Welcome to my world.

I'm SomeGuy, 29 years old, residing in Vancouver, BC, Canada. I've studied English Literature, Chinese Martial Arts, and am currently pursuing careers in writing - possibly even in the anime industry itself.

And I work for this site.

And you should be watching Beck: Mongolian Chop Squad.
Or watching Ranma 1/2.
Or learning about the Shinsengumi.
Or planning to visit Vancouver, The Best Place On Earth (actual marketing motto).

Here at the "Smallville" page, I have my personal blog where I'll post about anything and everything. If ya need me or otherwise need to know anything from/about me, here's where I'll be.

If you're really looking for my more professional, site-type stuff, you wanna head over my "Metropolis" world.

(Banner Design Courtesy of Red Tigress - thanks Red!)

Mid-Con Post: What I Learned Today . . .

I'm blogging this down so I don't forget later . . .

Rule one: keep your weapon pointed at your opponent.
Rule two: turn your body to the side to give a smaller target.
Rule three: lean your body away from your opponent.
Rule four: turn the true edge of your blade against the opponent's to move it aside.
Rule five: put the strong of your blade against the weak of theirs.
Rule six: Being on top is better.

Ahem . . .

. . . . . so yeah, I learned some basics of rapier combat yesterday. That was extremely fun. Thank you again, Academie Duello, for coming out to the con!

Pre-Convention Post

Day one is starting right now, more or less. Pre-reg night was a total success for the con' which was actually really surprising: registration lines were flying through, there were prizes handed out to keep people entertained in the lines, and the new convention center is MASSIVE. Considering last year's con' was about 5000 people, this is allowing for a very spacious setup so far.

Anyway, the big reason I wanted to post before we headed out . . . remember my post last year about that train-wreck of a Masquerade Ball?

Here's my post-ball post for this year:

Heya, it's the guy who called people liars when they said they "couldn't dance". It's about 1am, and I only got home about half an hour ago after helping clean up the last of the dance.

Before I say what I'm about to say, I first wanna refresh everyone's memories from last year and my first post after that:

http://animeevolution.net/index.php?topic=7323.msg268058#msg268058

Now that out of the way . . . . .

. . . I'm absolutely over the moon right now with how well things went. The music was good, the attendance was way more than we were expecting and, above all, people seemed to really be enjoying themselves. For children's charity, I also understood we made about $310 tonight (or a sum around there), which is never a bad thing.

For everyone who attended, my thanks go out to all of you for coming out and really affirming that people WANT this event at our con. I really couldn't be happier right now. I mean, I could be, but I'm not a perfectionist. As things are right now, this was amazing.

A huge thanks goes out to Peter and Carol, our dance instructors. I've done two different anime convention "masquerade dance lessons" now and learned a couple really interesting steps from both (well, one more interesting than the other). I was glad to learn 'em, but the straight up truth was that I absolutely didn't use those lessons later on when the actual masquerade got going. With Peter's box step and rumba step (I think it was?), not only was I using it quite a bit tonight, but I was seeing a lot of people using the steps tonight! That in itself really speaks for how good our lesson was (which I also loved for being so compact and concise). Thanks so much, Peter and Carol! Also, I need to say it was a total pleasure watching the two of you strut your stuff out there. T'was very inspirational.

Arka and Cruz, your music work was masterful now that you were left to your own devices without certain people pestering you. Also, the requests never seemed to bog you guys down, and the good music kept rolling along.

And then of course, Janet . . . the girl who STOPPED me from getting everyone to thank her at the end of the ball . . . you put together a hell of a ball. It was a bit of a last minute rush job, you sorta had all this responsibility dropped into your lap . . . and you pulled it off wonderfully. Mad props, and I'm pretty sad that we won't have you for next year. Hopefully you've inspired us for next year so we can keep it up. Also, you literally built a bridge for us. It doesn't get much more hardcore than that.

Another quick thanks to Doctor Konme who helped us build the bridge, and to Vyce for helping us out with the bag-as-prize. Always saving our butts.

So of course things could have been better. Next year we can hopefully get things prepared faster/sooner so we don't waste too much time, and that hopefully we can get the serious planning quicker. Decorations are always tricky, so those can be done better next year with more time to plan it out. Also, if I had known there'd be so many attendees, I'm sure we would have made more than 120 dance cards.

Going to the dance cards, I think the theory was better than our implementation. It still worked pretty well, but the "secret dancer" thingy could have been smoother. If anyone read Janet's post from earlier, you can see that we tried to get volunteers for this, but this ultimately fell through so we were left to pick people at random (and then we lost a couple pens in the process. Ah well). So hopefully with more time to lead up, we can get some volunteers all ready and willing to go.

One quick question for everyone who was there: how did you guys find the dance card games? Did they help people get around and ask each other to dance, or was it just an extra complication in the way of enjoying the ball for the sake of the ball? Like, I thought it went alright, but I do wanna know how you felt about it too.

But these are all easy fixes, mostly, so long we have people dedicated to keep this going. But we can worry about that later. For now, I'm just extremely, extremely pleased. You guys kick ass!

Thanks!

I'm not gonna take too much credit for this year, though I did inadvertently end up helping out a lot for this ball (for one thing, a LOT of the music selection - Peter totally dug my picks). But yeah.

I'm calling this a redemption year. It was awesome.

How Does He Find Time For It All?

Let's face it, I really don't have the time for it all.

Also, did I mention that there's a lion dance at 8am this morning too? At the same convention centre for a different event, no less?

Yeah, gonn' be a long day.

Bakudanyaki Banzai!

Holy crap! It's convention time starting tomorrow!!! How the hell?! Ahem. So, con-related . . . last weekend a bunch of us went out to UBC to do some cosplay photography. A couple of them did Valkyria Chronicles (which kicked ass ...

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266 and Rising . . .

Anyone wanna do Fan Words for me? It's almost convention time and I've been a little busy . . .

Also, yesterday was the anniversary of the D-Day landings. Ain't that something?

Edit: I may need to actually take this Fan words thing a little more seriously . . . perhaps I might talk to Adam about it a bit more . . . we'll see.