1. Turns out I was a wrong, kind of. The CARIBBEAN Monk Seal went extinct in June. The Hawaiian Monk Seal is still not extinct... barely.

    On days like today, I really don't want to be inside. I want to lay in the grass under the sun eating a juice pop. Is that so much to ask?

    Last night I saw 2 college age boys cleaning about 200 sq/ft with individual paper towells. Maybe they like ACTUALLY hate old growth forest.

    <p>I really love <a href="http://www.red-sweater.com/marsedit/" title="MarsEdit 2 - Powerful Blog Publishing For Your Mac">MarsEdit</a>. I wouldn't blog <em>nearly</em> as often as I do (which isn't <em>nearly</em> as often as I'd like) if I had to do it all through the <a href="http://wordpress.com/" title="WordPress.com » Get a Free Blog Here">WordPress</a> web interface (which is better than most)*. But I've always been unhappy with the default template for posting a quote from another site via the bookmarklet. I would usually rewrite it myself by hand each time. Sometimes I repeat myself waaay too many times before tricking out some tool to automate for me.</p>
    
    <p>So while setting up another blog for a different project, I was finally pushed to scratch this itch. It was super easy. I don't know why I didn't do it sooner. I added a bit of semantics to be a better web citizen (or whatever). Unfortunately, some of bits don't work from the bookmarklet, but do from "Post to Weblog" from <a href="http://www.newsgator.com/Individuals/NetNewsWire/" title="Mac RSS Reader – News Reader for Apple - NetNewsWire by NewsGator">NetNewsWire</a>. So here it is. If you like it, use it. Or don't.</p>
    

    <p><cite><a href="#url#">#sourceName#</a></cite> said:</p>
    <blockquote cite="#url#">
    <p><a href="#sourceHomeURL#">#sourceName#</a></p>
    <p>
    #body#
    </p>
    </blockquote>
    <p>
    COMMENTS-ABOUT-IT
    </p>
    

    </code>

    <p>* - How's that for a run on sentence?</p>
    

    Parsing BAD copywriting: Use consistent caps. End list items w/ punctuation or don't. Not both. Don't close your eyes & litter commas about.