Month: June 2007

  • The (Other) Fantastic Four (& More), Ghetto Bluetooth, and a Reunion/Photshoot…Work it Baby

    Here are some new photos of the twins, Cole & Carter and Trey & Tyler (the Fantastic Four).  Here they are at the lake with big brother Jaden and their 2 little cousins.  I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, Diane is the most amazing, bestest mother in the whole wide world!  Here are my Godsons:

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    And lest you think the pictures I took of Andy and the milk yesterday were messy…take a look at two sets of identical twin boys, all under the age of 4 (when these pictures were taken) getting REALLY messy.  I threw in a few of me with the twins as well.  Anyone who knows me knows how good I am with kids, but I can’t even begin to describe what baby-sitting for these four little devils is like.  Again, Diane is the Mother of the Year.  I love you my friend!! xoxoxoxoo


    So, my third Bluetooth in the past year, broke today.  I’m getting sick of spending $75 to $90 a pop on these pieces of shit that keep breaking.  They really are horribly designed.  The volume buttons never work, and the on/off switches are ridiculous.  Doesn’t Bluetooth have a monopoly though?  Isn’t that illegal?  Anyone know of any better options? 

    Here’s the sad story of my Bluetooth:

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    It keeps disconnecting unless I press on it.

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    Come to find out, a little piece broke that held it closed.

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    So of course with no pressure, it disconnected.

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    So, to save money, I introduce you to my Ghetto Bluetooth!

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    Maybe I should get a black rubberband, LOL.

    So I guess now, I’m a 21st Century nerd!

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    Song of the day


    The dogs were glad to see Seth when he came home the other night, and he was apparently glad to see them too. LOL! 

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  • No Use Crying Over Spilt Milk

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    Tonight’s weekly family dinner was more somber than most, but as you can see, we tried to not let that show to the kids.  Dave is still in intensive care on life support.  The doctors don’t all seem to be on the same page about his treatment, which is rather annoying.  As of last night we were preparing for the worst but this morning there was a glimmer of hope in the form of a tracheotomy.  As it is, he’s one of the oldest Cystic Fibrosis patients on record.  Please keep him in your thoughts.

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    It was nice to hear that NDM‘s cousin’s wife gave birth to a beautiful baby.  The Circle of Life.

  • Ask Me About My Dead Son, Soccer Playing Nuns & The Liberation

     

    Someone needs to throw rotten fruit in Ann Coulter’s ugly hateful face.  This absolutely sickens me.  Whether you’re a Republican or Democrat this kind of evil must be stopped.  Boycott this woman in any way you can.  She’s a filthy, smug, hatemonger.  I wish someone would have projectile vomited on her face. And if you haven’t already seen the clip of her referring to John Edwards as a faggot, click here.

    Elizabeth Edwards is a real class act, as is her husband, and if you read her blog, she talks about drowning out the hate. So, I take back my hateful words, but I only hope that this raises awareness of what good people the Edwards’ are. To wit: (Update:  They duped us all!)

    “Now it is our turn to drown out the hate. Find a way — whether it is contribution here that sends a message to Miss Coulter and those who applauded her (which, of course, I prefer) or whether it is a statement on this blog or others or all of the above — but please find a way not to sit silent in acceptance. It doesn’t change until we say we will not be silent when this happens.”  Elizabeth Edwards, wife of presidential candidate John Edwards.

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    Ann Coulter is such a right wing nut job that even George Bush hates her!!

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    I saw a nun yesterday.  Not exactly something I’m used to seeing walking down Santa Monica Blvd!!  I wanted to stop and talk to her, but she didn’t really seem too interested in the dogs.  She made me think about nuns though.  Does anyone remember the show “The Flying Nun“?  It was, in hindsight, an absolutely ridiculous television show starring Oscar winner Sally Field as a nun who could fly. Yes, fly.

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    “The show was commended by several Roman Catholic orders in the late 1960s for humanizing nuns and their work. It also offered a difficult typecasting obstacle for star Sally Field to overcome. Its three season run left such an indelible impression upon its viewers that, more than 30 years after it ceased production, it continues to be satirized and referenced in modern films and television.”

    The nun I saw yesterday was in the more traditional habit, like this photo I took in 2000 of Mick’s aunt, the soccer playing nun!

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    Left to right that’s:  Kurt, Eva, Mary, Mick’s aunt, Sabine (in liederhosen I might add!!), and Mick.  We were having a party at Mick’s parent’s house in Bavaria, Germany. So, in retrospect a flying nun is just plain silly, but a soccer playing nun is absolutely fabulous!!

    Seeing yesterday’s nun and remembering Mick’s aunt made me wonder about habits, so of course Wikipedia had the answer:

    Catholic Canon Law requires only that it be in some way identifiable so that the person may serve as a witness to Gospel values, simple as a mark of detachment from vanity and greed, and becoming.

    Interestingly enough the paradox of veiling a nun in a habit and a Muslim woman in a Hijab is becoming blurred.  As reported in The Guardian last year,

    “In the 1840s, not long after Catholic emancipation, people were so enraged to see nuns brazenly wearing their habits in the streets that they pelted them with rotten fruit and horse dung. Nuns had been banned from Britain since the Reformation; their return seemed to herald the resurgence of barbarism. Two hundred and fifty years after the gunpowder plot, Catholicism was still feared as unassimilable, irredeemably alien to the British ethos, fanatically opposed to democracy and freedom, and a fifth column allied to dangerous enemies abroad.

    Many women, whose mothers had happily discarded the veil, adopted the hijab in order to dissociate themselves from aggressively secular regimes. This happened in Egypt under President Anwar Sadat and it continues under Hosni Mubarak. When the shah banned the chador, during the Iranian revolution, women wore it as a matter of principle – even those who usually wore western clothes. Today in the US, more and more Muslim women are wearing the hijab to distance themselves from the foreign policy of the Bush administration; something similar may well be happening in Britain.”

    I guess my point is, things aren’t always as they seem.  Though nuns can’t fly, they can play soccer.  Though burqas and Hijabs may symbolize the oppression of women, they might also signify their shared identity.  Just something to think about.


    And to end on something lighter, here are a few photos just taken around the neighborhood:

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    Saw this while walking the dogs yesterday. It was thrown out of a window.  Talk about  having yout PC crash!!

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    Sunset Blvd.

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    The Hollywood Sign through the smog.

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    And finally, in the “This is why they hate us so much” category:

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    Here’s Jake Byrd from the Jimmy Kimmel show.  This will crack you up!!

     


  • I Love a Rainy Night

     

    The weather has been absolutely gorgeous here for the past week. (Let’s face it, it’s pretty much gorgeous most of the time.  Not too hot, cool at night and no humidity.  What more could we ask for??)

    Answer: RAIN!!  (No, I’m not talking about the Korean Pop Superstar…though he is coming to Los Angeles on Saturday, which I know Kimsoon is excited about…as are many many others!)

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    The rain I’m referring to is the stuff that falls from the sky, or rather, in the case of Los Angeles, doesn’t fall.  Los Angeles has not had any measurable rainfall since last July.  To wit:

    Driest Year on Record Appears Likely.
    Weathernotes for Wednesday, May 30, 2007.

    There’s a little drizzle around the Los Angeles area this morning, but it would take much more than a light mist to make up the nearly one foot deficit in Los Angeles rainfall. Los Angeles’ rainfall total remains at 3.21 inches for a water year that began on July 1, 2006 and will end June 30, 2007. Normal rainfall would be 15.14 inches.

    If Los Angeles (USC) receives less than 1.21 inches of rain between now and June 30th, this water year (July 1, 2006 to June 30, 2007) will become the driest since recordkeeping began in 1877. According to the NWS, the average rainfall in Los Angeles in the month of June is 0.06 inches, so a new record dry water year appears likely. This would break the record of 4.42 inches set in the water year of 2001-2002.

    After an email exchange with Allen tonight I realized how much I miss thunderstorms in the midwest.  There’s nothing like falling asleep to a hard pouring rain and thunder and lightning.  It’s magical really, and something we don’t get to experience in Los Angeles.  Like the fireflies I wrote of earlier this month, thunderstorms were a part of childhood lore.  Every year about this time they would start in full force.  The combination of the hot humid air in the lower atmosphere and cool air in the upper atmosphere, formed a “perfect storm” so to speak.  Maybe I’ll have to get one of those machines at Sharper Image that mimic thunderstorm noises.  Anybody have one?

    By the way, if you’ve never heard what the rain in a good strong thunderstorm sounds like, the next time you take a shower, turn the water on full pressure, hold your hands flat and tight to your ears, and put your head under the shower stream.  Experiment with the sound by increasing and decreasing the pressure on your ears.  It’s fun! (I’m easily amused!)

    So anyway, tonight I walked the dogs to Beverly Hills.  It was a gorgeous evening. 

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    We met a very nice lady named Paula at the park.  Her dog’s was named Leonardo, and the three dogs played together for quite some time.  When I told Paula that I was just dog-sitting for Ruby & Garbo, she realized she had met Garbo 4 years ago when he was just a puppy and Seth & Jessica had just brought him home.  We got to talking, and it turned out she was from South Africa but had lived in Australia for quite a while as well.  We swapped stories about Cape Town and Sydney, and with my thoughts of thunder and lightning storms tonight, I dug out this photograph I took in Cape Town, South Africa about 8 years ago.  I took it with my Canon Elan IIE 35 mm camera.  To get the shot, I was perched precariously on a median between two fast moving highways, with my tripod balanced ever so carefully.  I almost fell once, but I got the shot, as any true photographer would!

    LIGHTNIN

    So, here’s today’s song of the day, dedicated to Allen…where it’s hot, humid and stormy.  It’s a totally cheesy 80′s country/pop riff, but it’s appropriate to this post.  LOL.


    You’d expect something that involved Paris, driving and a bitchy girl to end up with a jail sentence…not the case:

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    And last but certainly not least…

    Happy Birthday Daniel-san

    Who would have ever thought that a chance meeting at Dulles Airport and all those adventures in Portland each time I visited, would result in such a lifelong friendship.  (I looked at the photos and our first trip to Multnomah Falls was 7 years ago last week!)  In my never ending quest to find embarrassing pictures of our group of friends on their birthdays, it wasn’t as easy with you Daniel, but here goes: 

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    NYE – My house 2003

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    Hard to believe you don’t drink!

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    Lord of the Rings Premier, Munich Germany, 2001

    Happy Birthday & Dicken Schmatz my dear friend! –Carey


  • Growing Children Eating Dog Food in the City of Angels & a High School Reunion of Sorts

     

    What a great weekend!  It was absolutely gorgeous here in LA, and the dogs and I spent nearly the whole time outside.  I also got a very generous gift from Tyson which caught me by surprise.  Thanks for that Tyson, and thanks for lunch too.  You’re going to make some some girl very lucky some day!
     
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    Unfortunately my cousin Darlene’s husband Dave is back in the hospital.  This time he’s in intensive care and on a ventilator.  Please think good thoughts for him!  I was looking back at some pictures of my extended family down here in Southern California (My aunt and uncle have 3 kids, their kids have 8 kids and their kids have 4 kids!).  And all those kids are really growing up!  To wit:

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    2004

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    2007

    What a difference 3 years makes!!


    I’m dog-sitting for Garbo & Ruby this week and I swear these dogs eat better than I do!  For those of you old enough to remember who Dick Van Patten is, he starred in a long running 70′s TV show called Eight is Enough, about a family with 8 children.  A bit of trivia; halfway thru the first season, the actress who played the mother of the 8 kids, died of cancer.  Her name was Diana Hyland, and at the time she was “dating” a young up and coming teen heartthrob named John Travolta, who was 18 years her junior.  (It was all a front as we know today.  The “heartthrob” was actually gay, and Diana was playing the role Kelly Preston plays today)
     
    Anyway, I digress.   Dick Van Patten is apparently now in the dog food business, and his food looks and smells pretty darn good I must admit.  Who knew dogs liked carrots and potatoes!!  Though when I read this, I kind of felt a little sick:
    Van Patten was in the news in early December 2005 for lending his name to Natural Balance, a line of high-end dog food that is intended to be indistinguishable from stews and other dishes (or table scraps) that are normally intended for human consumption. He has demonstrated this by eating, on at least one occasion, his own brand of dog food in tandem with some pet.
     
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    Garbo & Ruby are enjoying this particular brand which is called Chinese Takeout w/ Sauce.  Nice touch with the hat Dick!
     

    The following is an email correspondence with a girl I went to high school with 25 years ago.  She found me after my mother made on online comment on a local Chicago paper’s obituary website.  It is indeed a small world! (I actually found her in my old high school year book and took a picture (see below), to be fair though, I’m posting this extremely nerdy profle picture of me from the early 80′s.  You gotta love the 80′s and feathered hair!)


    Carey,
     
    I think I knew you Way Back When? Were you, perhaps, an SHS Saxon back in the early-to-mid-80s??
    If so, it’s quite strange how the randomness of the universe is not so random. If not — cheers!!

    Posted 6/16/2007 1:23 AM by misshope01


    Hi, Hope (?),

    Yes indeed, I was a Saxon, though I barely even remembered that reference! LOL. I have scoured your Livejournal in hopes of finding clues to your identity. All I have found however, is that:

    You’re an excellent writer, succinct and to the point (unlike myself, who can drone on for pages and keep digressing…kind of like I’m doing now ). Sylvia (Plath) would be proud.
    You hate Alabama (not much of a clue I guess. If you loved Alabama, that would certainly narrow the field!).
    You wear glasses.
    Your husband’s (?) name is John.
    You’re a Cure fan and went to Smith College (as opposed to a Smith’s fan who went to Cure College).
    You’re not homophobic (Thank God).
    You like mashed potatoes (a true Chicagoan).
    You used to work in the Sear’s Tower.
    You love iPods, recipes, Anderson Cooper (I met him and his partner last year, great guy), the color pink, not going to Florida, Sex & The City, Harry Potter, Paris and Sylvia Plath among others.

    So, basically, I’m clueless. I guess I’m one of those adults who have trouble remembering things, though my life is far from monotonous. I suspect more likely however, that I likely blocked out most of what I remember from high school. It was a miserable 4 years for me. Barely any friends. Nerdy little asthmatic boy…a true geek. LOL.

    College was my real time to shine, and shine I did. Away from the ties of family and an environment that squashed my individuality, I excelled in making friends and building the persona I have today.

    At any rate, please clue me in as to who you are. Don’t be offended if I don’t remember you more than vaguely. The only real friend I had in high school was a girl named Shana Reardon. Many of her friends were always very nice to me, as I was her friend, but I didn’t know them that well, and certainly didn’t keep the same company (She was a cheerleader and her brother a football player….you remember how that goes). Maybe my memory is fooling me. I was fairly close to some other girls, Natalie Barnes, Sandy (the last name escapes me) and quite a few from “Adaptive” P.E. LOL. You’ll have to jar my memory.

    So how on earth did you stumble across my blog anyway? The universe is indeed a strange place. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve run into people in the most unlikely locations: on a train in Istanbul, an airport in Australia or Times Square in New York. At any rate, thanks for writing. I’m curious to know more. I hope you have a great weekend. Stay cool and dry if that’s possible in hell. LOL

    Ciao,
    Carey


    Hi Carey,

    Back in high school, I knew you from BOTH adaptive PE (but I’d forgotten that until you mentioned it) and from chemistry class (and, maybe even — did your family go to St. Marcelline’s?) Mr. Loh? What a crazy-ass way to teach chemistry — do you remember him throwing scissors to us from the front of the room (as people dove under their desks!) My friend’s daughters go to Hoffman, and he still teaches there.

    I remember you for disparate reasons — you were nice, and funny in the very non-high-school way I appreciated, and — the memory jarring reason — I loved your name! I thought it was very cool, and as a wordsmith, then and now, I saw many possibilities. I was a geek in high school — I came to SHS my junior year, so I never quite made it into the “in” crowd (or, that which I aspired to: the “in” crowd of smart people.) I was on the fringe of that social group, but very involved in extracurricular activities (but only the geeky ones.) I think I was a year behind you — I graduated in 84.

    Speaking of names, my name is Melissa *****, but people in high school knew me as Missy (and, forgive them, my family still calls me that.) I don’t expect you to remember me at all — your name jarred my memory, that memory led me to recall a face, and a voice, actually — and here we are. Worry not, though, I’m NOT a stalker: I just have a very detailed memory for lots of unrelated information. I like to think it’s what has led me to be a writer, especially if you believe the old adage that we write what we know. But, I tend to remember most everything — my siblings call me Rainman — at least, with the PhD behind me, some of the less useful memories have now been replaced by poetry!!

    I live in Alabama (as you know) but I’ve only been here since March: I was in academic administration at the U of C for the year before that, and I worked in marketing for a private equity firm off-and-on while I was in grad school (hence, the Sears Tower reference. I did love that office!!) I was the first person in my family to go to college: I went to Smith when I was 29 and graduated when I was 32, with a degree in English, and I got my doctorate in English this year from Emory University in Atlanta. Like you, high school was NOT my thing, but I’ve found a place in the world that makes me very happy.

    I’m in Alabama for an assistant professorship at a cute little college, which starts in the fall, but that came about because my British boyfriend is a professor locally — and he can’t move without getting a new job or being deported, and he is in a ridiculously specialized academic field. Needless to say, when he told me a year ago that he was moving to the U.S., this was NOT what I expected. After we both get tenure, we will depart the South QUICKLY.

    From what I’ve read in your blog, you appear to have a wonderful and interesting life — I’m glad to know that. As elitist as it may sound, I am always quite pleased to learn that people have escaped the northwest suburbs. My mom and sister still live there, and I always run into people I know in Dominick’s, and it startles me when they have never left the immediate area, really, except for college. Wider horizons are invigorating and humbling. Plus, since you were kind and smart, I’m glad to know that you’re living a full life, and enjoying it along the way.

    Now, here’s the story of how I found you: remember as you read it that I am not a stalker, and that I do research as a big part of my job, plus I am entertained by the internet. Here we go:

    1. I talked to my mom on Friday night, and she told me that a friend of hers had died — the woman who led her rosary group (my mom is 82 and a widow, living in a senior citizen apartment building, so her scope is fairly limited these days.)
    2. After my boyfriend (who is traveling) called me at 2:50 a.m. to see if I had called him — and woke me out of a dead sleep — I was too awake to go back to sleep right away. So, I went to the computer to amuse my self until I was sleepy again.
    3. I went to the Daily Herald website to look for this woman’s obituary. I wanted to leave a note in the online guestbook for her children, letting them know how much their mother had meant to my mother.
    4. There was an entry in the guest book from a woman with your last name, which jogged my memory (again, I loved your name) who mentioned that her sons had also known this woman as a bus driver. Thus, the way my brain works, I thought of you, and I wondered “What has he been up to for 25 years?”
    5. SO, I googled you, and it was very cool when I found your blog, because it was interesting and engaging. And here we are.

    If you’d like to commiserate further on all things Saxon, or the wonders of Chicago, or anything else, please email me.

    Otherwise, I’ll keep an eye out for you the next time I’m in Times Square, or an airport in Australia (or if I ever manage to get myself onto a train in Istanbul!!)

    Best,
    Melissa


    Hi Melissa,

    I’m finally getting a chance to respond to your email with the attention it deserves.  As you’ll see from the attached photo, I have now put a face with a name, LOL, and I’m happy to say that yes, I do remember you (Low blow with the picture I know…I pray you don’t still have your yearbook!). 

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    Though, unlike you, I didn’t remember Chemistry and Mr. Loh (until you reminded me), but did remember the dreaded Adaptive P.E.  I don’t remember which was more demeaning the shuffleboard, or bowling with rubber balls!

    As I read your email to my mother, I was struck by how kind your words were.  It makes me feel good to know that someone remembers me in that way from all those years ago.  My family did go to St. Marcelline’s as well.  My mother taught confirmation there, and my father was in the Holy Name Society (which now that I think about it was little more than an excuse for the men to get away from the women and drink.  God love the Catholics!)   

    Your Post Saxon period (sounds like the Middle Ages!) has been quite accomplished!  My best friend Daniel got his Masters in English from EIU, and is now teaching high school.  I wish I would have had the guts to have a major like that…but it was the “Greed is good” 80′s and I became a boring business finance major like many others.  I must say however, it has treated me well.  During high school I worked at Heritage Bank.  I even went back there to work for 2 summers in college.  It was a great proving ground for me, and to this day my primary checking account is there!

    After college, I worked at First American Bank in Evanston, until I was hired away by a software firm that made software the bank used.  When I started with that company, I was the 50th employee, when I left 13 years later, there were 5000.  Needless to say I got in on the ground floor and took off from there.  That job afforded me many things, namely the means to travel the world many times over.  I traveled so much in fact that from 1997 to 2001 I didn’t even have a home.  I would work during the week and on Fridays if I was on the East coast I’d fly to Paris or London and if I was on the west coast I’d fly to Tokyo or Hong Kong.  I loved it.

    I finally left that job after 9/11 (travel was no longer fun to me) and settled with a small software company here in California.  I work from home and travel only once every couple of months which is great.  It was a perfect transition for me starting over with a small company and helping it grow and I’m really loving it.

    The day before I got your message, my Mom had told me that Mrs. Ward, my old bus driver had died.  She didn’t tell me she had gone on to the Herald’s website and left a message.  Isn’t it funny how things happen!?  I told my Mom about it and she had a good laugh.  She lives with my brother now.  My parents got divorced after high school and my Dad remarried and moved to Texas (you thought Alabama was bad!).  My Mom has M.S. but is doing well.  I don’t know if you read about my recent email correspondence with my 4th grade teacher on my website, but it’s pretty neat to have this kind of thing happen twice in as many weeks!

    It was really nice to hear from you.  I’m sorry we don’t live closer to each other!  If you’re ever in Southern California, I would love seeing you and meeting your boyfriend.  The “Hotel Careyfornia” has become quite a popular destination since I moved here 5 years ago.  Please keep me posted on your jobs and moves.  Thanks again for the kind words and fond memories!

    Carey


  • Brokeback Coffee Drinker, Children and Dogs and Bears, Oh My!, Wienermobiles and the Subcontinent


    I’m dog-sitting again until next Wednesday.  I met Seth & Jessica for breakfast at 7 this morning at the Urth Cafe.  I forgot my stupid camera, so I just snapped a couple of these with my cell phone.  Bad quality, but you get the idea.  Jake Gyllenhaal was there, and though I normally don’t take pictures of celebrities here, I took this because the last time I mentioned Jake Gyllenhaal on my blog, I got hundreds and hundreds of hits from all over the world from people in his fan club.  They’re apparently quite loyal.   Then I baby-sat Hannah for a while while her Mom & Dad ran some errands.  We had fun.

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    Tried to be discreet about taking this photo of Jake Gyllenhaal. Not sure who he was with either.

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    Happy Hannah

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    Hannah & I played and danced while Mommy & Daddy were gone.

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    Ruby fast asleep, LOL


    Crazy Google Search of the Day – I’m #1

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    I wonder what they were actually searching for?  They spelled “wiener” wrong but Google still found it.  Maybe they meant “winner” and the “mobile” meant mobile phone?  Not sure what “crazy” has to do with it.  These people who come to my site from these searches may be crazy!


    I got a message from India recently saying that I cover a lot of Asian issues, but never deal with the Subcontinent.  Coincidentally, these two items were recently brought to my attention:

    15-year-old performs surgery in India

    By MUNEEZA NAQVI, Associated Press Writer Thu Jun 21, 1:24 PM ET

    NEW DELHI – The 15-year-old son of two doctors successfully performed a filmed Caesarean section birth under his parents’ watch in southern India in an apparent attempt to set a record as the youngest surgeon, officials said Thursday. Instead, the boy’s father could be stripped of his licenses and may face criminal charges.  Read more…

    and from neighboring Pakistan:

    Pakistan’s late-night, cross-dressing TV star

    (05-17) 04:00 PDT Karachi, Pakistan — By day, Ali Salim’s chin is covered with stubble. He wears scruffy jeans and feeds his taste for cigarettes. But at night he puts on a sequined sari and high heels and transforms himself into Nawazish Ali — catty chat-show queen and South Asia’s first cross-dressing television host.  Read more…


    I tell you, there’s never a dull moment in my life.  Today, while walking the dogs, we were on the lookout for bears!!

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    Here are a couple of other photos from our walk today, and a video of Garbo & Ruby playing. 

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    Song/Video of the day. This performance still gives me goose bumps.


  • Xangaholics Anonymous

     
    From:  Chris (Xanga)
    To:  Carey
    Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2007 3:19 AM

    Hey Carey,

    all good, surprisingly, we’re all still up.  but we’re getting close.  hopefully by the time you awake, the site will be back up!  here’s to 22 hours straight and counting, for some others on the team 44 hours.  =O
     
    thanks for the followup email…it’s been a long and stressful night.
     
    chris
     
    From:  Carey
    To:  Chris (Xanga)
    Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2007 6:55 AM
     
    Hey Chris,
     
    6:55 AM here on the left coast and yes, it’s working.  Maybe this was a good thing, I actually went to bed last night earlier than I ever have since joining Xanga. 
     
    Get some sleep.  –Carey

     
     
    If you saw the final episode of The Sopranos, you should really get a kick out of this.  It’s quite clever on their part (except for the fact that they’re comparing themselves to an organized crime family!  LOL, I still love it though) 


    Preservatives & Newlyweds

     I really need to stop eating junk food.  How is it that these potato chips can last for 3 months??

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    No wonder I’m getting fat!

    natevonda (Medium)

    Nate & Vonda had a 4 hour layover last night before flying to Fiji for their honeymoon. So I picked them up at LAX and we went out for Thai food.  Had a great time!


  • Liberal Enclaves, A Monkey on my Lips and Other Addictions

     

    en·clave      [en-kleyv, ahn-] Pronunciation KeyShow IPA Pronunciation noun, verb, -claved, -clav·ing. –noun

    1.any small, distinct area or group enclosed or isolated within a larger one: a Chinese-speaking enclave in London.

    West Hollywood, CA, the city I live in, is definitely considered a liberal enclave.  I sometimes forget how liberal, as I’m somewhat desensitized to it.  According to Wikipedia, approximately 41% of the city’s residents are gay or bisexual.  It is also one of the most densely populated cities in the United States, which really attracted me to the city, because I can walk everywhere and don’t have to drive (a rarity in Los Angeles).

    Last night my boss drove up 60 miles from Laguna Hills, CA.  He is an evangelical conservative Christian, and we have excellent discussions about our various political views.  He’s never been one to try to convince or convert me over to the side he believes.  In fact, on Election Day last year, we made a deal.  I would vote for one conservative Republican if he would vote for one liberal democrat.  We took pictures of our ballots with our cell phones, and sent them to each other.  It was pretty funny.  Despite our political differences, we get along very well.

    Anyway, last night he drove up here because we were having dinner with one of our business associates who was visiting the area.  We went to a great sushi restaurant called Fat Fish.  We ordered a few of their specialty rolls, the “Fat Aass” and the “Nutty Roll”.  A good time was had by all. 

    fatfish 

    Somehow though, the conversation moved towards politics.  I’m not sure how it happened and as soon as it did, we all knew we were in dangerous territory.  Of course, I had homefield advantage, but as our business associate was even more conservative than my boss, it was 2 against 1.  The conversation didn’t get too heated though, and we decided to adjourn from the restaurant and go to Pinkberry, since they had never been.

    Since parking is such a nighmare around there, we decided to walk.  Big mistake.  I had intentionally picked a restaurant that wasn’t exactly in the gay heart of West Hollywood, as to not inundate them with too much in your face liberalism all at once.  On the walk to Pinkberry, we passed 3 gay bars and 2 adult novelty stores.  I did a good job diverting their attention with my conversation, until we came upon this billboard, lit up for the whole world to see:

    gaybillboard

    It’s an ad for a gay cruise line and it was pretty funny.  Yes a mockup but you get the idea.  Welcome to West Hollywood!

    Tonight while walking Roscoe, I stopped to eat dinner at an outdoor cafe.  There were two women next to me, who loved the dog and started asking me some questions about the city.  They said they were visiting from Checotah, Oklahoma, population 3,481 (incidentally, the home of Carrie Underwood.  In fact one of the women used to teach school with Carrie Underwood’s mom).  These women had never been outside the state of Oklahoma.  They decided to come to West Hollywood, because People and US magazine said that was where all the stars were!  Needless to say, they had never seen a gay person, let alone a city full of them.  I think they were still a little in shock.  They had no itinerary per se, they just wanted to shop in Beverly Hills and try to see movie stars.  LOL.  So I got a piece of paper and wrote down all of the hot spots for them.  What to do, where to go to see celebrities and cultural things to do in LA.  They were very appreciative, and hopefully a little less leary of this liberal enclave!!


    ad·dic·tion       (ə-dĭk’shən)  Pronunciation Key noun

      1. Compulsive physiological and psychological need for a habit-forming substance: a drug used in the treatment of heroin addiction.

    Speaking of Pinkberry, the controversy continues: 

    Today brings an update to PinkberryGate, the scandal that rocked the tangy-frozen-dessert industry to its very core. Charges were levied last month against the rapidly proliferating treat concern that it was falsely marketing its product–made from a powder-based formula comprised of finely ground panda bones and unicorn horns–as yogurt. An update to their website assured customers steps were being taken to investigate what, exactly, the company was serving at grossly inflated prices to its legions of fanatical customers.  Read more… 

    chapstick  While we’re on the subject of addictions (i.e Crackberry), anyone who knows me knows I’m addicted to Chapstick.  If I was ever on Survivor my one luxury item would definitely be Chapstick.  So imagine my surprise when I learned of this:

    lipbalmaa

    Yes, believe it or not, there’s a “12 Step Program” for addiction to Chapstick and other various lip balms, including Blistex, Labelo, Carmex, etc.  The website, http://www.lipbalmanonymous.com/ features articles on the “Industry of Addiction”, the “Lip Balm Drug Connection” and an “Addict Denial Page”.  I’ll be the first to admit I’m addicted, but Lord knows there are worse things I could do!   Lest you think the wacko behind this website isn’t serious, check this out:  http://picks.yahoo.com/picks/potw/20070618.html

    And finally, the ultimate addiction story of the day.  Are you ready for this?  In another ridiculous example of why the “War on Drugs” is absurd, the following photos were taken from a $207 million drug raid in Mexico.  Again, if you don’t believe it, check out:  http://www.snopes.com/photos/crime/drugmoney.asp#photo

    drugmoney

    drugmoney2

    drugmoney3

    drugmoney4

    Don’t get me wrong.  I know I live in the aformentioned liberal enclave, but I’m not a drug abuser.  I think this simply points out that we will never win this war. (Hmmmm, where have I heard that before??)  The scary part is that you know this is just a minute fraction of the money that’s passing between here and Mexico.  I’m not pretending to know the answer, but Nancy Reagan didn’t have it right 25 years ago, and Bush still doesn’t have it right.  Isn’t there something else we can try?  The Draconian penalties imposed for minor drug offenses just to prove we are “tough on drugs” and the fact that a marijuana conviction can result in a longer prison sentence than murder are truly insane!!  We are going the way of China here, it’s very scary.

    chinaexecution

    Death sentence is passed against a
    woman who was immediately executed
    with three other people on drugs charges.
    (UN International Anti-Drugs Day, 6/26/03)
    www.sina.com.cn via AI web site)
     
    America has the world’s highest incarceration rates:
     
    Incarceration_rates_worldwide
     
    That’s despite spending trillions of dollars on the War on Drugs.  To wit; the Reagan administration alone spent $1.86 trillion while the first Bush administration spent $1.38 trillion.  And remember that started 27 years ago.  I wonder where all that seized money from this latest raid is going to go???   Sickening isn’t it?
     

    Google Search of the Day.  This one from Illinois visited today.  I’m #1!  LOL


     

  • Planes, Gains (in age) & Automobiles in 525,660 Minutes on the Red Carpet

    I’ll be back tomorrow…until then I’ve posted some of Sabine’s wedding photos.  Talk to you all soon! –Carey


    As our far flung group of friends converge on Utah for Nate & Vonda’s wedding, I’d like to take this opportunity to wish them all the best in their new lives together.  Congratulations to both of you….and Bianca too!!  Beijos!

    vonda (Medium)

     
     
    A few photos taken by Bine!


    I received a very nice surprise in the mail Friday from my good friend Sabine, who I’ve written about extensively.  This is what she sent me:

    rent (Medium)

    525,600 minutes, how do you measure the life of a woman or a man? How about love?

    That song, from Rent, is the theme song of the group of friends that I’ve been spending New Year’s Eve with since 1997 on continents all over the world.  We’re a tight knit group of friends and we all get along wonderfully, whether it’s on the beach in Brazil:

    IMG_0221

    IMG_0358

    or sipping hot chocolate with a Sabine’s Grandma in Bavaria after playing eisschiessen an a frozen lake:

    withoma

    temple

    or partying ’till dawn in a cold crowded flat in Seville, Spain: 

    NEWYEAR

    FOREVER

    The point is, we are friends till the end.  525,600 minutes, how do you measure a year in the lives of friends?  In daylights, in sunsets, in midnights, in cups of coffee.  In inches, in miles, in laughter, in strife.  In 525,600 minutes, how do you measure a year in the life?  How about LOVE.

    IMG_0845


    I had such a productive morning on Friday.  By 8:00 AM I had met Seth, Jessica & Hannah at Urth Cafe, had taken my car in for it’s 40,000 mile service and had gone to the grocery store. (Update:  Bad news.  Honda just called and said I need new brakes, new tires, and a new battery.  There goes $750.)

    New update:  I picked up my car from Honda this afternoon.  Luckily I told them not to fix the tires, and that I would take them to the last place I had them changed.  Thank goodness I did that, because I had forgotten that this place warranties its’ tires.  It’s called Just Tires, and if you live in Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, Raleigh Durham, Philadelphia or Washington, I highly recommend this chain.  They are so honest.  I didn’t even remember I had the “protection plan”, and they replaced my tires for $15 each!!  The employees are very service oriented and polite.  What a nice change of pace.

    tires



    Talk about a “desktop” computer!!!  WOW

     

    Only in Hollywood:
     
    Does your husband feel unappreciated? Does your wife need a little sumpin’ sumpin’ extra? Are you in the doghouse? Roll out the red carpet, bitches!

    That’s right, you can greet your loved one with the cheery nylon pile usually reserved for the likes of A-listers, their entourages, and Star Jones. This 24″x15′ roll-out can be yours on eBay! Velvet ropes and paparazzi not included!

    How great would it be to greet your sweetie with the red carpet treatment … down the hallway to your depressing apartment?

     

    redcarpet  


    I just realized why the tips of my fingers hurt…I was subconciously popping bubble wrap all day at my desk, LOL.

    bubblewrap (Small) 


     ON THE LIGHTER SIDE

    This morning on the way to work I rear-ended a car at a stop light while not paying attention.  The driver got out and he was a dwarf!

    He said, “I’m not happy”…

    I replied, “Well, which one are you then?”


    Song of the weekend


  • Spaghetti Dinner

     
     

    IMG_2436 (Medium)

    My favorite picture of the evening….look how happy the little goober looks with his toothbrush.  LOL

    Song of the day