Tiki Central / General Tiki
Is forum activity decreasing?
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TM
tiki mick
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 11:22 AM
Seems like there is not much going on here as before. Am I imagining it? Is it the fault of "purists" like myself? Should we have welcomed with open arms the carribean buffeteers, party city and Shaka-Brah hawaiiana people? In my defense, the original concept of tiki as laid down by Sven and others was cool enough for me...I never felt we needed to widen the tent to include all the other stuff...but maybe I was wrong? I am not saying I like any of that stuff....but man, it seems like a ghost town around all parts of this forum except the collecting section. Is it just my imagination? http://soundcloud.com/lucas-vigor/sets/set-3/ "yer jus not tuned into the series of tubes yet, let it soak in". [ Edited by: Lucas Vigor 2011-12-27 14:03 ] |
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AlohaStation
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 11:28 AM
SpaceBook - happened. Same effect on Forums all over the web. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 11:56 AM
Nope, I am seeing it also, very little interaction on TC There is a small core group that that makes it to everything I think TC has been a bit of a Ghost Town as of late, Lucas. |
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Limbo Lizard
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 12:00 PM
If memory serves, it gets this way, between Thanksgiving and new Years, every year. A lot of people are rushing around, and make only hit-and-run visits to T.C. It'll pick back up after the holidays. |
TM
tiki mick
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 12:11 PM
Maybe, but the "drought" seems to have begun long before this holiday season began. It's true what CTIT says, though. I can't help but think that because a lot of us (myself included) stuck to our guns, we chased those that brought (for example) pictures of their party city tiki bar set-up only to be ridiculed. Instead of sticking around and learning something, they took one look and never came back. Can't say as I blame them. On one hand, I am perfectly happy to keep tiki for myself, and not share with anyone else. But on the other hand, maybe some of those people could have been a fresh infusion? I blame myself, partly. |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 12:17 PM
Vey true. Facebook simply is the much quicker and easier reward. Whenever I post a link to a thread I did on TC on Facebook, I get 10 times more reactions than here. Popular culture is in an ever-accelerating spiral of quick rewards and fast thrills, becoming more superficial in the process. Beginning with the manic speed of cutting music videos, newer generations were raised on this diet of speedy content and visuals. It is much faster to click on "Like", or write ONE funny line, than do in-depth research and scan images and put a coherent post together. That's falling out of fashion. Plus, the Tiki Revival has already lasted a long time. After the 90s Tiki underground, the early to mid-2000s saw serious Tiki culture archeology parallel to an explosion of new Tiki art and the Tiki event scene. In the later half of the 2000s the Tiki scene was re-invigorated from the inside by the craft cocktail revival, but the awareness of the art and style aspects leveled out, or even shrank (I am excluding the hardcore followers on TC and elsewhere of course). But 10 years is a pretty long time for any fashion to last. :) On one hand it is simply not as NEW, and unique as it was when there was little of it around, on the other it takes serious interest to get into it and understand it. While the information is all out there, now more readily available than ever, it's a big heap of stuff to wade through (just take Tiki Central). And the in-availability of my books ain't helping. The lack of a coherent, in-depth context and understanding of its cultural background is leading to a two-dimensional image of Tiki nowadays, which puts it into just another category of the many pop cultures. For a pop culture to continue to exist, the Tiki revival has simply not been able to prove enough commercial expansion potential. It has established Tiki in the pantheon of popular culture (as opposed to having been completely forgotten before) and will live on for sure, but as a subculture of the ones who love and understand it...and maybe there will be another revival sometime. |
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hoody
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 12:18 PM
Well - there are probably a lot of us tiki voyeurs out their too....watching TC with interest and care, but not active in the discussions. My kiddlings who are nine and eleven years old, love everything tiki. A new generation! Here is a photo of their tiki garden... my little bloke designed the surfing tiki god when he was seven, and a local mate had a go at carving it for him. My little girl put image to music with her song Tiki Tiki Wa Wa (may post separately if people are interested). Not too bad for a couple of kids. We're madly getting ready for a tiki New Year Party, where there will be 30-40 kids (and associated adults) enjoying mocktails and cocktails till dawn or bed - whichever comes first. We will be chanting the Tiki Tiki Wa Wa round the firepit. Tiki dying, certainly not, at least not in Aust. If anything, its still in revival. TC is probably just in a lull... Keep up the great posts - love the ecommunity. Love the artists - wish I was artistic. Marketplace is terrific - so sad that postage is prohibitively expensive to Aust. Hoody |
TM
tiki mick
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 12:24 PM
Tis' true, there are many "stealth" Tiki lurkers out there. Just the other day, I was watching the Eddie Murphy "Haunted Mansion" DVD, and there is that scene in the tiki bar....and what a tiki bar it is! Turns out, that was no set, but a tiki bar that is in the home of one of the producers of the film. Now, that person (to my knowledge) has never posted here...there could be many more out there that just never come to this forum. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:01 PM
The more I think about it, yes Lucas it is your fault :lol: Sven has pointed out some good reasons why popular culture has, to be polite |
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Swanky
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:12 PM
We need a "Like" button here so we can all give "Feedback" that is far less than a "Reply". Might give a better hint as to actual participation here. I think the Tiki nerds are becoming a smaller and smaller group here. It seems Tiki Oasis gets bigger every year, but a nerdy presentation like mine this year probably drew as many people as it would have 5 or 10 years ago. And it certainly has to do with basic time expenditure. I happen to make it a habit to come here near daily. But I also read a bunch of blogs, and go through FB, etc. daily. All of us nerds are getting more in our lives that make us pick where we spend time. My idea a bit ago was to repost the nerdy stuff from here on my blog so those with less time for TC can keep up with the hidden gems. There is a FB TC place where people might do the same thing. A nice TC "nerd filter" would help. I am regualrly shocked when someone like Duke posts here and I think, man, he lives! How did he find that thread? "Cool and Current" is NOT the answer. An "Un-cool and Nerdy" list would be better. And it would help if BoT was still easily available for $25. |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:28 PM
It's not only the price, but distribution and exposure. Once it is not on the book table anymore, and not on the shelf either, it has practically disappeared from public awareness. It's publish or perish alright. Meanwhile the publishing world is in turmoil because of threat of electronic media combined with the recession, and it is getting harder and harder to get a book printed. A dear friend of mine just had his new book cancelled, and that after having two successful books published previously with the same publisher. And that book is ready, written and photographed! I just feel fortunate that I got Tiki Modern out in the nick of time, a while back my publisher told me he never would have put it out in this current climate. We are all contributing to the cultural demise by buying cheaper stuff, using electronic media, and showing we can work for less. These are interesting times. |
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TikiTomD
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:33 PM
Regarding Swanky's point on the Book of Tiki availability / affordability, is it possible that it might someday be reincarnated as an eBook? -Tom |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:50 PM
I just like the tactile experience of a real book better - but that is already changing for the new generations of consumers, so I would not be opposed to it. But: An e-book version would only make sense if I could add all the links I possibly could to each chapter, of unpublished material, of music and video clips - like many of the posts I have done here. But then, that amount of additional work would be staggering, how could that be possibly made worth my time? That is a real dilemma: While the interactive multi-media potential of e-books is seemingly unlimited, they are expected to cost less. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:55 PM
I was just going to bounce the same question TikiTom just asked off Sven It's all about getting the word out there. |
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bigtikidude
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 1:57 PM
I wouldn't quite say these are interesting times. 1.Some are going into Ostrich mode, and sticking their heads in the sand. 2.Some are going into hibernating mode.
I say that the economy is partly to do with the downturn of people at some events. As for lack of participation here on TC and other Forums, on a darker note, We don't have to prove the prophecy true. Happy Holidays everybody. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:01 PM
How about just a version of the BOT & Tiki Modern "as is" for download or updated versions The availability of your books Sven has been a issue for sometime |
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MikeyTiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:10 PM
Chuck, I wouldn't say his books are hard to find, but yes the price is going up, but not anything like limited edition mugs, not to mention rare mugs. (The last copy of BoT I saw on eBay went for $52.75.) |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:12 PM
Yeah, it does seem there are some things going on currently that are more important and pressing than Tiki for folks. Like pure survival, witness the sale of Tiki mug collections. The current pig-headed bickering of this country's political establishment, the inability to stem off global warming while the disastrous effects are all-evident...It's enough to make one retreat to your own island. When looking at the re-invigorating effects of the second World War, it also seems that mankind sometimes needs cataclysmic events to get their asses in gear. |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:18 PM
That sounds uninspiring and laborious to me. But if someone would come to me and say: ...I would probably not say no. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:22 PM
MikeyTiki, I have to disagree, it took me two years to get a copy of the BOT (I missed the original release) I know it pops up now and then on eBay at a fair price but that is rare too. [ Edited by: Chuck Tatum is Tiki 2011-12-19 14:23 ] |
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Mr. NoNaMe
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:25 PM
Has anyone noticed that the "currently browsing" seems to have increased in the last couple of years?? Maybe by 20%? At least I am pretty sure it has. I've mostly been a lurker lately due to ADD/OCD & the fast gratification of Fbook. Also, I'm not a "giver" nor attention seeking. Mostly because of ADD/OCD preventing 100% attention to detail or task completion. :) Ooooo, a shiny penny..... EDIT: My new years resolution is to contribute more to TC & everything else I enjoy. [ Edited by: Mr. NoNaMe 2011-12-22 07:55 ] |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:30 PM
Sven do you retain the digital rights to your books or does your publisher? |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:37 PM
I would have to check with my publisher, but I am 99% sure the BOT rights have reverted back to me. And I would have to check if they have any digital plans for my books. They ARE the number 1 in my book for quality and world-wide distribution. |
TM
tiki mick
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:39 PM
I couldn't agree more. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:42 PM
If you want to do it your self, I found this article about it here: An excerpt:
I will stop harping about it now, just wanted to put out the possibility of doing it this way. |
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tikibars
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:45 PM
Hi I can say with a certain amount of authority that full--color, coffee table-style books that might appeal to tiki people, and which might have been written by authors well-known to the tiki community, will still be greeted lukewarmly when distributed in an ebook format, no matter how amazing the content might be. To wit; http://www.bigstonehead.com |
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bigbrotiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 2:54 PM
I had a hunch, James. Thanks for chiming in pragmatically. |
OGR
Or Got Rum?
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 3:10 PM
Well, I guess it's time for another "Tiki is dying" thread. No offense Lucas as I you feel you and all other TCers have something important to add as we cannot read each others minds and that is part of the blog process. .....And....I find it ironic that the thought The Book of Tiki on Kindle, because the original BOT is 65.00+.....Lets see first I will need the "Kindle Fire" for 199.00 and then TBOT. Hey !!!! But if you can make some money Sven, I'm all for it. Lets say I love my well worn original. |
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GatorRob
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 3:23 PM
As much as I'd like to see the BOT and Tiki Modern enter the digital realm, the question of whether it can generate revenue for our esteemed author is another issue entirely. I still prefer, as you say Sven, the tactile feel of paper for books like yours. For just the printed word, however, eBooks are great. But I think that's quickly changing. eBook readers with larger and higher res screens will be able to handle books like the BOT just fine. B&N's Nook just had this update very recently:
Sounds great, doesn't it? My Nook's (and iPad's) screen is too small to do justice to something like the BOT, but I'm sure larger and higher res screens are coming. Frankly, it's the way everything is headed. Lucas, your thread has turned into a discussion on the availability of Sven's books! It's relevant though and part of the overall equation. I'd just like to add that I have not deserted my love for "purist" (as you call it) tiki. My participation on TC has dwindled to a trickle only because I don't like to post here unless I have something of real value to add. And since our obsession is with things that have their roots in the past, it's getting harder and harder to come up with anything "new" to add to the discussion. So, lack of posts doesn't mean lack of interest. We're still here. :) |
TM
tiki mick
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 3:27 PM
I can only speak for myself. Let's just say I was curious if things had seemed awful quiet around here of late, and if others had noticed it to. I don't really want to see tiki become mainstream...I like the niche group it's in. BUT, I also don't want to see tiki bars close down due to lack of interest. For example, I think it was the surge in tiki enthusiasm that allowed Don's in HB to florish. What happens next? |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 3:32 PM
Yes you are right Lucas If we don't support our local Tiki establishments they will not be around much longer |
TM
tiki mick
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 3:52 PM
If I lived closer to Don's, I would go a lot more. As it is, Trader Sam's is my place! And not only that, I always recommend it to non-tiki friends! |
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Big Kahuna
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 3:58 PM
Pish-posh, I say! I travelled 3000 miles to hang out with you froot-loops, twice this year. I visited Rumpus Room, Tonga Hut, Sven's, Tiki-Ti, Trader Vic's, Damon's, Bahooka, Don The Beachcomber, Trader Sam's, Bowers Museum & Oceanic Arts. I met most of my TC friends in person, and might I say you're all smarter, funnier, better-looking & more charming in person! I've also purchased books, mugs, CDs, shirts, art & lounge supplies from many TC folks. I have every intention of doing the same in 2012. I, for one, have no intention of letting anything die. If the fringe element, pretenders & hobby-of-the-month club folks come & go, so be it. As long as we remember to support the scene & introduce Tiki to new people, we'll be fine. I should be back for a big, squishy group hug the end of May. |
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PolynesianPop
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 5:41 PM
But Lance, for your argument to work you have to go to more tiki bars than just Don's -- or do you just want Don's to survive? And no -- 1 visit to the Tonga Hut for the Grand Re-opening doesn't count! :) |
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hoody
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 6:27 PM
Wow - a heavy and depressing thread to read. Are things so bad? Really? The purpose of letting you know about my kid's enthusiasm was to show that Tiki - proper Polynesian pop culture tiki - had a future, a strong future, if the leaders in the tiki community can engage and guide the kids: The tikiphiles of tomorrow. The kids are more savvy than most realise. They enjoy different styles of music, architecture and decor. They genuinely enjoy a swanky lounge bar groove; and they also have a fascination with the South Seas culture and artifacts. With travel so cheap today, many kids have visited the islands and they desperately seek to recreate the same ambience at home. As older people we might fondly reminisce about the past, and collectibles that have passed. These kids have a vibrant interest in tiki that is reflective of enthusiasm that hit America during the post war era. This vibrant interest needs to be encouraged/directed so that it blossoms into something special. However, in the absence of available guidance from artists and enthusiasts, the energy of these kids will either wane or be redirected. In desperation they will resort to bright plastic tiki parties... never enjoying the depth of the true Polynesian pop tiki culture. I agree with many of the sentiments in the thread - information on tiki culture needs to be available to this new generation of enthusiasts, in a format that they use. I love my hardcopy BOT, but kids don't have coffee tables, and they rarely read hardcopy books anymore. Its so hard for them to emulate a culture if we don't expose them to it. Its difficult to read a "doom and gloom" thread without injecting some enthusiasm about the future. We need to embrace the mocktail and coloring book crowd, and then grow them from "Mocktails to Cocktails", from "Tiki Coloring Books to Tiki Art". If we want the true Polynesian pop tiki culture to grow, then we have an imperative to expose the work of Tiki Icons to kids now, so that in 10 years there is a whole new generation of young adults looking to enjoy our tiki bar culture. |
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TikiFramer
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 6:36 PM
If a hardback book of good quality (i.e.; a Taschen Book)sits on a coffee table, there is nothing like it! THAT is why The Book of Tiki and Tiki Modern should not yet be available in electronic format...just sayin'. This is also why Taschen continues to be successful as a publisher. Thanks Sven for your wonderful contributions...you have made a difference in many peoples lives. |
CTIT
Chuck Tatum is Tiki
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 6:52 PM
Yes Poly-Popster we do need more Tonga Hut time indeed, you sir are one of those I spoke about Merry Tiki-Mas, little Sven, Lucas & all of Tiki Central, please don't ban me next year! |
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Potato.
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 7:05 PM
Is a slowing-down of posts, etc. on TC indicative of an end of tiki fandom? I don't think so at all. Not only for the reasons people said that winter is typically a stay indoors, not so tropical time of year where we have to focus on other things, but let's think of how quickly Tiki Central has grown. There are so many educated people in here posting all the time and the history to this point of tiki is only so long. We were going to run out of (or slow down in) history eventually, and maybe this is the beginning. There's just not much new left for us to learn? I can't speak for events and people going out to the bars because, where I am, the nearest tiki bar is 50 miles away and in another town. It's hard to visit. But, if the posting of history and asking of questions on Tiki Central has slowed, don't think of it as reduced interest. Think of it as a rousing success. We've (you've) put so much info into this one place that everyone knows where to go to get all they need. I don't post much because I have nothing new or interesting to say. Someone else has said it better elsewhere. So, is this evidence of a reduced interest in tiki. Oh hell no. I just read and learn from those who came before me. And I assume THAT is more of a reason than any scary downfall in interest. |
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MadDogMike
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 8:35 PM
I just self printed a single book with Lulu, it should be here this week. It will be interesting to see the quality. I think a 370 page book cost me about $90. Of course smaller books and/or more volume costs less |
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MadDogMike
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 8:38 PM
oops! [ Edited by: MadDogMike 2011-12-19 21:40 ] |
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hoody
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Mon, Dec 19, 2011 9:19 PM
Oh no.An error occurred. Site administrators have been notified of the error. |