Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Have you heard about "Lost" fans' outrage over the V logo fiasco? In the grand scheme of things, it's really not that big a deal, but still sort of frustrating when trying to get an organic tv experience!:)

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/31/that-v-made-lost-hard-to-see/

I guess it's the stubborn streak in me, but immediately after "Lost" was over, I turned off the tv and decided not to watch "V" like I had originally planned. I'm so tired of watching shows with dancing characters, wide banners and so on and so forth along the bottom of the screen or at the corner of it. No wonder it's becoming more common for people to wait for their favorite tv shows to come out on dvd. The advertising-hungry powers that be have obviously decided to pump it up since so many of us fast forward through the commercials...

Network executives should not be surprised to discover viewers are growing tired and disgusted with these intrusive symbols. Ratings for all shows will continue to plunge if this newest way of promoting shows and products continues!!

Monday, March 29, 2010

The Broken
Slow and boring or cinematic and thought-provoking? There are two camps of response to one of the more highly regarded films in the After Dark Horrorfest series. In "The Broken" Lena Headey plays a radiologist struggling with her identity after she is in a serious automobile accident.

The movie is full of broken mirrors and doppelgangers and lots of quiet, dark moments and yet Headey does such a good job and the eerie atmosphere is so convincing you don't really care that nothing makes sense and some moments seem to drag on...for anyone who likes to overanalyze their movies, this is for you!!:)

Friday, March 26, 2010

Darwin Deez

"Radar Detector":


It's not due till April 13th, but you can hear this catchy little tune here:


http://www.myspace.com/darwindeez

I'm looking forward to hearing the entire album!:)
Head First

I'm a Goldfrapp fan so maybe I'm a little too biased in liking Head First.  Entertainment Weekly isn't that crazy about it...not to mention their little dig at Xanadu, which is to be expected given the movie seems to be either a love or hate it kind of deal. 'Course I love the soundtrack so even if they are right about this album I don't mind. :)



EW's GRADE
B

Details Release Date: Mar 23, 2010; Lead Performance: Goldfrapp

BELIEVER Goldfrapp | Goldfrapp
BELIEVER Goldfrapp
Having deserted the dozy comedown of 2008's muted Seventh Tree, U.K. duo Alison Goldfrapp and Will Gregory return to the dance floor with nine tracks of glitter-strewn glam pop. Head First sounds as if they've been commissioned 
to paint the inside of Olivia Newton-John's mind, circa 1980: all strobe-lit synths, feathery vocals, and goofy synonyms for sex. Only "Shiny and Warm," a dark-disco burner, recalls the sootier allure of their early stuff; otherwise, 
this is pure Xanadu camp. B

Spin magazine also makes a Xanadu connection:

Goldfrapp, 'Headfirst' (Mute)

Nightclub chameleon flaunts '80s shimmer.
Naural showperson that she is, Alison Goldfrapp has changed personas compulsively since her U.K. duo's 2000 debut, moving from arty cabaret balladeer to electro glamazon to the psychedelic wood nymph of 2008's Seventh Tree. But that foray into flutes and folk was brief: The title of Goldfrapp's fifth album might refer to their dive back into nightlife.

On Head First, the singer's bandmate-producer Will Gregory creates a pitch-perfect neon-lit '80s wonderland with Hi-NRG bass lines and plenty of that fat synth sound made famous by Van Halen's "Jump." The album's bright vision is established with the first three tracks, all awash in artificial ambience and an unearthly feel-good vibe. "Alive," in particular, wears its influences proudly, flaunting the shimmery squiggles that denoted muse-y magic in Xanadu. When Goldfrapp leave the roller disco, they find other retro gimmicks to play with, like the dated techno sound of "Dreaming" or the arena-rock breakdown in "I Wanna Life" (Step 1: Drop rhythm section. Step 2: Clap hands over head).

Goldfrapp also revive the vocal experimentation that has been their trademark twist on electronica. "Hunt," with its yelps woven into the background, recalls Imogen Heap, but the gorgeous minimalist closer "Voicething" -- built from carefully stacked layers of Alison's own breathy coo -- has no modern pop equivalent.




To be fair to EW, though, Goldfrapp's new single cover does have that ONJ/Xanadu look going on:






just finished reading an interesting piece in the March 22nd issue of National Review. I especially relate to this line: Yet you can't help but reflect on what must be far commoner than these joyful reunions: unwelcome e-mails from life segments long since consigned to the "best forgotten" bin...It's exactly for that reason I've tamped down on any impulse to contact someone from my very distant past...most people fall out of our lives for a reason, I suppose...and most of those people probably have no interest in hearing from us...



   No Hiding Place

My breakfast-time reading matter of choice, the New York Post, has regular stories about long-separated friends, lovers, and family members who find one another via Google. Here's one: High School Sweethearts Rekindle Romance After 50 Years. The boy and girl were parted by a ruse of their parents, who disapproved. Half a century on, he widowed, she divorced, they are exchanging vows at last.

Who can resist such a story? Yet you can't help but reflect on what must be far commoner than these joyful reunions: unwelcome e-mails from life segments long since consigned to the "best forgotten" bin. A sixty-something friend, tame and settled now but quite the boulevardier in his younger days, grumbles about girlfriends and mistresses from the remote past sending him e-mails: "Their husband dies, and first thing they do is get on the Internet looking for old flames."

To me a boulevard was never much more than a paved surface to be driven along, but even the most retiring and least courtly of us have past connections we would much rather not be reminded of, and domestic circumstances we have no wish to see disturbed. Since hearing my friend's complaint, I open my e-mail window with trepidation. So far there have been no unpleasant surprises, but I suppose it can only be a matter of time.

Most of my out-of-the-blue e-mails have actually been from classmates at my secondary school. Strange it is to see these names in the inbox. I remember them clearly: Life is never so vivid as in those teen years, though perhaps this is more true for products of the English single-sex school system than elsewhere. Cyril Connolly passed the definitive comment: "The experiences undergone by boys at the great public [i.e. private boarding] schools, their glories and disappointments, are so intense as to dominate their lives." Mine was merely a provincial day school, but it was a good one, with a pedigree going back to Henry VIII, and strove to emulate the ethos of the great schools, with some of the same results. We boys, at any rate, knew one another better than we have known anyone since, family excepted.

A name I was particularly glad to see appeared in my inbox a few days ago. We were best friends from the second form to the fourth (ages 12 to 15). Together we tested the limits of our very constrained school environment, sneaking into a low-life "out of bounds" coffee shop in the town after school, accumulating detentions for offenses against the dress code, idolizing the upper school's most egregious bohemian. (Who has since, I see, attained immortality on Wikipedia as "an English journalist, author, broadcaster and gay rights activist." He wrote an autobiography at age 23 — there's self-regard for you!)

My classmate's father was a fan of folk music and R&B, with a fine stock of records purchased by mail order from the U.S. When I saw that name in my inbox, in fact, the first thing that came to mind was Muleskinner Blues, which I heard sitting on the sofa in his family living room. How strange it sounded! — wellnigh extraterrestrial. Thus I caught some tail-end flavor of what music historian Greil Marcus called "the old, weird America" that was even then being nagged, shamed, bullied, legislated, and paved out of existence. A couple of years later we were at Sea Cadet camp together when we heard the news of Eddie Cochran's death — clearer in my memory by far than the death of Buddy Holly a year earlier.

Now here we are at the other end of life, survivors somehow in a world not much more hospitable to the bohemian temperament than that school of ours, but with many more places to escape to. And we are the same people, of course; nobody changes much. "Still feel that I'm only passing for a grownup," he remarks in that disarming way I remember, "but I won't tell if you won't." I guess I just did, but … no names, no detention.

An odder case first appeared in my inbox five years ago. He'd got to thinking, he wrote, and Googled around … Did I remember the walks we had used to take at lunchtime, talking juvenile metaphysics? Of course I did, and sent him a long reply … to which he never responded. A couple of years later the whole episode repeated: e-mail from him, my reply, nothing further. Then a few weeks ago, a third repeat. Does he just get drunk and maudlin, think of his schooldays, fire off e-mails, and then in the morning feel ashamed? No way to know.

There is no hiding place for me, in any case. I have written too much on the Internet, posted too much reminiscence on my own website. No hiding place for my friend the ex-boulevardier, either. He is an academic, and they are the easiest of all people to find —through their published papers, their college websites.

What has been true of us for ten years or so is fast becoming true of everyone, though. Last week the Stragglers attended an event at our daughter's high school, an evening of advice to get us started on the college-application process. Amongst much else, we learned that 10 percent of college admissions officers acknowledged looking at social-networking sites like Facebook when evaluating applicants, with negative consequences 40 percent of the time. No hiding place for the kids, either, then, since they all seem to patronize these sites.

I used to worry that my chauffeured, play-dated kids might never understand true liberty and independence. Now here is a second worry: that they will never know real privacy. Like the people in Zamyatin's dystopian novel We, whose houses are made of glass so that unauthorized activities can be observed, their lives will be open to anyone who cares to inspect them — with the twist, of course, that the exposure is voluntary on their part. With closed-circuit TV cameras, and the "data miners" scrutinizing their every candy purchase, what will they know of secrecy, silence, self-restraint?

I am glad to have connected with old friends; I am happy for those long-separated sweethearts; I only wonder if these may be slight and incidental benefits from a phenomenon that will soon stifle Privacy — Liberty's quieter, more studious twin brother.

Thursday, March 25, 2010


The Nation

National ReviewEven though I'm a flaming liberal, I like to read both perspectives when it comes to politics, so that means The Nation AND National Review...but this recent item in The Nation about the Texas Board of Education's changes to the school system's curriculum has me seeing red....unbelievable stuff and very scary that it's going to happen; Conservatives often foam at the mouth about Liberal bias and yet isn't this what they're doing...again: unfrickingbelievable!!:



http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100405/foner (link to article)



I shudder at the thought of how the lesson on Phyllis Schlafly and the Moral Majority would be taught (more like propaganda, I bet)...just as some of the far far right do today these people tried to excuse their hateful views by calling them 'traditional values.'...With an agenda like the one the Texas Board of Education wants, would there be any room for truth and fairness? I am so glad I live in a state with a more realistic sense of what learning is!!

Supernatural: The Complete Fourth Season



on tonight's Supernatural, it's zombie time...yay!:) sounds pretty interesting:

(from the CW's network website)

"Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) investigate Bobby's home town where the dead are rising from the grave but instead of attacking humans, they are happily reuniting with their families. The brothers turn to Bobby (Jim Beaver) for help but he tells them not to worry about it and to leave town. Suspicious, Dean investigates and comes face to face with Bobby's dead wife (guest star Carrie Anne Fleming) who has no memory of what happened to her. Once the zombies start turning evil, the boys tell Bobby he has to kill his wife but he refuses."
...I LOVE zombies and this looks pretty interesting and possibly very irreverent...

The following excerpt looks promising, if a little bit odd when it comes to describing this fictional take on John Lennon's death:


http://alangoldsher.blogspot.com/2010/03/excerpt-from-paul-is-undead-british.html

The book isn't due in store till June 22...can't wait!:):

Paul Is Undead
You Couldn't Ignore Me If You Tried: The Brat Pack, John Hughes, and Their Impact on a Generation



This new book is both a look at John Hughes' films (truly the first of their kind when dealing with and taking teenagers seriously) and the absolute power of a high school life that sometimes lingers with us long after we pass through the doors for the last time.

"Pretty in Pink" is one of my favorite movies and as someone who came of age (though sometimes I doubt I really did) during the 80s I can't help but recall all of Hughes' films (especially "Ferris Bueller's Day Off")  with much affection.  With the exception of earlier films such as "Rebel Without A Cause" and "Splendor in the Grass" very few films up until the 80s came anyway near to capturing the angst and wonder of teenage emotions and daily life.

I've only just started reading this, but I thought I'd post something about it while I'm in the midst of it and still excited...I hope to return to add more thoughts on it:)

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Hope you're having a great day!!!I just came out of one our (almost always terrific!) staff meetings where we opened with a ten-minute presentation on stress management. Believe it or not I learned more in that time than I have from dozens of self-help books.

Two of the most central concepts: we cannot change our past* and we cannot change the fact that people act in a certain way (plus the idea that we cannot change the inevitable) are both small battles I have serious trouble winning sometimes.

But something about the speaker (and the peace stones she gave us!) has inspired me to try and not worry so much...and to remember that old (sometimes tired-sounding cliche when you're in a bad mood!) saying that attitude is everything!

Peace to you!!! And always be well!:) 



*Issues with the past (for many of us, I think) often involve not being able to forgive ourselves for something we did to someone else...for all the talk you hear about regretting the things we didn't do, I still think the regret over what we did do is far more painful!!

But I want to end on a postive note, so I'll just say again: HAVE A WONDERFUL DAY!!:)
Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall And John Oates
I was SO excited to buy this yesterday! Up until a year ago I never thought I'd ever buy music digitally...I really prefer having hard copies of music on my shelf that I can grab quickly and put on my stereo. But between saving four to five dollars by going on the Amazon MP3 store and being able to skimp on gas money (to go to Target or Best Buy) to go straight to my laptop...I can't argue with the convenience. Not to mention my iAudio player makes everything sound as good (if not better!) than the stereo.

Anyhow...the bird and the bee!! Their newest album is awesome!!!They are faithful to Hall and Oates while maintaining the beautiful quirky sounds of the bird and the bee. AND, unlike other groups and singers, they aren't too worried about changing the pronouns of the songs. So what if Inara George is singing about a woman? She doesn't care so why should we.

The best tracks on "Interpreting the Masters Volume 1" are, quite simply, ALL of them!!:)

But I'm just amazed at how much I love the trippy bounce of "I Can't Go For That" (always been my favorite H&0 song!) and the deliciously earnest and frothy "Heard it on The Radio" (the only song on the ablum that's not a cover!)

USA TODAY and other publications haven't been too keen on the album, but I definitely CAN go for this great ablum...

Friday, March 19, 2010

Lost Girls and Love Hotels: A Novel (P.S.)

Lately I've been catching up with all the things that had lost their buzz for me...maybe because I'd been tired or a little less passionate than I'm used to being about books. Anyway, the important thing is that I'm loving books more than ever and lucking out in finding some great ones.

The great thing about short story collections and non-fiction is that I can read them and still fit in a novel...all three types of books in different rooms of my place ready for me to pick up where I left off.

The problem with the zombie ones and Lost Girls and Love Hotels is that I can't put them down. Lost Girls is so quirky and funny and dark and mysterious plus (this is shallow!) the cover is very eye-catching!:)

As you may be able to tell from the cover Margaret is not the best role model in the world, but she's been through a lot and is trying to escape her painful past (and less than thrilling job at Air-Pro Stewardess Training Institute) by losing herself in drugs and sex in Tokyo's exotic night life.

Those scenes can be pretty explicit, but the sadness and genuine pain she's in when she's trying to forget is unbelievably barren and almost strangely familiar to anyone hoping for a little oblivion.

Lost Girls is unlike anything I've read in a while;I have a feeling I'm going to be staying up late tonight reading this all the way through...having putting zombies aside....temporarily, of course!:)

p.s.

I just found out that the book is being made into a movie: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0920462/

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Hey Now

You've got to hear "Hey Now" by Augustana; it's just so so beautiful and raw and makes me think of something Jeff Bridges said in an article I read in Filter magazine:


"Be kinder than necessary 'cause everyone you meet is facing some kind of battle."


Sometimes when "Hey Now" shows up unexpectedly on my MP3 shuffle I catch my breath at how gorgeous and sad and comforting it is...and I think it's also talking about being kind to yourself, too! We all go through dark and lonely times (some people definitely have it worse than others and a very small number somehow manage to skate through life with very few problems) but giving into the pain in a permanent way is not the answer, is never the answer...somehow Augustana doesn't make all this sound trite and that's why I love the song with all my heart...
Lonely Werewolf Girl
Oh how I love this book! I may have already blogged about this before...don't think I have, but IF I have, I apologize. It's THAT good, though. Earnest, sweet, funny, very engaging, sad and chock full of great characters, wacky adventures and unique story lines.

When it comes to the supernatural I've always thought if a writer were going to somehow tie in eating disorders it would be connected to zombies. But in Lonely Werewolf Girl the title character battles depression (among other things) after being thrown out of her house when she lashes out at her father because he and her mother hound her about not eating.

Sounds a bit odd, maybe, and even a bit over the top, but it's not. Martin Millar knows the heart and mind of a teenage girl...and perhaps that's one of the best things about this wonderful book...

Wednesday, March 10, 2010


I've often had dreams about foxes. Dream dictionaries state that this means there is an enemy hiding among your friends, but I don't buy this theory at all. In my dream, the foxes are always beautiful and friendly and I can see the burnished red color and texture of their fur as if they really are in front of me.

Dream symbolism is nothing more than an attempt by someone else to confine people's imaginations and lives into little square boxes where there is no room for anything but pat little cliches to thrive. I say let your dreams mean what you want them to...or even better....maybe just realize they don't have to mean anything at all!!:)

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

The Best of All Flesh: Zombie Anthology



There is a point in many people's lives when they have been so hungry they have almost felt savage, a throwback to caveman times when you do whatever it took to get food.

Maybe that's why when I read zombie fiction or remember episodes of X-Files like "Hunger" (from the seventh season back in 1999) I think of disordered eating and a base kind of hunger that is more primal than anything else in life, including sexual desire. The kind of hunger that is more powerful than shame or dignity...that is so overwhelming the morning after you feel like you woke up with a stranger you did unspeakable things with...

If you're a serious X-Files fan you might remember the "Hunger" episode with Chad E. Donella playing a troubled young man with serious food issues. http://x-files.wikia.com/wiki/Hungry In one scene he is talking in a support group and he speaks of his hunger as something he can't control. Even though he does despicable things (in a nutshell: he eats people's brains) the viewer almost feels sorry for him....

Obviously they're not real and not nearly as animated or attractive as vampires, but I've always sort of felt bad for zombies for this same reason. In a recently released anthology called The Best of All Flesh James Lowder brings together some of the best talent in zombie fiction.

more on this later!

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Appetite for Destruction


Guns N' Roses were never my thing the first time around. I couldn't understand the passion some of my classmates had for the band. But the other day I picked up Appetite for Destruction on a whim and now it's been on player most of the week. I can't believe I never gave these guys a thought way back in the late 80s when "Paradise City" was the place so many teens wanted to go.

If an album remains a classic (as "Appetite" has) then there's really no need to revisit it and wonder at its staying power. Classics never go out of style and besides, new albums (especially by talented emerging artists) probably deserve more review room anyway.

And really, who am I to say that Appetite for Destruction is amazing?...I don't write for Rolling Stone, I have no music experience at all and everyone pretty much already knows this was one of the most solid-selling albums in the late 80s, generating 4 Top 40 hits and some of the most wonderfully unrestrained sounds in rock history.

For me, nothing cures a bad day like coming home, putting on my headphones and listening to something freakin' wild that's loud and mean and isn't the kind of music you'd ever take home to your parents (unless, of course, they grew up in the 80s!)
It's my favorite issue of the Baltimore City Paper...the annual Dining Guide came out today...look for it (if you live in the area!) at local bookstores, libraries and in those yellow newstand boxes or click right here:

http://www.citypaper.com/special/story.asp?id=19833

Reading about food is even better than eating it because there are 0 calories involved and while your taste buds don't get the benefit, there is always the power of memory and your imagination:) This is an actual favorite of many people, from what I've heard, and even has a nickname..."food p*rn"...(rhymes with corn)...I'm afraid if I use the real word my post will be deemed unfit for minors!:)

"Food p*rn," unlike the other kind, is something I can really get into it...I'd much rather look at pictures like this

than at ones of naked people...

As someone who is starting to notice her metabolism drastically (!!!) slow down, I no longer can eat anything I want like I could fifteen years ago. Back then I could eat anything and still stay under 110 pounds...now my weight balloons if I eat something fattening...it's a bummer, for sure, but the pictures are (oddly enough) somehow very comforting!

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

 
I'm running out of people to talk Lost with...so many of my friends are jumping ship (even though they've committed five previous seasons of viewing to it) because they feel long-lingering questions aren't being answered fast enough (or maybe not at all, ever).

Now I'll admit I have a few dying-to-know-the-answer-to things on my mind, but, really, if not all of them are going to be addressed, I don't mind. I always thought the reason people watched Lost and stayed with it for so long was because they enjoyed an intelligent show that didn't spoon feed them everything and actually asked that they read between the lines a little.

...just my two cents:)...

Tonight's episode, by the way, had the creepiest ending I've seen on tv in a long time...Terry O'Quinn is just amazing!!!


Girl You Know It's True I'm Gonna Miss You
Maybe I should be embarrassed that I still have my original copy of Milli Vanilli's Girl You Know It's True, but I'm not. Not only does the album remind me of college and some of the best times in my life, but the music isn't that bad...no, really, it isn't.

And when you think back on other groups (and possibly current ones) who may or may not have sung their own songs (and certainly there are some who haven't!), you have to wonder why Milli Vanilli took such a bad fall? (If you're old enough to remember...record stores offered to refund all record, cd and cassette copies after the scandal broke, no questions asked.)

"Blame it On the Rain," "All or Nothing," "Girl You Know It's True" and "Baby, Don't Forget My Number" are all pretty strong pop songs if you're measuring pop by light and fluffy and shamefully catchy...but beware, if you have a hankering to hear them nowadays and you don't still own the original, watch out for the album on the right; the mp3 version of "Girl You Know It's True" is the remix, not the shorter, more snappy one that played on the radio back in the day.
 

Thinking back on it all, I'm not so sure reading Forever at the age of ten was a good idea. My parents were always pretty open about letting me read what I wanted, though I'm sure if they had known just what Forever was about they'd have been horrified. And I think the only reason they were so open about what my sister and I read was because it would never occur to them that we would ever read anything questionable.

The book was my first exposure, of any kind, to sex. It would be another two years before we had sex education in class (or "family life" as it was tactfully called when we had it back in the early 80s) and up until then my thoughts mostly alternated between two prevailing theories: one belonging to the stork and the other to a variation on pollination. 

Needless to say when I first read Judy Blume's classic novel about teenage love and sex I was absolutely terrified by the things Michael and Katherine were doing. I remember wondering if this was something everyone did and if it were something everyone had to do at some point in their life. If it were, I wanted no parts of it,  not so much because it seemed repulsive as that it seemed so clinical and unromantic. Even then, I kind of wondered: don't people value something like this as more than something physical? You should wait for sex because you needed to understand how special and important it could be in loving relationships...

Written in 1975 the novel would go on to be the target of many a banned book list and was also (it is thought, though seriously or not I can't be sure!) to be responsible for the declining popularity of the name "Ralph." I  won't go into the reason for this because if you haven't read the book I want to spare you and if you have...well, then, you already know.


Monday, March 1, 2010

new episodes of scripted television shows return:)

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/01/arts/television/01season.html?ref=television


Glee, Vol. One: Road to Sectionals

If you're interested in what shows are returning now that the Olympics are over, just click the above link. My beloved "Glee" still seems so far far away (it returns in April)...

I'm STILL in shock that "Mercy" made it to a full season...yikes!! Maybe I'm just missing its appeal?
 
Just a quick plug for these wonderful cookies (or rather the mix that produces these wonderful cookies) which are "all natural" (I'm putting in quotes because these are so good I'm somewhat doubtful they're truly all natural!) and quite addictive...don't make them all at once or you'll eat every single one...more on this later!:)