Monday 9 February 2009

Today i made pasta with chicken mushroom cream sauce

Ingredients: 448 g farfalle (bow tie) pasta, 15 g butter, 4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves, 80 g onion, diced, 12 shiitake mushrooms, 235 ml heavy cream, salt to taste
6 g coarsely ground black pepper

Instructions

1. Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil.
2. Add pasta and cook for 8 to 10 minutes or until al dente; drain.
3. Melt butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Cook chicken until no longer pink, and juices run clear.
4. Transfer chicken to a cutting board, and thinly slice; set aside. Saute onion until tender and translucent.
5. Add mushrooms, and gradually stir in cream.
6. Cook, stirring constantly, for 7 to 10 minutes, or until sauce is thickened.
7. Stir in chicken, and season with salt and pepper.
8. Cook 5 minutes, or until heated through.
9. Toss with cooked pasta until evenly coated.

Friday the 13th..coming soon

With a new version of the classic movie Friday the 13th just around the corner I’m stuck between excitement & fear. Sure Halloween & even the Texas chainsaw massacre have been remade into more modern versions of themselves but have they always been good remakes? - Halloween worked because it had rob zombie behind it & even now he is filming another Halloween movie but the Texas chainsaw massacre/hills have eyes 2 & another number of remakes failed to really bring anything new or worthwhile to the fans. This latest Friday movie is the 12th of the series (if you include freddy vs. Jason) & so far its looking like it may have stayed true to the original. We are living in a more modern age with countless numbers of horror movies bringing in the big bucks at the box office so its not surprise that in this latest re-imagining that the filmmakers have opted to make Jason appear more human, whether this will work or not is something we wont know until the movie debuts on Friday. I suppose it really comes as no surprise that the same director of the Texas chainsaw massacre remake has been given the reins on this new movie & the internet has been buzzing for weeks with news on the production & its cast. There are a number of early reviews & previews circulating right now but I really would recommend going to see it as most if not all of them are loaded with spoilers & they really will ruin the movie for you. Not surprisingly a new documentary has been released to coincide with the new movie & I have to say its actually really good. The documentary called “his name was Jason” is 90 minutes of interviews/stories & even never before seen footage from the series, though aimed at diehard Friday fans its entertaining enough to keep most movie goers watching. I’m off to see the movie on Friday & will definitely be posting a review on my blog, in the meantime here’s some Friday facts you probably didn’t know.

Friday facts...

The original "Friday the 13th"was the most successful instalment in the series grossing over $37 million in revenue. The series as a whole has grossed in excess of $250 million.

The budget for "Friday the 13th" was only $500,000.

The film was shot over a 3 month period from September-October 1979.

The movie was filmed at Camp Nobebosco in New Jersey. The camp is still in operation to date, and they have a wall of Friday the 13th paraphernalia to honor the fact that the movie was set there.

This is Kevin Bacon's first leading role in a feature film. He made his feature film debut in "National Lampoon's Animal House"(1978).

Betsy Palmer was chosen to play Jason's mother strictly for the fact that she could provide her own transport to the set.

While the movies are all available on DVD I bought the boxset which was missing "jason goes to hell & jason x" so really you are only getting the first 8, some of the packaging lies as many of the extras advertised are missing from the final boxset.

Composer Harry Manfredini has said that contrary to popular belief, the famous "chi chi chi, ha ha ha" in the film's score is actually "ki ki ki, ma ma ma". It is meant to resemble Jason's voice saying "kill kill kill, mom mom mom" in Mrs. Voorhees' mind. It was inspired by the scene in which Mrs. Voorhees seems to be possessed by Jason and chants "Get her mommy....kill her!" Manfredini created the effect by speaking the syllables "Ki" and "Ma" into a microphone running through a delay effect.

Capcom Confirm Dead Rising 2 for PS3/360/PC

It's been rumoured for a while, but today Capcom have officially confirmed via press release the existence of Dead Rising 2. The sequel is set several years after the first game with the zombie virus having spread beyond the mall and town of Willamette, featuring a new lead (and as yet unnamed) protagonist and with the action taking place in "gambling paradise" Fortune City. The game is being handled by Blue Castle Games, with Capcom promising that members from the original Dead Rising team will be involved with the production. And it's going to be on the big three platforms (the Wii getting Chop 'Til You Drop later this year), which i have already seen for pre-order in local game shops. The main complication holding back a sequel to Dead Rising was the legal battle with the MKR Group.

The MKR Group, who holds the copyright to both the 1978 Dawn of the Dead film and its 2004 remake, sent letters on February 6, 2008 to Capcom, Microsoft, and Best Buy, claiming that Dead Rising infringes on the copyrights and trademarks of these films. In a complaint filed February 12, 2008 to seek an injunction preventing a lawsuit from MKR, Capcom asserted that "humans battling zombies in a shopping mall" is a "wholly unprotectible idea" under today's copyright laws; Capcom further points to the warning "label" on the box cover as a preemptive measure to separate the game from the films. The MKR Group has since filed a lawsuit after failing to reach an agreement with Capcom over the dispute.The lawsuit was dismissed in October 2008, with United States Magistrate Judge Richard Seeborg stating that MKR failed to demonstrate the similarity of any protected element of Dawn of the Dead to that of Dead Rising, with many of the elements MKR claimed were similar being part of the "wholly unprotectable concept of humans battling zombies in a mall during a zombie outbreak".

Great Depression 'skyscraper' heels back in fashion

Women are buying skyscraper heels last popular in the 1930s, providing further evidence of the parallels between the current economic crisis and the Great Depression.

Tall stilletos are one of the fashion trends of the year, thanks in part to celebrities including Victoria Beckham and Gwyneth Paltrow. The designer Christian Louboutin even plans to create "extreme" eight inch heels after the success of his six and seven inch pairs Heel heights are meant to fall during times of financial hardship – under the fashion industry's so-called "stiletto index" – but it seems women are instead dealing with the recession by buying big. The last time super-high heels were in vogue was during the Depression that followed the 1929 Wall Street Crash. Ali Hall, editor of fashion magazine Look, told The Sun: "All the main shoe trends are mega high – and even more death defying." Feminist academic Germaine Greer has predicted that the popularity of high heels will collapse as the recession worsens. "Now is the towering shoe moment of the Noughties, which will be followed by the inevitable fall," she wrote. Women may enjoy window-shopping for towering stilettos but "few of them will have the spare cash to invest in shoes that can be safely worn only in bed," she added. The historian Amanda Foreman blamed the growth of high heels on male fashion executives who want to restrain female rivals in the jobs market. "These shoes are obviously not for the working woman, they aren't designed for cobbled streets. They're not real life, but a little fantasy."

Facebook no safe haven

Facebook just turned 5 years old. But a week that should have been filled with reflection and good times was instead marred by a series of breaking news reports detailing sex scandals, phishing, and other malicious activity on the world's largest social network.

On Tuesday, February 3rd, it was reported that thousands of sex offenders (many of whom were previously booted from MySpace) were lurking on Facebook (they've since been removed). Ok so these might not have necessarily been MySpace 'refugees' in the sense that they migrated en masse from MySpace to Facebook - they likely maintain profiles on multiple social networks. But the fact remains that there were thousands of convicted sexual offenders on a social network that is generally perceived as safe. On Wednesday news broke of an elaborate and disturbing sex ring involving at least 31 high school students. An 18 year-old man named Anthony Stancl has allegedly been masquerading as high-school girls on Facebook, flirting with underaged male classmates and convincing them to send him nude photographs. He would then use the photographs to blackmail the boys into performing sexual acts with him, which he took pictures of using a cell phone. Stancl has been charged with 12 felony counts and up to 300 years of jail time. (In a somewhat bizarre twist, Facebook responded to news of the sex ring by stating that fewer than 1% of its 150 million users are affected by impersonation schemes. So, around 1.5 million people. Not exactly a confidence-inspiring statistic.)

The same day, Facebook updated its Terms of Service, rewording many of its rules to make them easier to understand and explicitly prohibiting some common transgressions, like including false information in profiles or creating fake accounts. But there was one far more timely addition: "If you are required to register as a sex offender in any jurisdiction, you may not use the Facebook Service." Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt says that sex offenders had previously been banned through a number of other more general statements in the Terms of Service, but that the company wanted to make it more explicit. On Friday, CNN reported on an increasing number of phishing attacks seen on Facebook, using a technique that was first heard about in January. After gaining access to compromised accounts, scammers are now using Facebook to ask the victims' "friends" for cash. The attacks can be particularly effective because the scammers can easily look up personal details of the people they're contacting.

The reality is that no matter what these social networks do, they'll never have the technology or the manpower to stop every threat. Which is why they need to stop pretending that they're safe. Facebook's (and MySpace's) goal is to connect as many people as possible, and the sad truth is that many people are very naive when it comes to online safety. These social networks need to step up their education and awareness efforts, perhaps even offering a 'safe mode' for users (even adults) who aren't adept at navigating the web's pitfalls. Because sharing is only fun until someone gets hurt.