Urban75 Home About Offline BrixtonBuzz Contact

2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics Thread

I took this a few weeks ago in Vancouver. I wondered if it was an Olympics thing or not.

8530_319388825720_718760720_9241783_4700201_n.jpg


Couldn't see much else going on, except at the airport where there was Olympic stuff everywhere.
 

Wins my award for most over dramatic music for the least interesting sport.

It's extreme bowling!
That's pretty lol TBF :D

What the fuck is that about, they kinda scrub the ice to make the skiddy thing go in a particular direction?
 
That's pretty lol TBF :D

What the fuck is that about, they kinda scrub the ice to make the skiddy thing go in a particular direction?

You don't know about curling?

It's this game from, er, Scotland....

The game of curling is thought to have been invented in late medieval Scotland, with the first written reference to a contest using stones on ice coming from the records of Paisley Abbey, Renfrewshire, in February 1541. Two paintings (both dated 1565) by Pieter Bruegel the Elder depict Dutch peasants curling—Scotland and the Low Countries had strong trading and cultural links during this period, which is also evident in the history of golf.


The game of curling was already in existence in Scotland in the early 16th century, as evidenced by a curling stone inscribed with the date 1511 (uncovered along with another bearing the date 1551) when an old pond was drained at Dunblane, Scotland. Kilsyth Curling Club claims to be the first club in the world, having been formally constituted in 1716; it is still in existence today[2]. Kilsyth also claims the oldest purpose-built curling pond in the world at Colzium, in the form of a low dam creating a shallow pool some 100 × 250 metres in size, though this is now very seldom in condition for curling due to warmer winters.

The word curling first appears in print in 1620 in Perth, in the preface and the verses of a poem by Henry Adamson. The game was (and still is, in Scotland and Scottish-settled regions like southern New Zealand) also known as "the roaring game" because of the sound the stones make while traveling over the pebble (droplets of water applied to the playing surface). The verbal noun curling is formed from the Scots (and English) verb curl[3] which describes the motion of the stone.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curling
 
I don't think it's that big over here anymore TBH Johnny. Not that I have anything against curling, but it does just look pretty lame as Olympic sports go.

If it makes you feel any better I think your flag building looks fucking great against the blue sky!
 
They've passed a law that is an abrogation of a basic civil right, imo: the right to free speech.


So if the police and city workers with boltcutters break into someone's apartment to remove a cardboard sign that's deemed to be anti-olympic, it will be loudly trumpeted throughout the world media. :D
]

So if I lived there and I made a sign that read "The Winter Olympics Here in Vancouver is Like a Big Jam Doughnut with Cream on Top", I'd be breaking the law?
 
I don't think it's that big over here anymore TBH Johnny. Not that I have anything against curling, but it does just look pretty lame as Olympic sports go.

If it makes you feel any better I think your flag building looks fucking great against the blue sky!

When you google curling scotland, it looks like it's still a going concern there. Maybe it's just outside of your ambit. :)
 
When you google curling scotland, it looks like it's still a going concern there. Maybe it's just outside of your ambit. :)
Waaaay outside. I don't know shit about football, let alone curling.

So what tickets you got then Johnny? What you going to see? :)
 
I wonder if avoiding that kind of press is why they're trotting the torch through every rez imaginable (and providing the local band councils with boxes of feel-good swag they can hand out to the assembled folks as it passes through).

It went through a couple of towns near us last week. The Other Half went. I stayed home and rearranged the linen closet because a boy's gotta have priorities.
 
Waaaay outside. I don't know shit about football, let alone curling.

So what tickets you got then Johnny? What you going to see? :)

None. You had to prepay for the tickets, and that only got you into a lottery for them. Also, the prices now have gone through the roof for anything good. A ticket to the hockey final will now cost you in the thousands, if not tens of thousands of dollars.

I'll watch it on tv, or on the screens around town or in a bar. There are many many events taking place throughout the region. I'll do that instead of pay inflated prices for the actual event tickets.
 
I wonder if avoiding that kind of press is why they're trotting the torch through every rez imaginable (and providing the local band councils with boxes of feel-good swag they can hand out to the assembled folks as it passes through).

It went through a couple of towns near us last week. The Other Half went. I stayed home and rearranged the linen closet because a boy's gotta have priorities.

The funny thing is, nothing has happened here wrt olympic planning that was anywhere near indian land, that didn't involve extensive consultation and where appropriate, payment for the bands involved.

Seeing the protests here, seems a bit of a mockery when compared with the protests about the Chinese torch relay, arising from their treatment of Tibet.
 
None. You had to prepay for the tickets, and that only got you into a lottery for them. Also, the prices now have gone through the roof for anything good. A ticket to the hockey final will now cost you in the thousands, if not tens of thousands of dollars.

I'll watch it on tv, or on the screens around town or in a bar. There are many many events taking place throughout the region. I'll do that instead of pay inflated prices for the actual event tickets.
That seems a shame. Will it be the same for London do you think? I was half arsedly thinking I should take the boys to see some event, even though I can't really think of one I'd be that into (high jump? throwing the heavy ball thing?). Probably live it would be quite fun. If it's gonna be an expensive lottery though then really fuck that.
 
That seems a shame. Will it be the same for London do you think? I was half arsedly thinking I should take the boys to see some event, even though I can't really think of one I'd be that into (high jump? throwing the heavy ball thing?). Probably live it would be quite fun. If it's gonna be an expensive lottery though then really fuck that.

It will probably be something similar. If you're interested, I'd suggest starting to look into it now.
 
When I saw the bump, I thought it going to be about Crazy Eddie.

The Olympic flame headed out of Winnipeg on Thursday, carried part of the way by an endearing resident of Great Britain who soared to fame at the 1988 Calgary Games.

Michael Edwards, better known as Eddie (the Eagle) Edwards, was a plasterer when he qualified as the sole British applicant for the ski-jump event 22 years ago.

Eddie (the Eagle) Edwards stopped at the CBC Winnipeg studio after participating in the Olympic flame relay on Thursday.Eddie (the Eagle) Edwards stopped at the CBC Winnipeg studio after participating in the Olympic flame relay on Thursday. (CBC)A self-funded, near-sighted athlete who wore fogged-up glasses during the Olympic competition, he placed last but endeared himself to people around the world.

Now 46, his legend lives on as evidenced by the cheers he received while carrying the torch just after 8 a.m. in Winnipeg, a short distance from where it started the day at the Minto Armouries on St. Matthews Avenue.

Edwards was invited by the Canadian Olympic Committee to return to the country where he made his mark and participate in the relay.

He said it was great to be back in Canada and although the torch relay wasn't quite the same as being in the Olympics 22 years ago, it was great to be part of the whole Olympic dream again.

link
 
Back
Top Bottom