Tuesday, December 19, 2006

My Shame

I literally asked the Blockbuster checkout girl not to judge me by movie choice this evening: Step Up and Alex Rider. I generally am fairly free about owning up to my low brow proclivities--I vehemently argue for the inclusion of pop culture in education--but, I guess I was feeling guilty about putting A Scanner Darkly and Don't Come Knocking back on the shelf in favor of these.

I've watched Step Up, and I'll admit to enjoying it quite a bit. The exciting/interesting/disturbing? portion of the film came when I noticed that Nora's (female protagonist's) mother was wearing a shirt that I have hanging in my closet. This was the first time that I've ever had that experience hence the excitement. It made me wonder, gee, whose job is it to go to Ann Taylor Loft to shop for movies, how interesting. But, seriously, I'm 26, should I be wearing the same thing as the mother of a high schooler? That I find slightly disturbing.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Most Exciting Thing Ever?

The first day of break is always wonderful, especially when I already cleaned my room amongst the height of finals week becasue I needed a break from writing my papers! So, that leaves the not-to-be-taken-lightly task of choosing the first book to read for fun. Right now contenders are:
  • Small World by David Lodge "a post-structuralist parodying academic comedy," basically it's supposed to be a smart, funny, book about academics. It was short-listed for the Booker Prize and will probably be on my field exam list.
  • Flaubert's Parrot by Julian Barnes, whom I've met! Interestingly, this was short-listed for the Booker the very same year (1984) as Lodge's and will also probably be on my field exam list.
  • Twilight by Stephenie Meyer, a teen fantasy novel about vampires.
In the mean time, I've done a little de-tox by watching Mindhunters and Love the Hard Way. I also am extremely excited about seeing Eragon, forget that I haven't seen any of the probably Oscar contenders like The Departed, The Queen, or Babel yet. Bring on the dragons!

Friday, December 08, 2006

1.9 Miles Close to Home

Because it's such a 'breaking news story' and because it's right down the road from me, I'll draw your attention to this associated press article.

"A man who authorities said wanted to commit acts of "violent jihad" against civilians was charged Friday in a plot to set off hand grenades in garbage cans at a shopping mall, authorities said." You can read the rest of the article here.

That shopping mall is my mall. The one I go to for coffee on my way to school, the one I worked at last year, the one that is my mall. He was planning to attack on Friday the 22nd when the mall would be chock full with all the holiday shoppers in this, the second largest city in the state.

There are times that I get frustrated with the current war on terror and by no means do I claim to be up-to-date on what's going on with the politics of the day; however, this does make me realize that there is a threat, that people do want to kill lots of other people for religious reasons. Now this man was acting alone and is not affiliated with an organization, so there's no clear group enemy just a single extremist. I'm not sure what that would mean for national politics.

However, for locals, it makes me wish that this guy had been loved more. A person who is truly loved and accepted can't do these sorts of things, can he? I love my church here, and I am excited by its mission, by its message. They (We!) believe that people matter to God and they should be loved like Jesus loved. Is it naive to hope that a difference can be made through this institution? That the community can becoming more loving and accepting, so that hate won't drive people to actions like setting of grenades in a crowded mall?

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Robert Altman (1925-2006)

An amazing and innovative director.

Photo of Gosford Park,  Robert Altman


Obituary

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Crisis Averted?

The stress knot in my spirit has been gradually increasing in regards to The Future. I often struggle with perceived implications of importance. Case in point: what I do next semester in regards to both the classes I take and teach will determine what my dissertation looks like, and what I do for my dissertation takes up the next two and a half years of my life, determines my academic persona, which is how I can present myself on the job market, thus affecting the kind of job (if any) that I get and decides the entire rest of my future and any career happiness and satisfaction I may wish to have. The fact that I haven't yet published an article (to get into the profession, they expect that you are already a functioning member of the academy) seems to indicate that I will never have anything of interest to say in this my chosen field. See how simple, logical, and tortuous?

Yesterday, however, I had an hour and a half conversation with my professor/mentor/hopefully-dissertation-chair about The Future (at least my academic one), which was comforting. I feel as though I'm on the right track with the course I'm planning for next semester (it's actually literature, not comp!), and we set up a plan for an independent study that will allow me an official time and space to explore what I want to do with my dissertation, rather than me needing to do that undirected and in addition to the rest of my load.

I feel better. At least, I know what next semester is going to look like. Although, I still have to put together an independent study proposal, which means research to find a book list, etc. Plus, finish this semester, I have a paper due in two weeks that has not been started yet, egads.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

A Different Kind of Flood

Of late, I feel like I haven't had much to post about, but then all in a rush, I'm so overwhelmed with options and such little time that I again I fail to post. A minute sampling:

David Sedaris. We all know and love him, but now I've seen him live and loved him, though still from afar. I didn't wait in line to meet him; Liz's long ago blog about how chatty he was frightened me. I really don't want to meet and talk to famous people, especially ones that I like. I seriously doubt my ability to be unique and engaging, and I'd rather be anoynmous than ordinary.

Marie Antoinette. I enjoyed it a lot. I love the 80s glam-rock and anachornisms (Converse sneakers in 18th century Versaille?!), but my complete and udder lack of knowledge about the history hurt the impact the film could have made. So, I recommend a bit (seriously, I'm sure whatever wikipedia has will do just fine) of research to give the film a little context. Otherwise, the movie is like Lost in Translation, pointless.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

For My People...

Because I know that my (albeit small) readership is heavy on the English nerd scale, I submit a fun grammar website that I actually found because there's a podcast--Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing. Uber-cool.

Friday, October 06, 2006

Jump Start

Being well on top of things that I need to do is not my normal state of being. I've set today aside to work on a presentation that I have to do in two weeks, but all I can seem to do is watch Food Tv (with the occasional foray into Style and BBC America) and stare at the piles of books and articles in a semi-circle about me. I've gotten brand-spankin' new post-it page markers and index cards, so I've got everything I could possibly need. Except being engaged in my topic--you, clever reader, are correct in assuming this blog seems to be yet another procrastination technique. I think I'm going to abandon the presentation work and work on next week's class work...

On a completely unrelated theme, I watched The Singing Detective yesterday. Now, Robert Downey, Jr. is one of my boyfriends; Jeremy Northam and Adrien Brody are nice as well; I love the noir and modern takes on it; I enjoy complex narrative structures; I'm a sucker for musicals; so, keeping all this in mind, why didn't I like it especially well?

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Ernie, Why Do You Have a Pot on Your Head?*

This weekend I switched desks in my room, which turned out to be a much larger project than I had originally anticipated. One issue was that I was going from a computer desk with a couple of shelves to a desk (I think a bureau, actually) that belonged to my grandmother. So, the organization of materials was different. Because I intended to do a minimal amount of work, I put everything on my bed, pulled the desk out, vacuumed and put the new one in.

But that's just the beginning, then I decided to move where the desk was to the corner that had my entertainment center. So, piece by pice I moved out the clutter that lined the wall, pushed the 800 pound center (without moving any of the electronics out of it--those things are a pain to connect) to its new home, put the desk it the now vacant corner, and painstakingly recreated the precarious balancing along the wall with the remainder of stuff because attempting to go through all that is definitely another day's project.

*The entire time I felt like the Seaseme Street sketch where Ernie broke the cookie jar so he had to put the cookies in the flower jar and had to put the flowers in the milk jug and put the milk in the fish bowl and had to keep the fish in his hat, so he had to wear the cooking pot on his head--or something like that...

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Stilling Running in the Same Hamster Wheel

My Google homepage quote of the day struck me as dreadfully apropos:
Someone's boring me. I think it's me.
Dylan Thomas, in Rayner Heppenstall, Four Absentees (1960)

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Man Movies

Last night, I watched She's the Man and Inside Man. The first was, eh, just okay. I think Amanda Bynes is quite talented in general, but not especially brilliant in this. True, the boy was beautiful, but I really didn't see their relationship develop at all. As far as the Shakespearian adaptation, it was interesting enough, but no where near the dead on meld of teen and Bard as in 10 Things I Hate About You.

The second film was interesting. I didn't see much of Spike Lee, the auteur in it however, which was a little disappointing. Of course, my boyfriend, Clive Owen was wonderful--when isn't he? (oh right, Derailed), and I enjoyed the clever aspects of the heist--who doesn't? Samuel L. Jackson's character was interesting, more nuanced than one might expect; I guess that belongs to Mr. Lee. All in all, a nice film.

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Some Quotes From This Week's Reading

For a classic Hollywood cinema presentation:
"Few people recognize opportunity because it comes disguised as hard work and application." Cary Grant

For American literature 1830-1865:
"No reason can be asked or given why the soul seeks beauty. Beauty, in its largest and profoundest sense, is one expression for the universe. God is the all-fair. Truth, and goodness, and beauty, are but different faces of the same All." Emerson from "Nature"

And last, but not least, from Old English:
"Nu tod[ae]g Godes gela[th]ung geond ealne ymbhwyrft m[ae]rsa[th] p[ae]ra eadigra cildra freolstide,..." King [Ae]lfric circa 1000. Pretend that all the [th] have one of two interchangable symbols (thorn or eth) and that all the [ae]'s are smooshed together into the symbol for the a, as in bath, sound. I spent about three or four hours translating ten lines. Blah-dy-blah.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Diluvian Rain



We had a lot of rain on Monday, or rather it all came in a short period of time. This picture from The Rockford Register Star (am I going to get into trouble for using it?) is about two miles from my house. Coming home from a church function with my parents, our car stalled in the middle of three feet of water a block from home. We got out (the water filling the car), waded home, and waited a few hours until we could walk back and get the car, which--thankfully--started!

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Some Media

Angels & Insects (A.S. Byatt): I just finished reading it, knowing that if it didn't happen this weekend, I wouldn't get to it until next summer or so. It's scary to know that I will have very little time to read anything other than school stuff for the next semester and that Christmas break will be so busy that I won't be able to handle capital L Literature.

Anyway, the book is two novellas: "Morphia Eugenia" which, I'll confess I 'read' the movie first, is visually sumptuous but somewhat redundant to the movie (meaning the adaptation well-portrayed the text and didn't interpret it). But, I hadn't seen the film in years, so this was a nice repetition of story. Not to spoil the story, but the switching of letters around in "INSECT" makes for a wonderful connection to the natural world. A poor natural scholar gets caught up in a too-perfect family system that, of course, must be revealed.

"The Conjugial Angel" is interesting in how this follows up the impeccable Possession. This time the historical poets and poems that intertwine with our story are real. Alfred Tennyson's sister tries to contact, through seances in a lovely Victorian setting, the man (Arthur Hallstum)she was to marry years ago who died that Tennyson wrote In Memoriam about. Very interesting in how it weaves together Romantic and Victorian poetry with spirits in a type of ghost story. Basically, Byatt can do no wrong in my eyes, but it doesn't rival her magnum opus.

Katie and I saw a last movie together before she jetted off to London--The Illusionist, and I have to reaffirm for those in doubt that yes, I am available to have Edward Norton's babies. It was wonderful, the story, the acting (at least by Norton, Sewell, and Giamatti), the illusions (cinematography and cg)! While not being particularly impressive, Jessica Biel does a fine enough job and, most importantly, does not distract from or ruin the film. Katie and I were clever enough to figure out most of the story, but even 'knowing' what was happening didn't make the film any less enjoyable. Turn of the century Vienna is becoming more and more interesting to me as a time period; modern Western Europe, but tinged with Eastern influence (as this movie is). Especially interesting is Norton's show which is not just a magic show, but somehow a philosophic exploration on big issues: time, life, death. If it's showing near you, run don't walk!

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

New Post

So, school's starting. Grad school is fun because every day is different, since classes generally only meet once a week. Rather than having a first day of school, I get a first week!

I'm not teaching this semester because I'm working in our writing center and our computer lab. While excited about both of those assignments, I'm missing teaching this semester. I was sad that I didn't get to design a syllabus and schedule, print out a class list, make out the new page in my gradebook. All of that.

I did end up replacing my laptop. The combination of a failing computer and a week and a half of actual vacation between summer school and the semester weaned me from my daily habit of spending hours online, which thus increased my email return speed and blog posting regularity. Now that I'm back to school and working a job where I'm supposed to sit in front of the computer, I'm sure I'll be plugging into the world of the virtual fairly quickly.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Of Computers and London

So, I've been having computer issues lately that may result in a new laptop (hopefully not though). I've done a little bit of looking at new ones, and they have about four times the power of mine for about a third of the cost. Maybe a new one wouldn't be so bad... However, I'm not sure I have the budget for it because I just bought tickets to London!!!

I'm going to see Katie over New Year's! I'll be there for two and a half weeks, and I'm dead excited. Already we have plans to go to Scotland and Mount St-Michael (in France, where I can utilize my nearly useless French skills from this summer--provided no one tries to speak with me and writes doewn whatever he/she is trying to communicate!). I hope we can eat curry in Brick Lane, go to the British Museum (can you believe I didn't go when I was in London before?), and ride the Eye--strange touristy phenomenon that it is.

So, until I get to go do all that I'll have to content myself with being an anglophile in the USA, reading British authors like AS Byatt (I'm in the middle of Angels and Insects), watching BBC America (Life on Mars and The Kumars at No. 42 are fantastic), and planning my travels.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Fantasy--About and Actually

First, I just finished reading American Gods by Neil Gaiman. Sigh. It's absolutely genius, having many of the qualities that I appreciate most in fiction: a high amount of symbolism/mythology that borders on allegory (at parts); humor, I mean it's fun to read; lots of clues/foreshadowing, if you're clever enough to catch on early (sadly, for the most part, I wasn't); truth and love triumphant. If this guy wasn't already married, I'd being driving around WI right now looking for him to throw myself at.

That said, who wants to go see House on the Rock and Rock City?

Second, I was on my department's homepage, where we have a "Quote of the Moment," when I saw this:

Fantasy remains a human right: we make in our measure and in our derivative mode, because we are made: and not only made, but made in the image and likeness of a Maker. -- [J.R.R. Tolkien]
Not only is it cool, but I can't believe that it was coming from my rather secular department. Nifty, says I.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Ho-hum

So, one week of summer school, then about a week and a half before the fall semester starts. It's starting to feel rather weird because I won't be teaching. I'm working as a tutor in the writing center and then helping in the nwr (networked writing resources...computer lab stuff). Well, hopefully, I'll be teaching literature in the spring and not just another composition course.

I finally succumbed and joined myspace today. Interesting, very interesting. I just hope that I can keep myself from spending (actually, wasting) too much time on it.

Over the weekend I saw two excellent movies: the first, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and the second, The Exorcism of Emily Rose. The former had a fresh narrative technique and Robert Downey Jr. being oh so talented and charming. The latter blew me away. While I occasionally indulge in scary films, I am no connoisseur; however, I do find the spiritual messages, symbolism, etc. often thought provoking. This one seemed downright evangelical. If all my dreams come true and I am one day teaching film at a Christian college, this will be on my syllabus.

Monday, July 31, 2006

Just In Case There Was Any Doubt




You Should Drive a Saturn Sky



You're sleek and smooth, and you need a car to match your hot persona.

Besides, sometimes you want your top up - and sometimes you want it down.

Friday, July 28, 2006

It's Nice to Know...

...that M. Night Shyamalan and I would totally be friends (based on his iTunes Celebrity Playlist and his American Express commercial/magazine ads). And he'd be understanding that I haven't seen his movie yet, because, you know, he's cool like that.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Overwhelmed

I am always and forever composing blog posts in my head when I'm not near a computer but am not as strong following through and actually typing and posting them. Now, that I've got a moment to sit down, I'm overwhelmed by the possibilities in the backlog. Perhaps I'll just give a couple sentences (or fragments) highlighting them.

1. Two weeks ago, I went to Cornerstone, which is a huge Christian festival with lots of bands--P.O.D., MXPX, David Crowder Band, Reliant K, The Roosevelts (a new fav) to name a few. They also were showing movies, having seminars, and other happenings. Example, I listened to a lecture entitled "Literature of the Oppressed: British Women Writers" and watched Donnie Darko.

2. I went white water rafting and rock climbing with my junior high youth group. Lots of fun. Only slight sunburn; a large accomplishment for me.

3. Cheerleading camp at my school. Large droves of girls in the exact same outfit with the exact same hairstyle. Creepy.

4. Crazy excitement over the fact that I can drill my countries in an online map quiz. Amazingly fun.

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Yee-ow! Boom shak!

The Cat Empire is some of the happiest music I've ever heard. I first saw them in LA, then again the following week in Chicago. I wanted to go to Milwaukee this week for a third concert, but I couldn't really make it work. As much as I love their cd--and believe me, I've not listened this much to an album since U2's latest, maybe even more than that--seeing them live is why I love them. They are indescribably incredible, but I'll try.

Their musical style is reggae/latin/brassy/rap/spoken word/dance. It's upbeat and impossible to sit still to, but very laid back (a la their Australian nature). There are six of them, and they play together in a seamless manner, mixing all these genres with ease. When they perform live they actually perform, not just play what you hear on the cd. They spin their songs differently, but they also do a lot of improv and jamming. It's incredible--I heard a five minute bass solo and loved it!

Lyrically, they're hippies, and I love the positive attitudes. The idea that their way of waging war is through music, dance, and being good friends is refreshing and encouraging. An abridged sample from my favorite song "The Chariot":

This is a song that came upon me one night
when the news it had been telling me
about one more war and one more fight
and 'aeh' I sighed but then I thought about my friends
then I wrote this declaration
just in case the world end
Our guns
we shot them in the things we said
ah we didn't need no bullets
cos we rely on some words instead
kill someone in argument
outwit them with our brains
and we'd kill ourselves laughing
at the funny things we'd say
And bombs
we had them saved for special times
when the crew would call a shakedown
we break down a party landmine
women that so sexy
they explode us with their looks
ah we blowing up some speakers
jumping round till the ground shook
[...]
Our weapons were our instruments
made from timber and steel
we never yielded to conformity
but stood like kings
in a chariot that's riding on a record wheel
[...]
Then our allies grew
wherever we would roam
see whenever we're together
any stranger feel at home [...]

I know their music is a little expensive (imported), but it is well worth it. Or better yet, go to one of their concerts, where a musical crush will turn to obsession, and buy it from them directly!

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Hchello, hchello

Boy, it has been a long time. I've been super-busy learning to read French in the most unnatural way possible. Katie's been up to see me. We watched the final season of Home Movies (sniff) and the premiere of The Venture Brothers (Go Team Venture!). I went to see a minor league baseball game (and am going to another--different team--Monday). The past day and a half I've been finishing two quilt tops that have been languishing about unfinished for months. I've been reading (American Gods by Neil Gaiman, Ghosts by Paul Auster, re-reading some HP) and watching (finished Angel, Fritz Lang's M, re-watching HP, and Pirates of the Caribbean and Pride & Prejudice--it was a Keira Knightly day). I'm going to be going to Cornerstone (a Christian music festival) this weekend and then on a rock climbing/white water rafting trip with my youth group the next. Busy, busy.

Soon, I shall sit down and write anecdotally about things that have been happening (an interesting night of 'bar-hopping') and the group The Cat Empire, which I am powerless against. I can't stop listening to their cd, going to their concerts, and watching their dvd.

But, not tonight.

Friday, June 16, 2006

Learn Something

"Wherefore" means why, not where.

Okay, because nearly everyone is subjected to Romeo and Juliet at some point in his/her high school education, I would think that this is common-ish knowledge. However, this is apparently not the case. I suppose this is fine for the general public, but there's no reason for professionals to perpetuate the misconception.

Yesterday, I watched a bizarre show on Animal Planet called Romeo and Juliet: A Monkey's Tale*, which documented a feud between two groups of monkeys in Thailand that escalated when a female from the temple group got it on with a male from the market group. The voice over narration was "from" the point of view of Tybalt, cousin to the female monkey, Juliet. While I seriously question the reality of this documentary--it seems to fit too perfectly with Shakespeare's narrative to be truly captured on film--it was amusing to see how Animal Planet adapted the classic story. I was enjoying the terrible puns on the famous lines penned by the Bard until "Tybalt" explained that Juliet would go to the train tracks where Romeo had skipped town and wonder "Wherefore was her Romeo?" Unacceptable.

I'm sure someone was paid good money to write the script, so why would he/she not spend some time learning about the play they're riffing rather than relying unchecked on the sketchy, general facts that reside in the public conscious? The issue Shakespeare's Juliet is pondering is not where did that hunky Romeo disappear to after the party, but why oh why is he a Montague--the one boy she can't (or rather shouldn't) have. So when she laments "Romeo, Romeo wherefore art thou Romeo?" she is bemoaning his connections, not his location.

Okay, then? Got that Animal Planet? All clear?

*Sorry, after more than five minutes of internet searching, I can find no suitable link to point readers to for more information, ergo, you'll have to take my word for it!

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Sinking From Reality Into Fiction

So, yesterday was my chance to have Sarah time and not have to interact with a bunch of people (though I did go to church). I finished the second book in the Southern Vampire series by Charlaine Harris. I read Queen of Babble, Meg Cabot's latest, which was great fun. I watched discs two and three of Angel season five (ohmygosh, Lindsey's back! with sexy tattoos! just like me!!) I watched the movie Blue Car resultantly had a probably inappropriate dream (but can you really control those?) about an unavailable gentleman.

Today, after doing a bunch of errands and meeting with a leader from the youth group I work with, I watched It Takes Two, which is a Parent Trap meets the Prince and the Pauper mid-90s flick starring (who else?) the Olsen twins, Kirstie Alley, and, of course, the undeniably charming Steve Guttenberg. I don't know which is worse: admitting I watched the entire thing, or that I enjoyed it? In fact, it seemed so familiar I wonder if I haven't seen it before, rather than being an excellent judge of genres and filmic conventions.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

I Got Inked!

Finally, after--no joke--seven years of contemplation, I got a tattoo! I love it and am already excited for the next one! It didn't hurt much at all (it is rather small, so that probably helps with the low pain issue) and has given me a feeling of empowerment.

All in all LA was a great time (I miss Eden). Now only one week until summer school starts and Harry Potter Camp!

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

L.A.

While it seems mostly ridiculuous to be blogging, because I'm with half of my blog's audience, I'm spending time on the internet for the first time in a little while, and I've been missing interacting with my blog world. Katie and I are in LA visiting Eden (and my brother). We have been busy! Today is the first day we've had some down time, which is generally the majority of my time. We went to a club (Katie's account should be more intriguing than mine), went to the beach, went to many stores (I spent more money on a single pair of jeans than my last three pairs combined, I'm still mulling over the purchase), have eaten at some fine establishments (yummy Cuban food for one), and have generally just been having fun being together. I'm sure I'll be more anecedotal when I get back.

In media land, I finished reading A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick. It was quite interesting; I don't know if I can say that I liked it, but I'm glad I read it. The author's afterword that dealt with his personal experience dealing with drugs that inspired much of the book was rather poignant. I'd like to talk about it with someone though. The book seems to be an interesting result of the culture of the sixties in regards to lifestyles, government, etc. Somewhat cynical and despairing at the same time. I think there's a movie coming out soon, so hopefully that'll give me a forum to discuss this with some other thinking souls.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Discerning Cub Scout

On Monday, I went to a Memorial Day parade with Katie and her family (her mother, I think correctly, asserts that Memorial Day is the best parade--brief, candy, not too hot--rather than the fourth of July). Katie and I were bemoaning the fact that we didn't have young nieces and nephews to gather candy because people usually throw to the little 'uns. We didn't really want to make spectacles of ourselves, but consider--it's free candy! However, we were spared the dilemma because of the various boy/girl scout troops who did throw us the goods.

One of the little boys gleefully singing, "Get your candy from the candy man" gave us some suckers. My favorite, though, is the cub scout (five or six year old cutie) who, looking directly at us, reaching into his bag, said, "Here, you guys can share" and threw us a single Tootsie roll.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Sleepover

I had a small group sleepover last night. Not too many girls came, but those that did had a good time. We choreographed a dance to Ashlee Simpson's "L-O-V-E," painted our nails crazy (I currently have dark purple with white tips), made smores, watched Clueless (well, those who stayed awake). Lots o' junior high fun. What we didn't do was have any deep meaningful conversations or discussions. Part of me feels like I should have been shepherding/teaching/imparting Biblical truth (other than telling onscreen Dionne she should "stay that way until you're married" when she remarks "technically, I am a virgin"). On the other hand, I don't know these girls super-well and some bonding time was probably in order. Hopefully, I've laid the ground work for future conversations, rather than just missing an opportunity to have one.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Crazy Fears Or Fear of Crazies?

What do you think about serial killers? I find them creepily fascinating. What causes a person to become that depraved? I go through bursts of watching The History Channel's Perfect Crime? and reading CrimeLibrary until I get too freaked out and have to stop.

A couple of days ago as I was listening to Sufjan Stevens, I realized I don't really know anything about John Wayne Gacy and went into research mode. Two days ago, I saw Resurrection Man a film with Stuart Townsend as a psychotic IRA-ish thug/killer during the Troubles. Yesterday, I watched Suspect Zero, a fantastic film with Ben Kingsley, Aaron Eckhart, and Carrie-Anne Moss about a serial killer that hunts serial killers using remote viewing (psychic abilities). It was amazing, right up there with Seven, truly that good.

But now, I'm creeped out. Yesterday, I went for a walk in the woods and was furtively glancing off the trail, wondering how I would react if I found a body. And when I was driving, I pulled up next to a middle-aged, over-weight, white guy wearing thick glasses, and worried if I fit the profile of his victims because that's the type of person that I imagine serial killers generally are.

This probably isn't healthy.

Monday, May 22, 2006

You Should Be A Poet
You craft words well, in creative and unexpected ways.And you have a great talent for evoking beautiful imagery...Or describing the most intense heartbreak ever.You're already naturally a poet, even if you've never written a poem.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Nashville Without Altman

I'm in Nashville, TN on a mostly impromptu visit. Dad is at a business conference, so I'm amusing myself around town. It's been fun to be able to choose exactly what to see and when without having to consider anyone else's predilections. While finding things that are especially Nashvillelian but aren't centered around country music or horse racing has been a challenge, I'm gamely venturing about and finding things and activities with which to occupy myself. Tomorrow, I'm likely to give up on the touristy type stuff and head to the mall, but I have done the following things that I couldn't do anywhere else:

Visited the Belmont Mansion. Big pretty house built by this uber-rich woman, Adelicia Hayes Franklin Acklen Cheatham, in the second half of the 19th century; she got even richer playing both sides of the Civil War so she could sell cotton to the English for nearly a million dollars (in 1865 money!). I was there before the place opened and was waiting on the doorstep for a little while. Rather than walking in however, there's a bell that's rung and I felt like Willie Lohman hoping to get in and be accepted. Then while on the tour it was me and the college aged tour guide. It was rather awkward; I didn't know how much eye contact was appropriate, how much I should look at the room, etc. Although I tried to laugh at the scripted jokes, I was more often amused and giggling by other, apparently non-funny, very serious, parts, which prompted Charles (my tour guide) to give me strange looks. All in all though, opulent house (it had indoor plumbing before the White House!) filled with lots of marble statues and china bought on the Grand European Tour.

Ate lunch at Centennial Park by the Parthenon, the world's only life size replica. I thought it was pretty hokey until I learned that it was built in 1897 for the Centennial Fair. Since most people, Adelicia excepted, didn't have money to travel the world and the technology/spread of information (no Discovery or History channel) was far less advanced, it was probably actually very cool and culturey to go see. At that festival they also had recreations of the pyramids, street in Morocco and a bunch of other places around the world. Now there's an art gallery in the basement and 41 foot statue of Athena on the top level, crazy.

I wanted to continue my day of simulacra by seeing The Nashville King, an Elvis impersonator, but Dad was scheduled until late, and there're just some things you can't do on your own.

That was yesterday, today I went to the Frist Center for Visual Arts (the art gallery), which was okay. Half the gallery was closed because they're preparing for a new exhibit, so there were only four rooms open, each containing approximately 6-8 pictures. Ho hum, although one Monet (pretty much the only artist I recognized) was rather nice. What was rather cool was their exhibit (the one other room open in the gallery) of martele silver. This line of silver is American Art Nouveau that was shown at the 1900 Paris Exhibition! Supposedly, it is significant enough to rival Tiffany glass in America's contribution to and execution of Art Nouveau. That was lots of fun to see. Sadly the only tangible, take-homeable thing about it was a ninety dollar book in the gift shop , so I have nothing, no postcard, no pamphlet, to remember it by. I couldn't even take any pictures. Sad, because I do love all things Art Nouveau.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Two Books

Monday I turned my grades in and was officially free! It's been wonderful and the books I've read have rocked my docs, so I'm here to tell you about them in the hopes that they will, one day, rock your docs as well.

Sunshine by Robin McKinley
I love Robin McKinley, and I love vampire fiction, so how could I go wrong? What I find most interesting about this is I see the prequel coming. Like with her book the Blue Sword, which alluded to prior events (Aerin, the dragon killer) subsequently explained by the publication of The Hero and the Crown, I am curious about Onyx Blaise (her dad), what his story is, how he met her mom, and what happened in the Wars that made the family, especially Sunshine's grandmother, disappear. Hopefully, McKinley's working on that right now (goodness, how old is she? I hope she writes books forever!).

City of Glass by Paul Auster
A wonderful piece of post-modern fiction that is a spiritual detective story (think I Heart Huckabees) that deals with doubles, layers of identity, and enough walking to drive Michel de Certeau (one of the more interesting city theorists that I read in class this summer) to delirium. Plus very interesting thoughts on the Tower of Babel and language. If the fall of man precipitated the fall of language (think Lacan), would regaining true language return us to paradise?

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

My Dad Rocks!

Because after hearing me complain about the region problems that prohibit me from buying/watching British DVD's, he bought me a regionless DVD player! (Online and cheaply.) So, now I can watch the copy of Byron that my professor saw when she was in London over Christmas break (and shop on the UK Amazon)!

This cinematic version of Byron is supposed to paint him as his lover Caroline Lamb described him--"mad, bad, and dangerous to know"--while showing how Byron was indeed the first rock star. And who better to play that than Jonny Lee Miller?

Saturday, May 13, 2006

New Music

Tuesday Snow Patrol's new album Eyes Open came out; you may be familiar with the single "Hands Open" that has been playing for a little while. I like them, thought the song was catchy, ergo the purchase, but I had no idea the excitement that awaited me in the full album. Are you ready?

Track eight, "Set Fire to the Third Bar," is sung with...Martha Wainwright! And it rocks!

Friday, May 12, 2006

Enjoy the Silence, Not Really

It was silent, but I didn't enjoy it. Yesterday was quite possibly one of the ickiest days ever. Cold, wind, rain. Just the day for staying inside by the fireplace and reading. Not really the day for dolling up to go to a rock concert, but I did anyway; Depeche Mode tickets are not especially cheap. There was excessive make-up, there was hairspray, there was a custom-made scarf--all for this occasion.

Driving there was something. Broken windshield wiper beginning to scratch the glass and limiting visibility on the highway to a dangerous level. Skipping a fun dinner, ending up at Burger King to get it replaced and still make it on time. Only to learn:

Show's been canceled.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Maybe I'm Not the Best Person to Have in a Crisis

Yesterday was terrifying. I'd been up for no more than twenty minutes, when I heard my dad yelling, "Sarah, I've cut myself." I flew downstairs to the garage where my dad was holding his hand in a towel and looking for the top portion of his thumb. He'd been using the table saw when his hand slipped. I called 911 and, after a disturbing three rings and a bored "Is this an emergency?," got an ambulance to come. I'd gotten my dad to sit still, rather than crawling around on the sawdust covered garage floor, so I ran back up stairs to put on jeans (I was still in my pajamas). About five emergency personnel showed up in three vehicles. They found the severed piece, ultimately to no avail, there was no reattaching it, it was not a clean cut. Emergency room, lots of phone calls. My dad ended up having outpatient surgery last night and is at home, doing okay today. The cut was on his left hand, below his nail, above his knuckle. He still has use of the joint, etc. Praise the Lord, it could have been much worse.

My dad had good, I would almost say jovial, spirits the entire time, partially, I think, so I wouldn't panic any more than I already was. I couldn't look at his hand or the piece of thumb they found, and the doctor at the emergency room made me stay sitting in case I fainted. Number one, not good with blood, etc. Number two, completely unaware of the medical system. When I was talking to the fire chief (or who ever he was), he asked if I wanted to go to this specific hospital. I had no idea which one we "usually use;" we don't use them at all really. Do people actually have 'regular' hospitals? I had to get directions to the place and then ask what I should do when I got there! I guess I'll be better prepared for next time, though I sure hope there isn't one!

Saturday, May 06, 2006

I'll Have My Day in Court!

And it was almost that dramatic of a morning, but I didn't feel very triumphant. A few weeks ago, I received a speeding ticket. Being that I was very busy, I forgot about it and didn't send in the payment (I was very guilty). I knew/thought that the court date was mid-May, so on Monday when I pulled out the ticket to deal with, I was shocked to see that my court date was Tuesday at 9am. Yipe.

Tuesday morning, I was a bundle of nerves, scared to death of standing in front of a judge, desperately trying to explain that I didn't belong here and I just wanted to pay, leave, and never come back. No idea how long it would take, I called the writing center (where I work) to ask if they could rearrange my schedule. This is no easy feat; its a super busy time of the year, and appointments are made. Though sometimes these appointments can be moved to other people, often tutors just have to be there. I felt awful that something I could have taken care of meant that I was going to be late.

Frightened of the legal system, guilty over possibly missing work at the worst possible time--this is the emotional state I was in as I walked out to my car to find the driver's window broken and my stereo gone. My dad's window was also broken, but they didn't get the stereo. Though I waited for a little while for the police, I didn't want to be late for court, so I drove the pick-up (in high heels). It turns out that court was nothing--I went into a room in the back of the court, sat down at a table with a guy (nice tie), talked for ninety seconds, and paid the ticket. It took me the rest of the day to relax I was so wound up. Being so tense is not my normal state, nor fun may I add.

But, that was a few days ago, since then I've finished most of my work. All I've got left is one take home final and a bunch of grading. I've spent today cleaning my room, purging it of all the books for finished papers, and watching season five of Gilmore Girls.

Monday, May 01, 2006

Encourage Me!

Because I'd much rather think about this summer than the last two weeks of the semester, I'm turning my attention to my summer school courses. PhD requirements include reading knowledge of two foreign languages. I am hoping to take French this summer, but am number five on the waiting list (yipes!). I am currently enrolled in German, and while not particularly excited about it, there must be something useful in having a basic understanding of the language (sadly, the six weeks of German I had in my 7th grade "Experiencing Language" course has not left much of an imprint). But, rather than being whiny and despondent about the issue, which I might be if I had more energy, I'd like to think of what good will come from this summer's education. So far I'm excited because:
  • I like the German movies: Run Lola Run, The Princess and the Warrior, and Wings of Desire.
  • Heidelberg was pretty when I was there; I visited my first castle.
  • German Chocolate cake is awesome.
As you can see my list needs more, is anyone aware of popular media and/or culture that might help raise my interest in the German language? Or Germanness in general, say if I had theme music to do my homework to?

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Distract Me!

Okay, so I don't feel as though I have anything amusing or new to share, but I am actively looking for something to distract me from my paper, but that I don't have to feel too guilty about. I mean, I am still sitting at my computer sitting in the piled semi-circle of open and marked books. I'm done with my paper in the sense that I've just about said all there is to say, but I'm not quite to fifteen pages and my professor asked for twenty. I'm slightly annoyed because I had a broader topic that she made me narrow, and now I don't have the books, nor have I done the reading to go back to my original idea. Oh yeah, and its due Wednesday. I wanted to be done with a draft tonight, so I could just be editing--she's a grammatical Nazi, but strangely puts in all the extraneous 'that's' that I try to cut out. I wonder if E&E Editing services include 25% increase in material length...

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Esotaric Juvenalia

In my Middle English Literature class, we're giving 'conference' presentations--basically reading aloud a twenty minute version (8-10 pages) of your term paper. Let's be honest. What we write in those things belongs on the printed page, not the human tongue. While writing, we revel in long, complex sentences, seamless insertion of quotes, and unpronouncable vocabulary. By the fifth one of these in an afternoon, my attention was...let's just say waning. So, with the help of a complicit classmate, we embarked on Medieval MASH!* And so I give you my Medieval future:

Living in a mansion...
I will own four books.
I will be an lady, wench, evil fairy, anchoress.
I will marry Gawain, King Olaf, lovesick lyric poet, Piers Plowman.
He will work as a merchant, field hand, priest, knight.
The language I know will be French, none/illiterate, vulgar English, Latin.
My favorite deadly sin will be gluttony, jealousy, wrath, sloth.
My favorite sermon topic will be chastity, levels of the estates, generosity, joining a convent.



*I will say we actually have played this before with other topics, the best of which is Harry Potter MASH.

Saturday, April 22, 2006

The End is Nigh

Only two weeks of classes and then finals week left. Wow, as I write that I think about the two papers I still have to write (probably only 20 pages total, so not as bad as it could be), and the research papers I have to grade--rough and final drafts. Eek! Finals week used to be the best week of the school year, we'd watch movies--often the whole of the BBC Pride and Prejudice-- and enjoy the sunshine (usually). Sadly, now that I'm a teacher it means doing lots of grading, no matter how hard I try to front-load my syllabus, and making tough decisions like, should I fail (meaning give less than a C, which requires the repeat of the course) the senior taking my required gen-ed along with 24 other hours this semester who is planning on graduating, but really walks that D/C line?

Saturday, April 15, 2006

More Personal Connections

In an attempt to seriously and intently not do my paper (eek, I need ten pages by Wednesday, conference ready!), I watched In the Company of Men, which is directed by Neil LaBute and stars Aaron Eckhart. It's quite interesting, very little action, just lots of talking, but I haven't seen anything so horrific in a very long time. Two corporate alpha males play a game of revenge against women that have wronged them by toying with a deaf girl's emotions. It's terrifying to think that men exist like this. Its disturbing to get such a close look at a character like Eckhart's Chad that may in fact not have a soul.

The personal connection is that it was shot in Fort Wayne, with special thanks to the Pfieffer House--a coffee house that I've known and loved. In fact, I think they shot a scene there, but I'd need a second opinion...

Ok, on to Medieval drama.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Once Again Hollywood Reaches Out to Me

I was watching season three of Angel (the episode "Billy" where the guy passes on misogynistic urges to other guys was awesome...of course, they kicked his ass) and there was another reference to a town in my life. (Like the Wheaton/Veronica Mars connection.) At one point, as the gang is foiling the evil plans of evil-doers, an evil guy ticks off some key cities of operation that they'll need to contact, "Berlin, Singapore, Paris, Muncie." Indeed, Muncie being a center of maniacal machinations would explain some things, like how it took me three years to learn how to find my way home from there in any sort of reliable way.

Fortunately, Harry and the Potters will be playing played there April 7th. (Dang, I was going to make Lij go.) I'm sure they made the town safe with their Wizard Rock that vanquishes evil foes.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

For Once,


I shall be the cool one, who knows the hep internet sites. Check out dinosaur comics. This guy's been doing them every weekday for three or so years, always using the same six panels of art. They're pretty great.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Gulp

That's me swallowing my pride. I had to apologize for saying some things that unintentionally made one of my friends feel devalued about a past relationship. I don't know how well it went; I've been wanting to say something for a week, but didn't figure it was appropriate in an email, or even a telephone conversation, though that's where it ended up happening. I wanted to speak to him in person, but its awkward when there are always other people about. I don't really want the entire office/department to know what I'm saying.

So, I ended up calling him because I was just feeling awful whenever I thought about that situation. The problem is I don't know how well it was received. I'm not great at reading people's facial expressions and body language, but I'm better at that than I am at voice inflection. I don't really know what I was expecting in return, not that he said much, but I hope that I was able to clearly communicate my regret for making him feel bad because that was clearly not my intention.

Monday, April 10, 2006

Could it be? A Research Agenda?

I presented my "award-winning" paper today. I was unnecessarily nervous; all went well.

Lots of papers have yet to be written this semester. I'm rather excited about one that I'm going to write that deals with Dirty Pretty Things, which I just re-watched this weekend and realized how fantastic it's going to be. And exactly how fantastic is that, you ask? We're talking leading into dissertation fantastic, that's how much!

Friday, March 31, 2006

Professional Development

This weekend our department is hosting a conference. It happens every year and is a fairly notable one. I presented today on narrative structure in Orlando both Virginia Woolf's novel and Sally Potter's film. It went okay. I was a little nervous, and I think I went over my twenty minute time limit. Another notch on the cv. I wonder how much a school is really going to look at my conference presentations and if that'll effect my being hired.

I'd much rather spend my weekend cleaning my room, watching Angel, and working on my term paper (though not grading papers and that I'm going to have to do). It's so frustrating that I'm expected to participate in the profession at the level of a professional, while being a student and a teacher all at once. Plus, I'd like to have some semblance of a life. I feel like the only thing I'm capable of doing when not working on school stuff is being at home in my pajamas, watching tv and going for the occasional walk in the woods.

I know its just a matter of gritting my teeth and cranking through, but I'm a bit overwhelmed at the thought of another three-plus years of this.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Shout-out's and Frivolities.

I know I've plugged it before, but I don't think you're listening: Watch Veronica Mars...yes, you! It's just fantastic and looking like its going to be around for awhile longer. So, you'd save yourself the trouble of coming to it later when its wildly popular by getting in at the ground floor now. Last night's episode (an interesting return of Troy for those familiar) started two Arrested Development actors, one of whose character was from "Wheaton, Illinois." Huzzah! National recognition!!

The question of the morning (before I grade annotated bibliographies) is how to spend approximately $150 frivolously? I won a department award for a paper I wrote for my post-colonial/post-imperial class last semester, and they gave me money! I've decided to be decadent, but how will that best be optimalized? I welcome all suggestions. Right now some of my thoughts include Season 1 of VM plus a Best Buy spree, a digital camera (haven't decided which and I'd have to cough up my own money too to get anything worth having), some sort of day spa package, or there's a bracelet at Tiffany's that I quite like.

Monday, March 27, 2006

*Sniff*

I was very sad when my perfume Grace (from Victoria's Secret) ran out because it has been discontinued. Ever gamely, I bought a new scent (this time from Gap, department stores are just too expensive); this one is called Heaven.

I even smell redeemed.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Well, Golly

Its been quite awhile since I've posted. Where do the days go? Especially since I clock daily time on the internet reading other people's blogs.

The past two weeks have swung rapidly between the busy/not-busy* ends of the spectrum. I had spring break in which I was productively lazy. I didn't sleep for ten hours a day (as has happened in the past), but read lots of books and watched lots of movies/tv shows for fun. That meant that my dreams for productivity were not realized, and I spent the last five days sleeping very little and writing very much (ooo, that sounds awkward, hopefully I was more eloquent in my papers).

Between the true breakyness of spring break and when I got educational religion, I went on a retreat with my junior high youth group. It was basically fun, but my girls were crazy. They all brought excessive amounts of candy and caffeine and were hell-bent on sleeping as little as possible. The first night it was after 3:30 when I finally put on the mean-teacher-voice and told them "You have to stop talking on the phone/text-messaging the boys in the next cabin and go to bed!" The second night I slept in the adjoining room and gave them a one o'clock lights out. They were rather tired then, so I think it was upheld, but I fell asleep before getting a chance to check on them.

Amusing incident of the weekend: after being told they should probably only use their cell-phones in an emergency, one girl justified aloud to her friend that a broken hair-straightener was one and she needed to call home. I listened to her explain, twice, to her dad why she was calling, and at one point, she vehemently said "It is the end of the world."

*I accidentally typed "not-busty," and we all know I'll never live on that street. Hehe.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

What's a Girl to Do?

I don't think I would describe myself as lonely; I'm very good at keeping myself entertained. I just wish I had a partner in crime. I was reading/writing at Starbucks today; I'm generally quite productive when I go out to work, my bedroom having a high concentration of distractors--cable tv, my dvd and book collection, an internet accessible computer... So, my problem at Starbucks (and where ever I try to work) is I need a (mostly) silent partner. I need somebody to watch my stuff when I go to the bathroom. I need somebody to listen to me read aloud the occasional interesting/indiscernible sentence, comment, and then go back to her/his own work. I need somebody that I'm comfortable enough with that I don't feel the insecure need to be witty/clever/memorable/entertaining so that this individual will want to continue our relationship. In short, I need an old friend. Everyone around here is too new; I need to perform, or at least be in active getting-to-know you mode when around anyone. All my kindred spirits are too far away, and when I see them I want to be friendshiping, not companioning (does that make sense?).

Truthfully, I don't see a solution in sight. Once I finish my degree and I can either move near an old friend or spend time making an old friend without worrying about finishing up term papers!

Monday, March 13, 2006

So Good

I know I'm a little late to the bandwagon, but I'd like to think there's still room. I watched Walk the Line for the first time yesterday. Sigh. It was awesome. I think its interesting that despite the depravity of Hollywood and their themes (so raves my father), there were still many redemptively themed stories such as Cash's and oscar-winning Crash. Heck, I even thought The End of the Spear was pretty good.

So, in the past two days I've also bought and watched Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and Pride & Prejudice, and, though my bank account is rather strained until the eagle next flies, I am sorely tempted to buy Walk the Line or at the very least, the soundtrack--just because I so love Joaquin and Reese.

Saturday, March 11, 2006

People on the Internet...

...make me laugh. For instance, an amazon "So You'd Like to..." list for "Spending a Fortune and Making the FBI Most Wanted List." To be honest, its rather genius. And such good hearted fun (there's plenty on the net that isn't).

Currently, I'm avoiding working on my book review for Middle English Literature, but I hope to finish it before I go to bed. Yesterday, I didn't finish all my grading (big surprise), but I also want to--at least--get the proposals done tonight.

I did read English as a Second Language (Crane, 2004), which was rather forgettable and silly--people in grad school in England can't drink that much (at least not and still pass their classes!). I read a few chapters in Levenger founder and CEO Steve Leveen's book The Little Guide to a Well-Read Life, which, based on his advice to give up on a book you aren't enjoying after the first 50 pages, I may or may not finish.

This morning I finally started Robin McKinley's Sunshine and am loving it! I'm sure there'll be more to report later. Right now, I can pontificate on the wonders of Neil Gaiman and his Sandman series. These are graphic novels that are Important. They are more truly capital "a" Art than many a novel I've read (see aforementioned chick lit disaster). Visually and narratively these books do some of what I love most--intertextuality that blends pop culture and erudite high art. There's a lot I don't know about this genre/medium, but from what I know, these books are significant for bringing more attention from both the mainstream and critics. So, read 'em.

Oh, and a word of warning. When buying the new Harry Potter, be sure to get the double disc, special edition. Two versions are out there, and I got the single disc. So, I've got to go back to the store to return and make the switch.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Spring Break

While I am quite excited for spring break, I don't feel that I desparately needed it. I have been enjoying this semester, and I don't even feel too far behind on most of my work. Granted, I would have been in trouble for one of my papers had this next week not been free, but still, I feel like I'm on track. I'm at a comfortable pace in my life.

That being said, I have giant, Josh-sized, ambitions and goals that I hope to accomplish this week, but when I sat down and mapped the week out, I felt good. I even have the last Friday-Sunday off so I can go on a retreat with Genesis, my junior high youth group.

Tonight, I'm taking a break. I'm watched the last two episodes of Project Runway; I'm going to read some chick lit I just got from the library, and I'm going to watch Angel (still only in Season 2, grr). Tomorrow's goals: grade research paper topic proposals and synthesis papers, watch Proof, attend a bbq for the Genesis leaders, and maybe some room cleaning.

I'll let you know how it goes.

Thursday, March 02, 2006

For Real Free Downloads

I'd never really realized until tonight what an extensive collection of free downloads that amazon has. Some are really good (as in download this now!), some cheery (and appropriate for the upcoming holiday), and some just goofy.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Ugh.

Bad cold. Not sleeping well, not breathing well. Not concentrating well. Ergo, not much happening here.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

I recently bought the new All-American Rejects cd, and I love it: 1. I can't get enough of the song "Move Along." 2. I've made my peace about "Dirtly Little Secret." I no longer think it's a terrible (though catchy) song about a guy being ashamed of the girl he's with. No, I think it is more literally about our obsessions, our personal shames, our...secrets. The use of Post-Secret in the video isn't clever and incidental but intentionally surface level.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Congratulations

To the employee of the month at my Best Buy, who drives a black el Camino (for some reason it struck me as funny, and made me wish for a camera phone).

To me, who was able to reply "Pretty much, no" to the interviewer from my church checking out to be sure I wasn't someone crazy wanting to do creepy things with the children in my ministry, when he asked, "So, have you never had any problems in your life?"

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Olympics

This morning I watched the opening ceremonies for the Olympics. (Last night, some friends and I had Bollywood night, eating Indian food and watching the film Dum.) I've been surprised by the tepid reaction most of my school friends are giving to the Olympics. Nobody I talked to was excited about them or even planning on watching. It sort of made me feel like the little kid with all the cosmopolitan adults who were too cool for such childishness.

But, as I watch my taped ceremony, I'm glad that I'm excited. So many people spend so much time and energy focusing on the negative, criticizing and critiquing everything that's wrong with the world today. Yesterday afternoon I went to our World Cinema Film Seminar (I actually ran it--the guy who was supposed to couldn't) where we watched and talked about Osama, a film about the terrible condition for women in Afghanistan under the Taliban. People were angry that the international community hadn't done anything to stop it, yet they also talked about how they are against the current US intervention. One girl even offered that because those of us in the room "like arty films and are more anti-Bush." Hmm. I wish I had been clever enough to respond to that.

So, this morning, seeing a world-wide effort to promote healthy relations and simply enjoy some of the pleasures of life, like sports and artistry, I was glad to be celebrating the positive good that is being done in the international community. Rather than feeling shameful, I feel piteous for those who don't want to take a moment and rest their negative energies to be happy and excited for the games to come.

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Oscars

I have to admit I'm not especially excited about this year's nominees. I haven't seen most of the films though I'm working, at least, on the top five. I'll see them soon because they're nominated; they look okay, but, for the most part, they seem so groomed for the Oscars that I'm not expecting any O'Henry endings. I did see Capote on Friday and thoroughly enjoyed it. I love movies about literary people. Plus, if Philip Seymour Hoffman doesn't win the Oscar, I'll never watch them again.

(Okay, we all know that's a lie, but he seems utterly deserving.)

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Freakish and Random

As I was filling out my gradebook for the semester, I noticed that eight students, a full one-third of the class, have last names beginning with "S."

I've finished the second season of Gilmore Girls. Quite fun; I'm torn over whether I want Rory to be with Dean or Jess.

I finally finished my homemade present for Eden; I can now send her the birthday/Christmas combo pack (not yet a month late!).

My cinema and the city class is awesome. Last week we watched Fallen Angels, which rocked. Alienated people wandering Hong Kong at night with cool, techno-mellow music. This week we're watching Metropolis, which I'm excited for, except for the fact that its silent and I can do absolutely nothing else, but watch it. No multi-tasking tonight.

Tuesday, Oscar nominations are announced!

Thursday, January 26, 2006


Do we think this would look awful on me? It would be the perfect thing to go with my red Mary Janes that I don't know what to wear with.

Monday, January 23, 2006

And I Was Doing So Well

I was so productive the first week of school. Heck, I was even good for most of the weekend, finishing most of the week's homework and lesson plans through next Monday. But then Sunday night hit and Gilmore Girls, the first season of which I've been casually watching on dvd, got good. I was up until two a.m. last night (I teach at nine and have a 35 minute commute) watching. And again tonight, rather than finishing reading all my students writing samples, I finished the season, which ends rather cliff hanger-y and now I can't wait to get my hands on the next season. It's frightenly remniscent of last year's Buffy (not that I'm loving Gilmore Girls nearly as much); fortunately, there are only five seasons available, not seven.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

I Can Quit Anytime I Want, or Media Overload

I feel overwhelmed with things to say here, so I'll probably end up saying very little and trite information at that. On Friday there was a lot of snow here, so much that my friends decided not to visit me for dinner and a movie. In the absence of my planned activity, I laid in bed for eight hours or so (I was planning on taking a nap) and watched tv.

Since school started, I feel as though I've been inundated with things to watch. One friend lent me season one of Arrested Development and another season one of Gilmore Girls. In addition, my online rental has sent me (albeit dreadfully low in my queue) the first disc of Profit. So I bounced between these three shows for the entire day. Arrested Development is hilarious in a bizarre way that I'm loving. I'm not yet in love with Gilmore Girls though I'm enjoying it enough to keep watching (like Mt. Everest, the discs must watched because they are there). Profit is disturbing and creepy in a special the-protagonist-is-a-villainous-sociopath sort of way that was too much for mainstream audiences in the mid-90s (heck, it probably still is too much for most mainstream audiences, though not you, gentle reader).

On Saturday, Friday's activities were able to be renewed. We went to see Brokeback Mountain (perhaps slight spoilers ahead). There were some raw scenes that I was uncomfortable watching, but overall, it was interesting, I guess. More interesting however was the not-so-favorable-assessment of the film by my gay friend, who convincingly noted that the film isn't really progressive. Literature/Film often has homosexual characters who are 'punished', similar to the fates of two men in this film. Also, the film seems to be playing to unrealistic fantasies (like most media).

I feel a little bad that my money went to that film, and not End of the Spear a film about Jim Elliot and Nate Saint who were killed on a missionary trip to Ecuador, which my parents are currently seeing. I hadn't really heard of the film until today, and I wasn't prepared to see another film in the theatre so soon.

Well, hopefully, I'll be able to go soon and my students will appreciate the powerpoint on "What You (Should) Already Know About Writing" that I've put together in the meantime.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

The Beginning and Strangeness

First few days of the semester. I generally love it; there's nothing more exciting than getting a new syllabus or a new class--what will I read, learn, and love over the next few months? Yesterday was a little disappointing. One class didn't have a syllabus, and the other had some big talkers.

It was weird in my film class; after having the same professor for two years, I anticipated being a little nervous, but I felt like all my confidence in my proficency in the subject was gone. I couldn't speak or jump into the discussion. I felt like it was my first film class all over. Hopefully, that'll wear off soon enough and I'll be able to participate!

This morning I had my first class for teaching. I think it went ok. I have one student from last semester. The kids were all pretty quiet, but seemed eager enough. Hopefully, they'll be a fun group. I had a great bunch last semester, so I worry that they won't be the same.

Odd thing. I'm pretty sure (in the 90th percentile) that one of the students in my class is someone I went to high school with (and he was older than me). Granted, I understand that people take different paths to (or around) college--some meander more than others. But, I feel weird teaching writing to the guy who was ahead of me in Latin. Should I ask him what high school he went to and verify the connection?

Monday, January 16, 2006

Tomorrow!

The semester starts tomorrow. I'm mostly excited. I am much more productive when I have some sort of a schedule. I did however get my bathroom painted. A week into last semester I wished I would have painted it over the summer, but didn't have time until now. I did three coats and it still isn't perfect, but it's livable. I painted it a darkish orange and am going to use brown paint to add words, a quote, a verse, or some such embellishments, but haven't exactly figured out what those'll be yet. For now, it's just orange and that'll have to suffice.

I've got a meeting on campus tonight. My brother leaves tomorrow. Time for the next chapter.

Friday, January 13, 2006

More Stalking

So, when I ran into my stalkee at the office yesterday, I found a reason to go to his office (leaving a note on somebody else's desk with information that I've been meaning to give her for months). During the course of our conversation (well over a half an hour!), he mentioned his blog, to which I replied, "oh really, so anyone can read it," prompting him to give me the address. Of course, I've read it already, but now I can talk to him about it!

I've been spending a bunch of time working on my syllabus, but I think I'm happy with how the class is going to look. I'm going to have them keep blogs!

Friday, January 06, 2006

Internet Stalking

Seeing as I'm the quietish girl that didn't know how to talk to boys very well until college and still doesn't have the faintest idea of how to instigate a relationship, I excel at internet stalking--quietly gathering up every shred of information about the person to be found on the world wide web and then pining for him secretly. My latest crush has mostly dissipated in the wake of him having a harem of girls also pining for him, some probably much louder than me.

However, he wrote a fantastic journal about a coast to coast walking trip he took by himself this past summer in England. He's quite a droll writer and makes me want to go back to England (not that I need much encouragement for that). While there are a myriad of reasons why we would be perfect for each other, the one from this journal that stands out to me is from Day Twenty-Three. I have made anyone who has ever visited me and walked in the woods behind my house play Pooh Sticks. Generally, I have to explain the reference, but here's a guy who already knows it.

Sigh. Pine.

As Soon As I'm Not Lazy

(e.g. when the semester starts), I shall post this in a permanent fashion on my sidebar.

But not today.

Today, I shall just post the link here and say Post Secret is amazing. People make handmade postcards sharing a secret and send them to this guy who posts them. Its amazing. I've been reading them for several months now and I almost always laugh aloud and tear up at the same time. There's an exhibition of cards in DC that I wish I'd go to (man, I need to visit Carrie!). Cards are used in the All-American Rejects new video for "Dirty Little Secret."

Anyway, if you people haven't ever seen 'em, do so now and I promise you won't regret the time. Money back guaranteed!

Monday, January 02, 2006

Oh Yeah

Happy Blog Birthday to me! It's been exactly one year since my first post. Nothing compared to the prolific likes of Eden or Lij, but still--yay!

The Librarian

All of you should see The Librarian: Quest for the Spear. It's a little cheesy in that special made for TV way (which is silly, why should TV be an inferior medium for two-hour narratives than film...well, I suppose the environment--commercials, etc. makes it less appealing, but that doesn't mean the quality should decrease), but quite fun overall. It's very Indiana Jonesish with Noah Wyle as a man who has umpteen degrees and is the king of nerds (swoon). In case you don't see it--your loss--I will fill you in on the two best lines:

"I should have known he was evil; he gave me an A-"

from one woman to another while engaged in fisticuffs over Noah "Get your own geek"