Onkel Neal
06-19-07, 10:19 PM
Yeah, I could see one of these every year. (http://youtube.com/watch?v=5IfRb-sWuDk&mode=related&search=)
Yippe kai-yay..... (http://youtube.com/watch?v=R5in09EwYV0)
Life Lesson #1 - Yes, on the surface, coming out to the coast, getting together, and having a few laughs sounds great, but it's a horrible, horrible way to spend Christmas.
Life Lesson #2 - Outside of the comfort of your own home, never, ever take off your shoes.
Life Lesson #3 - African Americans are your friends.
If you ever find yourself in a life-or-death situation in the multi-ethnic world of a Die Hard movie, be sure to keep your eyes open for the helpful black guy. Yes, John McClane might look like the kind of goofy white guy who likes to pull out his harmonica and try to jam with the band at blues bars, but that didn't stop Reginald VelJohnson as Sgt. Al Powell or De'voreaux White as Argyle from pulling his white-ass out of the fire in the original Die Hard. There's no way McClane could've gotten around the airport so quickly in DH2 without the help of Art Evans as Barnes, and do we even need to get into the eight kinds of awesomeness Samuel L. Jackson brought to the role of Zeus in Die Hard with a Vengeance? OK, there was the nerdy black hacker guy in DH1 and Good Times' John Amos almost did con McClane in Die Harder, but still, half of McClane's pension should totally go to the NAACP.
Life Lesson #4 - That guy you just killed? He's not dead. Honestly. Go check. Poke him with a stick or something. You'll thank us later.
Life Lesson #5 - Don't worry if you get shot in the shoulder. Yes, you'll wince and it'll look awful, but it won't impede your ability to run, jump, or kick some bad-guy ass in the slightest. In fact, you'll probably just forget about it altogether.
Life Lesson #6 - If you find yourself waging a one-man war against an army of terrorists, here's a quick checklist of all the items you'll need to have to succeed:
Cigarettes, lighter (not for the cigarettes, mostly just for blowing stuff up), gun, walkie-talkie, gruff New Jersey sense of humor, shoes (very important), stain-resistant wife-beater tank-top, ironic hangover, inability to stop kicking ass, Reginald VelJohnson's home phone number.
Life Lesson #7 - Family always comes first.
John McClane has learned this lesson the hard way on multiple occasions, so please learn from his example. If you ever find yourself trapped in an office building with armed gunmen, if you find a dead body in an airport on Christmas Eve, or if you get caught up trying to stop techno-terrorists from destroying America, stop everything you're doing, call all of your relatives, and tell them to run. It doesn't matter where, but any or all family or friends (estranged wives, children, pets, etc) need to be as far away from you as possible. Because, trust us, in these sorts of situations, your closest family members practically start releasing pheromones that only terrorists can smell, a strange, desperate hormone that screams, "Please kidnap me and use me as leverage! I'd be such an ever-so-good hostage."
Life Lesson #8 - If you ever encounter someone with an Eastern European accent, shoot them in the neck immediately. There's a 54% chance they're a bad guy.
Life Lesson #9 - Back-waxing is a painful, though necessary evil when you're a card-carrying terrorist-thwarter. A silky, smooth posterior is always an asset if you're going to be squeezing through an air vent or taping a glock to your back.
Life Lesson #10 - It never hurts to engage your enemy in pleasant conversation.
This is a classic McClane-ism. At the end of Die Hard, while Hans Gruber presses a gun into Holly McClane's temple, John had the foresight to try and make small talk with Hans, pleasantly noting that the terrorist would've made a good cowboy. This engaged Hans in the conversation, his guard went down, and BOOM! Shot through the head, falls out the window, and the FX guys win an Oscar. McClane used this same tactic at the end of Die Hard with a Vengeance, offering uber-baddie Simon a quick smile and quipping about his bad headache. He drew Simon into the conversation with a universal observation, Simon responded, offering McClane some aspirin, and BOOM! The aspirin led them right to Simon's secret lair and he gets blown up in a helicopter. Leave it to John McClane to turn small talk into a deadly weapon.
Life Lesson #11 - Save your A-list material for the climax.
Aside from all of the getting shot in the shoulder and running over broken glass, the hardest thing about being a professional bad-ass like John McClane is keeping your wisecracks fresh. Some rogue cops who won't take no for an answer go their whole lives without coming up with something as good as "Yippee-ki-yay, mother****er", so you can't keep trotting it out every time you kill a faceless henchman. You hold it back, making the audience want it, and then toss it like a grenade right before you kill your arch-nemesis or at least blow something up. But don't worry - everyone knows that it takes a million underwhelming "Just the fax, ma'am"s and "take THIS under advisement, jerkweed"s until a truly great one-liner is born.
Life Lesson #12 - If you ever see William Atherton, shoot him in the neck immediately. This lesson also applies if you're a genius grad student working on a space laser, a Ghostbuster, or are stuck in a bio-dome.
Life Lesson #13 - Terrorists are a lot like annoying girlfriends who never admit what they really want. If they say they want to free political prisoners, they're really breaking into a vault. If they're blowing up parts of New York, they're really trying to steal some gold. Be sure to let the terrorist know that you're not a mind-reader and that you're committed to improving your inter-communication skills. And then shoot them.
Life Lesson #14 - While "Ho, ho, ho, now I have a machine gun" is a hilarious way to annoy the heck out of the terrorists who are ruining your Christmas Eve, it is a totally inappropriate sentiment to share in your annual holiday letter. Grammie will not be amused.
Life Lesson #15 - Did we mention how important shoes are? Because it takes a long damn time to pull ten million shards of jagged, blood-soaked glass out of both of your feet.
Source: IGN (http://www.ugo.com/ugo/html/article/?id=17419§ionId=2)
Yippe kai-yay..... (http://youtube.com/watch?v=R5in09EwYV0)
Life Lesson #1 - Yes, on the surface, coming out to the coast, getting together, and having a few laughs sounds great, but it's a horrible, horrible way to spend Christmas.
Life Lesson #2 - Outside of the comfort of your own home, never, ever take off your shoes.
Life Lesson #3 - African Americans are your friends.
If you ever find yourself in a life-or-death situation in the multi-ethnic world of a Die Hard movie, be sure to keep your eyes open for the helpful black guy. Yes, John McClane might look like the kind of goofy white guy who likes to pull out his harmonica and try to jam with the band at blues bars, but that didn't stop Reginald VelJohnson as Sgt. Al Powell or De'voreaux White as Argyle from pulling his white-ass out of the fire in the original Die Hard. There's no way McClane could've gotten around the airport so quickly in DH2 without the help of Art Evans as Barnes, and do we even need to get into the eight kinds of awesomeness Samuel L. Jackson brought to the role of Zeus in Die Hard with a Vengeance? OK, there was the nerdy black hacker guy in DH1 and Good Times' John Amos almost did con McClane in Die Harder, but still, half of McClane's pension should totally go to the NAACP.
Life Lesson #4 - That guy you just killed? He's not dead. Honestly. Go check. Poke him with a stick or something. You'll thank us later.
Life Lesson #5 - Don't worry if you get shot in the shoulder. Yes, you'll wince and it'll look awful, but it won't impede your ability to run, jump, or kick some bad-guy ass in the slightest. In fact, you'll probably just forget about it altogether.
Life Lesson #6 - If you find yourself waging a one-man war against an army of terrorists, here's a quick checklist of all the items you'll need to have to succeed:
Cigarettes, lighter (not for the cigarettes, mostly just for blowing stuff up), gun, walkie-talkie, gruff New Jersey sense of humor, shoes (very important), stain-resistant wife-beater tank-top, ironic hangover, inability to stop kicking ass, Reginald VelJohnson's home phone number.
Life Lesson #7 - Family always comes first.
John McClane has learned this lesson the hard way on multiple occasions, so please learn from his example. If you ever find yourself trapped in an office building with armed gunmen, if you find a dead body in an airport on Christmas Eve, or if you get caught up trying to stop techno-terrorists from destroying America, stop everything you're doing, call all of your relatives, and tell them to run. It doesn't matter where, but any or all family or friends (estranged wives, children, pets, etc) need to be as far away from you as possible. Because, trust us, in these sorts of situations, your closest family members practically start releasing pheromones that only terrorists can smell, a strange, desperate hormone that screams, "Please kidnap me and use me as leverage! I'd be such an ever-so-good hostage."
Life Lesson #8 - If you ever encounter someone with an Eastern European accent, shoot them in the neck immediately. There's a 54% chance they're a bad guy.
Life Lesson #9 - Back-waxing is a painful, though necessary evil when you're a card-carrying terrorist-thwarter. A silky, smooth posterior is always an asset if you're going to be squeezing through an air vent or taping a glock to your back.
Life Lesson #10 - It never hurts to engage your enemy in pleasant conversation.
This is a classic McClane-ism. At the end of Die Hard, while Hans Gruber presses a gun into Holly McClane's temple, John had the foresight to try and make small talk with Hans, pleasantly noting that the terrorist would've made a good cowboy. This engaged Hans in the conversation, his guard went down, and BOOM! Shot through the head, falls out the window, and the FX guys win an Oscar. McClane used this same tactic at the end of Die Hard with a Vengeance, offering uber-baddie Simon a quick smile and quipping about his bad headache. He drew Simon into the conversation with a universal observation, Simon responded, offering McClane some aspirin, and BOOM! The aspirin led them right to Simon's secret lair and he gets blown up in a helicopter. Leave it to John McClane to turn small talk into a deadly weapon.
Life Lesson #11 - Save your A-list material for the climax.
Aside from all of the getting shot in the shoulder and running over broken glass, the hardest thing about being a professional bad-ass like John McClane is keeping your wisecracks fresh. Some rogue cops who won't take no for an answer go their whole lives without coming up with something as good as "Yippee-ki-yay, mother****er", so you can't keep trotting it out every time you kill a faceless henchman. You hold it back, making the audience want it, and then toss it like a grenade right before you kill your arch-nemesis or at least blow something up. But don't worry - everyone knows that it takes a million underwhelming "Just the fax, ma'am"s and "take THIS under advisement, jerkweed"s until a truly great one-liner is born.
Life Lesson #12 - If you ever see William Atherton, shoot him in the neck immediately. This lesson also applies if you're a genius grad student working on a space laser, a Ghostbuster, or are stuck in a bio-dome.
Life Lesson #13 - Terrorists are a lot like annoying girlfriends who never admit what they really want. If they say they want to free political prisoners, they're really breaking into a vault. If they're blowing up parts of New York, they're really trying to steal some gold. Be sure to let the terrorist know that you're not a mind-reader and that you're committed to improving your inter-communication skills. And then shoot them.
Life Lesson #14 - While "Ho, ho, ho, now I have a machine gun" is a hilarious way to annoy the heck out of the terrorists who are ruining your Christmas Eve, it is a totally inappropriate sentiment to share in your annual holiday letter. Grammie will not be amused.
Life Lesson #15 - Did we mention how important shoes are? Because it takes a long damn time to pull ten million shards of jagged, blood-soaked glass out of both of your feet.
Source: IGN (http://www.ugo.com/ugo/html/article/?id=17419§ionId=2)