I am dry, bubbly, and excitable.
My Self-Summary
I like to converse about things. Opinions? Politics is fun.
Religion a bit stickier topic, but if you're game...I like to be
challenged. If you have an opinion, let's argue it.
I'm a mass of contraditions. That's what makes like fun, right? I
can be outgoing, yet bashful, a clown, yet dour, lovable, yet
intimidating. At work I'm a neat freak and but my bedroom is a bomb
site. Keeps things interesting. Mixes it up. I take a while to warm
to people. You get the ball rolling and I'll keep it in play.
You like computers? So do I! Anything technie and I'm facinated.
I'm not that ignorant either. Try me.
What I’m doing with my life
Postgraduate Law. I finally finished my Media degree, after winning
a place in the degree uni and they said "oh by the way, the
industry you want to get into...it'll be dead in ten years". I also
work part time in retail. I find that customer service skills are
quite underrated. People tend to talk down their first jobs, but
really, if you don't know how to treat customers in a retail store
with interest and respect, how are you going to go with a million
dollar client?
I’m really good at
computers. I like building them, playing on them, talking about
them.
The first things people usually notice about me
Curly hair maybe?
My favorite books, movies, music, and food
Chinese and Thai food. But I don't go for seafood, in any shape or
form.
I like Comedies, but particually satirical movies. There's more
satire on TV I know because Australians do it best...the Hollowmen
is the most recent best example. Frontline rocked. Backberner was
okay. The Britts know what they're doing, they did coin The Office.
They also had Absolute Power and (still have) Dead Ringers.
The six things I could never do without
A computer, the internet, my cat, a source of heating/cooling,
chocolate, my handbag
I spend a lot of time thinking about
Copyright law, particually in relation to movies and video. How are
governments going to impose it on a society, or will it again
become another victimless crime that is unenforcible (given that
duplication of data means no net loss for a company in terms of
product, just in terms of potential profit from the sale of that
data. But would the person have purchased the product in the first
place)? I also wonder about the future of regioning in Australia,
after the Sony Kabuski Kaisha v Stevens High Court ruling.
You should message me if
You enjoy intellectual conversation. You'd like to speak to someone
who's straight up. You like to eat interesting food, don't mind
spicy. You have something to say about copyright law and regioning
laws and their long term effects globally. You don't quite fit the
above criteria but get a good feeling from my profile.