Sunday, June 13, 2010

Sunday Snippets

Just a few small notes on a Sunday evening. Looking forward the the return of the HBO series "True Blood" tonight!

Snippets
-You have to feel for the Team England goalie in the world cup. Well on their way to closing out the United States, a small error results in a tie! Oops!

-Tim Iacono is sharing his own ongoing short sale experience in a post today that is worth a look.

-Kid Dynamite has two good ones up today;
A Horrible Solution to NY's Pension Woes
Key take away:
"Under the plan, the state and municipalities would borrow the money to reduce their pension contributions for the next three years, in exchange for higher payments over the following decade. They would begin repaying what they borrowed, with interest, in 2013.
But Mr. Paterson and other state officials hope the stock market will have rebounded to such a degree by that time that the state’s overall pension contribution burden will have been reduced."
Just unreal. Mish adds that the pension plans are still looking for 8% yearly returns which is just silly.
and
State Bailouts: The Tragedy of the Commons
Plenty worthy of discussion here.

-Housing Doom picks up a strange way to try and sell your home; check this progression of price swings:

Good luck with that!

-Paul Krugman sees that Ireland is having a tougher go in the CDS/Bond arena that Spain and concludes that clearly the austerity plan in Ireland is seen as worse by the markets than the Spanish printing plan. Sure thing Paul.

-Econbrowser has some thoughts on Gold and Inflation. Another academic that cannot figure out why gold is not a commodity. The summary:
But with the long-run fiscal challenges facing the United States, are 10-year Treasuries really the safest place to put your money? The yellow metal seems to be one way some people are hedging that bet.
Not too bad.

-The Ten Most Annoying Car Owners is worth a few laughs. The sidebar on the right side has the commentary for each car. My number one is the Prius owners who are so annoying I just want to punch them. I prefer to gloat about my 300 plus horsepower monster instead to piss them off.

Added
-One cool new site I have been checking is io9.com which is a mix of all kinds of interesting stuff. Try it out!

-An oldie that I had not checked for a while is the RedMeat comic strip. Great stuff here, use the meat locker to get the archives. Anything with Milkman Dan and Karen is awesome. Here is a newer one which is the perfect metaphor for the Credit Card Industry:

Nice!

Have a good night.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Unplugged

I had a couple of articles and a couple of thoughts I wanted to go over but I have to tell you this week has got me beat. I was swamped at work, there were a few really long commutes home, and I stayed up too late watching the basketball game last night. I think I am out of energy for deep thought (I am capable, stop laughing!) so instead please enjoy an extended fun section for a pick me up.

Friday Night Entertainment
The Friday show is the most fun you can have with your close on when the NFL is in the offseason. My opinion of course!

Visual Aids
Some pictures for sampling. Clicking the picture will give you a bigger version or use the link to see original.

Well things must be getting serious if they want to try and send back the Terminator to change history:

This would be all over the place is Bush was president.

All you need to know about popular websites:

Yup.

Music for babies indeed:

EPIC WIN!!!

Do not eat the LOL Cat!:
funny pictures of cats with captions
see more Lolcats and funny pictures
Cookie Monster is evil.

Random Stuff
You can come across plenty of stuff across the interwebs. All of them.

-Do not delete your boyfriends Warcraft character. Really, Don't!
-Once thought to be only a legend, Rogue Waves were proven as fact by the Draupner Wave.
-The most expensive thing in the world? Californium-252, about $350 Billion a pound!
-A compilation of weird places to go.
-Do it yourself LASIK surgery??:

FAKE!!!! Love the smoke from the guys eye.

Rock Blogging
Some tunes for your listening enjoyment. Had quite a few requests so maybe not everything makes the show, but I do what I can!

This should be the anthem for the stock market, ABBA and "Take a Chance On Me":

My mom's favorite band BTW.

I learned this week that purplehulls are where black eyed peas come from! Who knew? Did anyone else know that? Don't lie! For my fellow Keg griller, fisherman, and botanical expert rock out with The Black Eyed Peas and "Pump It":

Fergie, call me darlin, the restraining order has expired!
Also, if you would like a Gulf Coast hand built fishing rod, my man can set you up.

Reader Watchtower wonders if I will play country music, and of course I grew up on country music. Funny stuff. Try out Keith Whitley and "I'm No Stranger to the Rain":

Nice tune.

Lurker would like Cher with "Gypsys Tramps And Thieves" and I forgot how hot, I mean how good a singer Cher is:

Love the 70's hair!

I have NO IDEA why this song has been stuck in my head but try out "Duke of Earl" by Gene Chandler:

Love it! Singers used to be able to sing, now not so much.

Two more but then you are on your own.

What is funny is that I LOVE the band Rage Against the Machine even though I would argue plenty about their view on quite a few things. They do rock though so try out "No Shelter":

Nasty tune!

Last call! You know what to do.

I had this up a couple of years ago and both Lt G and Watchtower were readers then! Amazing, we have been together a long time boys!

Anyways, this tune by the Boston band Big Wreck just gets to me and so I offer it up and ask you give it a fair shot. Try out "That Song":

Special song indeed. Wow.

Have a good night.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

If at First You Don't Succeed, Try, Try Again!

Ok, I should have some real time to post tonight so you are warned ahead of time! Non stop rain today and we had to put the heat back on. Summertime does not come easy up here.

Do not forget to get your requests in for Friday night.

How Many US Dollars are Out There?
While most mainstream writers focus on the "seen" types of money, there is and will always be an enormous underground where the US dollar is the big time king. I saw this story over at Clusterstock today and the pictures were amazing. Short recap:
This plush villa, seized by the Mexican government, has it all: lions, gold-plated handguns, millions of dollars shoved in closets, and a killer underground hot tub. A handful of photos were posted to Activeboard.com, some originating from pictures that the Mexican government took.
Sure, it was purchased with drug money, but you have to check out some of these amenities.
Here is but one of the pictures of the loot:

This put me in mind of a little factoid I wrote on a while back:
Interesting Currency Fact
Earlier this week I was paging through the marked pages of a book I read a while back titled "Gold: The once and future money" by Nathan Lewis. Now this is not going to be a gold post, I got tons of comments over at Seeking Alpha for the blurb I posted last night.

I had marked this section for further thought:
A staff member of the IMF estimated that as little as 10-15% of all the US Currency held outside of banks is used inside the United States. The rest is being used outside the country--by foreign central banks, in dollarized countries, by travelers, smugglers, drug cartels, tax evaders, and foreign commercial banks--as the international currency of the world. Roughly two thirds of all the dollars in the world are in the form of $100 bills, a denomination almost never seen in the United States.
I would wonder just how much money is out there but there is just no way to know. And I do not mean just the smugglers, well, the drug sort anyway not the government types!

Desperate Debt Wives?
Kid Dynamite covered a really weird story about Japanese advertising that uses women to entice men to buy Japan government debt. I kid you not!:
From Bloomberg:
"Japanese women are seeking men who invest in government bonds, according to an advertisement being run by the Ministry of Finance.
“I want my future husband to be diligent about money,” a 27-year-old woman says in an ad being run in free magazines promoting a fixed-rate, three-year note that Japan started selling last week. “Playboys are no good.” She’s one of five women featured in the page, which says “Men who hold JGBs are popular with women!!”"
The ministry commissioned the ads to appeal to citizens for money at a time when record government borrowing threatens to outstrip demand. Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who took office yesterday, said he doesn’t have an instant fix to rein in the world’s largest public debt."
Great stuff...
This is really strange. What will this do to sales of sportscars should people believe chicks like debt? In the comments section I just could not help myself:
getyourselfconnected said...
Extenzee and Pretenzee! Makes your debt even bigger in two weeks or your deflated principal back!
Ok, I am childish, but it has it finer points!

If at First You Don't Succeed, Try, Try Again!
I think the next stage of the financial debacle is taking shape and future policy at this point should be clear. There will be plenty of fake hand wringing as well as some debate (such that headlines can be called debate) about what to do but now I have zero doubt what is coming down the line.

Get ready for another round of funny money to be thrown at the economy in hopes more is better.

Why? I could go over plenty of reasons, but we have covered them all for a while:
-Housing IS going back down
-The stock market rally (on which the entire "recovery" was wrapped around) has suffered major damage and the swings as of late for no reason other than "fat fingers" has the average guy heading for the door
-Job markets are no longer shedding jobs at an alarming rate, but still no significant job creation (and no, even 100,000 real jobs next month is not significant viewed against the unemployment backdrop so don't bother)
-Via Ilargi at The Automatic Earth here is another angle I had missed entirely:
-BP [..] accounts for 12-13 percent of dividend payouts in Britain. Pension funds and other investors are heavily reliant on it.
-BP [..] accounts for 12-13 percent of dividend payouts in Britain. Pension funds and other investors are heavily reliant on it.
That should put you right in line with what will be playing out now. BP's bankruptcy looks like a foregone conclusion. That is, unless the US and UK governments step in, and do so broadly and very loudly. With both money and legal changes. The former, because BP faces far more in lawsuits and damage claims than it has in liquidity (its shares are now worth less than its assets, always an alarming sign). The latter, well, for more or less the same reason.

One party you don’t want to be when BP's bankruptcy lands square squash on the table is a Louisiana fisherman or a Florida tourist operator. British pensioners first!
While BP is a bigger concern for British pensions, how many US pensions are stuffed to the gills with now worthless FNM stock? Another hand looking for an out.

Forget the particular issues that will require more "liquidity" to make better, there are too many anyway. Let's take a look at the thought process going on amongst the very types to be crafting future policy.

Robert Reich, who seems to have a good head on his shoulders when it comes to handling the big banks, still is mired in the spend no matter what mantra. In this post he offers two things an economic advisor could tell the president:
-Spend more and hope
-Don't and pray
Well it is more nuanced than that, but that's what it is. Guess which way he thinks we should go?

As predicted by many, Paul Krugman is already moaning that the last round of stimulus/bailouts/whatever was too small to matter and now it is time for more. Next time this time will have been too small as well, but we will have to wait to skewer him then. Mish points out very well that we DID HAVE a lost decade already and Krugman is worried about the next one? It never ends. Here you go from Mish:
Kiss the Illusion Goodbye
With global stimulus efforts playing second fiddle to default concerns, a double-dip recession is just around the corner. Please see Hungary Tries To Calm Markets; Europe Headed Back in Recession, US Will Not Decouple for further discussion.
The Keynesian clowns will be howling that reduced stimulus killed the recovery. However, the reality is there was no recovery in the first place, only an illusion caused by unsustainable stimulus.


Yves Smith is even on board for accelerator depression by the government and uses this section as an analogy:
Similarly, the fear about rising deficits is misplaced right now. As George Soros pointed out in a speech today in Vienna, the action of righting an economy when it faces serious financial stresses is a lot like straightening out a car that has gone into a skid: you need to turn the wheels into the skid, which looks like taking it further off the track where you want it to go, until it regains traction and you can then steer it back to its proper path. In this case, we need an expansion of public debt to offset the needed contraction in private sector debt, and then to (Soros did point out that this was a tricky operation). Otherwise, a resumption of the crisis is in the cards.
I offered in the comments section:
While the Soros driving metaphor is not bad, I would ask what good is regaining a sliding car when you are doing donuts in a parking lot 10 miles from the freeway when you need to be on the freeway.
“Replace Private Spending with Government Spending” sounds good but it does not answer was there too much spending in the first place?
This is the kind of crisis mode deal stop gap measures that impede any long term progress.
I like that one! Donuts in the parking lot, HA!

Putting it all together, there is going to be another round of stimulus/loan guarantees/unemployment extension to 2015/tax credits for various things/etc. I think the summer will be all about "laying the groundwork" and then the fall will bring the noise. Right before the mid term elections. This is dangerous politically because you have to hope more people will like handouts and vote for you than people will hate wasting money and vote against you. Money handed out tends to get the handee voters to go to the polls though.

I wanted to talk about a bubble which has not garnered much attention. It seems bubbles are everywhere today and in everything. I will lay out the most dangerous one.

The creation of 3 Trillion, 5 Trillion, or 13 trillion (depending on how you count) of new money has not resulted in inflation nor a bond market dislocation. In fact, it seems as if you can make all the money you want and bond yields go DOWN! Inflation goes almost NEGATIVE! It is truly amazing. What this has done is make a bubble in the egos of the Keynesian type money printers. I think they are feeling pretty confident right now even as they ignore the structural issues that have allowed this game to proceed. Why not double it? Triple it? Why not indeed.

Gold can serve as a foil bubble, a bubble nonetheless, but a counter balance to the madness of this mindset. Everyone wants to know how far gold can go to the upside? Ask instead how far the money printers can dream.

Have a good night.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Delayed by Circumstance

Sometimes I feel like things are purposely put in the way of getting anything done! A quick story for tonight.

Delayed by Circumstance
After dinner yesterday the wife and I were going to drop her car off for some brake work today. Simple; we have been there numerous times and it should be a quick trip.

Except the dealership does not do "non-recall" repairs anymore; it has been converted to a 16 hour recall fixer joint. We were told to go to another facility nearby for the brake work but a letter, email, or call would have been good to have the new information. Whatever, things are crazy, I get it.

Tonight we go to pick up the car at the correct pace and of course there is some kind of a HAZ-MAT accident on the highway!!! I kid you not! On the southbound lanes there were many fire trucks, ambulances, and weird vehicles I had never seen fighting a fire in the back of a box truck with "Party Rentals" on the side. What kind of hazardous material was that!!??

We were so late we just got the car before close and then had dinner out to wait out the return clusterf$ck traffic. I just got in and it is quarter to eight. Unreal.

Safe to say no real time to get in a post, but I really mean to do one tomorrow. Lets see what else can happen!

Have a good night.

Monday, June 7, 2010

You Are in Good Hands

Well I am about out of time for a post once again! Monday's can be rough. At least the Celtics won game 2 of the NBA finals but of course I got sucked into watching the whole thing late last night. Not fun at 5am this morning.

You Are in Good Hands
I don't have much to offer for tonight. I think the market weakness was not good considering what I discussed Friday and Sunday. I think the US bond auctions finish up this week so I would expect a rally after that. Liquidity needs to find a home, yes?

I did notice that the volume on the late day sell off was really low, this is the inverse of the usual pattern. What delicious irony it would be if program trading pumped up a fake market and then walks it back down again. Unreal.

You are in good hands if you use the blogroll on the left. Plenty of great stuff. Some items in particular:
-Tim Iacono reviews the three part series on Gold by the WSJ's Brett Arends. Mr. Arends comes to the conclusion that gold maybe, could be a bubble and offers an idea on options to "play" the gold market. More paper games?

-John Hussman wonders if markets are nervous about the next US Mortgage meltdown:
Markets Aren't Worried About Greece Or Hungary, But Rather The Next US Mortgage Crisis
We should know real soon!

-The Automatic Earth has been very sharp as of late, so stop on in. The site is expecting to revamp and expand their work around the beginning of July, so if you appreciate the site like I do why not throw a few bucks in their donation bin to help out?

-The Housing Time Bomb reviews 2 scenarios for the bond markets going forward. Worth the thought experiment.

-The Evil Speculator has a great post that is very technical in nature. Complete with hilarious video, you should be aware of the TRIN index. The author points out quite a few things that agree with my nervous stance.

Have a good night.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Pictures and Real Estate Reporting

We have rolling thunderstorms going through right now. Hopefully it will end soon so I can go out and cook. I may have to add a dinner picture should I be able to get out there.

Just a few pictures, a guest post, and some thoughts on deck.

Guest Post: Reader Gawains
On Friday I offered up the blog to anyone that would like to put together a guest post to be featured here. We shall see how many are interested. It is my belief that I have the best audience out there.

Reader Gawains offers plenty of great inside information about real estate in the comments section. A real "on the ground" type of reporting that you will not get most places. I think Gawains will submit a few posts and I will be glad to publish them. I did get an email from Gawains showing me how bad many homes are after foreclosure. Here is Gawains:
There is a reason why most realtors (80%) don't work with repossessed homes. Because they don't have the money or don't want to do the work. It was 100 degrees outside today as I wandered around this house taking pictures, and I haven't even attached half of them. Broken door frames, missing sockets, trash everywhere, sheetrock damage, missing water heater, broken circuit board, missing a/c, missing cabinets, missing kitchen sink, missing commode, it's a disaster zone. I figure it's going to cost at least $20,000 to fully repair this house. And that doesn't include lawn maintenance, utilities, marketing and advertising, or selling commission. See what I'm talking about?

I was provided with a set of pictures that were just unreal. I had no idea grass can grow to be about 6 feet tall! Also, and you have to take my word for it, the interior of the house in question was ransacked and damaged. Due to confidentiality concerns I cannot publish the photos, but it was an eye opener.

More from email exchange by Gawains:
A couple of years ago, we would have had to hire contractors to clean this mess up. The entire lawn not only has to be mowed, but the cut grass and plants bagged and hauled off. Then there's all the trash, which as you can see is a lot. That has to be hauled to the dump. Then the house has to be cleaned.

These days the mortgage company uses a field asset management company to handle all that. Which is good, as it saves us the billing expenses. Still, cleaning up this house is going to cost several thousand dollars.

And then there's the repairs. Are you kidding me? The circuit breaker destroyed, water heater and a/c stolen, electrical outlets and sockets ripped out, kitchen cabinets and appliances taken, commode stolen, door frames broken, sheetrock damaged, we're talking about tens of thousands of dollars here.

If this property were to be sold as is, only a cash investor could buy it.

So you see the severity of the problem and the depth of the crisis. There is no way a profit can be generated by the resale this house. Think of the costs involved (the delinquent taxes must be paid by the seller at closing, for example). It must have been abandoned at least two years ago--how long does it take grass to grow six feet tall?--and was only recently repossessed. This is part of the shadow inventory. Only God knows how many properties like this--and I've seen worse--are on the banks' balance sheets.

While I have often tried to illuminate just how bad things are in the mortgage area, this insider look should really be more helpful. Thanks Gawains!

Monster Fish
On Saturday I was able to get out on the water in the kayak between rain storms. I had a small spinnerbait on one fishing rod and as I was tying a lure on another rod, this massive bass grabbed the spinnerbait as it dangling over the side of the boat! I was almost pulled into the water by the force of such a lunker fish:

Big fish, HA!

Things You Can do if You Are Nervous
On Friday I noted that I am now officially nervous and the reasons why. I am prone to being down on things economic (really?) but Friday was really ugly. I think that if this week does not go well in the markets a rout could ensue as there is nothing underneath stocks. But it could all be fine as well! Now I want to be very clear here; I do not think the world is going to end and we all will be living in caves. What I think is about a 1 in 10 chance right now is a situation where people start to panic and we get all the dumb behavior that would come with that.

Things like bank restrictions on withdrawals could happen. How do you think the average person would react to that? If you consider just that item it leads to other issues like grocery store mad dashes, gas runs, and related things. I think it would be short lived, but not fun at all.

So what can you do for peace of mind? Everyone is different but few things to consider having on hand are:
-Cash. Maybe $1000-$2000 in cash, preferably in smaller bills ($20 and smaller). If we get bank withdrawal restrictions you do not want to be in a spot where you cannot pay for things.
-Food. Canned goods in a pantry so that you could avoid having to contend with a store run when everyone is going nuts for a few days. Better to stay at home. Water you should always have quite a bit stored no matter what, water mains break all the time.
-Fuel. Well unless you are able to store gasoline safely this one is a tough spot. Just keep your gas tank on full for a while whenever you get the chance.
-Medical. If you or someone in your home has medication needs talk with your doctor about getting extra up front just in case a break from access would mean you would run out.

Now I am not trying to scare anyone, I just think we could have a 3 day to one week departure from the normal should things go bad in a hurry.

What about gold and silver? I did not mention them because if the 1 in 10 event happens they will not be useful to you at the time, but they should go higher in price!

Plenty of discussion about gold and silver as of late and I think it is good. All I can do is speak for me and I believe gold and silver will at some point become integrated into a new money system after the fiat paper ones all do their printathon thing. This will mean much higher prices. Both could also collapse, just like any other form of investment. Long term metals have maintained purchasing power, and I expect them to continue to do that. A good suit cost 1 ounce of gold in 1900, and today you can get a damn fine suit for an ounce of gold. How does paper money compare?

Some of my useless silver crap that will be worthless soon that I have on hand (the rest is buried in my neighbors yard, please keep it quiet!):
10 Ounce JM Bars:

1 Ounce JM Bars:

Pre-1965 US Quarters and Dimes known as "Junk Silver":

I have a soft spot for these gorgeous Phoenix Silver bars and will buy them whenever I find one, so if you have any that you want to sell....:

At least they are shiny, better than stocks any day, HA!

Have a good night.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Officially Nervous

That was one real clusterf#@k of a day, yes? What a mess. I will offer my observations and then as a means to distract both the readers and myself from things serious it will be Friday night. Not that I got many requests for anything anyway......

Officially Nervous
As a resident "Doom and Gloomer" you may think I am a nervous sort. Far from it, most of the time I am calm, cool, and collected. Well, unless it is football season, or a Lil Kim video is on. I have to say that today made me officially nervous and I will tell you why.

First off, the last leg of hope for a miracle recovery was a monster jobs number. Most had a range of 500k-800k to the plus side. My own was 550-650k. Of this most was to be census jobs but a bulk was supposed to be real organic hiring that we have been told is ready to explode any minute.

Well not this minute. Here is the last leg of the recovery hopes:

From the film "No Retreat, No Surrender" and if you have seen it you are a real martial arts film addict, like me!

I am more nervous now that I was at the March 2009 lows. Why? At that time there was a firmly established belief that the government would save everyone. They tried but now:
-Housing is rolling over big time
-The calls for job growth any day now just look dumb
-People are asking the right kinds of questions
-Government intervention has been shown to be at best a short term band aid but not a fix

That crutch has been removed. That is why I am nervous. I did not say they would not try, I said no one will really believe it.

And try they will. Here is what the folks that brought the last set of fixes are calling for:
The Case for More Monetary Stimulus Remains
It never ends.

I had a ton of stories that I was going to cover but I think I will leave things as I have written out. I may write this weekend about how to have a small backup plan in place should things get ugly in a real hurry. No worries, everyone can do these things and NO the end of the world is not at hand. The world was never going to end, contrary to what Henry Paulson and the big banks told you. Maybe just their world.

Off Topic:
I was thinking that a little variety would be good. I read Gawains comments here and Moneta's and others and I think "I just want to copy/paste the whole thing into a post" but I feel that is not quite right. Here is the deal:
Anyone that would like to offer up a contributor piece can submit it via email to the address on the left. I will review it and communicate if it will post. During the week I would like to feature at least 2 or more guest thoughts. All angles are welcome and nothing is out of bounds. Let me know if anyone is interested.

Friday Night Entertainment
With a lead off like that, can I salvage a fun evening? I am going to try!

Deja Vu
Last night I wrote at 8:20pm:
I have not been into basketball since the day's of a ferocious Pat Riley led NY Knick defense manned by such players as Ewing, Mason, Starks, and Oakley.

Not an hour later Barry Ritholtz wrote:
The Lakers vs. Celtics Finals are sure to be a blast. As a long suffering Knicks fan — a bud had season tickets during the Ewing-Oakley-Starks era — I appreciate good bball, and this is sure to deliver that.
Now that IS scary!

Funny Pictures
We all need a laugh.

Risk management Banking internal controls style:

Yup.

A late night at a 4 star Singapore hotel:

Beware drunk ordering!

A census worker comes to the door:
funny pictures of cats with captions
see more Lolcats and funny pictures
RUN!!!!!!!!!!!

Never make a deal with the Devil, it never works out:
funny pictures of cats with captions
see more Lolcats and funny pictures

Film Clips
A couple of clips for your perusal.

My favorite scene of "Revenge of the Sith":

The darkside rules and jedi drool.

For a real laugh, try out the parade scene from "Stripes":

Amazing cast.

Rock Blogging
Let's do this, LEEROY JENKINS!!!!!!!!!!

I am not a Jazz type, but reader Lurker is not one to make a bad request so I tried out Benny Goodman and "One O' Clock Jump" and while I am still not a jazz fan, it was cool to see the whole show:

Not bad.

Reader Gawains tends to pick some of the great guitar songs that exist and thus I offer Mountain and "Mississippi Queen":

Nasty good!

One of may favorite older bands is Bachman Turner Overdrive. Maybe my favorite is "Let it Ride":

"You can't see the morning, but I can see the light". Nice!

Just in case you missed it the last TWO times I played it, here is a really great tune by Droge and Summers named "Two of the Lucky Ones". Make sure you turn it up to hear the background vocal support, too pretty:

Love it.

A newer from Ozzy was "I Just Want You" and the lyrics here are pretty provoking:

"I'm sick and tired of being sick and tired, I used to go to bed all high and wired".

Two more but That really has to be it!

So you know I do not HATE all new music, I have to admit this song by Nelly Furtado really sticks on you. Do not listen to if you hate having songs stuck in your head!! If you dare, try out "Say it Right":

She is cute too!

Last call! Have enough beer for the evening? Check. Anything on TV to watch. Nope. It is what it is.

Closing the show with the classic Bon Jovi "Livin on a Prayer" which just never gets old!:


Close second was this which I always play!

Have a good night.