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<a href="http://www.movieflix.com/">www.movieflix.com</a>
<BR>This site has so much going for it...finding a site like this is what makes the hunt through all of the useless, lame
commercial pay-sites worthwhile. It offers hundreds of full-length, realplayer streaming movies, all for the low low price
of bupkiss. Just pick a genre, click the movie and connection type you have (narrow or broad band), and then sit back and
enjoy as the server dishes out your selection with no stuttering at all. The catch? All of the movies are either independently
produced, or of an aging, B movie nature. But there are plenty of classics to find here, and some of my viewings there have
consisted of Things to Come, Suspiria, The Asylum, The Last Man on Earth, A Boy and His Dog and Metropolis...to name but a
few.UPDATE:</b> Unfortunately, this site has gone over to a gravely unfortunate;pay to play" scheme where you have to
subscribe to see about 90 percent of what they offer. Too bad. Still a couple good flicks available for free
viewing tho.<b> </b>
<B>The Omen Chronicles</B>
<a href="http://www.ingsoc.com/waters/">www.ingsoc.com/waters</a>
<BR>Shrine to the greatest rock lyricist of all time. Either you get his scathing cynicism or you don't...those who do get
to enjoy some of the clearest, most entertaining indictments of society outside of a Kurt Vonnegut novel. This site offers
a good personal history of the man, but the complete list of musical forays and lyric transcripts reveals more about Waters
than a mere biography ever could.<P>
<b>Floydian Slip(tm) - The Pink Floyd Experience</b>
<a href="http://www.floydianslip.com/index.htm">www.floydianslip.com/index.htm</a>
<font face="Verdana" size="2">When you get to heaven, and are ushered into God's office to be welcomed, music from Pink
Floyd will be what's drifting out of his stereo speakers.While trapped in the bounds of Earth, however, you can click to
Floydian Slip and find everything you need to know about the greatest rock band ever. </font>
<B>breathe</B>
<a href="http://breathe.cjb.net/">breathe.cjb.net</a>
<BR>When you get to heaven, and are ushered into God's office to be welcomed, music from Pink Floyd is what's drifting out
of his stereo speakers. This fansite bit the dust in March (2000), but two very valuable resources still remain: an archive
of issues of "Steel Breeze", a PF eZine, and a giant archive of PF related interviews. If you're like me and have Internet
Exploder set to display links in Hover mode, then you have to play hunt-the-links with the author's goodbye page to find the
pointers to the remaining stuff, but trust me. It's worth it. Too bad we've lost the random "walking down the aisle
price-checking mayonnaise" MIDI renditions of Floyd song classics that welcomed you when you entered the site.\
<B>Live365.com - WGDG Classic Videogame Music</B>
<B>Defunct Amusement Parks</B>
<a href="http://www.defunctparks.com/">www.defunctparks.com</a>
<BR>To me, there's nothing more spooky than an abandoned amusement park. Brightly designed
concession stands and towering rollercoasters that were once the Mecca of scores of eager tourists, now gone to weeds and
cracked asphalt, their buildings collapsed under the weight of years of neglect. They seem like forgotten Gods to me, once
commanding the respect and awe of worshippers, now tossed aside like a used candy-floss cone. It also helps the ominous
atmosphere of some of these places that probably every major amusement park has a death or two in its history. This site
is an excellent index of these burial grounds for lost fun and magic.
<B>DisneyWorld MAGIC!</B>
<a href="http://www.disney.force9.co.uk/">www.disney.force9.co.uk</a>
<BR>Theme parks are like videogames made flesh. Which is a pretty strained segue, I know, but what the heck! It's my page,
and if I want links to theme park information I'll damn well put them up! Heh. Anyway, after succumbing to the crack
cocaine that is RollerCoaster Tycoon, I decided to bookmark some interesting links on the subject. Most have to do with
Disney right now, but they are not Disney Company sites, and more on other park makers will probably be added. This particular
site features an inordinate amount of information on Walt Disney World, including ride test video, an exhaustive history, and other things mouse related.
<B>rollercoaster.com</B>
<a href="http://www.rollercoaster.com">www.rollercoaster.com</a>
<BR>This site truly lives up to its label as "The Web's Premiere Coaster Site!". Here is the place to go to find editor's
reviews of these metal-hewn monsters of G-Forces, along with coverage of the parks that house them.
<B>A Visit to Yesterland - The Discontinued Disneyland</B>
<a href="http://www.yesterland.com/">www.yesterland.com</a>
<BR>I've never been to Disneyland, only Walt Disney World. So I don't have the same intense connection with this site,
but it's still a completely entertaining review of attractions lost.
<B>Widen Your World</B>
<a href="http://home.cfl.rr.com/omniluxe/wyw.htm">home.cfl.rr.com/omniluxe/wyw.htm</a>
<BR>As a dealer in nostalgia, most of my favourite theme park sites have to do with discontinued attractions at Disney,
and this site is no exception. I believe it started out as a site dedicated to that perennial freebie "If You Had Wings",
you know, the one with the blue moving seats and the deformed globe that would swallow you? It has since blossomed into an
endlessly interesting study of other dead attractions at WDW, with great pictures and terrific narration. Just like seeing
a picture of the original videogame Odyssey sparks waves of nostalgia, so did seeing snaps like the original RCA Space
Mountain instil in me the same reaction.
<a href="http://www.artloss.com/">http://www.artloss.com/</a>
<font face="Verdana" size="2">I'm not sure why found this site so compelling,
with its exhaustive list of stolen artifacts from priceless works of art to
ancient trinkets to classic toys, but I did indeed. Perhaps it's watching
the upper-crust get their just deserts, like the poor soul who left his
Stradivarious violin in the back of his Rolls Royce in NYC and had it pilfered.
My heart bleeds. </font>
<B>Adbusters</B>
<a href="http://www.adbusters.org">www.adbusters.org</a>
<BR>This quarterly magazine always makes for great reading when each issue finally arrives at the
newsstand. It's a scathing indictment of the insipid advertising industry, published independently in Vancouver and
without external advertising (although it's sprinkled liberally with its own spoof ads, such as the classic "Joe Chemo"
campaign). The website is a simple archive of past essays, a collection of their spoof ad images, and other information
to arm you against idiotic, careless advertising.
<B>alt.culture: an a-z of the '90s</B>
<a href="http://www.altculture.com/cgi-bin/home.cgi">www.altculture.com/cgi-bin/home.cgi</a>
<BR>A knowing look back at the decade that was.
<B>Atlas F Missile Silo</B>
<b>The Apollo Hoax</b>
<a href="http://www.ufos-aliens.co.uk/cosmicapollo.html">www.ufos-aliens.co.uk/cosmicapollo.html</a>
<p>There is an awful lot of evidence that the Apollo moon-landings were faked,
committed by the United States government in order to desperately make a giant leap ahead of the galloping Soviet space
program in the Space Race, and continue to have the daring exploits of NASA draw attention away from the growing bloodshed
and ideological folly of the Vietnam war. This page exhaustively breaks down the photographic evidence and at the end one
is left asking: Were the Apollo moon-landings the greatest television series ever perpetrated?
<b>Are Apollo Moon Photos Fake?</b>
<a href="http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/tv/iangoddard/moon01.htm">www.badastronomy.com/bad/tv/iangoddard/moon01.htm</a>
<BR>A counter-point to the above moon hoax page, which provides photographic
experiments which explain the anomalies conspiracy theorists have put forth
regarding the official NASA photos and movies from the moon. Hardly a
scientific study, but still provides viable arguments against a conspiracy.
I also recommend you check out
<a href="http://warpfest98.hypermart.net/warp1.html">warpfest98.hypermart.net/warp1.html</a>
<BR>This is another incredible little gem, that which makes slogging through the morass of utter crap on the net worthwhile.
It is simple in its execution, but utterly compelling and really quite breathtakingly well-done. The fact that it can be so
good while being smothered by the INCREDIBLY, LIFE-SHORTENING, HAIR-WHITENING, ANNOYING Hypermart ad pop-ups is a real testament
to its quality. I'd complain about the midi songs that occasionally jump up and stab you in the ears, but they actually seem to
enhance the whole effect after awhile.
<b>Zelda's Mars Attacks Home Page </b>
<a href="http://www.marsattacksfan.com/homepage.htm">www.marsattacksfan.com/homepage.htm</a>
<br>In 1962, the Topps company produced the startlingly violent and graphic
bubble-gum card set "Mars Attacks!", which immediately entered the realm of the
infamous with its loving depictions of screaming people being burned alive with
ray guns and family dogs being disintegrated. After being understandably
yanked off the market due to mass parental outrage, the set has since gained an
immense cult status, culminating in the 1996 release of "Mars Attacks!" the
movie, one of the few misfires by eccentric director Tim Burton. This site
holds up the tradition of details obsessed fansites by being an exhaustive study
of the phenomena, including an image of every card in the set. Have a
look, and then boggle at the fact that it was ever produced at all.
<FONT FACE="Arial" SIZE=-3><CENTER>I can't be held responsible for the content of these external links. Except for my own up there, I guess.
All I know is that at the time of posting, they were all brilliant offerings on the altar of the World Wide Web.
Remember, 90 percent of the internet is crap. These sites are some of the other 10 percent that make it all worthwhile.
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