Showing posts with label Hot Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hot Stuff. Show all posts

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Sriracha


Happiness is defined as a brand new bottle of Sriracha. We go through "Rooster Juice" like water at the Wild house.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Heather & Brooke


Here it is. The winner. This picture has been viewed more times, 440, than any other photo I have up on Flickr. In fact, it's more than double my second-place picture.

They're two very cute chicks, for sure. But I have no idea why this particular picture would surpass the many similar ones I have up there. It's not even in any groups, which is usually where views come from. Not keyworded either. Perhaps it was featured in Flickr's "Interesting" photostream? Maybe the two names in the title "Heather & Brooke" look appealing in a search result, like maybe it might be a mud wrestling pic or something?

Or, maybe it is just the cuteness after all.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Ghost Town

The city of Prypiat in the Ukraine was constructed in 1970 to house the workers for the V.I. Lenin Nuclear Power Station which was under construction there, 18 km northwest of Chernobyl. The 1,000 Megawatt Reactor #1 went online in 1977. Three similar reactors were commissioned over the next 6 years, with #4 going live in 1983.

Unless you have been living under a rock for the past couple of decades, you pretty much know the rest of the story. On April 26, 1986, the #4 reactor suffered a complete meltdown. This means that the reactor core has lost coolant and the highly radioactive uranium fuel rods have melted and breached the core. Massive amounts of radioactive material entered the environment. This accident is widely regarded as the worst in the history of nuclear power, even topping Three-Mile Island's partial meltdown in 1979. The radioactive cloud affected most of Europe and the radiation spike could be measured around the world.

The 50,000 inhabitants of Prypiat were evacuated in extreme haste. Many went to Chernobyl, Kiev, or elsewhere in the Ukraine. The loss of life was high, but I suppose we'll never know exactly how high. I do know that the children's playground directly in front of the reactors is one of the most radioactive spots on Earth.

Reactor #4 was completely destroyed in the accident and workers quickly encased it in a thick concrete sarcophagus to limit further radiation. The remaining reactors at the plant continued to be used until they were replaced by other sources and the plant shut down for good in 2000. In 2007 a plan was devised to replace the already-disintegrating sarcophagus with a much better one designed by a French company (France, incidentally, is the world leader in implementing nuclear power. Over 90% of France's electricity comes from splitting uranium atoms; they have 58 operating plants that make so much excess power they export it to most of the rest of Europe. And they've never had a serious accident. Nuclear power is good, you just need to do it right. But I digress...)

Today the ghost town that was Prypiat is completely deserted and highly radioactive. Few people dare to venture there.

Few, but not none.

There is an adventurous girl from Kiev named Elena who took an incredible trip into the "Dead Zone", through the streets of the ghost town of Prypiat, and right up to the gates of the infamous power plant, armed only with a camera, a Geiger counter, and in the interest of limiting her exposure time, a very fast Kawasaki Ninja.

Her photographs, although of low quality on the web, are awesome. And her stories, touching. Just the reality of it. The toys and bumper cars that were being enjoyed one minute and were discarded forever the next. The old family photos. The stores decorated for the Labor Day parade on May 1st that would never come. Wondering what happened to all these people. Everything frozen in time. It's still April of 1986 in Prypiat.

Look through her site if you get the chance, it's an amazing trip into the heart of a lost world.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Hungry For Hungarians


Here's your tasty morsel of the day. It's pasta basking in a vibrant fresh tomato sauce laced with red wine and loaded up with Hungarian peppers. The stuff dreams are made of. At least in my head.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Slacker


The lamp on our Sony LCD TV has burned out. According to the average life cycle chart for the bulb, I might have watched 8,000 hours of TV in the last four years.

I don't think so. My eyes would be like saucers. I think I got an underachieving bulb!

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Hhhhhhhhot!!!!!


More proof of paternity...this girl likes her food smokin' hot.