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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 3:39 am 
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Anyone want to share ideas or movies to watch?

Not sure if anyone here has read, I may have mentioned it, but I'm going to Rio on Thursday, part of the all out invasion with the CRT crew. Unfortunately, I'm starting at a 2 and a half hour flight to Miami and then something like 8 hours to Rio, coach style. I will be able to nap a bit, and I'm doing everything I can to be so tired with work and the gym the next few days that I should be able to get a few hours on the 835 pm flight that lands in Rio at 8am (3 hours ahead of east coast time). Of course that's if my connecting flight agrees.

So the topic I want to raise is... what the hell do you guys do to help get through these longer flights? I go insane sitting still and am used to watching Bloomberg TV with three crawls, just to help me sleep. I'm so used to sensory overload that the long flights are getting hard for me to deal with. If they only had wireless then i would bring my laptop and finish my last trip report...

So for this trip I recently started Greenspan's book so that will occupy maybe an hour or 90 minutes each way. But I'll be tired and won't feel like reading. Perhaps I'll get a good in flight film, and I'll jump all over that. My experience though is American Airlines international travel entertainment in the back of the plane is awful compared to other airlines. TAM was great in August, I returned from Buenos Aires on a direct flight and it sucked, worst and least comfortable flight ever. GOod thing I was so beat from 8 days of destruction. I will go for a lesson or two of Pimseleur Portuguese, potentially silent but whatever. I will try to download a George Carlin comedy show or something I haven't heard yet, that might get me a few minutes of distraction.

That leaves me with my new portable DVD player. It's pretty sweet, not expensive, black, swivels and has neat options. Also got lucky that the "case" for it is really soft and doubles as the ultimate airplane pillow. So i have that and two sets of headphones in case a hottie happens to be next to me (happened before, wound up sharing a cab home and dated her for a bit...).... but my problem is, I can't figure out what to watch. Maybe you guys can suggest some films or things I can rent/but to watch.

In a perfect world, I wouldn't have seen every episode of 24, because that is what I did for the longest time. But I'm all caught up. I've heard "The Wire" is worth the investment, having a hard time getting into it but I'm told I should push on. So i have Season One. Does anyone have a suggestions about films or TV shows? On my DVR I never miss House, Numb3rs (don't make fun of me, I already know I'm a math geek), and I like shows like Entourage. In terms of movies, I like drama and epic action movies, and underdog stories. Movies like Lord of the Rings, the Matrix, 300, Gladiator. etc, are easy for me to enjoy. My favorite film is 25th Hour. Last time I brought City of God, but have seen it so many times. I don't think I can sit there and watch a comedy show for hours because I need something more captivating. For Labor Day to CR I bought "Hero" (loved Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, and Absolutely loved House of Flying Daggers, must see that one), and I really liked The Last Samurai although it's a bit of a stretch that one of the samurai's was a 5 foot nothing Scientologist..., and I also watched Layer Cake. I wasn't really impressed with either film, but helped me along. I liked Snatch much better considering that "genre".

Lost... lost me as a viewer, it got too damn slow and screwy, but I've heard I should come back, so maybe that's an option, but I'm leaning toward no on that one.

Thought this would be a relevant topic with so many people traveling to CR and Rio for Thanksgiving.

And I know, you are all going to say knock back a few Jacks with a dash of diet and take an Ambien. Ambien didn't have much of an effect on me, I think it's mental, I feel like there is pressure to sleep and then it's an issue. In terms of drinking, my body is trained that drinking is followed by more drinking and partying and great amounts of release of emotion and fun. One drink and my heart races... I just can't undo that, so not an option. I would be chatty and want to go crazy on the box plane.

So... any suggestions?


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 8:40 am 
:o :o :o shave your balls in the bathroom :?: :?: :?: :?: :D :D


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 9:01 am 
PHD From Del Rey University!

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Ron,
I suggest Apocalypto. It's the newest Mel Gibson fair, granted it is subtitled because it is in mayan or old aztec or some sh*t like that. It's just a damn entertaining movie. It's pretty long as well. I have seen it 3 times, it's great on a flight. :D

Not to be confused with aPOCOlypto, part of the Pocoloco and Latinoheat gay series of movies :P :lol: :lol:

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 9:09 am 
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Ron I watched 300 on my laptop last trip in. It made the flight seem like 30 minutes.


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 9:20 am 
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RM, best flight I ever had was DFW to Paris a few years ago. Before leaving the house had couple of glasses of red wine and after check in 10 milligrams of valium. Fell asleep upon take off and woke up in Paris :)


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:25 am 
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On my trip to RIO in 2005 I took a generic Ambien. When we landed I couldn't remember eating dinner but I was pretty sure I did. I only slept for about 3 hours but it sure helped since the day consisted of getting settled in the Ipanema Towers, hitting the beach, dinner with 25 other CRT members then storming HELP until about 4AM.

Get as much rest as you can before you go because you won't get much once you arrive.

American Airlines entertainment for November:
http://www.aa.com/aa/i18nForward.do?p=/ ... vent=false

AA Movie guide:
http://www.spafax.com/american/index.ph ... &year=2007

I saw Goal II coming back from Medellin on Avianca. Not a bad flick.

AA Music guide:
http://www.spafax.com/american/index.php

AA Onboard Technology
http://www.aa.com/aa/i18nForward.do?p=/ ... nology.jsp

From another travel board:
Movies : The new brasilian bomb, "Tropa de Elite"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jeTL9hC ... ed&search=

The movie is a semi-fictional account of the Batalhao de Operaçoes Policiais Especiais of the Rio's PM. It is based on a book which was controversial in its description of the BOPE as a "killing machine".

It is the first fiction film of director José Padilha, who had previously directed Onibus 174.


From The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/14/world ... ref=slogin

"By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO
Published: October 14, 2007

RIO de JANEIRO, Oct. 13 — For Antônia Dalva de Souza, a new movie depicting the violent war between Rio’s drug gangs and an elite police military squad hit too close to home.

Douglas Engle for The New York Times

A badge bears BOPE’s symbol, a skull and crossed pistols.
Enlarge This Image
Douglas Engle for The New York Times

A member of the State Police Special Operations Battalion, known as BOPE, stood guard in the Parada de Lucas slum in Rio de Janeiro during an occupation in 2005 after eight kidnappings in which drug dealers were suspected.

Her hillside house, with its flimsy hollow brick walls, was riddled by police bullets this year. A round scar on her upper arm came from a bullet fired in a recent police crackdown, she said. Another stray bullet killed her 5-year-old daughter, Joyce, in 1995, as she lay beside her in bed. She suspects the police fired the shot.

“They come in firing,” Ms. de Souza, 32, said. “My K*ds crawl under the bed when the shooting begins.”

Residents of the Vila Cruzeiro slum here, one of the more violent in Rio, say they have been under siege for the past month from the black-clad, beret-wearing State Police Special Operations Battalion, better known as BOPE by Brazilians. Battalion members ride in on heavy armored vehicles bearing the force’s symbol, a skull and crossed pistols, or on foot, moving with frightening, catlike speed and efficiency.

Like seemingly every other Rio resident, Ms. de Souza has seen “Tropa de Elite,” or “Elite Squad,” a new Brazilian drama based on life inside BOPE, which is tasked with combating the city’s drug traffickers.

The movie, which opened nationwide on Friday but last week in Rio and São Paulo, has offered a rare look into the battalion, which is depicted as killing and torturing, seemingly at will. It is causing many Brazilians to reflect on what level of violence is acceptable from the police, especially in Rio, a city with a homicide rate more than six times higher than New York City’s.

In particular, torture is presented in the film as a near constant aspect of urban violence in Brazil, with police officers and traffickers competing to outdo each other on the brutality scale.

Even before it hit theaters, “Elite Squad” was already on its way to becoming one of Brazil’s biggest movies. A pirated DVD version was seen by nearly 11.5 million people, the polling organization Ibope said.

Efforts by the Rio police to keep the movie out of theaters failed. And on Thursday a police colonel in an internal affairs unit demanded that José Padilha, the director, appear for questioning on Monday. Mr. Padilha said Friday that it was part of a police effort to root out the officers who helped him make “Elite Squad.” Gov. Sérgio Cabral of Rio advised him to ignore the request. “The police are trying to persecute everybody that worked on this film,” Mr. Padilha said.

No film has caused such a stir here since “City of God,” an acclaimed 2002 look at Rio’s favelas, or slums, from the perspective of drug dealers. “Elite Squad” has made almost everyone who has seen it squirm, prompting, for example, a debate about whether hedonistic drug use by Rio’s rich and middle class is to blame for the city’s war.

The film traces the true story of Operation Holiness, the 1997 BOPE effort to exterminate a drug gang working in a favela near the home of Rio’s archbishop. BOPE was tasked with making the area safe for a brief visit by Pope John Paul II.

During the four-month operation, BOPE killed about 30 people and arrested 30, including the two drug kingpins, said Rodrigo Pimentel, a former BOPE officer who led the operation and co-wrote the book that inspired the movie. At least two bystanders were among the dead.

Back then, BOPE had about 120 members and was considered a haven for honest officers in Rio. The force has grown to more than 400 today, and its reputation for being incorruptible is fading.

But its reputation for brutality is almost indisputable. In a city fed up with violent crime, the movie’s fictional protagonist, Capt. Roberto Nascimento, has been lionized by many here for his ruthless, deadly style in taking on criminals.

It is not unlike the way Americans have grown to admire the fictional Agent Jack Bauer of the television series “24,” whose no-holds-barred style strikes a chord in a society on edge over terrorist threats. Both men are deeply troubled. Captain Nascimento, played by the actor Wagner Moura, suffers from wrenching panic attacks and struggles to separate his violent night world from his family life.

The captain and his men incessantly slap drug suspects and cover their heads with plastic bags until they spit blood. “Put it on the pope’s tab,” the captain says when a fellow squad member asks him whether to finish off a torture victim. It was a line BOPE members often said during the real operation, Mr. Pimentel said.

Reactions to the Nascimento character seem to have broken down along class lines. “He brings security to us rich and middle-class people,” said Aletea de Souza, a fitness trainer, after a showing on Sunday in Leblon, one of Rio’s wealthiest neighborhoods. “I wouldn’t say he’s a hero, but he’s a barrier, between the good and the bad.”

In Vila Cruzeiro that kind of attitude is breeding concern that the film glorifies BOPE. “This is a dangerous movie,” said Nanko G. van Buuren, who directs the Brazilian Institute of Innovations in Social Health, a nongovernmental organization in the favela. “The BOPE are torturing, and they are killing, and that is not O.K.” Ch*ldren in the favela wear black and playact torture sessions, placing plastic bags over the heads of friends, he said.

Mr. Padilha said the eye-for-an-eye reaction of many Brazilians surprised him. He said he set out to make a film denouncing violence and torture. Mr. Moura, the actor, said he thought it was “impossible that people in Finland or Sweden would see these police as heroes, police that torture and kill,” while many Brazilians clearly respect Captain Nascimento.

Mr. Pimentel, who resigned from BOPE in 1998 after six years, says the movie is arriving at a time of outrage among residents over violence in Rio. A particularly shocking case was the death in February of João Helio Fernandes, 6, who was dragged more than four miles by a seat belt after two teenagers stole his family’s car at gunpoint.

Mr. Pimentel said he became disillusioned with BOPE after Operation Holiness. “The police have forgotten their main mission,” he said. “We were not there to serve and protect. We were just fighting a private war against the drug traffickers.”

Mery Galanternick and Joshua Schneyer contributed reporting."


Last edited by Witling on Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:56 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:39 am 
PHD From Del Rey University!
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Ron

I highly recommend that you purchase the DVDs of the cancelled Fox television series, "Arrested Development." I didn't start watching this show until its final season and after a couple shows, I was hooked. IMO, it is simply one of the most clever, well written and biting sitcoms ever produced. Purchasing the first couple of seasons should get you there, and back. Just let them try to pull you off of that airplane mid episode!!


Ciaociao


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:39 am 
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A: Do whatever is necessary to fly business without paying the 5K... Miles, FF well in advance etc.. Not always possible but if at all costs what a difference it makes on those 8 hour flights...

B. Stop in the The lounge of your choice and drink a few of your favorite beverage... STOLI ANYONE

C. Have some wine on the plane

D. Drop a 10 MG Ambien (YES I KNOW DONT MIX ALCOHOL AND AMBIEN)

E. Dream of Bundhas and Helpe

F. Wake up in the land of Bundhas & Helpe Refreshed...

We are into Hours now... as I post this 82 HOURS TO GO!!!!!!!

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 12:20 pm 
PHD From Del Rey University!

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SC - Will check it out for sure... and not the "other" film you mentioned.

NYG - Saw 300 for the second time in August on my last flight to Rio, I was calling the immigration guy "Spartan" and I was ready to go to war with the garotas!!!!

HolaB... Let's see, that's 30 mg for me and 3 glasses of wine then? :D :D

Wit - Yeah, the movies don't look so great but seems like we might be getting Goal 2, I would be all over that...

CiaoCiao - I'll check it out...

Gman - 74 hours until I leave... it hurts so good... maybe I'll give the Ambien a shot again.


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 1:56 pm 
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I'm with G-man - business class makes all the difference in the world. That's what's been so awesome having all the miles on Taca now - I can barely remember the last time I flew coach.

I'm going to go the Ambien route and try to sleep as much as possible on the first leg - LAX to CR. Then try and mostly stay awake through CR to Lima, Lima to Sao Paulo, and Sao Paulo to Rio so I can crash hard when I get to Ipanema Towers around 9:30am Saturday, which will be 3:30am PST.

For in-flight entertainment, I've downloaded and burned to DVD a shitload of Reality Kings porn, including all the best of "Mike in Brazil". If I'm in first class in my own row, maybe I'll get ambitious and try to rub one out on the flight while my laptop battery holds out - otherwise, look out garotas!!! :twisted:

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 2:27 pm 
PHD From Del Rey University!

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I have gold status, working on Platinum and getting close. Next year will be easy with at least one Asia and one (gasp) Brazil work trip already planned for the first half of '08. In terms of upgrades, I don't have a ton of status or miles right now, cashed in a lot recently, any suggestions on how to try and play that game of begging? I also bought at a deep discount on this trip...

It's barely 40-something out right now.. ugh.. under 72 hours until departure...


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 2:56 pm 
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Miles... well if your an AA freak like me, Get a AA biz card and or Personal card you get like 20k just for having the cards....

If you have Citibank in your area and a Citibank checking account a CITI AA debit card will earn you 1 mile for two dollars too.

NOW CHARGE EVERYTHING just make sure you pay it off that will add up quickly even for non flyers...

Now: In advance book your Flights BIZ... 329 days for AA only 60K RT to Brazil when I booked or something like that cant beat the value here the kicker. its only $100.00 to redeposit the miles OR you have up to a year to use the ticket after your original departure or before if you want to change it with no charge. its an insurance policy if you absoultely know your going to a take a trip Internationally etc.

Last if your looking to gain miles and not get a free ticket.. its $250.00 each way plus miles to upgrade you pay more for the ticket and it costs you miles but you earn about 10K for your troubles as well...

AA is real easy to use miles, once you have them...

Less than 76 hours now!

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 4:12 pm 
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Mr. Medellin;
I would suggest popping a pill one you board the aircraft in Miami. And just sleep going down there. Last time I flew to Sao Paulo I decided to drink the whole time-- not the best way to arrive in Brasil, especially given you will need your stamina.


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2007 8:54 pm 
PHD From Del Rey University!

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My average flight was 19 hours - Las Vegas to Jakarta before I started coming to CR. I did it at least 6 times a year for awhile. I do not sleep the night before then pass out after take off. Good way to kill 8 hours.


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