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I admit - I'm not a big fan of anime. Not that I hate it or anything, it just seems like the kind of thing you either get into 100 percent or don't bother at all. Like WOW (that's World of Warcraft, for all you people with lives) or Star Wars convention groupie, there's no dabbling in Japanese cartoons, which I stopped paying attention to after Speed Racer (the TV show, not the movie).

That said, there are people out there who love them some anime. And for those people, Miami.com is giving away tickets to this weekend's Anime Supercon at the Downtown Miami Hilton. Come in costume (or not) and meet celebs like Oscar nominee Chris Sarandon (star of The Nightmare Before Christmas, The Princess Bride, Kingdom Hearts and Nausicca of the Valley of the Wind), voice actors from Adult Swim's Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Naruto, Robotech, the Halo video games and more.

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CONTEST!

THIS CONTEST IS CLOSED, I'M OFF TO START MY WEEKEND. CONGRATS TO OUR WINNERS! YOU'LL BE RECEIVING YOUR EVITE SHORTLY:

reefgoddess
SC5
STONNYRAMM
Joseph Q86
cleolettry
gsabrin22
srliss1

Whenever I hear the term "masquerade ball," I immediately picture that scene in Eyes Wide Shut where Tom Cruise goes to that Gatsby-esque Skull & Bones party and everyone wears a mask and gets their orgy on.

I can't guarantee Miami.com's Halloween Masquerade Ball on Thursday, October 30, at Casa Casuarina is going to turn into a swinger's club, but I can guarantee Tom Cruise won't be there. So that's a plus. I can also guarantee there will be complimentary cocktails, and you don't even have to wear a costume, as we'll provide you with a snazzy mask. And since it's at the mansion formerly known as Versace, you'll feel tres classy.

So, how do you get into such an exclusive partay? Easy: Start reviewing stuff. The users who leave the most reviews from now until Friday get themselves and a guest on the oh-so exclusive list. And I'm not just saying "exclusive" because I want you to feel special (not that you aren't). We can really only invite a certain number of people. So get on Miami.com, leave some reviews - you eat, party, leave your house every few days or so, right? - and in a few days you could get an invitation to our ball. That's right, it's a straight-up BALL.

Sure beats hanging out with Tom Cruise.

-- miaeditor

Holla if you love Halloween

In the, um, spirit, of Halloween, all my blog posts from now until Oct. 30 will, in some way or another, celebrate the holiday that lets me do two of my favorite things -- eat chocolate and wear sequins without scrutiny. But since it's Friday and I don't really feel like thinking all that much (except about the drinking I'll be doing later), I'd like to share with you an exerpt from one of my favorite essays: "The Littlest Hitler" by Ryan Boudinot:

Then there's the time I went as Hitler for Halloween. I had gotten the idea after watching World War II week on PBS, but my dad helped me make the costume. I wore tan polyester pants and one of my dad's khaki shirts, with sleeves so long they dragged on the floor unless I rolled them up. With some paints left over from when we made the pinewood derby car for YMCA Indian Guides, he painted a black swastika in a white circle on a red bandanna and tied it around my left arm. Using the Dippity-Doo he put in his hair every morning, he gave my own hair that plastered, parted style that had made Hitler look like he was always sweating. We clipped the sides off a fifty-cent mustache and adhered it to my upper lip with liquid latex. I tucked my pants into the black rubber boots I had to wear whenever I played outside and stood in front of the mirror. My dad laughed and said, "I guarantee it, Davy. You're going to be the scariest kid in fourth grade."

My school had discouraged trick-or-treating since the razor blade and thumbtack incidents of 1982. Instead, they held a Harvest Carnival, not officially called "Halloween" so as not to upset the churchy types. Everyone at school knew the carnival was for wimps. All week before Halloween the kids had been separating themselves into two camps, those who got to go trick-or-treating, and those who didn't. My dad was going to take me to the carnival, since I, like everybody else, secretly wanted to go. Then we'd go trick-or-treating afterward.

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Play Ball!

Things I've learned about while watching baseball playoffs:

Erectile Dysfunction
It's rampant, apparently, among the baseball-watching demographic. I saw so many Little Blue Pill (apparently the "V" word is banned from this site) commercials I now know all the words to the theme song ("Viva V-word!"), which has been stuck in my head for going on five days. I also now know the difference between the LBP and Cee-alis (the former is taken on an "as needed" basis, the latter every day), that ED doesn't discriminate based on age or race and that sitting in two separate claw-foot bathtubs on a beach is good foreplay. Questions these commercials didn't answer for me, though: are men actually aroused when they take it, or does it just deal with the mechanics? If so, does that mean their lady friends don't ever have to invest in another pair of impractical underwear? Why would anyone want an erection for three hours? How did they get those bathtubs onto the beach?

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TICKET GIVEAWAY!

THIS CONTEST IS CLOSED

If you've bought tickets to a concert lately through Ticketmaster, you know that a $20 ticket ends up being the price of a Bentley. Shame on you, Ticketmaster. We thought you were our friend. Know who really IS your friend? Well, us, of course, but also the Rhythm Foundation. They're the organization that brings us obscure (at least to Americans) bands/musicians from some country you've probably never been to and makes you fall in love with them and buy every one of their CDs and then have a party just so you can play all those CDs and then your friends are all, "I love this band, who is it?" And you're all, oh, what, you didn't go to their concert here last week?

Bajofondo

If a band plays in Urban Outfitters but nobody hears, does it make a sound?

What do you do when it's supposed to rain on a Sunday? Go to a movie, of course. What do you do when it's supposed to rain but turns out to actually be sunny but therefore really, unbearably hot? Go to the movies, of course. I'll jump at any chance to treat my albino skin to a dark cave. And be lazy. So, yeah, hooray movie.

So last Sunday my beaux and I decided to pretend we were 16 and go see Nick and Nora's Infinite Playlist. Think Go meets High Fidelity. I'm a sucker for teen movies (even more so if they involve teens dancing), as teen movies always portray the kind of teen experience I never had. I was never conflicted between hanging with the "odd" kids who I actually liked and the popular kids who would take me to college parties. I never got into a prestigious performing arts school and pushed the envelope with my street-honed dance skillz. And I never went on all-night escapades that involved going into the "big city," jumping from cool dingy bar to cool dingy bar and ending up in a hip diner at 5 a.m.

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Festivus for the Restivus

Though "the season" is officially here in Miami (determined by a very scientific formula - counting the party invitations in my mailbox), one area of entertainment still (and will probably always) remains more emaciated than Polina on the Janice Dickinson Modeling Agency. (Empty carrot cake box under the bed? I've seen that made-for-tv bulimia movie starring Calista Flockhart - you're not fooling anyone, Polina.) The JDMA, btw, is a great show to watch at the gym. But I digress.

We've got art (Basel), we've got fashion (Funkshion), dance (the MCB) and whatever's on the Arsht sched this season - some classical music, a few operas, a little Broadway, yadda yadda. But when it comes to music - as in bands one stands up in a mid-size concert venue to listen to - Miami is seriously lacking. This isn't a tune (pun not so much intended but maybe a little) I haven't sung before. Over and over and over and over. But it always comes up again when I go out of town to see a band - and to see most of my favorite bands, that's what I have to do - or, in the case of last weekend, more bands in a few days than I get to see all year here.

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Scary Contest!

THIS CONTEST IS CLOSED

I've never been a fan of scary things.

The scary movies I'm forced (or tricked) into watching I "watch" with my eyes discreetly cast to the floor. When I sense a something about to jump out, I conveniently notice that my shoe has come untied, or the Icee needs a good stir. I have no desire to feel a dead loved one's "presence" (or any dead person for that matter), mysterious "cold spots" in a room are the cause of badly placed vents and I don't think haunted houses are "fun." It's not so much that seeing a guy with a chainsaw makes me jump. It's the guy with a chainsaw suddenly turning it on behind me. I don't like being startled. I don't jump, scream and then laugh at my silliness. I get anxious and then pissed. I also don't like being touched by strangers (on all levels). I don't like it when the person behind me in the movie line is right on my butt, and so same goes for a zombie. I covet my personal space. Violate it and I get cranky.

That said, I understand that for many people, haunted houses are an enjoyable experience. So for those of you who enjoy a good scare, Miami.com is giving away passes to Nightmare: Ghost Stories, a new haunted house at Wynwood's SoHo Studios. It's an import from NYC, and they're all cutting edge, so it must be pretty good. The first 5 who reply to this blog post with "Scare my pants off, Miami.com!" get 2 VIP passes. The next 10 who do so get regular passes, which just means you don't get to go in the "express line." But really, half the fun is the anticipation.

Or so I've been told.

-- miaeditor

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Reunited and it feels so good

This weekend I went to St. Louis for the wedding of one of my good friends from college. Now, I'm not one for organized reunions. I didn't go to my 10-year high school, nor will I go to my 20 or anything after that. It's not that I was particularly anti-social during that period of my life. It's just that sites like Facebook have made it possible for me to keep in touch with everyone I want to keep in touch with from that time. There is no one that I think, "Hmm, I wonder where so-and-so is these days..." Except maybe this one girl we nicknamed Salad Shooter after an "intimate" experience with some vegetables. But that would just be out of curiosity (Hole cover band? Kindergarten teacher?), not genuine interest in her life. Same with the mysterious cowboy boot-wearing James in my Spanish class who told me to use "Paint It Black" for a retarded English assignment for which we had to analyze a song (which is what happens when your teachers grew up in the '60s).

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Screenings for the Week of September 22-September 28

By Kevin Craft

Miami Beach Cinematheque: 512 Espanola Way, Miami Beach; 305-673-4567. Tickets for non-members are $10; $7 for members and students.
Monday, September 22: Man of Two Havanas at 8 pm; director Vivien Lesnik Weisman will host a Q&A after the screening.
Tuesday, September 23: Man of Two Havanas at 8 pm; director Vivien Lesnik Weisman will host a Q&A after the screening.
Wednesday, September 24: Man of Two Havanas at 8 pm.
Thursday, September 25: Sometimes a Great Notion directed by Paul Newman at 8:30 pm.
Friday, September 26: Monsieur Verdoux directed by Charlie Chaplin 8:30 pm.
Saturday, September 27: Monsieur Verdoux directed by Charlie Chaplin 8:30 pm.
Sunday, September 28: An HD Digital presentation of the opera Aida recorded at the famed Teatro Alla Scala theater in Milan, Italy at 8 pm; tickets for this show are $18 for non-members and $15 for members, seniors and students.

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