Betties Bay - Our fun

Destinations No Comments »

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We went there again this weekend. The drive is truly fantastic and the scenery breathtaking. We met our friends there on the Saturday afternoon and after kicking some ball around and swimming we headed out to the house to do a lamb potjie (I will give you the “recipe” at the end of this blog). There was no wind and the kelp on the beach is quite annoying. But the breathtaking background of the Overberg mountains take all the bad and sort of shadows it.

The house that we normally go stay in is our friends family house. The front view of the house has a wonderful horizon view of the magnifying ocean and the back view of the house is in the shadow of the Overberg Mountain range. We normally braai out at the back and in the morning we sit on the front porch staring at the ocean. The house inside is painted all kind of colors as the owner is an eccentric Greek man and his personality shines through in the simplistic layout of the house and the multi colored paint in all the rooms.

The potjie ended up in pudding, a Pavlova and its mysteriously evaporated bottom and loads of red wine.

This morning was yet another astonishing sunrise peeking over the ocean creeping up the mountain and the beach was mystically happy again. With not a soul on the beach I caught up with God again and had a little chat. The waves crashing over the freshly awaken dunes was inspiring and truly crept into my yearning heart. I wept as I spoke to the heavens and as I looked back at my footprints in the sand I knew someone was there. I could feel it. Balmy on my skin and truly peaceful at the strands of my heart. Deeply touched to the core.

I headed back and we had some leftovers and good conversation with our two friends. Happily married coming from their second honeymoon. Photos friends, good food and their conversation backed up by the wondrous surrounding of Betties Bay. There is no other place like Betties - surrounded by her beauty, stress free under her calm spell, at awe with her beauty. You simply have to go there if you haven’t been there before. She will blow some deservedly fresh wind in your sails.

As promised herewith our little recipe - LAMB POTJIE

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2 Chopped Onions - Loads of garlic fried on super hot fire. 3 Packets of Lamb chops fried with half a Windhoek Light Draft. While the meat is frying get your buddies to clean and chop 9 carrots. Peel , wash and cut in quarters 7 potatoes. Wash broccoli and mushrooms. Add a packet of onion soup mixed with 500 mil water. And after the meat is almost cooked add vegetables. Leave the broccoli and mushrooms and add 5 minutes before dishing up. Pour some more wine and bring more beer to the cook.

Get the chicks to get the rice and salad ready and whala. The best lamb potjie ever.

Cooking time approximately 30 minutes on shit hot fire.

Good luck and let me know how it turned out for you.

Popularity: 18% [?]

Watershed

SA People No Comments »

1watershedarthaus.jpgHottest Band In SA

Band Members
Craig Hinds
acoustic guitar, piano, harmonica, lead vocals;

Nic Rush
lead guitar backing vocals;

Hylton Brooker
keyboards; Peter Auret - drums;

James Sunney
bass guitar

HOTTEST SA ARTIST/BAND:WATERSHED
People Magazine

They are sizzling hot and blowing the country, and the world , away with their incredible talent and outstanding performances. It’s no wonder they’ve just taken home their third Crystal Award.
“we all work so well together and our songs stand the test of time. I think that is the secret to our sucess”
- 2006 

Popularity: 16% [?]

The Expat Confessions

Books No Comments »

book1.gifThe Expat Confessions - By Ted Botha and Jenni Baxter

Expats bare their souls about leaving SA
Some are racists, but others long for pap and wors

ILSE FREDERICKS
15 January 2006


THE E-TEAM: Author Jenni Baxter with her family and her co-author, Ted Botha , during their first meeting, which took place in France last year. With Baxter and Botha are, left to right, Tara, Jade and Cassie Baxter and Baxter’s husband, Tony (wearing sunglasses)

SOME left because they were “sick and tired of blacks”, others because they were hijacked at gunpoint or because they wanted better futures for their children.

These revelations by South Africans who left for greener pastures are revealed in a new book, The Expat Confessions, written by two former South Africans living on opposite sides of the globe.

From “I don’t miss the Castle, there’s better beer here”, to someone missing “being open about freedom of religion”, the book exposes the truth about the lives of 500 expats.

The brutally honest account has surprised and even shocked the authors, Ted Botha and Jenni Baxter.

The Expat Confessions explores people’s reasons for leaving, their yearning for guava rolls and how they have become the butt of jokes in their new countries.

“I was hijacked in broad daylight in a petrol station — dragged out of my car at gunpoint. Here my car does not even have an alarm or a gear lock,” said Janet, who works in sales in San Diego in the US.

Schalk, a consultant now living in Adelaide, Australia, said: “I left because I was sick and tired of blacks. I loved South Africa and I always will. My heart will always be there, but I had enough of blacks and their never-ending wanting more, taking more, their ‘bugger the whites’ attitude.”

But the book also contains a section on “ex-expats” who returned home because of family ties and because they found life in South Africa “easier and more natural”.

“No amount of money can make me go back [to Britain]. I’ll happily get paid half of what I earned there and stay in beautiful Cape Town,” said Skye, a web designer.

The authors found that “while [expats] previously might have been judgmental of South Africa, they suddenly go to extremes to be understanding”.

Things expats missed most included the humour, the language, the food, the weather and the countryside.

“There ain’t no substitute for pap and wors,” said Anonymous from Australia.

Others have learnt to make do with substitutes in their new country, such as dried Lapland reindeer meat instead of biltong in Sweden, or Lincolnshire sausages instead of boerewors.

Botha, a freelance journalist who lives in New York, and Baxter, who lives on Australia’s Gold Coast, met on the SA Reunited website.

During e-mail correspondence they found themselves having lengthy conversations about South Africa, leading Baxter to suggest the book.

It took them 18 months to complete, and responses were captured on a website.

Botha said they hoped the book would spark a debate between South Africans and expats. He said he hoped expats could be lured back to South Africa to share their knowledge and their money.

Botha, who left in 1995, “frustrated with journalism in South Africa”, said he was shocked and surprised by the hate some expats had for South Africa, and the number of people in South Africa who remain antagonistic towards expats.

“It’s like [the expats have] never come to terms with why they left, or they have never forgiven South Africa for having ‘made’ them leave,” he said.

He thought such respondents mostly left during apartheid and some “because of job discrimination in the new South Africa”.

Baxter said that after reading many heart-wrenching responses, she was surprised that “those same people, who occasionally shed a tear for their homeland, still have no regrets at having left”.

The authors found that many expats sought out other South Africans to cope with life in their new country by joining expat clubs and websites or even churches and synagogues.

“I go to both the Catholic Church and a Baptist church and many of the leadership roles are filled by South Africans. Makes you think,” said one anonymous respondent from New Zealand.

Many expats were also surprised by how little people in their new countries knew about South Africa.

Ridiculous questions expats were asked included:

•”Do you have a beach in Johannesburg?”

•”Most South Africans speak Swahili, don’t they?”

•”Is it difficult to learn to cut your own diamonds?”

Of the 500 expats who responded, more than 300 were married. About a third earned $50000 (just over R300000) or less. Fewer than 10% earned between $100000 (about R610000) and $500000 (R3-million).

The largest number of responses came from Britain, followed by almost equal numbers from Australia and the US. Most of the respondents worked in information technology and were from Johannesburg.

Botha and Baxter wrote the entire book by e-mail, and only met face to face more than a year after it was finished.

Baxter, who has not returned to South Africa in 10 years, said she missed afternoon thunderstorms in Johannesburg, Vicks inhalers and a South African “passion for life”.

“I haven’t seen hail since I left. [I miss] South African magazines and the Sunday Times. I still haven’t found an Australian newspaper I love.”

READ MORE ABOUT THE EXPAT CONFESSIONS AT: www.TheExpatConfessions.com

Popularity: 22% [?]

Maverick - Business Magazine

Magazines 1 Comment »

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A business magazine you’ll still respect in the morning

Too many business magazines are aimed at people who no longer exist: dealmakers in sombre suits who sell each other widgets in smoke-filled rooms. Second-hand car salesmen with ambition, insurance clerks who got lucky.

But business is not what it was 50 years ago. Hell, business isn’t what it was five years ago.

Today the business world is ruled by mavericks, in the classic sense of the word. Mavericks are unorthodox and independent-minded. They have more faith in their own abilities than in accepted wisdom. They live for challenge as well as achievement. They get things done with a merry two-fingered salute to red tape.

Maverick is a business magazine for this generation of business people. It understands that the rules change every day, that knowledge is far more than data and that boring does not equal informative.

In part the magazine is defined by what it is not. Maverick is not a magazine of record. It is not a regurgitation of past events. It is not an advertorial showcase for companies willing to pay.

That leaves it free to be what every publication should be: pretty, witty, cynical and, most of all, useful. Because any business magazine should make its readers better business people. It can’t do that if the magazine is bought but not read, as is so often the case, or if it simply reflects an industry back at itself.

At Maverick we believe the high technology sector can learn valuable lessons from mining and that agriculture can hold insight into high finance. By making each article interesting and accessible we believe this cross-polination will make our readers stronger, better, faster.

We also believe that artificial divisions between work and play are often overblown. For mavericks work is fun, but relaxation is also important to prevent burnout. Adventure getaways can provide inspiration for new business ventures; workplace recommendations can provide the perfect venue for a romantic getaway.

That also means that Maverick straddles the shrinking gap between home and office. Reading it behind your desk (feet on the table or not, as per personal preference) will not raise eyebrows, but neither will it be out of place on the coffee table. We can’t guarantee that the kids will read it, but if they do you’d better be prepared for allowances to be leveraged into corporate empires.

Maverick brings together a collection of outstanding writers and photographers who have, to date, not had an outlet for their best work. It ruthlessly exploits their enthusiasm to create a publication that - shockingly - does not sacrifice good looks just because it is supremely informative. It then sells this package to readers who are desperate for what it offers. If anyone has a better business plan we’d love to hear about it. M

I enjoyed this magazine, Sometimes hard to read but truly great.

Popularity: 14% [?]

Mark Ashton - I second that

SA People No Comments »

rpou.jpgPROUDLY SOUTH AFRICAN ALSO WANTS TO BE HEARD.

I am writing this in support of Mark Ashton, “Mark is the Managing Editor of the ManufacturingHub.co.za publication (http://www.manufacturinghub.co.za/”>. He is a business owner, Johannesburg born and bread and proud to be South African.”

I read his blog

Leadership - South Africa - I demand ! on bundublog.com BAD ENTREPRENEUR.

And I was inspired, Mark is getting out there saying what each and everyone of us feel. I am also not very happy about what I see each night when I watch the 7 o clock news and I am always infuriated with what I see and read,. And I don’t know where to start. My boyfriend and I always talk about how we want to start a website or something where South Africans can get together to stand together and in some way have a toi toi voice. When I see the riots and the toi toing sessions that our fellow South Africans partake in when they want a raise or when they don’t agree with decisions that are made I always wonder why the rest of South Africa don’t do the same when they don’t agree. Why are we always excepting what is happening in our country and no one makes a stand. No one gets a wave started, a group of people to get together and protest about certain decisions that are being made that effects us so directly.

Why are most South Africans running away to other countries. Sure I can have a list mailed to me about the reasons to why but rather give me a list of what you have done to fight for your right. There is about a handful of people/journalists that have the guts to say exactly what is on their hearts. And I don’t blame them - I don’t have faith in my fellow South Africans to stand up with me and fight. I don’t believe people in this country would have the courage, the true courage to stand up to what they believe in and stand together. We lay down and we get kicked and if we cannot take the kicking and ridicule any longer we stand up and run. To other countries.

All I am saying is I would love to see South Africans coming together and voicing their disgust and taking action to make themselves heard. And I dont just mean by blogging. I mean in airing their opinions. Taking on Government and Leadership and whoever the hell makes decisions that effect us directly. I would love to see a nation of courage and not a nation of defeat.

I am starting a business endevour with my partner in the toughest market that I have ever seen or at least understood and I am not afraid. I am staying here even if I have every reason to leave. But I am prepared to stay and fight for my little space here in South Africa’s sun. This is a land of opportunity and maybe just maybe, if we could all stand up courageously and get a voice THAT CAN BE HEARD we can create a wave of change amongst South Africa and their hearts conviction.

Anyway these are just my thoughts after reading Marks blog, please see his article. I second that !!!

read our battle call to South African leaders here.

Popularity: 17% [?]

Bond Origination Websites

Websites No Comments »

Geepers creepers, no offense to anybody but I have just searched for a home loan  website and most of these  websites are an absolute nightmare.  They are all way too busy and confusing.  I have not enjoyed the experience. Has no one learnt from Google.

Anyway this is just my frustration for the day.

I mean look at bundublog, how clean their front page is.

Bundublog I think you should go and help all of them redesign.

Have a good day everyone, Bond Originating websites - NOT HOT AT ALL.

Popularity: 12% [?]

Whats eating Gilbert Grape

Movies No Comments »

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Great Movie, Great Story Line, Great Actors.

What’s Eating Gibert Grape is a beautifully shot movie of tenderness, caring and self-awareness that is set amongst the fictional working class one street town Endora. Centred around the Grape family Ellen and Amy and their two brothers Arnie and Gilbert, who, along with their morbidly obese widowed mother Bonnie Grape are striving to survive and coexist with the absence of a father figure, low wage work and seventeen-year-old Arnie’s severe mental condition. It is in this awkward and extremely one sided affair that the unfortunate Gilbert (Johnny Depp) has to constantly, while working for the town’s slowly dying Convenience Store, take care of his younger brother, played to such depth and conviction by a very young Leonardo DiCaprio. Gilbert’s life, his future, is thwarted he know this, but it is in this Guardian Angel that his love and bond for Arnie cannot, and will not, be let go. That is until the free spirit of Becky (Juliette Lewis) arrives in town, and with her grandmother are stranded for the week while waiting for parts for their vehicle. This realization unties new feelings, new thoughts and new hope for the put upon Gibert, something new is eating Gilbert Grape. Written by Cinema_Fan

Gilbert Grape lives in Endora, a place where nothing much happens. The only times the police got something to do is when Gilbert’s autistic brother Arnie tries to climb up on the watertower nearby. Taking care of Arnie is mostly Gilbert’s task which can be pretty demanding, at least while you are working at the local grocery store. Then one day Becky and her grandmother passes through Endora getting trouble with the car. Gilbert falls in love with Becky, but gets problems when he tries to find time for his own private life. Written by Lars J. Aas {larsa@colargol.edb.tih.no}

Popularity: 14% [?]

Lions Head

Mountains Wester Cape No Comments »

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After having some time off this weekend my mind really has had time to just relax and smell the roses. I have really not done much this weekend but enjoy friends and Beautiful Capetown. Friends of ours went for a picnic on Friday on Lions head as it was a full moon and was a perfect night to take absolute advantage of this beautiful head in Capetown. Lions head is a really nice hike for either early in the morning to watch the sunrise or late in the afternoon to enjoy the breathtaking views. It is a pretty easy hike and the summit at the end should be handled with some caution. Always take water with you.

There was an incident on Lions head on Friday evening, where a gentleman slipped and fell, he had a heart attack. There was a rescue and I am not sure what happened to him but be warned. Although it looks easy and not dangerous, anything can happen.

lionsheada.jpg  Detailed Map Lions head

Lion’s Head

Alongside Table Mountain is the distinctive shaped mountain slope, Lions Head. This proud lion overlooks the city and Table Bay on one side, and the scenic Atlantic Ocean coastline on the other. On a clear day the views are spectacular and great for taking photographs, particularly of Robben Island. Catch your breath along the steep path while admiring the great views which will inspire you to carry on further. You will wind your way around the lions head until you reach the chains taking you to the very top. The chains are there to assist you as you scramble up a section of rocky faces. They add an element of adventure, but be cautious and take it slowly. Not suitable for young children and the elderly. There is an alternate route to miss the chains but the path is still quite steep.

Starting Point: Signal Hill Road, at the Base of the forestry rd.
Ending Point: As for starting point.
Walk Duration: 2 ½ - 3 hours (Add on for stops)
Type of Terrain: Gravel road, Rocky single track, Steep section with chains to pull yourself up, ladders.
Difficulty: The majority of the walk is steep but easy going. The last section is very steep and you need to use chains to climb up a section of boulders, which increases the difficulty of this walk.

Popularity: 12% [?]

Bob Marley - Reminded

News / Articles No Comments »
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Date of Birth

6 February 1945, Nine Miles, St. Ann, Jamaica

Date of Death

11 May 1981, Miami, Florida, USA (brain cancer)

Birth Name

Robert Nesta Marley

Height

5′ 7¾” (1.72 m)

Mini Biography

Bob Marley was born on February 6, 1949, in Nine Miles, Saint Ann, Jamaica, to Norval Marley and Cedella Booker. His father was a Jamaican of English descent. His mother was a black teenager. The couple planned to get married but before the marriage Norval told Cedella that he had to leave Kingston due to illness. He died in 1955, seeing his son only once(it was later suspected that Norval passed on a certain hereditary form of cancer to Bob, which eventually killed him). Bob Marley started his career with the Wailers, a group he formed with Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston in 1963. He married Rita Marley in February 1966, and it was she who introduced him to Rastafarianism. In 1969 Bob, Tosh and Livingston fully embraced Rastafarianism, which would have a great influence on Marley’s music in particular and on reggae music in general. The Wailers collaborated with Lee Scratch Perry, resulting in some of the Wailers’ finest tracks including “Soul Rebel”, “Duppy Conquerer”, “400 Years” and “Small Axe”. This collaboration ended bitterly, however. The Wailers found out that Perry, thinking the records were his, sold them in England without their consent. This, however, brought the Wailers’ music to the attention of Chris Blackwell, the owner of Island Records. Blackwell immediately signed the Wailers and produced their first album, “Catch a Fire”. This was followed by “Burnin’”, featuring tracks as “Get Up Stand Up” and “I Shot the Sheriff” (Eric Clapton’s cover of that song reached #1 in the US). In 1974 Tosh and Livingston left the Wailers to start solo careers. Marley later formed the band “Bob Marley and the Wailers”, with his wife Rita as one of three backup singers called the I-trees. This period saw the release of some groundbreaking albums, such as “Natty Dread”, “Rastaman Vibration”. In 1976, during a period of spiraling political violence in Jamaica, an attempt was made on Marley’s life, and he left for England, and lived in self-exile for around two years. In England “Exodus” was produced, and it remained on the British charts for 56 straight weeks. This was followed by another successful album, “Kaya”. These successes introduced reggae music to the western world for the first time, and established the beginning of Marley’s international status.

In 1977 Marley had himself checked by a doctor when a wound in his big toe would not heal completely, and more tests revealed that he has a form of skin cancer called malignant melanoma. This is usually contracted by Europeans and can be hereditary. It is widely believed, therefore, that Bob inherited the disease from his father, who also apparently suffered from it. He refused to have his toe amputated as his doctors recommended, claiming it contradicted his Rastafarian beliefs, although some claim that the main reason behind his refusal was the possible negative impact on his dancing skills. The cancer was kept secret from the general public, and Bob continued working. Returning to Jamaica in 1978, he continued work and released “Survival” in 1979, followed by a successful European tour. In 1980 he participated at the independence ceremony of Zimbabwe, being the only foreign artist invited. It was a time for great success for Marley, and he started an American tour to reach blacks in the US. He played two shows at Madison Square Garden, but collapsed while jogging in NYC’s Central Park on September 21, 1980. The cancer he ignored earlier had finally caught up with him, and it had spread to his brain, lungs and stomach. Bob Marley died in a Miami hospital on May 11, 1981. He was only 36 years old.

IMDb Mini Biography By: A. Nonymous

Spouse
Rita Marley (10 February 1966 - 11 May 1981) (his death) 5 children

Trade MarkAlways had his hair in dreadlocks.

Started every performance by proclaiming the divinity of Jah Rastafari.

TriviaMarley was awarded the International Peace Medal by the African delegation to the United Nations in 1978. He was also an official guest at Zimbabwe’s independence celebration two years later, an honor Marley was quoted as saying was the highest he’d ever received.

Is father, with his wife Rita of Sharon Marley Prendergast (adopted), Cedella Marley, Ziggy Marley, Stephen Marley, and Stephanie (possibly adopted). He also had seven illegitimate children Rohan (b. 1972) (with Janet Dunn/Hunt), Robbie (b. 1972) (with Pat/Lucille Williams), Karen (b. 1973) (with Janet Bowen), Julian Marley (with Lucy Pounder), Damian Marley (with Cindy Tavares-Finson), Ky-Mani Marley (with Anita Belnavis) and Makeda Jahnesta who was born to Yvette Anderson/Crichton 11 days after he died in 1981.

Survived an assassination attempt, receiving minor injuries in the chest and arm (December 1976).

His albums are in the process of digital remastering and are being re-released with additional material such as alternate versions and unused demos.

His posthumously released anthology collection “Legend” is one of the highest selling “greatest hits” recordings by a solo artist.

A vegetarian.

His grandson Zion David was born on 3 August 1997.

His granddaughter Selah Louise was born on 18 November 1998.

He is buried in a crypt at Nine Miles, near his birthplace, with his Gibson Les Paul Guitar, a soccer ball, a cannabis bud, and a Bible.

Born to Norval Sinclair Marley (1895-1955), a Jamaican Marine officer and captain of Welsh descent, who later became a plantation overseer, and his wife Cedella Booker.

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

His song “One Love” has been used extensively for Jamaican tourism commercials.

He was voted the 11th Greatest Rock ‘n’ Roll Artist of all time by Entertainment Weekly.

Son of Cedella Booker.

His album ‘Exodus’ was chosen by Time magazine as the greatest album of the 20th century.

Was arrested in England for possession of a joint of a marijuana.

Was voted the third greatest lyricist of all time by BBC News Online users, following Bob Dylan and John Lennon (May 2001).

Considered by many to be the first superstar from the Third World.

His song ‘Rasta Man Chant’ is a traditional Rastafarian chant, known to every adherent of the faith.

Following the attempt on his life, he left Jamaica and lived in England between 1976 and 1978. In England he did not live with his wife Rita, but with Jamaican beauty queen Cindy Tavares-Finson. In fact, the song “Turn Your Lights Down Low” was written for her. They had a son together, Damian Marley.

It was announced that his wife plans to have his remains exhumed and moved to Ethiopia (January 2005).

Lived in the United States shortly in 1966.

Refused amputation of his cancer-affected toe due to his religious beliefs.

Suffered from a form of skin cancer called malignant melanoma, which is not common among black people. It’s widely believed that Marley got this form of skin cancer because his father was white.

Was given a state funeral in Jamaica.

The lyrics of his song “War” is a speech given in the United Nations by the late Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie.

Was a Rastafarian.

Was an avid and passionate footballer.

Was named by his father Nesta Robert Marley after his brother who, when Bob was just born, wanted to adopt him.

During the last months of his life, he suffered from very serious seizures.

His youngest child, a daughter named Makeda, was born to Yvette Anderson 11 days after he died.

Lived in Germany for a few months in 1981 for treatment for his cancer.

Tuff Gong was his nickname, given to him due to his reputed physical strength. Later, Marley started his own music production company and named it Tuff Gong.

Inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame for his outstanding contribution to British music and integral part of British music culture (11 November 2004).

One of the personalities mentioned in the song “Genius of Love” by Tom Tom Club. The others mentioned were James Brown, Smokey Robinson, Hamilton Bohannon, George Clinton, Bootsy Collins, Kurtis Blow, Lowell ‘Sly’ Dunbar (as Sly and Robbie) and Robbie Shakespeare (as Sly and Robbie).

Was taught to play the guitar by Peter Tosh.

The City of New York renamed a portion of Church Avenue from Remsen Avenue to 98th Street in Brooklyn Bob Marley Boulevard (2006).

Was posthumously awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award (2001).

 

Personal Quotes

My music will go on forever. Maybe it’s a fool say that, but when me know facts me can say facts. My music will go on forever.

I have a BMW. But only because BMW stands for Bob Marley and The Wailers, and not because I need an expensive car.

Bob Marley isn’t my name. I don’t even know my name yet.

I no have education. I have inspiration. If I was educated I would be a damn fool.

[on politics] Well, everything is political. I will never be a politician or even think political. Me just deal with life and nature. That is the greatest thing to me.

[on marijuana] Herb? Herb is a plant. Herb is so good for everything. Why these people who want to do so much good for everyone, who call themselves government and this and that, why them say you must not use the herb? You see, them say you must not use the herb because it makes you a rebel. Against what?

My music fights against the system that teaches to live and die.

Popularity: 21% [?]

10 000 BC

Movies No Comments »

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Wonderfully suspenseful and enchanting. Loads of nail biting scenes and short lived sad happy ending.  Great actors and animals.

A prehistoric epic that follows a young mammoth hunter’s journey through uncharted territory to secure the future of his tribe.

I just am a sucker for a great adventure. To escape the real world for a bit.

Popularity: 14% [?]


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