Archive for 2008

Waffle Shovels: Naruto

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

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[R-R] the mechanics of rape fantasies – your wildest dreams

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

Warning: Mature Contents

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spic and span, baby

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

itsubun’s new blog/subdomain

Thank you, Ashley for the hookup and Brian for setting up this new subdomain at Curry-Fury. You guys can split my soul and trick moneyz, etc.

For those of you who actually bother keeping up with my blogging and hysteria, please update your blogroll to http://coffee-spoons.curry-fury.com/

Also, new feedburner: http://coffee-spoons.curry-fury.com/feed/

itsubun is going to be deleted once I tie up the last of my loose ends and finish settling in here.

In other news, the summer lineup for 2008 is a disappointment to say the least [harem, harem, harem, with a side of harem]. But that means I can finally start chipping away at my HUEG backlog. Because Hige has been loitering outside of my window with his trashbags and babbling about being a hobo for a month in an attempt to move my cold, cold heart, I’m thinking I should probably pick up FLCL some time soon before he follows through with his hard luvin’.

Hope summer is going well for all of you.

TTGL - a reason for fighting

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

So I finally got around to watching TTGL after a fun week of Hige standing over me with his whip ever since I mentioned that I’ve kinda, sorta [totally] been ignoring all of the internet hype about it when it first premiered and therefore, have been living under a rock. So the existence of this entry is due in large part to his aggressive pimping enthusiastic encouragement to give TTGL a try.

All fun poking at Hige aside, I’m glad I didn’t miss out on this series. Funny, fantastical, all the right proportions of giddy excitement for epic adventures and deep empathy for the depiction of private and universal human struggles, TTGL is a Win.

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pale cocoon – archive of our losses

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Pale Cocoon is a one-shot OVA by Yasuhiro Yoshiura. In a futuristic dystopia of rusted cubicles, disintegrating archives, and weary bodies filing along the darkened corridor of a factory warehouse, we are presented with the silhouette of a bleak reality that isn’t too hard to imagine for ourselves as a real possible future. Ura, our protagonist, is a diligent archaeologist of sorts within the “Archive Excavation Department”.

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