rants & ramblings

Sunday, October 30, 2005

Modern Girls, Chimera, Screwed

There is an article in the NYT today that has terrified me: What's a Modern Girl to Do? by Maureen Dowd. There are some excellent quotes, but what it boils down to is a pretty dismal outlook for the future, especially if you are smart, confident and sarcastic (all of which could be said about me).

Dowd writes: "I took the idealism and passion of the 60's for granted, simply assuming we were sailing toward perfect equality with men, a utopian world at home and at work. I didn't listen to [my mother] when she cautioned me about the chimera of equality." Chimera is a word popping up all over lately, and one that I've become oddly attached to. A surprisingly disturbing episode of FullMetal Alchemist started it, though chimera in their traditional mythological form (lion's head, serpent's tail, etc.) pop up in Age of Mythology (which I confess to playing regularly). But the two definitions of chimera that I keep returning to are these in particular:
  1. any mythical animal with parts taken from various animals
  2. a thing that is hoped or wished for but in fact is illusory or impossible to achieve

Dowd nails the "chimera of equality"... but after reading the article I have come to the conclusion that I myself am a chimera of sorts, made up of pieces of identity that are often contradictory and seemingly taken from totally different female types (jaysus, didn't I say at some point that this wasn't going to be a blog full of egocentric ramblings? sheesh!). I mean, I guess we all are. But people often tell me they find me baffling and hard to categorize (not to mention hard to shop for, which makes birthdays and gift-giving hols kind of an adventure). I could wax on about myself for a while, but I think the point is more that if you are a chimera (as is, arguably, every truly modern girl), you are screwed.

I'm sitting here after reading this article feeling as though the empty chasm of my thirties is yawning mockingly before me. Thanks, Maureen. You have chilled me to the bone. But looking back on a recent social situation that absurdly resembled a date (even though it technically wasn't), I'm realizing that I am completely unequipped to be a dating contender... and that I'm both ok with and kind of upset by that. Unfortunately, I think everyone (even Dowd, on some level) would like you to believe that there is a science to it (50s cheesecake like "How to Catch and Hold a Man" has evolved into crap like "The Rules" and Cosmo, etc.), and, my brain being the way it is, I am tempted to research and problem-solve my way into developing an arsenal of dating behavior. But that is ridiculous, and thankfully I know that. But apparently just being yourself is not enough to get you through the jungle. So again, it all boils down to... we are all chimerically screwed. Oh well.

Saturday, October 29, 2005

Yams, Sharks, Kerning, Wolf Parade

I encounter my roommate in the kitchen moments after rousing from the sleep of the dead.
"I hope I didn't just yam you," she says.
"Excuse me?"
"Did I wake you with my yam?"
"Your yam?"
"I've just roasted a yam."
"Ah. No, I was totally unaware of that," I answer truthfully as I fumble towards the caffeine.

I am not fond of yams. When I was 11 I read in Newsweek that there is an African tribe who eat nothing but yams and therefore have nothing but twins. Totally sold on the idea of twins, and figuring my eleven-year late start might not actually be too much of a handicap if I made an extra effort, I attempted to exist on yams. Yams are foul. I think I made it a couple of days and then admited defeat. If twins are in my future, it will have nothing to do with nasty yams. Hey, I'm already a Gemini.

Meanwhile, the Daily Candy girls tossed out this link today: www.greatwhiteadventures.com... SHARK DIVING, BABY! 1) This is totally on my list of things to do and now that this link has fallen into my lap (haven't actually started planning yet), I can start a Backpack page. Yes, I have some shark issues, and I'm stupid and under-adrenalized enough to believe that going down in a cage and getting bumrushed by a perfect, prehistoric-style carnivore will be fucking awesome. 2) The Daily Candy girls get some points from me. Honestly, I had no idea they were adventurous beyond trying new restaurants downtown. They would have completely won me over had they somehow worked a shark into their bullshit chick-lit style illustrations (part French poodle, part fashion sketch, part kindergarten... v. cover of mint green Bridget Jones wannabe paperback, etc.), but alas, that was not to be.

Totally unrelated, I thought this response to a poll about how to sexify design-related conversation/typographical pick-up lines was a bit of very silly genius: "I think we need to kern u and i a little tighter." Nice geeky variation on the old "let's rearrange the alphabet" standard.

Oh, and I am in love with Wolf Parade. Can't stop listening. You can hear clips on their MySpace page (am not sure how I feel about MySpace yet, actually... yes, MySpace is the new Friendster but fuck, I barely use Friendster as it is and MySpace has many many many many more emo teens. Sigh).

Friday, October 28, 2005

Happy Halloween (Weekend)


I'm not sure what I'm doing yet, but I know there will be Mega M&M's involved.

pic courtesy of Diesel Sweeties, who featured this on a t-shirt at some point.

Daily view, 10/28

  • Mimobots... overpriced but still cool (like many things in life).

  • Cell phones and iPods now available in vending machines. Ahh, kiosks.

  • Coolhunter loses some credibility by spotlighting the Jimi, that piece of crap plastic wallet that you always pick up in places like the MOMA store, turn over a few times in your hand, then throw back onto the pile. Does anyone actually have and use the Jimi? Coolhunter must be scraping if they are featuring this thing today. It's years old and has that milennial fruity iPlastic thing happening. Sigh. Apparently this has upset me. Go figure.

  • I must learn more about the Explorer's Club.

  • I am hungover this morning (yes! left the house last night! woooo!) and therefore have no problem with the fact that i just whored out to iTunes for the new Wolf Parade and am ordering a pizza for breakfast.

  • Apparently the entire city smelled like maple syrup last night. I was too drunk to notice, alas. Good thing, because I hate maple and probably would have tossed my cookies (psychological trigger?). By the way, I am never drunk, so I am proudly stating repeatedly that I got toasted last night because I have a misguided sense of achievement.

  • The New York Times is acknowledging people like me who watch entire seasons of TV shows on DVD. I don't watch TV regularly, so this is currently the only way I access shows. Also, any article where a grown man (and lawyer, no less) proudly admits to watching all five seasons of Gilmore Girls is good stuff with me (though, in this same article, there is this disturbing quote: "My DVR is my new girlfriend," Mr. Kass said. "And she does whatever I tell her to do." Yikes).

  • DAMN IT... Gothamist reports that Song, most wonderful and ridiculous and awesome of discount airlines, is being eliminated. I loved Song. Sigh.

Thursday, October 27, 2005

Daily view, 10/27


  • Pattern designs by a kinda creepy couple who call themselves Deadly Squire (Daily Candy featured this weeks ago—in your face, Josh Spear!

  • Gothamist reports that the bus I take to get to my boss's place has won a Pokey Award for the slowest bus in the city. Ha, I knew it!

  • I love that the Village Voice keeps plugging the One Man Star Wars Trilogy. It's a brilliant show and Charlie Ross is the nicest of self-proclaimed geeks (I have a little crush, can you tell?).

  • Alphabet furniture...

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Daily view, 10/26

Some things I saw online today that I've noted for possible future use/reference/heckling:
  • Houses to be shaped like orchids and tents... in the Cotswolds, for chrissake: Landmark Architechture

  • Sites devoted to cheap/free drinks in NY (this is more wishful thinking on my part... how nice it would be to occasionally leave the house and get something as ridiculous as a "$10 Martini & Manicure"... so far from my reality that it's not even funny): drinkdeal.com and myopenbar.com

  • Disturbing news blurb (New York Times): "Increasingly, manufacturers are looking at the automobile as an extension of the home, a place to work and entertain."

  • Fucked up products: Numbered sugar cubes from Droog Design, the iBelieve (turns your iPod shuffle into a crucifix), the Fanny Pack Stealth Audio Recorder, the Italian Wrist PC, mp3 playing toothbrushes and toilets

  • Favorite Gothamist item of the day: Hasidic Hellraisers (or Mazel-TOUGHS). Sorry that the Jews are rumbling, of course, but the story features a guy I went to high school with, Aaron Teitelbaum (ok, I'm 99.9% sure that it isn't the same guy, but there is always that misguided sense of connection when people have the same name).

  • "Vikings are just Swedish Pirates"

  • More Tokyo bizareness from Satan's Laundromat.

  • Overheard in New York gem: "Yo' shit is so deep you gotta be a scuba diver to understand it!" —credited to a Hobo in Washington Square Park (Who says "Hobo" anymore? How very Utah Phillips).

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

The Final Countdown

Tonight, after devouring the recently released Season 2 DVDs of Arrested Development, I trolled my music library hoping that I had, at some point, acquired a copy of Europe's "The Final Countdown" (the 80s hit that GOB Bluth uses as his anthem). I remember being quite fond of that when it came out originally (ah, junior high), and was feeling nostalgic. Plus, GOB makes me cry laughing.

I found the song—not only did I have it, but to my shame I found out that I actually purchased it from the iTunes music store (at what I assume was a low point) during Summer 2003. So I played it...

AND THEN AN HOUR AND A HALF LATER REALIZED THAT IT WAS STILL PLAYING. Somewhat horrified, I discovered that I'd inadvertently activated the "repeat one" option in my iTunes. That's not the scary part—what chilled me to the bone was the fact that I sat right here at my desk for the entire 90 minutes worth of Europe. Does that much Final Countdown do permanent damage? Have I become such a computer zombie that any music choice fades immediately into the background? To quote the lyrics (which are now implanted into my subconscious): "I guess there is no one to blame... Will things ever be the same again?"

(Fuck, and my roommate totally caught me in this, too. She's going to have her revenge by frying something heinous, I bet money.)

Locked Out

So I just locked myself out of my apartment. I knew this would happen sooner or later—it's inevitable, I guess. The creepy thing is that for the last week I've been overly paranoid about it, slapping my pockets in momentary and unintentionally comic panic each time the door swings shut to MAKE SURE I HAVE MY KEYS, etc. And then today, without any fanfare, I strolled coolly into the hallway with absolutely nothing in my pockets, not giving it a second thought until the tiny, final click of the lock pointed out that I'd just royally screwed myself. Sigh.

It's not that my brain wasn't turned on. I was ready to walk out the door. I had outgoing mail in hand. An umbrella. I'd even put my damn galoshes on (I'm sorry, but I maintain some misguided sense of nostalgia about calling rubberized rain boots galoshes... some sort of fucked up fictional connection to a childhood I never had that involved eating chowder in lighthouses. Wellies? Pah. Boots? No. Galoshes, baby. Galoshes.) and taken care to tuck in the cuffs of my pants so that I wouldn't get wet during my brief excursion to the mailbox on the corner. I had brushed my hair, for chrissake (gotta look presentable for the Orthodox Jews, exhausted Dominican mamas and poor gay male musicians who live in my hood, after all. Sheesh.).

I went immediately to the basement to try to find my super, assuming he'd be able to let me back into my apartment. The basement is dark and creepy and painted red, with several strategically placed survellaince mirrors and lots of moulding boxes lining the hallway. Fairly typical, I assume. The super lives down here with his family, and seems to enjoy himself—once, coming out of the laundry room, I overheard he and his wife singing karaoke in spanish with a passion that was so heartfelt it made me choke up and flee to the upper floors. Of course, you can never find the super when you need him—ringing his apartment doorbell only results in the uncomfortable feeling that he is standing silently on the other side of the door peering at you through the peephole and taking grim pleasure in leaving you hanging.

So I gave up and went to the damn mailbox. I passed two people—one of the aforementioned poor gay male musicans and a high school girl in a pink Juicy hoodie who curled her lip/raised one eyebrow at me in judgement (yes, the galoshes are ridiculous). So I was totally invisible to the guy and a source of cynical teen amusement to the girl. Always a nice midday rush.

Coming back into the building, I finally roused my super (who is Dominican and barely speaks english, but is improbably named Dudley) from his basement hole by obnoxiously pressing the building buzzer. He cheerfully opened his door to me this time, only to tell me (after dubiously eyeing my footwear) that he had no keys. This doesn't quite make sense to me... no skeleton key? Has he really always done maintenance only when myself or my roommate has been there to let him in? He said, "I am super-tendent. Not super-man!" and tried just as cheerfully to shut the door in my face. But, this being New York and all, I have never once seen any of my neighbors, much less made their acquaintance, and I needed a phone to call a locksmith. My phone was behind a locked apartment door, remember, along with my wallet, so calling and then paying a locksmith seemed a bit beyond my immediate reach.

Dudley was horrified that I would consider bringing in a professional. Wouldn't my roommate be back soon? No (again, this being New York, I barely know my roommate and she certainly doesn't bother to keep me abreast of her comings and goings). Couldn't I just wait? Er, no. "What choice do I have, if you can't let me in?" I asked, still unconvinced that he didn't have a full ring of keys somewhere (perhaps behind the HUGE BOOKCASE FULL OF LIQUOR! The passionate karaoke makes a little more sense now). Dudley, suddenly sympathetic to my plight, scrounged around in his toolbox for a second and then, with an odd conspiratorial pride, presented me with the solution to my predicament:

A metrocard.

Yes, Dudley broke into my apartment using only a simple flimsy piece of yellow plastic. Initially he turned me loose to do it myself, but after about five minutes I heard the elevator lurch to life and he materialized to check up on me. "You a terrible thief!" he chuckled, taking the metrocard out of my useless hands and sinking to his knees before my apartment door. A few grunts later, the door swung open (revealing the horrified cat, who I'm sure had been shitting himself at the idea of strangers breaking in and interrupting his main pastimes of eating and sleeping). Relief washed over me like a wave. Suddenly my phone, my computer, my wallet... all these things were back at my fingertips (not to mention I could change my shoes).

Dudley pointed out that he had really saved my ass and that a locksmith would have run me at least eighty bones. I do not consider myself generally tip-savvy, but even my clueless self gets it when the super hits me over the head with suggestive sledgehammer. I gave him twenty bucks. He seemed pleased.

After playing such a charged role in this small drama, I'm afraid the metrocard was a little the worse for wear. Andrew Jackson in one hand, the metrocard in the other, Dudley pushed his luck by winking at me and then suggesting that I buy him a new metrocard as well. "That's what the twenty is for," I winked back, feeling that things had suddenly taken a very awkward turn. (Though irrelevant, it didn't help that Dudley is about half my size. He is a man that manages to be impossibly small yet impossibly round at the same time. Not sure how he pulls this off, but I tower over him like a crazy giant... a crazy giant in galoshes, no less).

Dudley made his exit and I locked myself IN. Breathing a deep sigh of relief, I had a brief sit-down to collect my scattered thoughts before heading back to my desk. The cat, who had remained visibly "hidden" under the coffee table while Dudley was in the apartment, emerged and hopped into my lap. Mistakenly thinking that this small creature companion of mine was going to offer up some comfort, I pulled my head out of my hands and faced the feline.

"Well, that was something, eh, Rust?"

Rusty responded by looking me in the eyes and then slapping me in the face with one pathetic clawless paw. Having made his point (which, I assume was, "How dare you bring such trauma into my life, you bitch!"), he ran into the kitchen to "hide" under the table. He is now audibly snoring on my bed, his routine restored. Sheesh.

Moral of the story: Keep your keys close. Consider installing a system of locks that can't be conquered by a $2 metrocard. Cats are lazy neurotic bastards who have a false sense of invisibility.

Monday, October 24, 2005

James Blunt, Coldplay

Yes, yes, matter of taste, but I just don't understand the appeal of the cracked falsetto growling of singers like James Blunt, especially in the current emo context that has evolved into the mainstream. Sigh. It all seems over-earnest and manufactured, much moreso than someone like Damien Rice, who is inarguably over-earnest but at least comes off as relatively sincere as far as vocal presentation.

Apparently James B was outselling the new Coldplay at some point in England. That really, really, really surprised me. Not because I'm a huge fan of Coldplay (Coldplay is what it is; I accept it, enjoy it, but don't give them more musical credit than they deserve), but because someone so damn whiny could overtake a guaranteed superseller like X&Y (which was selling at Starbucks, for chrissake).

Overheard in NY

I don't care if I'm the last one to know about this site... it's wrong and brilliant and makes me cry laughing.
overheardinnewyork.com

k8lane.com, general screw it

Ok, so I have finally gotten my personal site kind of up and running... I put all my music cheesiness up, etc. I know the music is bad, but for some reason I really enjoy harboring the small secret fantasy that really I am a rock star underneath and will someday be discovered and made into a golden goddess. Yeah, yeah, cute when I was 12 and now it's just pathetic, I know... believe me, even as I coo into my computer's tiny, tinny microphone in the wee hours of the morning a voice is laughing and pointing in my head. Oh well. Screw it. I'm having fun.

Restyled the blog. Does it look exactly like the rest of the site? No. Am I tired of tweaking the damn stylesheet? Yesssss. So again, screw it.

Am I a dork for blogging about the Batemans? Yessss. Though who cares. I am Bateman proud. People blog about worse things.

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Satisfaction, the Batemans, that fickle bitch called Fame

Having just kind of awkwardly enjoyed watching the 80s preppie-rock chick flick Satisfaction (in which Justine Bateman reeeeeeeeally reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeally tries to make us love her as a rock star but, let's be honest, is just plain awful in the singing department), I find myself thinking of poor Justine now and again. Ok, who knows—maybe Justine is happy having given up acting for fashion design or whatever, but... what must it like to have been so cool once and now have Katie Holmes (poor Katie, lost to us all now) basically delivering the modern version of what Justine was... the doe-eyed brunette. Now, most people probably wouldn't think to compare the two—I certainly hadn't before the Satisfaction revisitation. But there is something to this theory, I swear. Watch Satisfaction and you'll see it—Justine was rocking that vibe long before Katie.

Who cares, though, really... this is apparently the random crap that runs through my head.

Speaking of Satisfaction, though, I am glad Scott Coffey is suddenly back (er, 20 years later!!), even if he has directed a movie with useless Naomi Watts. And why the hell isn't Trini Alvarado more famous and more employed? You'd think Peter Jackson would do more to further the talented yet obscurity-bound actresses that have appeared in his films (Melanie Lynskey, where have you gone?). Sigh. Anyway, it's kind of sad to watch Satisfaction now and see that the two who give the worst performances (ok, thats harsh... Justine is the worst, but I love her) have enjoyed the most success: Julia Roberts and Liam Neeson. Sigh. Such a strange little film—apparently Britta Phillips was the voice of Jem. I loved Jem and I loved Satisfaction during those horrible years known as the late 80s and never connected the two. Of course, there was no IMDb then...

Back to the Batemans, I'm glad Jason B has resurfaced and found success on Arrested Development. That show is genius. Read a recent interview with Jason where, during the interview, he calmly told some woman who walked up and squawked "Hey, are you famous?" (who does that?) that he was Marc Jacobs. I love that. If they're going to be idiots you certainly have license to fuck with their minds. I wonder if Jason ever wakes in a cold sweat knowing that Teen Wolf Too will probably be mentioned in his obituary.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Noah Baumbach, Eric Stoltz, Parker Posey

Have I seen the Squid & The Whale yet? No. Am I already sick of Noah Baumbach? Yes.
I was less than impressed with NB's presence on the Life Aquatic commentary track—the more I read and hear about him the more my initial impression that he is a pretentious little weasel is enforced. SIgh. Of course he's married to Jennifer Jason Leigh. How could he not be? Meanwhile, did I gasp aloud in a crowded theatre the first time I saw the Squid preview? Yes, because Anna Paquin and Jeff Daniels, having burned themselves forever into my consciousness as father & daughter as a result of Fly Away Home, lean in for a kiss. Eww... sigh.

Of course I will see Squid at some point, because Laura Linney is great and because I want to see if NB is worth a damn. But the buzz is killing me. Yes, I saw Kicking & Screaming. Sadly, Eric Stoltz does not guarantee a quality indie. Josh Hamilton and Parker Posey, even... and yet still not so much. Despite the above, does NB deserve to be labelled the ruiner of Wes Anderson's brilliance? Who can say. We'll have to see if Wes gets it back next time.

Segue. What the hell happened to Eric Stoltz, anyway? Poor bastard. He's still in action, but apparently as some sort of smarmy cartoon of himself. Sheesh. And Parker Posey! Party Girl is either laughing her ass off all the way to the bank or seriously starting to slide (maybe both?). Blade III? Frankenstein? And I thought You've Got Mail was a low.