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Interior Verdigris Wrought Iron Garden Birdbath Home NR US $0.01 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 12:53:08 PST |
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ANTIQUE Finish CAST IRON Bird Interior Home BIRDBATH NR US $0.01 (1 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 12:53:11 PST |
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Roman 20" Boy Playing with Sail Boat and Birdbath US $100.00 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 12:57:28 PST |
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CBK Low Rise Pedestal Bird Bath in Antique Indigo US $87.50 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 13:27:00 PST |
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NEW GARDEN DECOR SOLAR LIGHTED BIRDBATH OR BIRD FEEDER US $26.95 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 14:04:40 PST |
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Sunflower Bird Bath Finish: Antique Pewter US $129.99 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 14:06:53 PST |
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Butterfly Dragonfly Bird Bath Finish: Antique Bronze US $129.99 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 14:14:40 PST |
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Butterfly Dragonfly Bird Bath Finish: Antique Pewter US $129.99 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 14:14:42 PST |
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Vineyard Bird Bath Finish: Antique Pewter US $104.30 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 14:38:13 PST |
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outdoor garden 3 MUSE BIRDBATH,Orlandi 33"x 18",NEW! US $99.00 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 14:46:40 PST |
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20" Heated Bird Bath with Metal Stand US $75.95 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 15:43:23 PST |
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Birdbath Statuary Cleaner 32Oz US $13.10 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 15:56:10 PST |
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American Eagle Bird Bath Finish: Antique Bronze US $106.29 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 16:02:55 PST |
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American Eagle Bird Bath Finish: Antique Verdi US $106.29 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 16:02:57 PST |
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Cobblestone Hanging Bird Bath 12In Gray US $15.30 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 16:27:52 PST |
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Vineyard Bird Bath Finish: Antique Bronze US $104.30 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 16:32:55 PST |
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Sunflower Bird Bath Finish: Antique Bronze US $129.99 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 16:47:12 PST |
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GORGEOUS HUMMINGBIRD SOLAR LAMP BIRDFEEDER AND BATH US $28.00 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 17:45:17 PST |
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Cast Iron Bird Bath Seed Feeder Garden Yard Art Stand US $24.97 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 18:19:47 PST |
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Mosaic Bird Bath of Frogs NIB Wrought Iron Base US $49.99 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:13:03 PST |
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BIRD BATH MERMAID CAST IRON rust sunflower garden decor US $24.99 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:17:03 PST |
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Interior Verdigris Wrought Iron Garden Birdbath Home NR US $0.01 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:17:13 PST |
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ANTIQUE Finish CAST IRON Bird Interior Home BIRDBATH NR US $0.01 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:17:16 PST |
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Kozybird Round Birdbath De-icer with 11" Diameter Mat US $70.96 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:39:15 PST |
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Kozy Non Heated Bird Bath with Pedestal US $85.94 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:42:37 PST |
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Water Wiggler with Sage Green Glazed Cover US $35.99 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:49:42 PST |
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20" Beige Heated Birdbath on Pedestal US $96.21 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 19:50:17 PST |
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Kozybird Crescent Birdbath De-icer with 14" Curved Mat US $61.01 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:03:11 PST |
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Kozybird Heated Spa with Pedestal US $142.48 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:13:21 PST |
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Pedestal for Grey Kozybird Spa US $57.38 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:28:04 PST |
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Water Wiggler with Natural Pottery Cover US $48.93 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:32:29 PST |
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Allied Precision Industries Water Wiggler US $31.37 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:41:27 PST |
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bird bath US $2.00 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:41:37 PST |
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Water Wiggler with Glazed White Ceramic Pottery Cover US $41.01 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:44:31 PST |
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Hummingbird Bird Bath Finish: Antique Bronze US $158.40 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:46:18 PST |
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Hummingbird Bird Bath Finish: Antique Pewter US $110.60 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:46:21 PST |
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Hummingbird Bird Bath Finish: Antique Verdi US $110.60 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:46:23 PST |
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Metal Stand only for 20" API Bird Baths US $43.81 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:47:57 PST |
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Kozyfill Auto Birdbath Filler US $65.64 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 20:54:06 PST |
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250 Watt Cast Aluminum Birdbath De-icer with 6' Cord US $44.60 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 21:07:13 PST |
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Beige Bird Bath Pedestal for 600 US $35.89 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 21:51:39 PST |
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ANTIQUE Finish CAST IRON Bird VICTORIAN Garden BIRDBATH US $0.01 (0 Bid) End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 22:33:06 PST |
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Cast Iron BIRD BATH Pedestal Feeder - Rustic Brown US $24.95 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 22:54:23 PST |
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NEW FOR YOUR OUTDOORS Antique Iron Birdbath US $1.00 End Date: Tuesday Mar-09-2010 23:38:19 PST |
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VERDIGRIS LEAF ANTIQUE STYLE OUTDOOR GARDEN BIRDBATH US $21.01 End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 0:55:45 PST |
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ANTIQUE Finish CAST IRON Bird VICTORIAN Garden BIRDBATH US $0.01 (0 Bid) End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 1:03:41 PST |
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VERDIGRIS BIRDBATH SCULPTED OUTDOOR GARDEN BIRD BATH US $20.62 End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 1:15:35 PST |
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Verdigris Wrought Iron Garden Leaf Outdoor Birdbath NEW US $0.01 (0 Bid) End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 1:55:43 PST |
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Heated Oasis Bird Bath - Winter Weather US $53.20 End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 1:58:30 PST |
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FLOWER PETAL BIRD BATH Outdoor Cast Stone STATUE NEW US $84.95 End Date: Wednesday Mar-10-2010 2:04:38 PST |

Blogdigger Media search for Birdbaths
Blogdigger Media search for Birdbaths
GeekBomb: Everything You Wanted To Know About John Malkovich

John Malkovich is one of those actors who really seems hard to pin down. He can take a strange role and make it his own, a la Teddy KGB in Rounders, or he can take the role of a villain and make it uber-creepy, like he did in In The Line of Fire. Or, he can also play a part where he’s playing himself, and a version of himself piloted by someone else, and make fun of himself and his image in the process as in Being John Malkovich. Besides all this, he definitely seems like someone that you don’t want to piss off.
Malkovich is defined both by his acting ability, and the strange choice of roles he’s taken over the years. He’s not someone you’d ever see as the leading man, but what he brings to the table in his supporting roles and antagonistic ways more than make up for that. He’s gone from art film staple to period piece villain to comedic foil and every other role in between, and he’s now joining the ranks of the comic book realm with a part in Jonah Hex, where he’ll be squaring off against Josh Brolin. You can never quite tell what he’ll be doing next, and the only cinematic counterpart I can even think of him would be Christopher Walken (although Walken isn’t quite as choosy in his roles). Maybe we’ll see them in a father / son project some day.
While I dream about that, head down below to check out today’s GeekBomb about John Malkovich. After all, he’s premiering in this weekend’s wonderfully quirky movie The Great Buck Howard.
The Early Years
Malkovich was born in Benton, Illinois in 1953, one of five kids born to Daniel and Joanne Malkovich. His parents owned and operated a local newspaper, The Benton Evening News, and a local conservation magazine called Outdoor Illinois. His father served as the conservation director for the state as well, and his mother didn’t like to dole out strict punishment, so the kids ran wild in the Malkovich household. John’s older brother Daniel often teased him for being overweight, which eventually led Malkovich to drop 70 lbs by eating nothing but Jell-O for two whole months. He also picked up sports and played throughout high school, and you can see a photo of him in his football outfit in Being John Malkovich.
Malkovich later attended college at Eastern Illinois University, and later transferred to Illinois State University where he studied theater, and became good friends with fellow student Joan Allen. Knowing Malkovich like we do, its a bit ironic to note that Illinois Statue University is located in Normal, Illinois. After leaving college before graduating, he moved to Chicago and joined the fledgling Steppenwolf Theater, which was founded in 1974 by Gary Sinise, Terry Kinney, and Jeff Perry. Malkovich stayed at Steppenwolf for many years, beginning with his first play as an actor in 1976 with Birdbath. He started directing plays there the same year with The Indian Wants The Bronx, and he often returns to direct or perform. He last appeared there in 2005’s Lost Land.
He didn’t coast by, however, and often had to take odd jobs to support himself. “I worked in an office supply store, I drove a school bus, I painted houses, I worked for a Mexican landscape gardening company, picking out weeds.” He said, “And generally when I was doing something it somehow took my interest. In fact, it must be a kind of shallowness. When I did office supplies mostly I thought about office supplies, and then when I got on the train I’d think about theater, and then I would do theater. But the next morning I would go in and, you know, reorganize the paper clips.”
First Film Roles and Breaking Out
While at Steppenwolf, Malkovich won an Obie Award in 1983 for True West, and when the production of Death of a Salesman he was appearing in was adapted for television on CBS, he won an Emmy award for his role as Biff opposite Dustin Hoffman as Willy. Although that was not Malkovich’s first time on television as he had also appeared in the 1981 television movie Word of Honor in 1981. Malkovich continued to win awards for both acting and directing, and had a small role as an extra with several other Steppenwolf members in Robert Altman’s A Wedding in 1978. But he really made the leap to starring film roles with his double whammy year of 1984, when he appeared in both The Killing Fields and Places in the Heart, for which he was nominated for an Oscar.
He again had a year of dual roles in 1987 with parts in Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun, and as a quirky android and a scientist in Making Mr. Right, but he really rose to the star power level in 1988 when he played the deliciously evil Vicomte de Valmont in Dangerous Liaisons. This propelled him into the stratosphere, and he actually briefly dated Michelle Pfeiffer during filming. Since then, he’s appeared in almost 50 different film and television projects, including being nominated for his role as the bad guy in Wolfgang Petersen’s Clint Eastwood thriller, In the Line of Fire (which netted him a Best Supporting Actor Oscar). He’d continue to take extremely quirky roles like the Clown in Woody Allen’s Shadows and Fog, and Cyrus ‘The Virus’ Grissom in Con Air. He excelled as the insane Kurtz in the TNT television production of Heart of Darkness, and stole his scenes as the Oreo-eating poker player in the Ed Norton / Matt Damon movie Rounders, but his most notable role will probably forever be in 1999’s Being John Malkovich.
Being John Malkovich
Malkovich was sent the script for this movie by Spike Jonze, and he initially didn’t want to star in it. He offered to help produce it, but didn’t want to play the title role and felt that it would be better for another actor. Eventually Jonze wore him down after a couple of years and he agreed to be in it. He had always loved the script, and famously said, “When I first looked at the script, the title seemed like a one-line joke, but it turned out to be a 100-page joke.” Originally, Kevin Bacon was going to play Malkovich’s friend, but that role ended up going to Charlie “Masheen” Sheen. Malkovich is also meant to be playing a very exaggerated version of himself: his actual name is John Gavin Malkovich, and his character’s name is John Horatio Malkovich.
Being John Malkovich brought Charlie Kaufman to public notice, and also shined a new light on Malkovich himself. The film won multiple awards and was nominated for three Academy Awards. Makovich has continued to pursue his love of acting and strange roles ever since, bringing his notable quirk to roles in The Libertine, Adaptation (where he played himself playing himself again, albeit briefly), The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Art School Confidential, and Burn After Reading, among others. Would he be playing these parts if he hadn’t been in Malkovich? It’s hard to say. At least he’s never done Making Mr. Right 2. It’s easy to gauge the effect that film had on Charlie Kaufman, but it’s harder to tell how it affected Malkovich, and if it changed his imaged in the mind of producers and casting directors. In my opinion, it did nothing but help his career, and it’s nice to see someone not take themselves so seriously. And Malkovich seems like a guy who would have taken himself ultra-seriously.

Tidbits
Malkovich’s first Broadway directing experience was with 1985’s Arms and the Man. He later replaced actor Kevin Kline in the lead role.
John Malkovich appears in the video for Annie Lennox’s hit song “Walking on Broken Glass,” and he’s wearing a costume borrowed from the set of Dangerous Liaisons. The video also stars Hugh Laurie, later of House fame.
Malkovich is fluent in French and lived there for more than 10 years. He currently resides (supposedly) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Although he never finished college, in 2005 while speaking at his alma mater, he was awarded a bachelor’s degree in theater.
While it was overshadowed by Being John Malkovich in 1999, he also played screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz in HBO’s RKO 281 about the making of Citizen Kane. This is well worth finding and watching.
Another quirky film of his worth seeing is Colour Me Kubrick, which is the true story about a man who passed himself off as Stanley Kubrick. Malkovich plays Alan Conway, the hoaxster.
Once said: “I want to be successful. I would like it to be a success with something that doesn’t make me want to vomit all over the screening room after I’ve seen it.”
John Malkovich also designs his own line of clothing, and the proceeds benefit theater.
Related Stories
Shadow Life
Are Aliens Among Us?

What if we were to try and define life in ways that are different from what we are used to? Might we find life of a kind we hadn't expected, in places we hadn't considered? Sounds screwy, but a respected scientist from Arizona State University seems like he knows what he's talking about. As reported in the London Times:
Aliens may be living among us, but we do not know it because they are microbes that do not have the standard biochemistry of Earth-dwelling organisms.
As well as the many forms of life based on DNA that are known to science, the Earth may have been home to a second creation of organisms that make up an unremarked realm of “life as we don’t know it�, according to Paul Davies, of Arizona State University, a cosmologist and theorist of extraterrestrial life.
Such “weird life� would never have been identified by scientists because the techniques they use for studying microbes are based on the familiar biological processes that drive the living things we understand, Professor Davies told the American Association for the Advancement of Science conference in Chicago.
The identification of such life on Earth could aid efforts to find life on Mars or elsewhere in the solar system. A second terrestrial creation would also indicate that life arises easily when the conditions are right, suggesting that it is common throughout the Universe.
Of course if one considers life to be anti-entropy, then it makes perfect sense for life of some form to be mandatory almost everywhere in the universe.
Top Dollar
Who are the highest paid Hollywood stars? Well leave it to Forbes Magazine to take an interest in celebrity money! Here's their list of the ten most bankable stars in Hollywood, with the ever likeable Will Smith at number one and four others tied for number two:

1 Will Smith
2 Johnny Depp
2 Leonardo DiCaprio
2 Angelina Jolie
2 Brad Pitt
6 Tom Hanks
7 George Clooney
8 Denzel Washington
9 Matt Damon
10 Jack Nicholson
Among those fighting for the number two position were glamour parents Brad Pitt and his wife (the only woman to make the top ten) Angelina Jolie. Last week they were at a red carpet affair and agreed to stand for a few moments for the professional photographers.

However, it was a lowly paparazzi who couldn't get a position in front that ended up with the shot that sold for the most money to the tabloids.

My that's a firm grip - but who can blame her?
Bailout Talk
Boston radio sensation Michael Graham is coming to UMass tomorrow night, as you can see from this poster plastered all over campus.

Non-students and the general public are invited.
Artist in Residence
Nationally renowned artist and Amherst resident John Sendelbach passes along the following cool pics of himself and his craft.
Not your everyday birdbath.

The perfect visual metaphor for romance - a heart on a spring.

A cosmic skyscape.

The artist relaxing at his Amherst home.

The artist surrounded by psychedelia.

This beautiful piece of Sendelbach metalwork was inspired by Jerry Garcia's classic tune Cats Under the Stars.


I like this bizarre yet beautiful snippet of the song. It's being sung at some kind of lame community event in nowhereville, yet the woman's voice is exceptional, if only people would stop talking long enough to notice.
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