February 03, 2011
This is the botnet entry to the Greatest Random Album Cover of All Time contest:
Alameda? As a band name, it seems almost plausible. Sure as shit it's a far cry from my actual IRL band name "The Mainview Harmony Sisters". Myself on Harmonica/Mandolin, Crazy Nancy on accordion, and Cranky Kathy as the dancer.
Mainview Apartments is the subsidized housing for crazy/infirm where Nancy lived at the time.
The band was hot.
--From LC Aggie Sith:
"A few days ago, Mel over at Big Fat Nerve threw yet another gauntlet at her gullible readers. The challenge: to come up with a band name, album title, and cover art using various websites."
1 – Go to Wikipedia and hit random. The first random Wikipedia article you get is the name of your band.
2 – Go to quotationspage.com and hit random. The last four or five words
of the very last quote of the page is the title of your first album.
3 – Go to Flickr and click on “explore the last seven daysâ€. Third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover.
4 – Use Photoshop or similar (picnik.com is a free online photo editor) to put it all together.
5 – Post it on your blog along with these instructions, and trackback or link to your post in these comments.
Have fun!!
h/t: LC Aggie Sith at Hookers and Booze
Posted by: the botnet at
10:30 PM
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Post contains 238 words, total size 2 kb.
Posted by: mel at February 06, 2011 09:28 AM (BqOMI)
Posted by: LC Aggie Sith at February 11, 2011 12:51 PM (+bSoE)
With greatly expanded global fresh water distribution, arid lands could be cultivated resulting in a huge abundance of global food supplies. The most conservative estimate is that with the construction of the Trans Global Highway, the planet will be able to feed several billion more people, using presently available modern farming technologies. With the present global population of just under 7 billion people and at the United Nations projection of population increase, the world will produce enough food surpluses to feed the expected increased population for several hundred years.
Thomas Robert Malthus's famous dire food shortage predictions of 1798 failed to take into consideration modern advances in farming, transportation, food storage and food abundance. Further information on the proposed Trans Global Highway can be found at www.TransGlobalHighway.com .
Posted by: guest at March 09, 2011 03:53 AM (rW/YM)
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