; brave, indeed he was, for who would cherish such a dream; then Victor said, standing in front of the tribal leaders, whispered to Poggi, said in a low, very low voice, with a small bird in his hands [he was holding], “You must kill this bird in front of everyone, lest, you give them time to eat you, should you not.”

It was a tiny bird for sure, whistling a tune nonetheless, and a cut bird at that, yet it bestowed fear in the strongest of the natives, it was known to pick, and pluck out the eyeballs of their loved ones. Perhaps love is a strong word here: their comrades.

Poggi looked about, the natives were laughing (he would learn in the next year they laughed all the time, like monkey’s, all the time moving, laughing ‘ha, ha, ha…’ they bellowed it out constantly, with spears in hand, laughed with each other, not sure what they were laughing at, just laughing like lost souls, like idiots; painted up like devils, as he would be in time.

Now they were all looking at Victor and Poggi (Victor had proven himself to be a fearful friend, and was in no danger, as was Poggi).

“Eat the eyeballs out of humans, do they?” asked Poggi, as if to have it clarified (a rhetorical question at best).

‘Crack…!’ went the bird’s neck; Poggi had twisted it, broke its neck, and saved his life at the hands of these cadaverous jungle devils. He looked at the bird, as if it would whistle again, but of course it would not, and he knew that. And all the natives looked at him, he was one of them now. He painted himself likened to their kind, and lived with them for a year.

See Dennis’ web site: dennissiluk.tripod.com dennissiluk.tripod.com

Do You Want to Sound Like a Pro?

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

If you’re like most people who take piano lessons, you do!
Whether you’re young or old or somewhere in between, you aspire to make beautiful music and………..right away!

You’ve probably heard the old joke:
“How do you get to Carnegie Hall?” asks the inquisitive tourist.
“Practice, practice, practice!” replies the wise old responder.

But wouldn’t you much prefer to learn the secret to sounding good just for your own satisfaction and enjoyment?

That’s probably why you take piano lessons… However, most piano students forget to pay attention to the very areas that would enable them to sound great!

Do you do one or more of the following?

1. Ignore the timing by not counting or tapping your foot.
2. Play everything at the same volume.
3. Disregard the key signature and just start playing the piece.
4. Use too much pedal.
5. “Type” or bang the keys and disconnect one note from another.
6. Allow the accompaniment (usually the left hand part) to overpower or drown out the melody.
7. Listen to talk radio instead of spending some of your time listening to music.

If you recognized any of the above habits as things you do, congratulations! Now you know why you aren’t sounding like a pro yet.

(Parents: Have you noticed these traits in your children who take lessons?)

Obviously, you want to sound good! (And you parents want your kids to sound good, don’t you?)

So instead of treating piano practice like a chore, here are seven ways to start you on the way to Carnegie Hall:

1. Pay attention to the timing: count or tap your foot.
2. Notice the dynamics (indications for differences in volume) and follow them.
3. Look at the key signature before you start to play and mark all of the sharps or flats if you need to.
4. Use the pedal with care. (Pedal changes are often marked in classical pieces, and should be made in songs with each chord change.)
5. Employ correct fingering as you work towards playing smoothly and connected (unless the music asks for staccato: detached playing).
6. Listen for the melody. Can you always hear it while you are playing?
7. Focus on spending some time listening to music every week. (With wonderful tools like iPods, MP3 players and the internet, it’s easy to find recorded versions of the pieces that you play as well as music that motivates and inspires you.) Give these suggestions a try.
Start today. You’ll be surprised at how much better you sound!

Copyright © 2007 by Ed Mascari

edmascaripianostudio.com edmascaripianostudio.com

Eight Tips for Selecting an Online Texas Holdem Poker Table

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Online Texas holdem offers you a large number of options for selecting the table when you play poker online. This is in contrast to the live casino Holdem poker game where you have limited number of options for table selection. Since a large number of people form all over the world play Online Texas Holdem, you have more chances of selecting the right online poker table for you.

Online Texas Holdem-The Right Table Holds the Key to Success
Here are some important tips that will help you select the right online Texas holdem table to improve your win percentage when you play online poker.

1. Select an Online Texas hold’em poker table where more people tend to commit mistakes because they increase your winning chances. If you are able to select such a table to play online poker, you are expected win more often.

2. Online Texas hold’em poker that you select must have the less skilled players. Even if you are an excellent poker player but playing on a table with more players matching your level reduces your chances of winning.

3. The chances of your winning reduce if you select an online Texas Holdem poker table that is too tight, too loose or too aggressive. According to poker pros, a loose- passive table is the best bet for playing poker online. Such a table for online holdem poker will have more callers and few raises before the flop.

4. An online Texas hold’em poker table that has lot of rises before the flop reduces your win margins because seeing the flop becomes an expensive affair on such tables.

5. If you play online Texas Holdem poker on a tight- passive table, your expected profits reduce considerably. However, such a table to play online holdem poker is more predictable and offers you the opportunity to steal the pot more often.

6. Remember that an online Texas holdem poker table where a large percentage of people see the flop is a looser table. If you are looking for a loose-passive table to play poker online, you should select the one with a higher flop percentage and an average pot size.

7. You have play tight on a ten-handed online Texas hold’em poker because there the competition is intense and you would have to show down your better hands. This is the reason why some players prefer six-handed tables to play online holdem poker. When you play in such tables, you have more chances of seeing the flop and winning.

8. Do not spend more than one hour on any online Texas holdem poker table. Increased time could lead diminishing concentration, which could adversely affect your game. Try to ensure that your average session online Texas hold′em poker should not exceed an hour.

Follow the aforementioned tips for selecting the right online Texas holdem table and witness your bankroll seeing a new high.

Mark Williams is a Poker Fanatic! Visit his site for the Best Poker Articles available online. If officialonlinepokerinfo.com Online Texas Holdem is your game you do not want to miss this site!

Can You Understand English?

Monday, October 29th, 2007

There is a lot of talk about making English the official language of the USA. That would stop the need to spend so much money printing out things like drivers license, tax, voter registration and other official forms in so many languages. If people come here, they will simply have to learn English. However, is it really that simple? English is anything but a virgin language. It has roots in the tongues of many nations and one word can mean many things. If you travel around our great nation, you will discover some extreme examples of that fact.

Several years ago, I visited Pennsylvania Dutch Country with my family. Most people have read about the Amish people, but it’s something you have to see for yourself to believe. They first came to North America to escape religious and political persecution in Holland and the Netherlands. Most live in Pennsylvania, some in Ohio and Indiana and a few have established closed communities in Canada.

The religious life of the Amish tends to dominate all they do. While they appreciate the freedom that America offers them, they want none of what they consider our vices. Most of the traditional Amish people refuse the use of electricity and modern conveniences like telephones, cars and machine driven farm equipment. The majority are Farmers who use horse drawn carts for their transportation and horses for plowing, pulling wagons and other heavy work.

The most amazing sight you can see in Pennsylvania Dutch Country is an Amish barn raising. The entire community gets together when someone needs a new barn and builds the bulk of it in just one day! The men construct the barn while the women cook and provide refreshment. I guess that when it comes to the Amish, it takes a village to raise a barn!

Because they consider waging war a sin, the Amish are generally classified as Conscientious Objectors with Selective Service. They have their own schools and churches and teach that being self-sufficient is vital. They do use banks, save a great deal of the money they earn from farming for the future, give ten percent of their worth to the church and refuse to participate in the Social Security program. The Bible says to make no image of any thing on the earth or in heaven. You will not see any religious statues in their churches. They do not use cameras of any type and the Amish dislike having tourists take their picture.

Sometimes it is hard for tourists to resist the temptation to photograph these unusual people because they look so quaint. The Amish dress in what might be described as very plain clothing. The men wear dark pants with suspenders, light shirts, a wide brimmed hat and a dress coat for special affairs or cold weather. Most have beards and stop shaving when they are engaged or marry. The women wear dresses, no pants, and most will never cut or trim their hair. None of the Amish wears jeans, anything with a design on it or buttons. They use hooks and eyes on their clothes because of a tradition that says their persecutors in Holland wore large buttons on their coats as a sign of pride. Most wear large dark colored shoes and none wear sneakers or dressy footwear.

The Amish speak their own language that has been described by dialectologists as an old form of Dutch mixed with German and some Old English. It is their attempt to speak modern English that really gets your attention! If I were outside our house and needed my wife to give me a diaper for the baby I might say, “Honey, throw a diaper out the window. I need one for the baby.” However, the Amish would say, “Father, please throw the baby out of the window a diaper.” Yikes! Maybe that’s where Michael Jackson got the idea of dangling his kid out of the window. I guess we’re all lucky that’s all he decided to dangle out the window?

This whole Amish style of speaking made me think about the English language and some of the odd ways in which we describe things in different parts of the USA. Like all Americans born here, I guess I have been short with those who come to America from somewhere else and have trouble learning our language. I mean, how many times should I have to say ‘BIG MAC’ at McDonalds to actually get one? It’s frustrating, but imagine how people who come from other places feel when confronted with English?

After doing a little research I discovered some reasons that the English language is confusing to those who speak other tongues. The main problem seems to be that one word simply has too many meanings. Let’s take the word love for example. A child says, “I love you, Mommy,” and tends to mean I need you and miss the comforting feeling I get when I don’t see you. A baseball fan says, “I love that team!” They mean that they are a fan of that team. To go further, their commitment to the team may vary. Do they attend every game? Follow their team on the road? Have box seats? How much do they really “love” that team?

A man says to a woman, “I love you.” Does he mean for now, for the moment, until someone he thinks is better comes along? The old Stephen Stills song, Love The One You’re With illustrates one example of what love can mean to a person. It seems that the meaning of the word love can be very different for a man then it is for a woman.

For men love often means sex. While a man might say “I love you” and mean I like the way you look and want to have sex with you, a women might say “I love you” and mean that she finds the man attractive in many ways and sex is merely the ultimate expression of all else that she feels. I believe that women, in contrast to men, can have a greater depth to their feelings for another person. Is this because they tend to be more emotional to begin with?

I have noticed that women tend to have friendships and associations that are deeper then those enjoyed by men. While women will probably share their most intimate thoughts and feelings with a close friend or associate, men will not. They will generally talk about business, sex, politics or sports. No wonder people trying to learn English get confused. It seems that Americans simply cannot say what they mean, mean what they say or even agree on what they mean!

The Clinton scandals of the 1990s illustrated the problem with English. When President Clinton spoke of sex, he meant intercourse between two people. Others argue that intimate bodily contact of any kind is also sex. Surveys at the time tended to show that most men agreed with the President’s definition, but didn’t support him. Most women did not agree with the definition, but supported him! Others say that what the president did with Monica Lewinsky was merely petting. Imagine a first day English student from a foreign country listening to a man say, “I love my dog, I pet her everyday.” Later the same man says, “I love my wife. I pet her every chance that I get!”

As an experienced Speaker, I have had the opportunity to travel all over the USA and Canada. Whenever possible, my wife and children joined me during summer months. It was on these trips that we first realized how words that people use could mean very different things depending on where you live in the United States. We all feel the call of nature, for example, but not all of us go to the same place. On more then a few occasions, my wife and kids had to come and ask me where the facilities were and which door they should use.

In much of the Northeast where I am originally from, we go to the Bathroom. Now unless you’re at home or staying in a hotel, you are unlikely to go in a bathroom to bathe or shower. Some people got tired of saying bathroom and created another common term. They would ask to use The Facilities. Try doing that in most any restaurant in others parts of the USA and they will think you want to rent a banquet room. In some parts of New York City, they keep it simple. People go to The Toilet.

In New England and various other parts of the country, they go to the Necessary Room. Many of the older restaurants, stores and snack shops in those regions have just one Necessary Room. For someone not used to that, it can get embarrassing, confusing and downright painful if you have to figure it all out while your bladder is ready to bust! Using bi-sexual toilet facilities can get complicated. In addition, what about that term?

Today, Bi-Sexual has a connotation that generally refers to one’s sexual preferences. Yet it wasn’t that long ago that it just meant a place used by or available to both men and women. For example, almost every Hair Salon that accepted male and female customers had the term Bi-Sexual in their front window during the 1970s. You are unlikely to see that today!

In the South and Southwest, they use the universally accepted term of Rest Room. Here is another case where smaller establishments often have just one Rest Room. Those that have two often put one of those universal symbols on the door. I hate those. Sometimes parts of the symbols are worn off or heavily painted over. Then you’re supposed to figure out which one to enter. The newer symbols are even more annoying. They are almost asexual and it’s hard to know which door to choose unless there is also some text to give you a clue. On the other hand, just can just wait and follow someone else in. If they’re wrong, you aren’t the only one who gets to look stupid.

In the Midwest and Northwest they get specific by saying, they need to go to the Men’s Room or Ladies Room. That is what I like! Keep it simply and life gets easier. Unless you have to go to the Men’s or Women’s Lounge. Years ago, many simply referred to it as the Lounge. Rest Rooms in better establishments often had one or more rooms that made up their facilities. Men had a sitting room that allowed them place to sit, smoke, adjust their tie or get a quick show shine via attendant or coin operated machine. Women also had a sitting room with well-lit mirrors and make up chairs so they could powder their noses in comfort. However, the word Lounge became confusing.

Better hotels and restaurants used to like to call their Bar a Lounge. You would see three or four signs that read Men’s Lounge, Women’s or Ladies Lounge, Lounge, Upstairs Lounge, Downstairs Lounge, etc. Finally, they just started giving their Bars colorful names to avoid the issue. It might be the Watering Hole in a western-themed hotel or the Rogues Roost in a waterfront establishment where a pirate theme might be in use. However, much to the dismay of any front desk hotel clerk with class, people have always and still often do ask where they can find The Bar.

When we speak of a Bar, is that a Bar of Justice as in a courtroom, a place where alcohol is served as in the Corner or Local Bar, something that holds weights for weight lifters or a Sand Bar out in the ocean? It’s like the word Bench. There are park benches, picnic benches, places where people sit in almost any situation and the Judge‘s Bench. Imagine what foreigners think when they go to Court and a Judge says, “Approach the bench!” How can they? They are sitting on it!

Finding a place to go potty isn’t the only challenge to those who travel around the good ole USA. If you want a carbonated beverage, you have another problem. In the Northeast, it’s a Soda. In New England, it’s a Tonic. In the Midwest, Northwest and some of the South it’s a Pop, Soda Pop or Fountain Drink if it‘s on tap. In Texas, it’s a Pepsi that might be an orange Pepsi, root beer Pepsi, Pepsi cola or even a Coke Pepsi! Texas is definitely a Pepsi place. I’m sure that at one time ordering a Coke in Dallas, for example, might get you invited to a Necktie Party. That’s a hanging for those unfamiliar with Old West slang. If all else fails, just join the politically correct folks and order a cola flavored carbonated beverage.

Food can sometimes present a problem to those who speak even the best English. Anyone who loves cold or hot lunchmeat and cheese stuffed into an oblong roll with any number of condiments needs to order a Hero, Sub, Submarine Sandwich, Philly Cheese Steak or Grinder depending on where they live and what is in the sandwich. People who like pastries filled with fruit can have a Danish, Mini Pastry or Snack Cake depending on their location. However, it’s not always everyday people who can be blamed for all these confusing terms, descriptions and phrases.

I believe we can blame the motion picture industry for some of the confusion regarding the English language. Depending on the Rating a movie has, a woman wanting to share intimacy with a man might say, “Let’s make love” in a G-rated film; “Let’s have sex” or “sleep together” in a PG-rated film; “Let’s f___” in an R-rated film; “I want you to stick your big, fat ____ into my juicy ____” in an X-rated film. Foreigners might wonder if we are going to change clothes, kiss or eat?

All Americans should speak English, if we can ever agree on what that is. In the meantime, I think I am going to start speaking Amish. The next time I want to tell my wife that I love her, have to go to work and that I want to share intimacy when I get home, I’ll just say, “Mother, I will go feed myself to the chickens today so you can later repair the bed and we can birth the baby in nine months.”

Author: Bill Knell
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A native New Yorker now living in Arizona, Bill Knell is a forty-something guy with a wealth of knowledge and experience. He’s written hundreds of articles offer advice on a wide variety of subjects. A popular Speaker, Bill Knell presents seminars on a number of topics that entertain, train and teach. A popular radio and television show Guest, you′ve heard Bill on thousands of top-rated shows in all formats and seen him on local, national and international television programs.