Archive for January, 2014



16
Jan
14

Fun With Beards

crazy_facial_hair_01Not every man can grow a beard, which is precisely why not every man should. You don’t ever want to be that guy who is very obviously trying to grow a beard that just isn’t there. Nobody likes that guy.

For most of my life, I put myself squarely in the category of “Men who should never try to grow a beard” and I was happy there. I shaved weekly and life carried on.

Then at the end of 2012 I decided to stop shaving two weeks before holidays began and just see what happened. Much to my surprise, 6 weeks later I was sporting a beard that made me look like a legit woodsman.

Problem was, it was starting to get a little wild and sticky-outy, so I tried to trim it down using these cheap clippers I have. Disaster ensued.

Here is a pic of that clearly shows that. I went to work like this for two days and even ventured out into public.

It was awesome.

 

 

I went back to being clean-shaven after that and put all aspirations of growing a badass soup-catcher aside until I was at least in my late-50s.

Problem was, I’d tasted the incredible, exhilarating power that comes with growing a beard. It’s hard to explain to someone who’s never grown one, but when you have a beard you feel like no one, no one, can fuck with you.

It’s like you’re reconnecting with your cave-dwelling forefathers, those hunter / gatherer motherfuckers who took no shit from no one and rarely lived past their mid-thirties.

They were the original rockstars of this world – dirty, hairy men who ran around in Mammoth-fur clothes, killing shit with sharpened sticks and dying in spectacularly stupid ways.

Once you know you have that power lying dormant within you, how the hell are you ever supposed to live a normal, beardless life ever again?

So naturally, when The Cub was born, I took it as an excuse to grow a “Dad Beard” and stopped shaving for three months. The growth I achieved in that time was phenomenal. Here is a pic of me looking back fondly on the times I shared with my beard on the day I decided to finally shave again.

 

 

Having already ticked the “Lord Fauntelroy” off my list of “Beards to grow one day”, I decided to see whether or not I could rock a “Heisenberg”.

I’ll let the results speak for themselves.

 

 

I sorely regret I didn’t rock that one in public for at least another month. I mean Jesus. The respect I coulda gotten with that thing in a boardroom, I’d be closing deals quicker than you could say, “H-h-h-h-h-h-h-h-have an A1 day!”

It was scaring The Cub though, so I decided to go full retard with a classic “Gay 70s Biker”.

 

 

However! This next one I’m proud to say I DID wear in public for a good day or two… or one… yeah, it was probably just the one because J-Rab told me straight up, there would be no sex for me for as long as I looked like this:

 

 

After I shaved that epic snor and was finally clean shaven after 3 months of enviable growth, I looked at myself in the mirror and was pretty surprised to be happy to have my old face back.

It will be awhile before I grow my next beard and this time I’ll invest in proper clippers because without them you start to look like a full-on bergie (see above) which can work if, say, you play in a folk band or are a creative director at an ad agency, but for the rest of us regular humans it gets a bit siff.

So now that I’m done with what is by far one of the most self-indulgent posts I think I’ve ever written, I’ll let you go back to your life safe in the knowledge that you’ll sleep better tonight knowing what your Tiger pal looks like with facial hair.

The. End.

-ST

15
Jan
14

The Most Insane Vines You’ll Ever See

Zach KingThis post might be super-late, but if you haven’t already seen Viner user (Viner?) Zach King’s videos you are in for a mind-bending experience.

Mashable chalks these intense magic videos up to expert editing and in 70% of the videos you’re about to see, I would agree. But for that other 30%, there is just no explanation for how the hell he’s doing the things he does.

My theory is that this dude could be Jesus reborn. I mean, if the first time around he could turn water to wine, is it such a stretch that the second time around he can turn a Rubik’s cube to bouncing balls?

Make sure you’re sitting down when you watch these and not re-tiling the roof or something.

 

 

Look, if the guy isn’t actually just straight up magical, he has an incredible imagination to come up with these tricks.

His Twitter handle is @FinalCutKing if you want to see more of his work.

Tiger out.

-ST

14
Jan
14

Found In Translation

6639820I subscribe to a newsletter from a group called Allaboutwriting that must be the only newsletter of the 20-odd I receive on a regular basis that I don’t swear loudly at and delete on sight.

Such is my love of these newsletters that I think I’ve been receiving them since about 2007 / 2008 and will probably continue to receive them for as long as whoever is sending them sends them.

Yesterday’s newsletter was a particularly awesome one because it contained an excerpt from a book called Mystery Girl by David Gordon who has two novels under his belt – Mystery Girl (published last year) and one from 2010 called The Serialist.

Here’s the excerpt Allaboutwriting sent me that had all my cubicle buddies asking what was so funny.

The book is about “a self-deprecating narrator, a failed writer who’s taken a job as an assistant detective to a modern-day Sherlock Holmes (who is certifiably insane)”.

Check it:

“I try to write a little.”

“Ah, a writer. That makes sense. I bet you’re good at telling stories, with the private eye stuff and all.”

“Actually, I write experimental fiction. I’m not really into plot-driven stuff.”

“You mean more just about the characters, their psychology?”

“No, not that either. I’m not really so interested in psychology.”

“So more like a poem or something, abstract ideas?”

“No, it’s a novel. Definitely not abstract. I can’t stand all that intellectual abstraction.”

“A novel with no story or characters or ideas? It’s hard to imagine.”

“Yeah, for me too.” We both laughed. “Actually, I don’t know what the fuck I’m talking about.”

I love the unexpected turn the dialogue takes, this moment of hilarious honesty that comes so abruptly you’re completely unprepared for it.

Along with that excerpt, the kind folks at Allaboutwriting also posted a link to a recent article David Gordon wrote for the New York Times which I am reposting here verbatim because I steal shamelessly from the interwebs, post other people’s hard work here and feel very clever about myself indeed.

 

Big in Japan

JAN. 10, 2014

    By DAVID GORDON

    You might not know me, but I’m famous. Don’t feel bad. Until recently, I didn’t know I was famous either, and most days, even now, it’s hard to tell.

    In 2010 I published a novel, “The Serialist.” It did fine for a debut, which is to say well enough to warrant a second, but my daily life didn’t change much: I wrote, I ran, I hung out with my friends. Then a Japanese translation came out, and things got strange. My book won a major Japanese literary contest, which was nice. Then it won another. Then another. Apparently this was extraordinary: No one had ever won all three before. I received copies of articles, which were totally incomprehensible to me except for the picture of my face and a big No. 1. I tried Google Translate, which rendered it all into tantalizing gibberish. My book was not even called “The Serialist” in Japan: The character is a pulp writer, so they used the title “Niryuu Shousetsuka,” which translates back into English as “Second-Rate Novelist.” That was me!

    The odd, or oddest, part, was that I had always been a fan of Japanese culture, its films, books and art, though I had never studied it, and it played no role in my books. It was like having a distant teenage crush on someone who suddenly wrote and said, “I like you, too.”

    The culmination of this peculiar adventure, which I had observed only from afar, occurred when Toei Studio made “Niryuu Shousetsuka: Serialist,” a film based on my book. That is to say, a Japanese movie set in Tokyo, with Japanese actors speaking Japanese, rather than my version, which features non-Japanese people and takes place mostly in Queens.

    They made the movie very fast, in about six months, and invited me to the premiere in June 2013. My Japanese publishers had contrived to release my new book, “Mystery Girl,” at the same time. The novel wouldn’t even be published in English until July. Maybe it had something to do with the international date line, the way emails from East Asia seem to come from tomorrow, but my Japanese life was clearly way ahead of my American life. So I went.

    At the airport, I was met by my editor and a TV crew, which, I assure you, had never happened before. I was put up in a hotel where James Bond might have stayed, with a remote-controlled tub that filled automatically and a giant button that opened the drapes — futuristic, but a ’60s kind of future. As requested, I put on a black suit and a tie (mind you, I can barely tie a tie, because in my real life I have no need for one) and went to the premiere, where each member of the cast, including the woman who sang the theme song, bowed and thanked me.

    In a daze, I was paraded before the press, blinded by flashbulbs and tracked by TV cameras. But because I couldn’t understand the directions, I often talked to the wrong camera, stared into space or even leaned on the scenery — until my intrepid and glamorous young translator told the reporters to wave if they wanted David-san to look at their cameras, like a baby at a birthday party. I watched the film with her whispering in my ear: “He is the detective.” It was as if I had fallen asleep and had a weird dream about my own book. At the end, when the lights came up and I stood to leave, she tapped my shoulder and pointed. The audience was clapping wildly. For me. I took a few deep bows and fled.

    For a week, I did interviews, met critics and fans, visited bookshops. Readers admired my views on literature and my deep understanding of women — things few readers (or women) think here. I travelled everywhere with an entourage, signing books aided by two assistants, one who held the book for me, another who blotted my signature with tissue. People toasted me and applauded my ability to eat with chopsticks or sign my name really big on a poster.

    Then I came home to my daily routine. I live alone in book-filled rooms smaller than my Tokyo hotel suite. My bathtub doesn’t fill itself. I sit and write all day in silence. Then I go running or out with friends, who barely ever applaud. Don’t get me wrong, it’s fine, but once in a while, as I eat a burrito and watch an old samurai film, I wonder how that other, more glamorous writer, David-san, the Second-Rate Novelist, is doing over there, where it’s already tomorrow.

    How insane is that story?! It’s every writer’s secret dream to reach that level of fame – people drying your signature with paper tissues, classic!

    I’m definitely going to read Gordon’s two novels and you should too. Then afterwards we can meet up and discuss the novel’s central themes and main characters over some fine pinotage and brie cheese with a roaring fireplace and a little Bach to keep us company.

    Did I mention that my flat smells of leather and rich mahogany? Winking smile

    Good times.

    -ST

    13
    Jan
    14

    Escape Monday: With Sexist Ads from the 1930s

    offending_chinreducerIt’s crazy how advertising has evolved over the past 100-odd years. The messages are all essentially the same, but the way they are communicated have become increasingly complex and manipulative.

    Back in the day, things were a little more straightforward. Advertisers had pretty much no shame when it came to targeting women to buy their products as you’ll see in the ads that follow.

    The scary thing is that most advertising still plays largely on people’s fears and insecurities, but instead of saying “You are fat / skinny / have bad skin / smell – buy our product” it’s now changed to “She is gorgeous, confident, sexy and perfect because she bought our product.”

    Advertisers have realised that you don’t have to point out people’s flaws to get them to buy whatever snake oil you’re selling. Instead, bombard them with images of flawless people and they’ll connect the dots all by themselves.

    I’ve sorted all the ads originally featured here (worth reading if you want more insight into and analysis of these ads) into easy-to-read categories.

    Category No. 1 – You stink

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Yeah, pretty brutal right? Just wait, it gets better. If it wasn’t bad enough that you stink, wait until you get a load of category 2.

    Category no. 2 – Your Lady Parts Stink

     

     

     

     

     

    Men back in the day were real uncommunicative shitheads apparently. Some would say not much has changed…

    Moving right along, category 3 is another winner that is still dogging women (and men) at every turn.

    Category no. 3 – You are too fat / too skinny

     

     

     

     

     

    Interestingly, though skinny women are currently considered beautiful, the opposite was true when the world went through the Great Depression and the tough economic climate saw countless millions of people wasting away from starvation all over the world.

    The next category is also one that exists to this day.

    Category no. 4 – Your Hands Are Rough as a Goat’s Knee

     

     

     

     

    The first one is the best (worst?) – “Romance DIES at the touch of DISHPAN HANDS!” Reminds me of the “Reefer Madness” movie posters that also did the rounds on the 30s.

    Moving right along, here’s ma favourite category of the whole lot.

    Category no.5 – Hey guys! Let’s invent a retarded-sounding new term to scare women into buying our shitty products!

     

     

     

     

     

    Yeah. That last one makes no sense whatsoever. The fuck is she putting gelatine in the salad for? What in the name of all that is holy is she making?!

    There are a ton more here, but I thought I’d end with a personal favourite from the early 70s:

     

     

    What the actual fuck. Who are they hiring, sex-slaves? The copy in that ad is so embarrassingly chauvinistic, it makes me ashamed to be a man.

    Anyway, I hope you guys enjoyed that trip down to hell memory lane. I’d like to say we’ve come a long way, but have we?

     

     

    No.

    No we haven’t.

    -ST

    10
    Jan
    14

    In 2014 We Play The Guitar, Owwwww Yeeeeeaaaaahhhhhh…

    realistic_flaming_guitar_fireI used to play. Back in the glory days. I remember the first night I played for a bar full of people. It wasn’t even on my own guitar, it was on this guy called Will’s guitar.

    The guitar I had at the time was a total piece of shit. The action on the fretboard felt like I was trying to play a fucking bow and arrow so I said fuck that, and borrowed this guy Will’s guitar.

    Will’s guitar was a thing of wonder. Yellow wood acoustic steel string, rich tone, so fucking easy to play. Will couldn’t play for shit so I felt like I was doing the guy a favour.

    Anyway, I got good and stoned like I used to back then and headed for this total dive-bar called “Die Tajhuijs” in Grahamstown for open mic night (or “Fireside Jam” as it was known).

    I remember that invincible feeling, walking down those twilight streets with Will’s guitar on my back, I was nervous as hell but I felt ready.

    When I finally got up to play this crazy thing happened to me that’s only happened a handful of times since. About 30 seconds into my first song, I started to feel this incredible sense of detachment, like I was leaving myself and watching myself from the outside.

     

     

    I played about 4 songs, three of my own and a cover and remember it going pretty well. Afterwards I drank cheap whisky with my friends until the bar closed and passed out later that night feeling like this was the beginning of something amazing, something life-changing.

    I did another handful of gigs at varsity, but stopped when I left. I had these big plans to get a band and make a million bucks, but I got a career instead and settled for a couple of thousand a month and a life of (relative) stability and certainty.

    On Saturday last week I played my first live gig in about 8 years. It was one song that a buddy asked me to play at his wedding as his bride walked down the aisle, something from the Twilight soundtrack.

     

     

    I fumbled my way through the song, making more mistakes than I care to admit and shuffled off in shame afterwards. It wasn’t that I hadn’t practised, I’d practised a shiteload, it was that I wasn’t prepared for the devastating effect that nerves have on your ability to function in front of a crowd.

    The positive side of this story though is that during all the time I spent practising for the big day, I started to get that old feeling back that I used to get when I played back in my teens and my early twenties.

    I miss that feeling. When you connect so closely with the instrument you’re playing you can’t tell where you end and it begins. That’s fucking powerful. The feeling of an acoustic guitar vibrating against your chest, reverberating in your bones. The way you can switch off your rational mind and just get lost, become pure.

    This year I want to play more. I want to start out at the beginning. Re-learn all the scales, know them backward, inside-out. Chose a song every week to learn, feel my hand strengthen and my fingertips get hard again.

    Also, I plan to watch and post a lot of videos like this one below from the “Guitar Moves” series. It features one of my heroes when it comes to playing, Josh Homme, talking about how he plays and how he learned his signature style.

    I really dig this interview, even if you don’t play I’d recommend watching it because Homme can be this really cagey guy when it comes to interviews. A lot of the time I get this feeling like he’s either bored to tears in interviews and deliberately trying to fuck with the interviewer, or like he’s trying to open up and the person interviewing him and they just aren’t getting it at all.

    This is just Homme being himself, it’s pretty awesome.

     

     

    By the end of this year, I hope to be playing like a flippin demon again and who knows? If I get my shit together, I might even film my progress as I go.

    Could be pretty hilarious Winking smile

    Peace out Party People, have a killer weekend.

    -ST

    09
    Jan
    14

    The Tiger Family Photoshoot

    6660267355_c1f8412e1e_oIf you have a baby, the golden rule is the minute that little bundle of poop joy can smile, you HAVE TO take him / her to a professional photographer and shell out a small fortune to have family pics taken.

    If you don’t do this, print the pics out on canvas and block-mount them in the most visible place in your house, you are a total failure as a parent.

    People will judge you, especially other parents who are pissed that they went ahead and dropped a couple of thou on their family photoshoot and you have the audacity not to follow suit.

    When you’re a teenager you have to deal with peer pressure, which is bad enough, but once you’ve bred you graduate to “parent pressure”, which is about 1000 times worse.

    J-Rab is smart as hell though and came up with a brilliant plan to get some amazing family photies without having to hire a professional photographer – hell, without even having to leave our flippin HOUSE YO!

    We just set up her camera in our spare room, balanced it on some books, set the self-timer and fired away.

    It worked well because we were totally relaxed and could take as many pics as we wanted. If you’re a new parent and have a half-decent camera, I would highly recommend going this route rather than hiring a pro.

    Check it:

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    There were others I also loved but I’ll save them for Facebook. In fact, many would argue that this entire post should have been saved for Facebook but those people are jerks.

    I’m proud of our little family. J-Rab and I have come a very long way to get to this point, we’ve braved some rough seas and have come out the other side stronger for it.

    And I’m especially proud of my little girl. She’s changed so much in the 4 short months since she was born as the pic below, taken when she was a few weeks old, perfectly illustrates:

     

     

    How I got so lucky I’ll never know. What I do know though is that I will fight tooth and nail for my girls to provide for them, care for them and keep them safe.

    That’s all that really matters. Everything else takes a backseat once you bring a new life into this world.

    The game has changed. I have changed and I swear to God, life couldn’t be better Winking smile

    -ST

    08
    Jan
    14

    Eating The Elephant

    5371287359_8fffb8f987_oIt’s been so long since I last wrote, I just had to brush the dust off my keyboard. Last year ended in a sprint for the finish line during which I bailed out on a whole lot of commitments, including this blog.

    Sadly, the hits on this site have suffered as a result and the only comments coming through have all been from bots, each more nonsensical than the last, but I knew this would happen.

    I’m prepared to start fresh and grow my readership to what it once was. That’s the thing about your Tiger pal, he’s a tenacious fucker, which is the nice way of saying he’s too dumb to know when to quit.

    I started 2013 with a post in which I wrote that my mantra for the year was “Be Brave”. At the time of writing that, it was a kind of in-joke that only J-Rab and I understood because she was about 7 weeks pregnant with our first child.

    That simple mantra got me through a lot last year, no lies. When you’re staring at the business end of a C-Section as they pull your daughter into this world, all you can be is brave.

    And for the most part last year, I think I did live up to that mantra. It might sound lame, but I took comfort in those simple words when shit was getting crazy and so, in keeping up with this tradition, here’s the mantra I’m adopting for 2014:

    EAT THE ELEPHANT

    Doesn’t quite have the simple elegance of “Be Brave”, but there’s a lot of power in those words.

    The elephant in question is the gigantic goal you’ve always wanted to achieve. Whether it’s to learn an instrument or get a promotion or travel the world or change your career, every one of us has an elephant in our lives that, just by its sheer size and magnitude, seems impossible to conquer.

     

     

    This year we eat that fucker. We do it one bite at a time, one day at a time until the entire thing has been devoured.

    It’s the “Brushing Your Teeth” approach to life. You brush your teeth twice a day for about two minutes and, provided you’re doing it right and throwing in the occasional floss for good measure, your teeth stay healthy and white.

    However, if you had to stop brushing your teeth for a week and then, come Sunday, brush them for a solid 24 minutes, after a month there’d be more green fur in your mouth than rancid felt on a pool table at Stones.

    So whatever your big goal for 2014 is, sink some time into it every day, whether that means getting up earlier, waking up later or forgoing your nightly routine of chain-watching your favourite TV shows (guilty), the excuse that there isn’t enough time in the day is a load of shit when you stop to think about it.

     

     

    In 2014 we fight to get that time back. We stop giving it away and wasting it because time is all we have and once it’s spent, it’s gone for good.

    Last year I set myself the goal of finishing my first manuscript for a novel. I ploughed through the first three chapters, hit a wall on the fourth and then made up excuses for the rest of the year as to why I couldn’t continue from that point.

    If I’d kept the momentum I had at the beginning of the year, I would have finished my manuscript by November, but I let the elephant trample me instead.

    I believe that there is an amazing life we are all meant to lead, one that is at least 80% awesome and is incredibly fulfilling and rewarding, but the only way to lead that life is to remain steadfast, focussed and disciplined when it comes to achieving your goals.

    This world owes us sweet fuck all. The sooner we realise that, stop making excuses and start eating the elephant, the sooner we can start living the dream.

    So here’s to kicking ass, takin’ names and eating elephants.

    Happy 2014 Party People Winking smile

    -ST