Video: The Transformatorium: EXTENDED CUT

I’m a Transformers collector.  For quite a while now, people have been asking to see more than just photo’s of The Transformatorium, my specially built shed housing over 4000 Transformer figures!  But doing a quick few vids with a camera phone to post online didn’t seem like it would really do the scope of the shed justice.

So in conjunction with Able Media Productions, for the first time we have proper footage of The Transformatorium in all its glory, as well as questions about the shed answered by yours truly.

The following video is the extended cut with 12 extra minutes of footage, showing through my personal collection a history of Transformers toys going back nearly 40 years!

If that sounds like a little too much looking at toys for you, the shorter 7.30 minute version can be found here.

Did you like this behind the scenes look at my lifes work?  Then say something nice in the comments section below 🙂 

The Transformatorium – most popular FAQ’s

Video: THE TRANSFORMATORIUM!

 

 

 

Video: THE TRANSFORMATORIUM!

I’ve been collecting Transformers for nearly 40 years.  For quite a while now, people have been asking to see more than just photo’s of The Transformatorium, my specially built shed housing over 4000 Transformer figures!  But doing a quick few vids with a camera phone to post online didn’t seem like it would really do the scope of the shed justice.

A film 39 years in the making

So in conjunction with Able Media Productions, for the first time we have proper footage of The Transformatorium in all its glory, as well as questions about the shed answered by yours truly.

So strap in and enjoy!  And if you like this video and are a rabid Transformers fan, then you might also enjoy the extended cut with 12 extra minutes of toy shelf footage, showing figures spanning the last 39 years!

Did you like this behind the scenes look at my lifes work?  Then say something nice in the comments section below 🙂 

The Transformatorium – most popular FAQ’s

Video: The Transformatorium: EXTENDED CUT

 

Concert Review – Weird Al: Ill-Advised Vanity Tour

Weird Al is easily the most beloved comedic singer of all time.  One of only four artists in history that has managed to have a Top 40 hit four decades running (the others being U2, Michael Jackson & Madonna), his enduring popularity and relatively clean material means that adults and kids alike have been enjoying his music for nearly half a century!

Well, Weird Al has been touring once again with his self-deprecatingly titled show ‘The Ill-Advised Vanity Tour’ and luckily for residents of the land down under, this tour has included Australia.

My son is as big a Weird Al fan as I, so what better to be the first concert of a 10-year old than to see the funny man in person, which we did at the Enmore Theatre.

 

Originals – Yes, Parodies – No

Weird Al is best known for his parodies of other singers works, but chose to leave them out of this tour, instead focusing on his original songs (of which he has written over 90).  Whilst this was somewhat of a disappointment for those for whom songs like Fat or Foil are favourites, it meant that for many of us we were hearing some of his lesser known songs for the first time which was a treat indeed.

Still kickin it at 63

Despite the fact he looks much younger (he practices a level of clean living I could never attain) Weird Al is now in his mid sixties.  When first entering the stage he did a high kick that would make the most stringent Karate master proud… and then sat down.  For the rest of the show Weird Al and his band, also getting on in years, stayed seated with just some thrashing of the heads.  Whilst this took away somewhat from the spectacle of the show, it did not detract overall and Al’s voice has lost nothing over the years – he could still belt out the hardest rock with an intensity that would rip my vocal cords apart.  Lighting was used to excellent effect, adding some much needed visual appeal.

The Sound

Perhaps the one disappointment of the show.  Either side of the stage were huge walls of speakers.  Whether they were aging themselves so not as crisp sounding, or simply were cranked too high, the volume was such that there were a few songs where you simply couldn’t understand what Al was singing.  Hopefully this is something they can rectify for future shows.  The volume was that intense that at one point I could feel myself getting a headache and my son was covering his ears with his hands, despite us being a full 20 rows back from the stage.

Live Show Review: An Evening With Henry Rollins

Bringing down the house!

Despite these few quibbles, the last 3rd of the show really kicked buttock!  Al finished off his main set with an even longer version of ‘Albuquerque’, a song of his that I had never cared for but that night had me in hysterics!  This was followed by a most surprising encore: first Weird Al sang Paul Simon’s ‘You can call me Al’ – and no it wasn’t a parody, he just sang the song.  It would be the first time in 40 years I’ve heard Weird Al sing a straight cover of another performers song and he did it quite well.

This was followed by a huge pastiche of bits of Al’s own parody songs (such as Amish Paradise) along with snippets of other songs like ‘The Lion Sleeps Tonight’ – garnering him and his band a standing ovation from an appreciative crowd.

 

Other attendee’s reactions:

David from Sydney

It’s always a massive joy to see one of your favourite performers live, and it’s even more enjoyable when they surprise you! A really unusual selection of songs and bits of banter that reminded us all that Al has a hugely wide range, and just doing parodies isn’t his jam. sometimes you need to play a full set of your own weird idiosyncratic numbers that some folks may not know as well. but still showcase the bizarre brain of the man himself…  The Pre-show set of Emo Phillips was a weird throwback to an older style of comedy that is both timeless and at the same time strangely dated.  It therfore felt even weirder when making up to the minute gags about Russia and American foreign policy along side “kill my wife” that could have been from the 60s, 80s or 90s….  

It was a great show, but the band and Al himself are definitely showing their age.  A little less running around the stage, a little more 3 guys on stools playing great technically brilliant music.

I would have been happy to have seen any show, but “funny feeling you don’t love me anymore” is one of my all-time faves so it made me very happy that i got that one on my night. Oh and the dada-ist poem and rhythmic chanting in the end was a piece of pure magic!

 

Orion from Rural NSW

It was a really good concert, Weird Al sang ‘Albuquerque’ really well.  I liked how he would say every berry donut they probably ever made in it. He mixed up lots of his parody choruses in one bit for the encore.

 

Jamie from Sydney

Weird Al Yankovic was such a joy to see in person! Performing at his very weirdest, he put on a show that included such dubious classics as “Dare to Be Stupid”, “Don’t Download This Song” and “The Biggest Ball of Twine in Minnesota”. Demonstrating his phenomenal range, he performed some of his songs in different styles, including a Reggae cover of Word Crimes. Friends of mine went to the show the next night and got a completely different set – I know I’ll be buying tickets for both nights if I’m lucky enough to see him again!

 

Aaron from Perth

I think the show itself was pretty dang great. Biases aside Al is still extremely funny, and he and his band legitimately rock on stage. Admittedly the sound system wasn’t the best so during many of the songs it was difficult to understand any of the lyrics, which could hurt the enjoyment of any songs that I or other audience members aren’t intimately familiar with.

That said, the songs I didn’t know I enjoyed which was only a few, and he also played a few of my all time favourites of his (including a style altered version of my absolute childhood favourite). And the finale was a mind bending spectacle I couldn’t have seen coming.

Less to do with the show itself, but I did find the audience a tad underwhelming, it seemed barely anyone was reacting most of the time in contract to my family and I headbanging along with Sue for instance (and that’s not to mention the one guy that wouldn’t stop yelling “Albuquerque”).

All in all, a fun experience that my family and I loved.

 

Brendan from Sydney

Finally after being a fan of his for so long, I got the chance to see him in concert. And it was no disappointment. A great artist with alot of music out there, parodies and his own. Both are great.

 

Did you see Weird Al live in concert?  What did you think?  Feel free to pop your thoughts in the comments section below!

Burger Review #8 – Paddy O’Burgs

What does one associate with the St Patricks Day?  Parades, wearing green, shamrocks, having a Guinness – the usual stereotypes.

But nowadays it seems any company will use the most tenuous of links to ride St’Paddys coattails in order to make a sale.

With that in mind, lets have a look at, from Loaded by BL – the Paddy O’Burgs Burger.

Now, the above description sounds kinda nice.  The choice to use American Cheese was an odd one, considering how many awesome cheeses there are to choose from from Europe where Ireland is situated, but the Guinness Braised Brisket, Irish Whiskey BBQ Sauce and Smashed Potato’s are all on point, making this sound both Irish themed and pretty damn tasty.

Then there is the bun  Oh the bun.:

‘It’s not easy being  green’

Oh that is a sickly green!  That’s the kinda green you see on the face of someone that has just eaten a very bad burger! That is not a green that should be seen outside of a child’s pencil case.  But one must confess that no green buns, no matter the shade, were going to look scrummy, so one can’t judge too much I guess.

Was this burger bad?  Well, it t’wernt great, I’ll tell ya that.  The taste was average to say the least, you didn’t feel like spitting it out but nor did you hunger to take another big bite.

The main problem was this was stew in burger form.  Yes Irish Stew is yummy, but not between two buns!  Everything about this burger was overdone to the extreme.  The brisket had been braised that long it could barely hold onto to its molecular structure, the smashed potatoes were too smashed – obliterated more like, the cheese was a melted mess and the Irish Whiskey BBQ sauce was barely thicker than just straight whiskey.

All this combined meant that the moment you bit into the burger a tidalwave of slush vomited out the other side to land with a sickening splat and you felt liquid running down your chin.  If you wanted to eat what had escaped the buns, a straw would have been more useful than a fork.

Burger Review #6: The E-I-E-I-O Burger

So should you get this burger? No, if this chain offers the same burger next St Patricks Day then avoid it.  The contents of a burger should not have the same colour and viscosity of what you see people evacuating in a back alley after 20 pints at an Irish Pub.

 

Burger Review #1: Big Angry Trev vs Australia’s Hottest Hamburger!