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Furry Reddit - Sat 4 May 2013 - 00:44
Categories: News

Furry Lego??

In-Fur-Nation - Fri 3 May 2013 - 21:47

Where have we been? Looks like even classic toys are taking on a furry angle. Legends of Chima is a new line of Lego toys the world-famous plastic brick system introduced this year. From the Wikipedia entry: “Chima is a land where anthropomorphic animals lived in peace with one another until a conflict caused a civil war with the eight animal tribes: Lion, Eagle, Raven, Wolf, Gorilla, Rhino, Bear, and Crocodile. The members of the factions fiercely battle over a powerful natural resource called Chi, which could allow its possessor to create or destroy.” The toy sets are already available — and a TV series based on the line has already been produced by Prime Focus for the Cartoon Network. Later this summer, a free MMORPG of Chima will be available on line as well.

image c. 2013 Prime Focus

Categories: News

Foxxie

Furry Reddit - Fri 3 May 2013 - 21:43
Categories: News

Two for the Price of One

DailyFurBlog - Fri 3 May 2013 - 17:45

Welcome to another sexy, sultry adventure in Foxy Fridays. Due to technical difficulties involving alcohol and three different flavours of gelato I was unable to post last weeks Foxy Friday post. So thus you will have to make due with two.

First: Though this doesn’t really go under the term “foxy” it does relate to something all of us have experienced in some way. Be it from a one night stand, an online over friendly person, or someone you just met at a con. The article HERE talks about what it affectionately refers to as “The Little Mermaid Syndrome.” With some rather blunt examples the author points out that due to things like Disney romances where everyone lives happily ever after people are inclined to go to some rather drastic lengths for whom they believe could be their Prince Charming. The article is definitely worth a read.

Second: Okay, so I have no clue if this is for real or not. However I just read an article about three men in Saudi Arabia who were considered to sexy and were deported because of it! I mean seriously?! Send them over this way if you don’t like how hot they are, I’m sure we can find room in oh so many places. The article goes on to point out different “precedents” that go as far back as the Bible. So if this is true and it actually happened I just have to laugh because just imagine being one of those guys. Walk up to somebody at a bar and say “You know, I was deported from a country for being too sexy.” BAM! Done! Best. Pick-up line. EVER.

Artists Used in Descending Order:

Lion21

Trance87

Categories: News

Vote for Your Favorite Mascot!

DailyFurBlog - Fri 3 May 2013 - 16:11

Currently the Pan American Games, which will be in Canada for July 2015, is holding a contest to vote for your favorite mascot! These drawings are the 6 finalists that Canadian children have drawn and submitted. People can vote once a day until May 5th 2013. So be sure to vote for which one you want to see!

If you want to read more about the Pan Am Games click HERE.

To vote and see all 6 finalists click HERE.

Categories: News

Not-So-Distant Cousins

[adjective][species] - Fri 3 May 2013 - 13:00

This is a lightly-edited reprint of a column in Anthro Magazine that first appeared in Issue #14, in 2007.

Perhaps my favorite activity at conventions is having dinner with groups of friends at local eateries. Anyone who knows me well will recognize that I’m pretty fond of my chow to begin with, and to be able to share my dining experience with a (usually) mixed group of old friends and new acquaintances is, well, the highlight of my calendar. Usually, at least once during a con I’ll try and round up a suitable group, and off we go for what is always a memorable time out.

One of the most remarkable such con-dinners I’ve had in recent years took place in Memphis, during Mephit, at the Germantown Commissary. A group of about fifteen of us of mixed ages and of varying degrees of my acquaintanceship formed a convoy and ran across town to this trendy establishment, which allegedly sold the best barbeque in town. On the way our convoy broke up and some of us were separated, causing much anxiety. The Commissary proved to be the most highly-overrated restaurant I’ve ever experienced; it was crowded, the servers were rude to the point of surliness, and the food was okay at best. At any other time I’d have been very unhappy with my evening.

But because of the people I was with, the experience was absolutely magic.

I don’t know what it is about fen (a common slang-term for SF and other geeky-type fandom members), but within minutes of sitting down we were off and running as if we did this sort of thing every evening of our lives. I can’t claim to recall everything we discussed; the conversation was much too witty, free-ranging and articulate for me to remember it all. I do know that we went from ribald jokes to the nature of the universe and back several times in the blink of an eye. It was, in other words, the kind of stimulating and intelligent conversation that I spend most of my life starved for—that most of us fen, I suspect, spend our everyday lives starved for. Certainly, it was for me rain to a desert.

At one point, while we were discussing the finer points of terraforming, a good friend of long standing who’s also very interested in high-tech and has a degree from a prestigious university interrupted. “Wait a minute!” he commented. “We’re furs! We’re not supposed to be talking about this kind of stuff! Aren’t we supposed to be debating which part of the fox is the floofiest?”

The comment got a good laugh, but it also made me think. My friend was right, in that the dinner conversation at this particular meal had a very definite SF flavor. Even more, I realized, the same was true of most of the similar dinners I’ve enjoyed for all these many years now. We’re far more likely to discuss artificial intelligence at these affairs than vulpine floofiness, for example. And while fur-related subjects like gengineering probably get more than their share of air-time, even these conversations wouldn’t be out of place at, say, WorldCon. In other words, while the furry fandom did in fact (as near as I can tell, not having been around at the time) split off from the world of SF, there’s still an awful lot of SF left in us even these many years down the road. While this may not be true of all or even most fur-fans—I do have definite preferences in mind when selecting my dinner-companions, after all, and the ability to discuss a wide variety of subjects both amicably and intelligently ranks high among them—there’s certainly enough of us SF-derived types around to give the fandom a definite and recognizable flavor.

I had this brought home even more forcefully to me at Rain Furrest one year, where I (being one of the guests of honor) interacted quite a bit with the con chairman. He was strictly an SF fan, not a fur, and the local furs had drafted him to run their con because at that time no one else thought they had enough experience. He and I had a quite pleasant conversation about the differences between a furmeet and an SF con… and, frankly, there weren’t many. Furs consume less alcohol, as a rule, and require a little more in the way of costuming support. But all the major elements are pretty much the same, derived almost entirely from the SF cultural parent. Even much of the lingo is the same; I didn’t blink when he used the term ‘SMOF’ (Secret Master of the Fandom), and he recognized my use of ‘fen’ and ‘mundane’ (meaning anyone other than a fen) right off. I don’t recall if the terms actually came up, but if he’d told me that a mutual acquaintance had ‘gafiated’ (Gotten Away From It All) or ‘fafiated’ (been Forced Away From It All), I’d have understood him instantly. In other words, furs and SF fen share a private language.

I suppose I can understand how the split between furs and mainstream SF fans came to be. There are distinct cultural differences, and probably most furs aren’t as hard-science driven as the SF fandom. Even so, there’s enough of us tech-rooted types around that I’ve never had problems putting together dinner-groups at fur-meets which I’d match, man-for-man, against just about any similar SF-based group in terms of general geekiness and science-savvy. It’s a shame we’ve grown apart, in some ways, and even more a shame that in some circles there seems to be actual animosity between the two groups. We may be two distinct cultures, but we’re at least as alike as, say, Canadians and US citizens. We’re non-mundanes, in a world where non-mundanes are all too rare and precious. Therefore we should be treating each other as respected and beloved cousins, if not brothers and sisters. Not calling each other names, as I regret to report happens all too often.

We’re all fen together, is what I’m trying to say. Natural allies, not rivals. I mean, how many places can you find people who not only enjoy discussing terraforming over barbeque, but are good at it? Not many, in this sad and intellectually-declining world. And, while I can’t speak for anyone but myself, I fully intend to treasure such individuals wherever I may find them. Whether that be in a fursuit, wearing an Imperial Storm Trooper outfit, encased in a suit of armor, or behind a deck of Magic cards. We’re fen, all of us. And there just aren’t enough of us around to allow for snootiness when choosing friends.

Is It a Good Idea to Move Out of State in Search of a Job?

Ask Papabear - Fri 3 May 2013 - 12:56
Dear Papa Bear

I live in Northern Minnesota with my grandmother. I'm 19 years old and I've been looking for a job for the past two months. I was recently let go of my last job, and I haven't been able to find any. I've looked and looked, I've made calls, I've had interviews, but it doesn't seem like interested in hiring me.

My grandmother is getting rather fed up with me not having a job, but she puts up with me anyways. I have an option to move to Fargo, North Dakota and live with a friend so I can find some work; granted I couldn't find any last time I went there... Do you think relocating to an entirely new area is a smart choice? I just don't know who to turn to ask about this. I've asked myself several times and it always seems that I'm more trouble than I'm truly worth. :P

What do you think I should do?

Sammi Foxxpaw

* * *

Hi, Sammi,

It might very well be a good decision to move to look for work, but don’t put the cart before the horse. Before you make the leap anywhere, you can do a lot online to explore job opportunities in areas where you might like to live. Based on my reading, North Dakota could be a good place to move if you work in the health care industry. Places like Fargo (surprisingly!) have become retirement meccas because there is a very positive doctor-to-patient ratio, low crime rate, and reasonable housing costs. Another industry in North Dakota that is booming is the oil industry (seehttp://money.cnn.com/2011/09/28/pf/north_dakota_jobs/index.htm). 

The good thing about this is that whenever there is a boom in one industry, such as health care or oil, a lot of related and support businesses grow up around them as a result. Go online and look up newspaper sites where your friend lives and check out the want ads to give yourself an idea of what may be available for you.

Here’s a very interesting chart as well (source: http://wpcarey.asu.edu/bluechip/jobgrowth/jgu_states.cfm).
Picture As you can see, North Dakota ranks at the top for job growth. But be a little wary of the stats because this is based on percentage of population. So, the number of jobs added in North Dakota is actually a lot fewer than in Utah, Texas, or Colorado, for instance.

You can see, too, that Minnesota ranks 14th in job growth, not too bad but not all that great. If you are having no luck finding work where you are not, expanding your search to other states is actually a sound choice. But, instead of moving to your friend’s place and then looking for work, search for jobs first, and then make arrangements to move. That’s the smart thing to do.

Another smart thing to do is to get more education. You say you are 19, so I am guessing you only have a high school degree. Remember, the more education you have, the easier it is to find work, as well as higher-paying work.

Good luck!

Papabear

Favorite way to explain furry to nonfurs

Furry Reddit - Fri 3 May 2013 - 11:55

What's your favorite way to explain it to nonfurs? I tend to explain it as "trekkies but with animal costumes instead of spock outfits"

submitted by Sat-AM_Reject
[link] [20 comments]
Categories: News

Hey /r/furry, I'd like to have an adult discussion ( NSFW )

Furry Reddit - Fri 3 May 2013 - 05:47

The reddit community as a whole seems to be fairly well-red, which is part of the reason why I think this is a good place for this post (along with the fact that it involves furries, obviously). The NSFW tag is because of the subject matter involving sex and sexuality.

I'm sure a lot of people have had a similar experience when it comes to the furry fandom, but at least for me, a guy who considers himself mostly straight, when it comes to furries I'd consider myself bi, leaning towards male.

I've long considered sexuality to be more of a spectrum than a black or white dichotomy, (it's not perfect, but something like the Kinsey scale is what I mean), so I've postured to myself that maybe for me and a lot of others, the furry fandom is a more free expression in many aspects of someone's life, possibly including sexuality.

So when I think about the kind of things that are sexually arousing to me when it comes to furries, many of them are gay and submissive situatons, being a bottom, etc, and I wonder how much of this is because of the way in which the furry fandom might feel "safer", or if this is simply a repressed sexuality or persona that one does not get to exhibit in normal circumstances.

It may be that because the community and the subculture can be very open and frank about sexuality that these things seem more commonplace; i.e. MOST people might have a sexual spectrum but one is more capable of expressing it as a furry. There may be an aspect of this that has to do with male furries not seeming as "male" as a human, and therefore do not push so far into the Kinsey scale for homosexuality as it would if it were a human.

I'd like some discussion and feedback, because I think it's an interesting topic. I've given it a lot of though, but never really talked about it with anyone.

submitted by fjaseif
[link] [55 comments]
Categories: News

Rocket Dog

Furry Reddit - Fri 3 May 2013 - 05:06
Categories: News

Furry Google Valentines Day doodle

alt.fan.furry - Fri 3 May 2013 - 04:45
Go to google, keep clicking the button in the center.

(if you read this late go to Google doodles)

[link]

--
The Saprophyte
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Categories: News

Unsheathed Presents: K.M. Hirosaki's Star Wars, Episode I - Episode I: The Phantom Menace

Unsheathed - Fri 3 May 2013 - 04:00
K.M. and friends sit down to talk about Episode I while watching it. Listen for synchronization instructions. Unsheathed Presents: K.M. Hirosaki's Star Wars, Episode I - Episode I: The Phantom Menace
Categories: Podcasts