JapaDog and Omegle random chat
You: I just lost the game...
You: frothy feather fingers?
You: pink linen door hinge?
You: corn crossbow juniper berries?
You: frog bunny lizard...
You: do the bartman?
You: jungle gym sweeper kick?
You: vote for pedro?
You: goat
You: omegle is broken hearted?
Stranger: hi! what are you talking about?
You: I lost again!
Vancouver Art Gallery on Robson
Rules:
1. "Don't talk about [Pillow] Fight Club!" (especially to news media and civic authories)
2. Don't be in location until the exact minute. (set your watches)
3. Hide your pillows.
4. Rush in screaming "PILLOW FIIIIIIGHT!!!!!"
5. After 15mins of excruciating fun, leave.
6. Stay off the road and sidewalk. (don't make this a police issue)
7. Do NOT hit anyone with out a pillow! (this includes but is not limited to people with cameras, bystanders, civic authorities, cars, use common sense!!)
8. "If this is your first [time] at [Pillow] Fight Club, you have to fight"
Interview...
The C-Word at the Playwrights Theatre Centre on Granville Island
"The 'C' word, in our case, stands for commitment, which is the source of great conflict," says Tuck of the play's themes. "The fear of loneliness makes people settle for comfort and control, and creates great big lies out of little fibs."
In The C-Word's familiar Metro Vancouver social landscape, Pal Prasad (Raahul Singh) is a professional love guru trying a little too hard to practice what he preaches, while his money-honey Ashley Hennessey (Sheryl Thompson) pays lip service to open relationships and wonders if this is as good as it gets. Steve Chung (Fane Tse) is tired of lubing up to stick with it, and his fiancée Kelly Cho (Grace Chin) will do anything to avoid getting hitched. Complicating the choices are Kelly’s opinionated parents and her feminist best friend Akesh Gill (Preet Cheema), as The C-Word presents clashing social, generational and cultural perspectives on doing the Right Thing.