March 2007 Archives

Or something like that.

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Wayne Coyne, from Pitchfork:
There's the real world and then there's this fantastical world. This girl, the Yoshimi character, is dying of something. And these two guys are battling to come visit her in the hospital. And as one of the boyfriends envisions trying to save the girl, he enters this other dimension where Yoshimi is this Japanese warrior and the pink robots are an incarnation of her disease. It's almost like the disease has to win in order for her soul to survive. Or something like that.
Yep. The Flaming Lips' 2002 Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots is being adapted for a Broadway Musical. Aaron Sorkin, of West Wing and Sports Night fame, has signed on to script the musical; Des McAnuff will direct/produce. Wayne of McAnuff, "When Des heard the record, he heard a lot about death and loss and the triumph of your own optimism...he had an emotional attachment to it". I can't say my own reaction to Yoshimi was altogether different the first few listens. It's even more so now, my "emotional attachment", anyway. I worry about a live-action adaptation, but given the nature of the music and even the Lips' live shows, this seems exactly right. I can't wait to make another trip to NYC to see it.
Hats-off to you, Sarah. I have been having a terrible beginning-to-my week, but Sarah introduced me to something incredibly funny that's been right there under my nose all along:

Best of Craigslist

In particular, she sent me two of the best, "Let us frolic in my totally dope blanket fort" and "My Turtle Needs a Booty Call". I'm giggling like an idiot over here. I also really like "Couch - Very Uncomfortable, Red - $3.75", "Will pay to catch your cold!" and (slightly morbid but funny) "My ghost is such a joke!"

Use The Farm, Luke

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Another vid! This is ridiculously well done; nice work, Organic Trade Association. Without further ado, Grocery Store Wars: Also, good supplemental material for the book I'm currently reading . . .

Back in a Short - Short

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I'm glad the SNL Digital Shorts continue to be solidly funny. You don't even have to be a Rainn Wilson fan to like "Business Meeting": (May I suggest MacGruber 1, MacGruber 2 and MacGruber 3??)
As seen on The Tighten Up Report . . . I went to the University of Virginia. That makes me an alumna. Cool. That also means I get emails from the Alumni Association regardless of whether or not I am technically a member (sorry, guys, but until I'm making a 6-figure salary, I'd rather you not hit me up for money every time I open my mailbox). Yesterday, I received an email about an upcoming event surrounding this Spring's Foxfield Races called "Bagels & Buses". For $55, you get a Bodo's Bagels breakfast, validated parking ticket, Foxfield's admission and bus ride to and from the races. If you've never heard of Foxfield's, to give you an idea, a local police officer was overheard referring to it as "Drunkfest". So, add a few popped-collars and sun dresses (read, "fratties and sororities") to whatever your idea of drunkfest is, and you've pretty much got it. Or, maybe you don't. I've never actually been to Foxfield's so I'm not an authority on the matter. But this post isn't about Foxfield's. It's about this picture. The picture they are using to promote this "Bagels & Buses" event. One, that is not a University Transit Service bus. Two, that is the most unappetizing looking bagel I've ever seen; it certainly isn't a Bodo's Bagel because we all know Bodo's has about the tastiest bagel south of the Mason-Dixon. Both of these points make me wonder if the folks who put together this event even went to UVa or live in the state of Virginia for that matter. Oh, and that's the worst Photoshopping I've ever seen. But besides all of that, why would anyone in their right mind call an event "Bagels and Buses" or create an image of a bus going through a bagel to promote it?!?! Nothing says "delicious" like rubber, flour and axle grease. University of Virginia Alumni Association, tighten up! Stop half-assing disgusting Photoshop images and over-charging for events.
I wish I'd seen this about 3 years ago. Thank you, freeengineer. [via Discover (nithin)]
I just stumbled upon "tumblelogs" or, as tumblr.com would have you believe, "blogs with less fuss". Tumblr is the software you can use to start your own tumblelog. Okay, "tumblelog" is a horrible, horrible conglomeration of vowels and consonants. I've had to think about it several times while typing it -- tumbleblog? tumblog? tupelo-blogg'r-loo? -- and the omission of the "e" in "tumbler" is a bit too much like Flickr, which I already irrationally *heart* and therefore ascribe my loyalties. Speaking of irrational love, traversing tumblr's featured tumblelogs (I am starting to really, really despise that word), I went here, which has a post -- wait, can I still call it a post? Is it a "tumble"? "Spill"? "I-fell-down-and-broke-my-crown"? -- including this use-to-*heart* pyramid, which made me giggle. With irrational love:
I can't see why anyone would ever use Tumblr, except maybe a new blogger tumbl'r or for aesthetic purposes, but especially because the blogosphere (more dumb vernacular) software already out there isn't restrictive. I mean, I can post long, wordy rants or short one-liners or images or other forms of media; why would I download more software for functionality I already have?!? Sorry, guys.
I have been thinking a lot about relationships. In particular, how being connected to others is what ultimately leaves us so alone. Yes, that sounds incredibly bleak, but what I mean to say is, the majority of my life has been propelled by the relationships I have cultivated -- familial, friendly, romantic -- and it is the emotional fiber of these bonds that leaves me vulnerable and wounded when something is severed or skewed. The easiest event to understand being the direct shearing of such a bond -- a death, a quick transition, a tragic event. But there are many other kinds of stresses which pull and tug at our connections with the people we love and care about which are not immediately obvious but which also cause turmoil and stress, confusion, sadness and isolation. This also leads me to think a lot about meditation, and specifically ascetic practices that encourage self-depravation. We normally think about this in terms of sacrifice. This seems particularly appropriate for those around me celebrating Lent right now: I will give up sweets! My favorite television show! Sleeping-in! While certainly an enlightened step for some, I’m talking more about the lifestyles of, say, monks; the conscious decision to live a life in constant meditation and deprivation in order to enrich one’s spirituality. Therein lies the problem: If I were to devote myself to a life of solitude and meditation -- deprive myself the satisfaction of fulfilling, social interactions with other human beings (among other things) -- would I truly bring myself closer to a spiritually enlightened place? That is, is it not the loss of such connection to others that reminds me, humbled, of just how truly alone and spiritual I am or can be? If I have never known such relationships, what would I have to measure my solitude against? Of course I am talking in extremes, Simeon the Stylite vs. Sally the Socialite, but I do think there is a lot buried in social connection that people overlook and undervalue as superficial or unimportant. I think most people can recall, during some of the happiest and fortunate moments of our lives, that feeling of being overwhelmingly fortunate. For me, that often has to do with feeling extremely grateful for the relatively small, but wonderful group of people in my life with whom I feel closely connected. Then there are the opposite moments when there are blips in these emotionally fulfilling relationships: rips, stretches and twists on that emotional fabric. The feelings associated with this, juxtaposed with memories of the feelings of overwhelming goodwill, are sharp and deep reminders of how uncertain even these relationships are, but also reminders of how good these relationships were/are/could or might be again. I find myself as grateful for these painful moments as I am for just having these relationships in the first place. It is true that the moments of sever are when I find myself less likely to be rational and thoughtful but uncomfortably emotional and when I definitely find myself swimming in emotionally difficult turmoil, but again: I am grateful for this. It is the act of catching those reigns and reminding myself of what is good and worthwhile that also reminds me of my own spirituality. I guess all this is to say that I am feeling solemn and thankful for the relationships I have had in my life. Both for them and what they have and will continue to reveal about myself.

May 2008

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