Movies: My top ten

I’m about to commit a mortal sin. Usually I hate lists, but the following is actually the result of a great deal of internal wrangling and soul-searching.

My top ten movies of all time (obviously limited to movies I’ve seen):

  1. Shawshank Redemption
  2. Money Train
  3. The Goonies
  4. Gattaca
  5. Gladiator
  6. Victory
  7. Raiders of the Lost Ark
  8. Rocky IV
  9. Twelve Monkeys
  10. Can’t Buy Me Love

Okay, maybe I didn’t really toil over it, but these were the movies that came to my mind first; so they must have made quite an impression on me.

Where do unlucky rich guys go to meet oh-so-classy single women?

At least this site doesn’t pretend to hide the fact that today’s classiest women are really only in it for the money. I guess if you’re a loser with the ladies who happens to have stashed away a little coin, this might be the place for you. I’ve no doubt that only the truest of true love awaits you heavy hitters who happen to make $100K+ a year.

Enjoy www.wealthymen.com

Hasselhoff heats up the screen in his latest video

I always like a b-lister who doesn’t take themself too seriously. David Hasselhoff scores major points with me in this awesome new music video.

The United States as an Oil Superpower

I found a fascinating article today in the New York Times entitled “Big Oil Find Is Reported Deep in Gulf” that initially made me smile. It was a report about a huge oil find deep underneath the Gulf of Mexico.

Chevron, Devon Energy and Statoil ASA, the Norwegian oil giant, reported that they had found 3 billion to 15 billion barrels in several fields 175 miles offshore, 30,000 feet below the gulf’s surface, among formations of rock and salt hundreds of feet thick.

Naturally, the more I thought about it, the more I realized that this will eventually just be used as another card in the deck for the oil market manipulators. Once those oil rigs go online, the oil market will be that much more “sensitive” to inclement weather in the Gulf of Mexico.

Of course it’s all puppeteering and scare tactics anyway since the oil companies have a “can’t lose” scenario. By not investing in refining and production infrastructure, they can claim lack of capacity and manipulate prices as such when anything bad happens. They also save that investment capital for themselves, and happily add it to their already record profits. How many businesses in the world can you think of that actually profit from ignoring consumers and from not reinvesting in infrastructure? Only one that I know of.