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bri
3/28/2006, 10:08 PM
You do not talk about Fight Club.

BlondeSoonerGirl
3/28/2006, 10:08 PM
You got something on your lip..right there...yeah...yeah...you got it...

Sooner_Bob
3/28/2006, 10:09 PM
don't poke is ear out

Czar Soonerov
3/28/2006, 10:10 PM
Dean can talk about fight club.

bri
3/28/2006, 10:15 PM
Rule #2: You DO NOT TALK ABOUT FIGHT CLUB.

picasso
3/28/2006, 10:16 PM
has Matthew Sweet made anything interesting lately? I heard one of his old jams the other day and it reminded me I have one of his CD's in the stash.

BlondeSoonerGirl
3/28/2006, 10:17 PM
Is there a Fight Club meeting tonight? Will there be 'Lil Smokies? I love those things...

sanantoniosooner
3/28/2006, 10:17 PM
yer all a bunch of space monkeys.

BlondeSoonerGirl
3/28/2006, 10:18 PM
has Matthew Sweet made anything interesting lately? I heard one of his old jams the other day and it reminded me I have one of his CD's in the stash.

Wrong thread, crackah...

bri
3/28/2006, 10:20 PM
has Matthew Sweet made anything interesting lately? I heard one of his old jams the other day and it reminded me I have one of his CD's in the stash.

Actually, yeah. He finally quit all that Phil Spector Wall Of Sound crap and went back to making good old fashioned powerpop. It's called Kimi ga Suki, and it's my new avvie. :D


I am Jack's Matthew Sweet obsession...

BlondeSoonerGirl
3/28/2006, 10:23 PM
Yeah, and it's awesome....

picasso
3/28/2006, 10:25 PM
Wrong thread, crackah...
I'm only part. waist up.

Sooner_Bob
3/28/2006, 10:25 PM
mmmmm, lil smokies.

bri
3/28/2006, 10:26 PM
Also, he's got an album of 60's pop duets with Susanna Hoffs.

Mmmmmmmm....Hoffs-tastic...... (http://www.myspace.com/sidnsusie )

Sooner_Bob
3/28/2006, 10:29 PM
Susanna Hoffs . . . now that's a blast from the past.

BlondeSoonerGirl
3/28/2006, 10:29 PM
Fastest...and most awesome..thread jack..ever.

OKC Sooner
3/28/2006, 10:30 PM
sorta like a ninja-jack or a stealth-jack

BlondeSoonerGirl
3/28/2006, 10:32 PM
CHUCK NORRIS JACK!!!

picasso
3/28/2006, 10:33 PM
Also, he's got an album of 60's pop duets with Susanna Hoffs.

Mmmmmmmm....Hoffs-tastic...... (http://www.myspace.com/sidnsusie )
he also kinda looked like Mitch Hedberg. or vice versa.

bri
3/28/2006, 10:35 PM
Yeah, I always noticed that too...

BeetDigger
3/29/2006, 09:50 AM
Susanna Hoffs . . . now that's a blast from the past.


I wish. :D

JohnnyMack
3/29/2006, 09:54 AM
'There used to be something called fight club, until :dean: found out about, now all the members are dead.'

Sooner_Bob
3/29/2006, 10:09 PM
I wish. :D

I said blast, not blow. :texan:

jthomasou78
3/30/2006, 08:28 AM
I am Jack's Matthew Sweet obsession...

I thought you were morrisey's obsession

bri
3/30/2006, 09:30 AM
I get around.

BeetDigger
3/30/2006, 10:03 AM
I said blast, not blow. :texan:


Blasts can come from various forms of stimulation. :eddie:

sooneron
3/30/2006, 10:21 AM
MS used to be one of my favorite artists. His shows are LOUD!

GDC
6/1/2006, 03:17 PM
We need something like this at the next tailgate.

http://sfgate.com/c/pictures/2006/05/30/ba_fightclub213.jpg


Fight club draws techies for bloody underground beatdowns
By JORDAN ROBERTSON, Associated Press Writer

Tuesday, May 30, 2006


(05-30) 00:00 PDT Menlo Park, Calif. (AP) --


They may sport love handles and Ivy League pedigrees, but every two weeks some Silicon Valley techies become vicious street brawlers in a real-life underground fight club.


Kicking, punching and swinging every household object imaginable — from frying pans and tennis rackets to pillowcases stuffed with soda cans — they beat each other mercilessly in a garage in this bedroom community south of San Francisco.


Then, bloodied and bruised, they limp back to their desks in the morning.


"When you get beat down enough, it becomes a very un-macho thing," said Shiyin Siou, 34, a Santa Clara software engineer and three-year veteran of the clandestine fights. "But I don't need this to prove I'm macho — I'm macho enough as it is."


Inspired by the 1999 film "Fight Club," starring Brad Pitt and Ed Norton, underground bare-knuckle brawling clubs have sprung up across the country as a way for desk jockeys and disgruntled youths to vent their frustrations and, in some cases, seek glory on the Internet.


"This is as close as you can get to a real fight, even though I've never been in one," the soft-spoken Siou said.


Despite his reserved demeanor he daydreams about inflicting pain on an attacker. "I have fantasies about it," he said.


In recent months, police in New Jersey and Pennsylvania have broken up fight clubs involving teens and preteens who were caught after posting videos of their bloody battles online.


Earlier this month in Arlington, Texas, a high school student who didn't want to participate was beaten so badly that he suffered a brain hemorrhage and broken vertebrae. Six teenagers were arrested after DVDs of the fight appeared for sale online.


Adult groups appear more capable of flying under the radar of authorities.


The invitation-only bouts in Menlo Park are held in a private garage, but the participants asked that the exact location be withheld.


Gints Klimanis, a 37-year-old software engineer and martial arts instructor, started the "Gentlemen's Fight Club" in 2000 after his no-holds-barred sparring sessions with a training partner swelled to more than a dozen people.


Most participants are men who work in the high-tech industry, and the only protective equipment available are fencing and hockey masks for fights with weapons.


Injuries do happen; several fighters have suffered broken noses, ribs and fingers.


"You get to be a superhero for a night," Klimanis said. "We have to go to work every day. We're constantly told to buy things we don't need, and just for a couple hours we have the freedom to do what we want to do."


Men involved in fight clubs often carry bottled-up violent impulses learned from video games, cartoons and movies during childhood, said Michael Messner, a University of Southern California sociology and gender studies professor.


"Boys have these warrior fantasies picked up from popular culture, and schools sort of force that out of them," he said. "The good guys always resort to violence, and they always get the glory and the women. Sometimes men carry that fantasy into their adult lives."


There is often a sadomasochistic thread running through underground fight clubs, said Michael Kimmel, a sociology professor at Stony Brook University in New York.


"Real-life fight clubs are the male version of the girls who cut themselves," he said. "All day long these guys think they're the captains of the universe, technical wizards. They're brilliant but empty.


"They want to feel differently. They want to get hit, they want to feel something real."


Menlo Park police hadn't heard about the club and said they wouldn't be likely to take action because the fights are on private property between consenting adults. But that could change if someone complains or is sent to the hospital, police said.


Five-year fight club veteran Dinesh Prasad, 32, a heavily tattooed Santa Clara engineer, said he once suffered a broken rib in a match but never told his fellow combatants.


He also recently skipped his first wedding anniversary to attend a fight rather than drive to Los Angeles to celebrate with his new bride, who is finishing law school there.


"I came here to get over my fear of fighting, and it's working," he said. "I'm much tougher than I was five years ago. I'm not at the level of these other guys, but if things were to get tough, I can get tough, too.".

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2006/05/28/state/n000048D43.DTL