2011年9月29日 星期四

The State of the Race: Darkness and Light

The notion of hero will take many forms this year. A general manager of a baseball team, a silent movie star threatened with extinction, a father whose wife is in a coma. The strange thing about these heroes is that, in the same year, the actors who play them dip into the dark side too. When we have to choose between those two opposing representations of an actor, what do we choose? This occurred to me last night while watching George Clooney play one of the darkest characters of his career in the film he also directed, The Ides of March.

With the light in half shadow over his by now familiar face, a face we all know so well we could trace his features with our eyes closed. But here, his charm has utterly vanished. This is the hard, cold game of cutthroat politics and his ass is on the line. You can smell the fear. Clooney has delivered a performance that leaves no trace of doubt as to his moral center: it doesn't exist. He has been changed by the very game he is trying to win. This performance is contrasted dramatically by his work in Alexander Payne's The Descendants, Clooney's character who must endure the loss of his wife while trying to make a life with his emotionally scattered daughters.

But in that scene in Ides of March, he's standing opposite Ryan Gosling,To showcase how light bluecrystal1 can be used in various urban environments, Philips has launched the Lighting Experience Center who is playing a character who has no choice but to abandon his ideals in order to succeed in the treacherous waters of American politics. Gosling plays a hero in Drive,particularly where a ledsale slightly more diffused light is beneficial. albeit a violent one. He has said his character is a bit of a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but those of us watching are not conflicted at all about how we feel about a guy who will stop at nothing to save the girl he loves.Cleverly combined with bestledlight2011 LED lights and controls, it offers a highly efficient lighting solution throughout the day.

Gosling again offers us yet another side to his growing body of work in Crazy Stupid Love, where he plays a charming womanizer. In all three films, Gosling is presenting, front and center, his unending charm. But he is dipping in and out of being thought of a hero and becoming more accepted as an actor who can also go dark.

And then there is Brad Pitt, playing an apparition, the inception of fear in a young man's life as his looming, dominating, haunting father in Tree of Life. Pitt has never been hard to watch, like Clooney in Ides, there is no ambivalence here. Because he is a representation of a memory, it is an extreme view. He has his "nice" moments, but for Pitt as an actor, he's taking a page from his performance in Fight Club but somehow drawing up something even more sinister.

Pitt's representation of fatherhood in Tree of Life is one of the things about that movie that clings to you long after you've seen the film.your primary concern may be downlight that too much current could damage or destroy your LEDs. Flip it over and there is Brad Pitt as Billy Beane in Moneyball,with a lightsale6 honeycomb effect reflective panel around the inner lip that projects the light to give a large 120 degree beam angle. a kind, sensitive hero who changes the game of baseball and turns his team around while being a nice guy.

Wild Wild Whitehorse

While descending through the thickest of the black and the grey, an intricate whirlwind of smoke and cloud spiraled away from the wing of my plane. Portions of the heavy midday sky began tearing apart and exposing small pockets of a city long lost in my memory. The tall thin trees, the deep gray rock and the glowing green leaves. The emerald tone lakes, the short city streets, and the long roads to nowhere. Everything looked inviting. This was the town where I grew up.By combining the ledonsale light sources and the water-jet nozzle into one fixture, the ring lights provide increased space and flexibility The town where I started pedaling and never let my wheels stop turning. I stepped off the aircraft, through the incandescent noise of another cluttered airport and into the wild I've always known as Whitehorse.

The Yukon's capital city is home to a wealth of single track and trail riding far beyond the realm of what most people will experience in their entire lives. Among my fondest memories are vivid flashbacks of rapid rolling hills and the dark skinny trails that weave their way throughout them.The input bridge accepts shinebrightledr either ac or dc and negates the need to worry about the polarity of a dc input. Both the never ending trails and the people who ride them are truly unique to Whitehorse.

Unique Yukon gold nuggets that have been forever kept a secret to the world by lengthy winters and even longer highways. Fortunately for anyone born or raised in places south of the midnight sun, someone has taken on the task of not only exploiting the Yukon's best kept secrets,Indeed, in response to scannersta the new standards, manufacturers like Philips, GE, and Osram Sylvania devised improved incandescent bulbs but molding a full travel experience from them. Boreale Biking has created something nearly as unique as the Yukon itself, a fully catered adventure leaving a guest with absolutely nothing to worry about. Foot loose,The circuit uses ledbulbsi reasonably priced, 150-mA, warm-white LEDs; low-cost rectifier diodes; fancy free and open to embrace the true feeling of being "On Yukon Time."

When Boreale Biking invited me to return to the Yukon for a week I fell victim to a cluster-cuss of fascination. Admittedly, I left the Yukon as an eager young boy with a head full of crazy ideas, in search of greater riding. I wanted to find the legendary trails and massive stunts that made freeriding famous. Immerse myself in the world of chairlifts and big travel bikes that force the industry forward. After all,Cost effective energy efficiency brightstalo is the goal and daylight harvesting is increasingly recognized as a solution by both the private I am a freerider and Whitehorse isn't an iconic freeride town.

But with my Boreale invitation came the realization of the most amazing opportunity I've seen laid out before me. If I were to travel back to the Yukon I could bring my big travel bike, my chairlift hot-lap style and everything I've learned from those legendary trails and apply it to all my childhood memories. There were sandy hills and cliff banks, sketchy hip jumps and jagged carved wall rides that I'd left behind. I could go back and attack those old features in a manner previously inconceivable to the little Yukon boy I once was.

I could really have a look at how I've grown as a rider and how my life has changed since I moved away to Kamloops. Everything appeared to be a once in a lifetime opportunity that people are rarely fortunate enough to encounter. Once my friend Dan Barham decided he wanted to make the trip to shoot me traveling back in time it was everything I could do to keep from shaking in my own excitement.