Archive for July, 2009

Bloggin’ (to the tune of “Truckin'”)

July 21, 2009

My father is a Libertarian, and he reads a lot of Reason magazine. When I told him I was blogging, and slightly ashamed of it, he sent me a link to an article about a new book called Say Everything by Scott Rosenberg, one of the founders of Salon. Link is below the excerpt.

Reason: Near the end of the book, you describe bloggers as the “curators of our collective history.”

Rosenberg: In the future, when people write the history of our time, they’re going to have this incredible trove of information. It’s not totally raw, but it is much broader than the material historians have had to work with in the past. It encompasses a much wider swath of humanity. I can’t help thinking of that as a monumental achievement.

http://www.reason.com/news/show/134784.html

Image Craving

July 20, 2009
Brigitte Bardot.  Is pretty.

Brigitte Bardot. Is pretty.

My boss makes me hate words. So…here is Brigitte Bardot.

“When I hear the word culture, I reach for my pistol.”

July 20, 2009

So I have this thing about cults, especially ones that incorporate group chanting/dancing to their worship repertoire (this is kind of all of them.) My unprofessional opinion (I’m an unlicensed, practicing therapist) is that this is because I grew up in a decidedly dogma-free household and community, and now crave restrictions, belief systems forced on me, and community-wide demonstrations of religious ecstasy.

I also like revolutions because, well, let’s face it, who doesn’t love a good revolution?

And world music.

So all these things kind of come together in this movie The Dancer Upstairs, directed by John Malkovich (him, too, I like) and released in 2002. The movie wasn’t critically lauded but I found it quite compelling. It takes place in some hypothetical, EveryCity, Latin America, and is centered around a detective, portrayed by Javier Bardem, as he tries to track down the leader of an ephemeral revolutionary party named Presidente Ezekiel. Ezekiel likes to quote communist philosophers and Kant and Nazi politician Hermann Wilhelm Goring (responsible for the title), and is also a fan of guerrilla and terrorist warfare, including suicide bombings and dog slaughterings. Bitchin’.

IMDB says…

The story is inspired by the Maoist insurgency in Peru known as the Shining Path. Its leader Abimael Guzmán, who was known by the nom de guerre President Gonzalo, was captured in an apartment above a ballet studio in the capital Lima in 1992. The ballet teacher Yolanda was based on Maritza Garrido Lecca, the woman in whose apartment Guzmán was found. Bardem’s character was inspired by Benedicto Jimenez and General Antonio Ketin Vidal, the leading figures responsible for Guzmán’s capture.

So there are a lot of things I really like about the movie, one being that everything is so misty and unclear the whole time. There are sinister forces at work in this provincial Latin American capital, invisible wires buzzing all the time, sending out Maoist aphorisms, creating secret societal connections, developing plots. I’m sort of the opposite of many movie goers, I think, in that I prefer not to be spoon fed everything; I appreciate a little mystery, even at the end of the day. I savor discomfort, I guess. Your every day cinematic masochist. In this movie, things are teased out well, but the majority of the action, at first, is shrouded in darkness and lit only by fireworks (the guerrilla group is fond of turning off the city’s power and then setting off fireworks), and I find it really interesting.

Any way, at one point Detective Rejas (Bardem) and another detective find a tape that a devotee is leaving for Ezekiel in a pre-determined drop off location. They intercept the drop off, grab the tape and examine it. It seems to be innocuous, until during the credits, the screen flickers (like the film has been cut) and it cuts to a party of people dancing joyously to a song that I have been TRYING to track down for ages. There’s a group clapping part, so I was SOLD! Once I found the name of it, I had to find an MP3 online, and now I pass it along to you. Enjoy yourself some Egyptian hoopla. Fuck Monday. Start a revolution.

http://sudairy.com//music/audio/awedouny.mp3

It could be worse…

July 20, 2009

You could be Mischa Barton.

An Underrated Movie

July 20, 2009

There is a Kicking and Screaming other than the awful Will Ferrell one. It was directed by Noah Baumbach, who later directed The Squid and the Whale and Margot at the Wedding, and released in 1995, and is probably one of the most quotable post-collegiate malaise movies ever. (Surprisingly a large category!)

“How can you be nostalgic? We only graduated four months ago.”

“I’m nostalgic for conversations I had yesterday. I’ve begun reminiscing events before they even happen. I’m reminiscing this right now. I can’t go to the bar because I’ve already been there in my mind, and I didn’t have a good time.”

Question: is there a word that means, “To do something specifically for its value as a memory”? If not, there should be.

The Ten Best Gifts I’ve Ever Received, in Order of Greatness

July 18, 2009

1. My friend G wrote me a six-movement piece for steel string guitar. He writes:

“Like yourself, they are very dense works in a very small package. As usual, it’s avant-garde music so you probably wont’ be whistling the tunes in the shower, but I hope you enjoy!”

2. Another friend gave me his sister’s old Caboodle, which is a great carry on bag when you fly.

3. Trapped in the Closet: The Big Package (Chapters 1-24)

4. Midget porn, given to me by my boss

5. A first edition of Lolita, along with a really nice letter

6. Trips (Israel, Brazil), by my parents

7. A mini-knife on a necklace

8. Fresh Direct

9. Netflix

10. A first edition of The Little Prince

(One person is responsible for three of these, and after writing this, I think I may send him a love letter…)

Excerpts from a Conversation My Funny Friend and I (Also Funny) Had Last Night

July 16, 2009

PS: also zoloft does wonders for tempering my sex drive, so that helps!
ID: hooray zoloft!
PS: sad egg no more
you remember that commercial right?
ID: tugged at my heart strings, fo shiz
PS: zoloft egg
me: but i was on zoloft once and i never got to be a happy egg!
and it’s the cutest thing EVER!
PS: its so cute!
ID: darling

Don't you just want to hug it?!

Don't you just want to hug it?!

Image Craving

July 16, 2009
Statue in Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans, Louisiana

Statue in Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans, Louisiana

Jesting, Infinitely, Part Trois

July 15, 2009

Happy day after Bastille Day…

“Lenz euphorically tells Green how he once got the tip of his left finger cut off in a minibike chain once and how but within days of intensive concentration the finger had grown back and regenerated itself like a lizard’s tail, confounding doctoral authorities. Lenz says that was the incident in youth after which he got in touch with his own unusual life-force and the energois de vivre and knew and accepted that he was somehow not like the run of common men, and began to accept his uniqueness and all that it entailed.”

A Brilliant Idea That is Mostly Mine

July 15, 2009
Gay and Nan Talese at their house in New Jersey

Gay and Nan Talese at their house in New Jersey

I participate in this writing program that’s based out of Baltimore, where I will be going in a couple of weeks.  Be prepared for posts with such titles as, “Stalking John Waters” and “Real Hookers, Real Lives”.  I digress…any way, last January I went up to Northampton, Massachusetts to meet with my mentor and the other five people in our group.  We basically talked writing and craaaaaft and drank a lot (writers, psh) and at one point starting talking about the formidable journalist Gay Talese, pictured above with his wife Nan, who had (has?) her own imprint at RandomHouse (damn, girl!)

Besides being the owner of a sort of unfortunate first name, Gay is considered to be the “father of New Journalism”, and is the author of books like Honor Thy Father (about the Mafia) and The Bridge: The Building of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. He also wrote the essay “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold”, which you can read in its entirety here, along with the other six best Esquire magazine stories ever written:

http://www.esquire.com/features/page-75/greatest-stories

So we were talking about Gay Talese and how he is a member of a small category of journalists who make no effort whatsoever to blend in with their subjects.  Seriously, Talese would show up wearing a white suit and red suede shows in the Congo to write a report on half-naked pygmies.  Baller.

We (collectively, as a group, though someone else may have initiated it) came up with a brilliant idea for an article or essay…a guided tour through Gay Talese’s closet!  Each piece of clothing could be a platform for reminiscing about his many journalistic adventures!  A story in a great outfit!  What more could you want?

The group gave me permission to pitch this story around as long as I give them credit, which I will do but almost don’t even need to as they will be famous, well-dressed writers in their own rights in a matter of years (weeks, minutes).  Let this serve as a record for anyone who steals the idea!  Copyright!  Mine!  Plus I have five other people who will vouch for the birth of brilliance, which occurred in late January, 2009.  It’s a boy!  And we’re naming him Gay…(?)

If someone who edits a magazine or sumpin sees this and wants to pay me to write it (girl’s gotta eat), please let me know!  I was thinking it would work well in New York magazine or Men’s Vogue, though that may have gone under…?

Granted, this may be like the time when I was a kid and I had what I thought was the most incredible concept for a series of chapter books a la The Babysitter’s Club. I almost exploded when I told my babysitter.  “Basically it’s going to be set on a cruise ship and it’ll be about all the people who live and work on the cruise ship…”

“I hate to tell you this,” she said, “But that’s The Love Boat.