Thanksgiving Leftovers – 2009 Beat Feast Redux

Carve that turkey-- carve it good!

Carve that turkey– carve it good!

Some Thanksgiving leftovers only get better the longer you let them “settle” in your fridge.

Arguably few leftovers get better tasting after three plus years of settling. In fact, most would give you diseases that would kill your average person, but digitalflood Pirate Radio was never average.

With that in mind– we flash back to a very brilliant leftover to feast upon. A little mix at df.com that we call “The 2009 Beat Feast – Redux”. A fine example of my DJ tomfoolery if there ever was one. I hope you enjoy this left overs, as well as, trust that you had a great Thanksgiving filled with friends, family, and enjoyment– if not there is always this mix to get you through the first few hours of work or such.  😉

DF Pirate Radio – “The 2009 Beat Feast – Redux”

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Please Vote If You Can On 11/6/12

Obama Biden 2012

DF.com proudly supports Obama & Biden in 2012.

It’s not secret at this point for most people who know me, but I am a Democrat and plan on voting for Barrack Obama for President tomorrow (11/6/12), as well as, the wider array of Democrat candidates on my local ballot. I’m not going to get into some sort of political battle over it. If your opinion differs– so be be it. I find myself aligning with the majority of issues and positions that the Democrats espouse and therefore it is the most fitting party for me to support.

If you want to find out who you align with there is a wide array of political tests out there, but I find this one works fairly accurately. Political Compass will at least give you some bearing of where you are if you are not quite sure yet (which most of us probably are– but hey it can’t hurt to do a sanity check). It is non-biased and will truly plop you somewhere on the political compass pretty accurately as long as your answer honestly.

I encourage to vote for whomever you wish, but the bottom line is that I hope you do cast your ballot. Voting is the essential duty of any eligible American citizen and I only hope you do take advantage of your rights to do so. There are many other countries where you would not be allowed to do so and therefore please do not take it for granted. I wish all the candidates the best of luck (of course you know I’m rooting along the Democratic party line so I’m hoping they do well across the board) and hope you do decide to make the effort to vote if you it is within your means to do so.

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Hurricane Sandy – The Aftermath

Downed Power Line in Warwick NY-- note the burn marks and hole in the pavement from the current.

Downed Power Line in Warwick NY– note the burn marks and hole in the pavement from the current.

On October 29, 2012 Hurricane Sandy arrived within striking distance of the Northeast. It had been building strength slowly, but surely over the course of a week’s time. It was already Category 1 and putting record low pressure measurements out even at some 200 miles out into the Atlantic Ocean before making landfall at 8pm EST. As the storm drew closer to it’s final landfall point in Southeastern New Jersey the Tri-State Metropolitan area was steadily torn apart by Sandy’s relentless winds. By the time the storm was done rolling through some twelve hours later there was a path of destruction wrought across New Jersey, Southern New York, and Eastern Pennsylvania that left millions without power, running water, heat, and in many cases shelter. We are still trying to understand the ramifications that Sandy left in her wake. Beyond its major landfall impact Sandy had destroyed much of the East Coast on its path towards New Jersey. The shoreline from Florida all the way up to Maine had been pounded by 80MPH+ winds, record sea level swells that induced major shoreline flooding, and rains that drenched communities far inland from the storms center.

I witnessed Sandy’s wrath firsthand and though at any given point I was no closer than 100 miles from storm itself my house shook, crackled, and shimmied more than I have ever seen in my five years living here. It was easily the most powerful storm I ever personally witnessed. Winds easily topped the 58MPH peak measurements taken off nearby professional meteorological equipment sheltered by far more trees and cover than I was. In the wide open plains of the former farmland of Warwick Sandy’s wrath was nothing short of ground-shaking (literally). We did not get much rain during the storm itself. About two inches over the twenty four hours prior to the storm passing through and only about .80 inches during the storm itself. This was not a flooding storm like last year’s Hurricane Irene. This was something new and unique in nature. A so called “super storm” capable of swallowing the entire Eastern US under its cloud cover, intense winds, and seemingly never ending power.

I was fortunate to suffer only minor loss of property (my beloved charcoal grill used for several DF Backyard Parties including our fan favorite “You Bring It, I Grill It” events) and a small portion of my East facing roof that I was able to get repaired within twenty four hours. I lost electric for only twenty minutes and all my family members (direct and extended) made it through without a scratch. I find myself returning to seemingly normal life until I had to venture from my street and make my way into the greater world some twenty four hours after the storm had passed. It is then I realized how truly blessed I was to get through so seemingly unscathed.

Much of my hometown of Warwick, NY is under darkness due to a widespread electric outage. The power companies are slowly, but surely restoring power. It is reasonable that 90% of Warwick will have power by the end of next week. There are hundreds of downed trees being cleaned up. At work we are restoring phone services at the customer level. We were able to get the majority of our subscribers back  in service within forty eight hours, but many need their telephone cabling put back up on the house. Many streets remain impassable. Many remain in the dark without power, water, or heat. Until we recover the power grid and finish removing the tree debris this will be the new normal.

It gets far worse though the further you go into Jersey or the closer you get to the shoreline. New York City, Staten Island in particular, was severely impacted. The New Jersey Shore is completely destroyed. Thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, remain without power, food, sanitary water, or shelter. Federal and State governments are trying their best to help. With a disaster so widespread though it is impossible though for the government and individual home/business owners to clean this up on their own. The Northeast needs your help and we need it bad.

This is why I humbly write to you. If you have the means to do so I respectfully ask for a donation of any size to be made by you to Red Cross to help out those most in need. Any dollar amount will do and you have my sincerest thank you for doing so, as well as, my respect. You can do so by visiting The Red Cross.

If you are in need of assistance, The Red Cross is also a great resource for you. Please feel free to reach out them if you need help recovering from this horrid event– that is what they are there for.

Together we can pull through this and rise above this– but we must do so by standing united together so as to support each other however possible. Thank you again for your time and consideration for donating.

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