Archive for December, 2006

Some wonderful things.
December 27, 2006A friend brought over a copy of “Scratch” this weekend and I watched it (IMDB) (Vikipaedia). It’s pretty terrific. . . the interviews are well-done, and the music is so-so fresh.
New goal: go to scratching contest sometime.
Also, one of my favorite columnists – Slate’s Explainer – opened up his mail bag and published some of the best unanswered questions of 2006 . . . of which there are something like 7,000. Some are funny, some are thought-provoking. I guess you get to choose how seriously to take them. My favorites from the article include:
- Is it possible to collect all the cookie dough in Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream and actually bake cookies from it?
- Why did Zidane head-butt his opponent in the World Cup final? Do the French not fight with their fists?
- Why is grilled chicken tasting increasingly rubbery and odd?
- PYGMIES: How/when/where/still in existence/do we mate with them?
Eye update: Still messed up, but improving.

World, keep on turning.
December 22, 2006
This is pretty much one of the best things that’s ever been on TV.

Happenings.
December 19, 2006First of all, let me say that it is a good idea to replace your contacts case every 3 months or so to avoid contamination and therefore infection. ‘Nuff said.
Secondly, a wonderful happening on the T this morning. I was heading to work a bit late because of health occurrences related to above; it was probably around 10 a.m. I was half asleep as usual, but another girl on the train was all the way asleep . . . I assume that she was working on a project all night for some classes at MIT. She was a tiny person, skinny and fair, and she woke with a start just as the doors were beginning to close at the Kendall stop, jumped up, thrashed a man aside from her, got half-stuck in the door as it closed, and finally made it out of the train, successfully remembering all of her books but without a lot of grace. All the passengers on the train of course noticed this, and most of us shrugged our shoulders at each other and made awkward smiling gestures . . . except one man who said “we need her for the Patriots!”

Yoko Ono
December 15, 2006So I’m totally in love with Yoko Ono. I think it started when I was studying postwar history in high school, but it was confirmed once I realized that she was such a talented performance artist. I know very little of her work, but I choose to believe that she’s wonderful.
I don’t think it was meant to have this effect, but one of my memories of love for Yoko is from when I saw Dar Williams in concert once in college. Dar described how she had the reverse opinion of Yoko from everyone else she knew—evidently Dar studied performance/abstract art in college and knew of Yoko primarily in that vein. When she heard about John Lennon, Dar was upset that he and his band were distracting Yoko from her art!
I think that charming story sealed the deal for me. I shed a couple of tears this summer when I was reading a Vogue article about the (by the way, amazingly young-looking and not afraid of showing leg) Ono . . . she said that everything was generally fine, especially when she was around people, but that she still mourned John every day. This was really moving for me. I also saw her accept an award on television once, not too too recently–I think it was right after the war broke out in Iraq. Through lots of tears she talked about how her late husband’s words were still very applicable today . . . all you need is love, etcetera. For me it’s always really comforting to see an established American icon like that, especially a woman – Alison Kraus, Bonnie Raitt, Glenn Close, Lily Tomlin, etc. all have a similar effect on me.
This post is a masterpiece of bad writing, but in light of the current troubles with her driver, and the accusations flying everywhere, I thought about Yoko today and felt a little sad about the whole thing.

Nelly Furtado
December 15, 2006I was really suspicious of Nelly Furtado at first given the “I’m like a Bird” phase . . . but beginning with her collaboration with Missy on a remix of “Work It” (I really liked her singsong-raps) I started to love her.
I’m now obsessed. There is much funk to be had. . . but she needs to avoid the bangs (is this hypocritical of me to say at this point? Now that I have bangs, do I need to be supportive of other bang-wearers, or can I still have my standards?)

I was just playing with you.
December 7, 2006
I know all my faithful blog readers have been wanting to ask me my thoughts on the new Gwen album and been too bashful. Fear not, I didn’t forget to buy the album at lunch yesterday during the gale force winds and smile all the way home. And don’t think I haven’t listened to it 10 times within the last 36 hours – what kind of girl do you take me for?
So far as the album goes, I’d never miss a new project of hers, but I’m not in love with it yet. I think it might be analogous to another sophomore project of hers, The Return of Saturn (admission: it’s not technically a sophomore album, and also, I still love it.) At the time, the reviewers said it was a typical sophomore slump, and I can see what they mean given the previous album and the extent to which it kicked butt. But—and this is what gives me hope—it was then followed with an Album of Great Strength (Rock Steady) . . . I can only hope that Gwen’s junior-year effort will have a similar success. Unfortunately, I don’t have the love yet for The Sweet Escape that I have for the Return of Saturn. Perhaps this will happen in its own sweet time.
So far as tracks go so far, I like Wind it Up, Early Winter, and “Don’t Get it Twisted.” And I dig the Sound of Music grabs, and the fake hair. (Perhaps she will do a video as a lion tamer, plain?)
That reminds me, one of my goals for 2-0-0-7 is to go and see Bonnie Raitt in person, hopefully with my Dad.

Questions and more questions
December 7, 2006Dave and I got into an interesting conversation about insular culture yesterday. The question that ended up coming out of it was – does a measure of equality across the board mean a drop in insular culture? I’m not sure what mine is (maybe it is so close to me that I can’t see it?), but he’s very attached to his.
Some of the issues reminded me of an article that Dennis and I discussed recently.

Putting the Hunk back into reality t.v.
December 6, 2006So I’ve been watching Beauty and the Geek lately, in defiance of all the stuff I should be working on. Is it unusual that I think all the guys are really hot even before they get their makeovers?
I know he messed up later, but I thought I knew who I was going to marry for a minute tonight when one contestant showed up wearing a shirt saying “I put the stud in study.” Brains and brawn?


