Monday, October 27, 2008
Good evening
Have you checked out the Hulu website? It's fabulous. You can watch tons of old (and new) TV shows and movies. I recently discovered that they have the first two season of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and the first three seasons of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. In season three of the latter, I found the episode "An Unlocked Window"! My cousins will surely remember any one of the aunts telling the tale of watching that episode when they were children. They literally shake with fear every time it's mentioned. So, of course, I had to watch it tonight. Alone. By myself. Completely alone. Ack!
The episode tells the story of two private-duty nurses, looking after a sick man in a huge old house on a dark and stormy night. They're quite terrified because there's a homicidal maniac on the loose who has been murdering nurses, and the latest murder has occurred very nearby. They lock up the house tight, but there's this one window in the basement...
Oh, man. Even though I knew the how the story ends, I still nearly vomited from the suspense. Mom, Linda, Debby, Sherry, Lisa, I now know what you suffered and, like you, I shall be scarred for life.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Two corpses, everything's fine.
So, I'm sitting here watching the movie Clue, and I haven't seen this movie for, literally, more than a decade. Probably a good fifteen years. But as I watch it, I am saying every line along with every character. Every. Single. Line. And I'm doing it in perfect cadence and with the same inflection as the actors. I'm even doing the sighs and the gasps of horror and, of course, the soup slurping. This is ludicrous.
Pretty soon my brain will stop accepting new information because it obviously doesn't purge any of the old stuff. Now if you'll excuse me, Colonel Mustard is about to suggest that they split up and search the house. Because, "This is war, Peacock! Casualties are inevitable. You cannot make an omelet without breaking eggs. Every cook'll tell you that!"
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
I've got Barack Obama in a box in my dining room. That got your attention, didn't it?
Now I know what you’re going to say, and really, it’s not that I have too much time on my hands. It’s that I mismanage it. The most recent example of such is the time I spent assembling a small army of paper doll political candidates and their various posse members.

Check out Fold US Candidate, a website that lets you create your own paper political brigade. Simply print the doll blueprint, cut along the lines, glue it together, and play to your heart’s content.
First of all, I haven’t used a glue stick since junior high, so that was awesome. Second of all, I don’t care what your politics are, this Governor Palin doll is adorable:
Sarah is holding a tube of lipstick because of her hockey mom/pitbull comment:

Hillary is wearing boxing gloves, presumably because she was fighting hard for the nomination.

When I put them together, in my mind, Palin is saying to Clinton, “Hill, sweetie, would you like some lipstick? You could really use a stylist.” And my imaginary Hillary replies, “Would you like to taste my gloves of pain, beauty queen?”
Check out Fold US Candidate, a website that lets you create your own paper political brigade. Simply print the doll blueprint, cut along the lines, glue it together, and play to your heart’s content.
I chose to make the complete set, and now they all live happily in a pink and brown box in my craft room.
Hillary is wearing boxing gloves, presumably because she was fighting hard for the nomination.
When I put them together, in my mind, Palin is saying to Clinton, “Hill, sweetie, would you like some lipstick? You could really use a stylist.” And my imaginary Hillary replies, “Would you like to taste my gloves of pain, beauty queen?”
Monday, October 20, 2008
This is most certainly going to end badly for me.
Not such a good week in Fantasy Football for me. Drew Brees finally self-destructed and Ronnie Brown got a karmic slap in the face for the 41 points he gained in week three. And my kicker? Got me ZERO. I could have just FORGOTTEN to put a kicker on my roster and I'd be in the same boat.
If all of this means nothing to you, just know this: Tonight, I am putting my head-to-head record and my place in the Survivor poll in the butterfinger hands of Randy Moss. If I could breathe, I would vomit.
If all of this means nothing to you, just know this: Tonight, I am putting my head-to-head record and my place in the Survivor poll in the butterfinger hands of Randy Moss. If I could breathe, I would vomit.
Friday, October 17, 2008
Times Square just got prettier
No need to crowd into the outdoor lobby at the Marriot Marquis any longer. The new TKTS ticket booth has finally opened! The renovated structure is far superior to the rundown (but much beloved) trailer/plywood contraption that formerly housed the booth. It's got more windows (twelve in all) and get this: you can use credit cards now.
But all of this is nothing compared to the booth's new facelift. It's covered in glass walls and sheltered by a red glass canopy.

But here's the show stopper: a sixteen-foot high staircase made of ruby-red glass that rises over the back of the booth and lights up at night. Visitors can climb to the top for a new vantage point of Times Square. They are encouraged to have a seat and enjoy a picnic lunch, but there's no smoking allowed. Fabulous!

I imagine that in ten or twenty years, this staircase will be as much an iconic image of Times Square as the towering, lit up Coke sign. It sounds like to the perfect excuse to go visit.
But all of this is nothing compared to the booth's new facelift. It's covered in glass walls and sheltered by a red glass canopy.

But here's the show stopper: a sixteen-foot high staircase made of ruby-red glass that rises over the back of the booth and lights up at night. Visitors can climb to the top for a new vantage point of Times Square. They are encouraged to have a seat and enjoy a picnic lunch, but there's no smoking allowed. Fabulous!

I imagine that in ten or twenty years, this staircase will be as much an iconic image of Times Square as the towering, lit up Coke sign. It sounds like to the perfect excuse to go visit.
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Martha wants to eat your baby!
I have this love/fear relationship with Martha Stewart. For example, I love her magazine, but I would be terrified to have dinner with her. (I’m certain she’d yell at me for my salt intake or my Sally Albright-like requests for extra ice in my Coke.) A recent article on her website about costume ideas for babies is a perfect example of my joy tempered with terror in all things Martha. There are some lovely photos with sweet lambs:

...and adorable chickens:

But eventually it all devolves into cannibalism:

That? Is horrifying! Martha wants to eat your baby like a turkey! Or bake him into a pie:

And let’s not forget succulent baby lobster:

At one point, didn’t the photographer have to ask himself, "Why am I putting so many babies on plates today?" And I imagine Martha saw his look of uncertainty, and pulled out her whip. An exquisite, hand-woven whip made of stingray leather and trimmed in ostrich feathers to be sure, but a whip nonetheless. Terrifying!
Now I had this post all typed up and ready to go, and then this evening at dinner two of my closest friends informed me that they bought a lobster costume for their infant son and were planning to take his photo as he sat in a stock pot. Hopefully, they will not read this blog and hopefully no one (I’m not naming any names, Chris) will tell them about it. I adore them and their son, but that photo is going to Wig. Me. Out.

...and adorable chickens:

But eventually it all devolves into cannibalism:

That? Is horrifying! Martha wants to eat your baby like a turkey! Or bake him into a pie:

And let’s not forget succulent baby lobster:

At one point, didn’t the photographer have to ask himself, "Why am I putting so many babies on plates today?" And I imagine Martha saw his look of uncertainty, and pulled out her whip. An exquisite, hand-woven whip made of stingray leather and trimmed in ostrich feathers to be sure, but a whip nonetheless. Terrifying!
Now I had this post all typed up and ready to go, and then this evening at dinner two of my closest friends informed me that they bought a lobster costume for their infant son and were planning to take his photo as he sat in a stock pot. Hopefully, they will not read this blog and hopefully no one (I’m not naming any names, Chris) will tell them about it. I adore them and their son, but that photo is going to Wig. Me. Out.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
A positively perfect day
My friend Melissa recently fulfilled her dream of moving to Arizona. Before she left, she tried to fit in all the things in Pennsylvania that she had never gotten around to doing. This made me think of the times I was working in New York City and all the New York natives told me that I had seen more of their city than they had in all the years they lived there. Unfortunately, we rarely spend much time exploring our own hometowns. This inspired me to have a Pennsylvania Renaissance. I’m going to act like a tourist in my own hometown. I already watched someone eat three pounds of beef in Clearfield, so a visit to Frank Lloyd Wright’s world-famous masterpiece seemed in order. On Friday I went to Fallingwater.

The BBC’s Elizabeth Bennet may have said of Pemberley, “I have never seen a place so happily situated,” but had she lived long enough (or at all) to see Fallingwater, Mr. Darcy’s home would have fallen in her estimation.

Fallingwater is cantilevered over a waterfall, which runs underneath the house, its boulders being worked into the home’s design, forming a hearth in the living room, a shelf in the kitchen, and the foundation upon which the building rests. The house is not my style at all; it’s all low ceilings and straight lines and steel and concrete. But the way in which it’s put together, the genius of its design, the loving care taken to incorporate it into its surroundings, almost made me cry. Its beauty defies description. In the words of little Miss Maggie, “Oh, I could live here.”

All that touring made me hungry. My perfect lunch consisted of the most delicious tuna salad I’ve ever tasted, served on mushroom bread, with a side of cole slaw, a frosty fountain soda, and a gob (which was wrapped up and eaten later – that sandwich was huge!) I love museum café food. It’s almost always great.

I ate this on the café deck, listening to BeeGees music on my iPod, and enjoying this view:

On the way home, I listened to the Cousin Road Trip CD, and relished the natural beauty surrouding me. The road between my house and Fallingwater is all gentle curves and hills winding through sun dappled meadows and fiery autumn trees and sparkling streams. It made me so thankful for a western PA autumn.



Inspired by Liz and Zack, I stopped at a pumpkin stand:



A perfect Pennsylvania day.

The BBC’s Elizabeth Bennet may have said of Pemberley, “I have never seen a place so happily situated,” but had she lived long enough (or at all) to see Fallingwater, Mr. Darcy’s home would have fallen in her estimation.

Fallingwater is cantilevered over a waterfall, which runs underneath the house, its boulders being worked into the home’s design, forming a hearth in the living room, a shelf in the kitchen, and the foundation upon which the building rests. The house is not my style at all; it’s all low ceilings and straight lines and steel and concrete. But the way in which it’s put together, the genius of its design, the loving care taken to incorporate it into its surroundings, almost made me cry. Its beauty defies description. In the words of little Miss Maggie, “Oh, I could live here.”

All that touring made me hungry. My perfect lunch consisted of the most delicious tuna salad I’ve ever tasted, served on mushroom bread, with a side of cole slaw, a frosty fountain soda, and a gob (which was wrapped up and eaten later – that sandwich was huge!) I love museum café food. It’s almost always great.

I ate this on the café deck, listening to BeeGees music on my iPod, and enjoying this view:

On the way home, I listened to the Cousin Road Trip CD, and relished the natural beauty surrouding me. The road between my house and Fallingwater is all gentle curves and hills winding through sun dappled meadows and fiery autumn trees and sparkling streams. It made me so thankful for a western PA autumn.



Inspired by Liz and Zack, I stopped at a pumpkin stand:



A perfect Pennsylvania day.
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