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A Note From David Himself ...? :D
...Here, in its entirety, as written, is an email we received on 3-3-97:
From: " David Duchovny"
Date: Mon, 3 Mar 1997 14:42:18 -0800 (PST)
To: (this web page)
Cc: Subject: Cool site
hi- cool site you got there.
i really don't surf the net, but when i did today
i guess you could say i got surprised.
i'm flattered, but i'm only human.
all the best-
Dave Duchovny
Excerpt from the book: "Before They Were Famous: In Their Own Words" by Karen Hardy Bystedt
"...I was kind of drifting along. Which might seem like a weird thing to say
because I was seemingly doing so well. I was talented in a bleak way and I was
just scared shitless that I wasn't going to be the best at what I was doing.
But I didn't know what I wanted to do. I just wanted to be the best. That's
kind of sick when I think about it. I guess I wanted to be loved and I thought
the only way to be loved was to be the perfect person or some kind of golden
boy...
I didn't set out to become an actor. I set out to act. And that was so much
fun. The idea of actually making a living at it was so frightening because so
many other things are contingent on it. It's the most frightening thing to try
and make a living at because you put all your shit in other people's hands.
It was hard at first because I had been so embraced by academia and all of a
sudden I was getting rejected from Foot Locker commercials..."
Yes, I have *all three* of the infamous David Duchovny
"Teacup" pictures! and since they are *not* adult in nature, I can present them
to you, David's loyal fans:
Click on the small thumbnail pictures to view the entire image.
My Geocities Neighbors
Update, June 2010: I logged onto the Internet for the first time circa December 1990, only a few months after the DARPA declassified it.
I started surfing the web circa 1992 or so. I setup my first web page server-side circa June 1995. At the time, my internet host was
called Geocities, and it was a great service. Unfortunately, it was acquired by the infamous Yahoo, and it went to hell after that.
Because I was one of the first Geocities customers, Yahoo let me stay on for free, but privately looked for a way to make me pay.
They found a way about 10 years ago, but I was still paying significantly less than everyone else, and they privately didn't like that,
and were looking for a pretext to kick me off. Finally in June 2010 they found one, and I suddenly lost my account after more than
15 years online. I didn't really care that much because I have my own server, and there are hosts (such as GoDaddy) that have far more
features than Yahoo for far less cost per month. Anyway, the following addresses were my former neighbors in my Geocities Hollywood Hills
Cul-de-sac. They no longer exist (probably because Yahoo blew them away) except for one, at address 2440: