Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Alaska, film, flights, kayak.com, Michelle Williams, movies, Wendy and Lucy, Will Oldham
Yesterday I saw “Wendy and Lucy,” the movie starring Michelle Williams and a dog (perhaps unsurprisingly, Will Oldham is also in it briefly). Michelle Williams plays a young girl, Wendy, who is trying to drive from Indiana to Alaska so that she can work at one of the canneries in Ketchikan. She has very little money (I think she starts out with like $600 or so) and is accompanied by her dog, Lucy. Her car breaks down in Oregon, where the action of the film is set. Her money dwindles. Complications ensue.
Ok, so this movie is actually pretty great — Michelle Williams is very believable, the dog is cute, the mood and pacing are terrific, etc. Except. Except that about two-thirds of the way in, it suddenly occurred to me that with $500 or $600 Wendy could have FLOWN to Alaska very easily. They probably could have put the dog in that pet cargo part of the plane, too.
I looked this up on kayak.com just to be sure — if you left in a couple weeks, you could fly from Indianapolis to Juneau, Alaska for about $470. In fact, if you flew directly to Ketchikan, the plane ticket would cost you $370. Even with taxes, ride to the airport, etc., Wendy would still have enough cash for some snacks and a ride to the canneries from the airport. Obviously this would not be a nonstop flight, but Wendy pretty much has all the time in the world, so I don’t think it would bother her.
I’m not trying to be one of those people who annoyingly points out the tiny logical flaws in every movie, but since the entire plot revolves around Wendy’s ability to get to Alaska, I have to say that I couldn’t remain emotionally involved with the movie once I thought of that.
And no, kayak.com did not pay me to write this. Although I think a “Wendy and Lucy” tie-in would make for a great kayak.com commercial. You know, in a sellout-y kind of way.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Los Angeles, spring, sunshine, Union Square
Sitting in Union Square drinking coffee. It’s 37 degrees or so, with a slight breeze, and sunny. It occurred to me that the longer I sat here, the happier I became, which must be due to the whole Vitamin D thing. It also occurred to me that the reason I’m so happy in L.A. is probably due to sitting in the car and soaking up sunlight all the time. I should remember to sit more. Outside, that is. I do A LOT of sitting inside.
Also, there seems to be some sort of verb tense problem in this post, but I’m not going to fix it. And my fingers are getting cold from typing on my iPhone. Have I mentioned that I love my iPhone? I love it.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: charles schumer, columbus circle, my camcorder
Ryan and I were walking out of the mall at Columbus Circle, and who should be holding a press conference right outside but Charles Schumer? Random. It pretty much made my day, considering I have had this pocket-sized camcorder for about three weeks now and haven’t seen anything vaguely video-worthy during that time. So now, please sit back and enjoy 4 minutes of Chuck Schumer giving stock answers to questions about Hillary Clinton’s upcoming Senate vacancy, the attacks in Mumbai, the recession, and the increase in subway fares.
UPDATE: Apparently the press conference was related to Schumer’s proposed legislation on gift card fees, which would explain why they kept talking about gift cards.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: george saunders, my gal, new yorker, sarah palin
There’s no real reason to put this link up, since I’ve pretty much sent it to everyone I know already (a small subset of whom are the readers of this blog), BUT I love it so much I guess I want it to be part of my life forever:
http://www.newyorker.com/humor/2008/09/22/080922sh_shouts_saunders?currentPage=all
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: hockey mom, lipstick, pitbull, sarah palin
What’s the difference between a hockey mom and a barking, inbred, non-sentient being that should be kept on a leash (and does not appear to have a good grasp of foreign or domestic policy)?
Lipstick.
Ryan and I are sitting on a plane, having just arrived in Los Angeles, and we are sitting one row in front of the most boring guy ever. A sampling of the most boring guy’s comments:
“I think we’re going into Gate 64. No, wait, 67. We’re going into Gate 67. Does someone want to bet me a dollar that it’s 67?”
“Look at that Delta plane, it’s so small. It’s such a small flight. Look, it’s so small.”
(regarding his hair). “You called me shaggy, and you called me hippie, and you called me grungy. We’ve got like a combo of comments. Like a trombo.”
(singing) “We’re going into Gate 67. Gate 67.”
“This is not like Ryan Air.”
“Do you think Michael Phelps is the greatest Olympian ever? I do.”
Ryan: “Kids these days. So fucking boring.”
Filed under: Uncategorized
I saw this blurb on Yahoo News about the Russian invasion of Georgia today:
“AP – Russian tanks rolled into the crossroads city of Gori on Wednesday then thrust deep into Georgian territory, violating the truce designed to end the six-day war that has uprooted 100,000 people and scarred the Georgian landscape.”
Is it just me, or is the rape metaphor in this sentence somewhat intense? Not that it isn’t completely apt or justified, just that it made me actually squirm. In a good way — in an I’m-feeling-the-brutality-of-the-situation-through-your-imagery kind of way. Maybe “good” is not the right word: “effective” is more on target. Practically a polemic when you think about it.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: All Points West, Christian rock, confusion, credibility, Kings of Leon, Occam's Razor
Yesterday I went to a music festival called All Points West, which took place at Liberty State Park in Jersey City. We rode a $15 ferry from Wall street to get there (my loopt friend, apprised of my every move, texted me to ask if I was taking the water taxi to Ikea. Nice try, Sherlock.). Since we started out late that day, and since we spent the time during Animal Collective in the beer “garden,” and since we decided to miss the Roots in favor of staking out our position in front of the Radiohead stage, we only saw two bands that day: Radiohead and the most puzzling, disorienting band I have ever come across — a band called Kings of Leon. As a sidenote, this is also the story of how I am an idiot.
The term, “mind-blowing experience” is often bandied about, used to describe any old thing that is great. For example, bands that sound very good and put on a very good show can sometimes be called “mind-blowing” by a well-meaning but perhaps overenthusiastic fan. This was not the case with Kings of Leon. Nor was it the case that Kings of Leon were even good — they were comfortably in the mediocre-to-somewhat-dismal range, with your standard rock-style songs that tried hard but fell short of being catchy. However, their mediocrity matters less than the fact of their triumph over that most insurmountable of barriers, a triumph so baffling as to be impressive. For you see, Kings of Leon, the band wedged in between Animal Collective and Radiohead, is a CHRISTIAN ROCK BAND. And not just a rock band where the members are Christian. No, a band that plays music in the genre known as Christian Rock. Like, for Jesus.
By the way, I didn’t know any of this when they took the stage. I had heard their name thrown around a lot in relation to other bands, bands that, for lack of a better term, were brands I felt I could trust (an embarrassing and telling sentiment). Taken as That Type of Band, I then heard half of a song and found it completely intriguing. The song sounded so literal, so much like it was trying to create an exact replica of a type of rock music that had only recently become old, without any nods to anything current or slightly new. Far from being turned off by it, I was incredibly excited (and a little nervous) that what I was witnessing must be the future of music — bands that were self-consciously trying to make themselves into museum pieces of a highly specific kind, with no nods or winks to show how ironic they undoubtedly were being. Kings of Leon, I firmly believed, had fully immersed themselves into the roles they were playing, as if they were living in their own mockumentary. You know, like Spinal Tap, but without any of the tell-tale jokes that would give it away to those not already in the know. The fact that the music they were trying to recreate was not to my taste only reinforced my admiration of their highly developed senses of humor. In short, I thought they must be geniuses.
So when the band came on, I was prepared for a certain type of an experience. They played the first song. Ok, I thought. Sure. I get the joke. They played the second song. Hmm, I thought. That’s interesting….what? The third song began. I began to get freaked out. My brain began racing as I started to panic. I don’t understand, I thought. I don’t get what’s happening. The world tilted sideways; everything got surreal. What was going on? Was this band even more brilliant than I had previously suspected, creating a perfect simulacrum of an increasingly specific type of band with breathtaking attention to detail, attitudes, dress, mannerisms, and musical composition? Or was I watching something else, something I didn’t quite understand? Then, towards the end of the third or fourth song, and after I had been staring blankly at the lead singer’s gold cross necklace for a full fifteen minutes (yeah, not too quick), in a blinding flash the Truth revealed itself to me in all Its Glory. Which must mean I have been Saved.
Anyway, once I had my revelation (further confirmed by Fiance Ryan whispering to me a minute later, “they’re a Christian rock band!”), the relief I had from my mental anguish was soon replaced with more questions: how did they get here? What is their deal? Who were these people singing along to the songs? Were they all Christian, or just oblivious, or knew but just liked it anyway? Does liking Christian rock mean you are Christian? (To this last, I’m going to say yes.). Also, the relief was replaced by the excruciating knowledge that we were going to have to stand there another hour and listen to this.
Of course, the most troubling question I had to ask myself was, really, how did I dupe myself? Am I really that credulous, that willing and eager to believe that shit is gold just because I believed it had credibility by association? That when faced with the band itself, I thought it more plausible that they had constructed an elaborate meta-reality of knowing fake-shittiness, rather than admit what in the normal world is the only explanation that passes the Occam’s Razor test — that Kings of Leon is just a regular, shitty, Christian rock band? Clearly, some soul-searching is in order.
As a final note, the lead singer did the sign of the cross over the crowd about 45 minutes into the set. Ryan told me he found this offensive, and I agreed.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: facebook, grand central, loopt, panopticon, privacy, regret
So, I recently received a request from a friend to join a service called loopt, which is basically a networking site where you can track exactly where your friends are at any moment of the day. For example, if I go onto loopt, I can see that one of my friends is on the corner of two random streets in a major urban center, and he can see that I am making my way down the street in another urban center. That way we can always, ALWAYS keep track of one another.
This is one of those things that sounds pretty much like the worst idea ever, like the greatest invasion of privacy yet (at least since facebook started that thing where it tracks all the sites you visit and posts it on your mini-feed). It very clearly marks the beginning of the end, the point where we enter a future where the government and corporations and various other institutions typically categorized as oppressive have access to all our information and therefore total control over us, etc. In fact, as I was joining I was thinking about how I will most definitely regret this decision in the future. Joining a service like this is asking for trouble. I’m sure in a hundred years, when the streets are overrun with paramilitary police-style minutemen brutally keeping the peace while we sit inside tiny pods trying not to think illegal thoughts and so forth, loopt will be the way they keep track of our every movement.
Anyway, if you want to join, I’m sure you can google loopt or something. And you should text me if you do, because I want to know where you are. Or rather, I WANT TO KNOW WHERE YOU ARE.
I’m at Grand Central now! Come meet me!
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: babelfish, cop-outs, songs of the outbreak, translation
So, this is kind of a cop-out post, but poorly translated text is so endlessly amusing. Here’s my previous post after it was run through Babelfish twice, English to Spanish, then back to English: