dog

  • I’m Entering Rehab

    The following, appeared in the Washington Post last week:

    Though it is embarrassing to admit this in public, I can no longer hide the truth. I have a Sarah Palin problem.

    I have written about her in 42 columns since Sen. John McCain picked her as his vice-presidential running mate in 2008. I’ve mentioned her in dozens more blog posts, Web chats, and TV and radio appearances. I feel powerless to control my obsession, even though it cheapens and demeans me.

    But today is the first day of the rest of my life. And so, I hereby pledge that, beginning on Feb. 1, 2011, I will not mention Sarah Palin — in print, online or on television — for one month. Furthermore, I call on others in the news media to join me in this pledge of a Palin-free February. With enough support, I believe we may even be able to extend the moratorium beyond one month, but we are up against a powerful compulsion, and we must take this struggle day by day.

    I checked, and I have written 39 posts about Wicked Witch of Wasilla, since that fateful morning of August 29, 2008, a day we wish we could all forget. So today, I declare a:

    So starting tomorrow, no posts about the Queen of Darkness. Like Mika Brzezinski, I will not give her the publicity she so craves:


    The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    Mika Brzezinski Experiences Palin Fatigue
    www.colbertnation.com

    “Mika, you need to buck up! Now I know you think that this story has no purpose other than keeping Sarah Palin’s name in the headlines for another news cycle. I know you think that she has nothing to offer the national dialogue, and that her speeches are just coded talking points mixed in with words picked up at random from a thesaurus. I know you think Sarah Palin is at best a self-promoting ignoramus, and at worst, a shameless media troll who’ll abuse any platform to deliver dog-whistle encouragement to a far right base that may include possible insurrectionists. I know you think that her reality show was pathetically unstatesmanlike, and at the same time, i know you believe it also represents the pinnacle of her potential. That her transparent desperation to be a celebrity so completely eclipsed her interest in public service so long ago, that there would be more journalistic integrity in reporting on one of the lesser Kardashian’s ass implants. Now I know, I know when you arrive at the office each day you say a silent prayer that maybe, just maybe, Sarah Palin will at long last shut up for ten fucking minutes. I know, I can see it in your eyes.”

    I hope my friends and family support me during this difficult time.  During my stint in Palin Rehab, I will occupy my time and blogs with more dogs, kids, and sunsets.  Enjoy!


    I dog-sat for Anjali this past weekend.  Doesn’t she look like the dragon from Never Ending Story?


    I also lost my camera last weekend, so I’m using my old one :(


    Chazz & Rio loved Anjali.  BTW, this is how they sleep with me!


    Reflections of Chazz & Rio at the beach…mirror images. Sorry for the lousy cell phone video!


    We had another great dinner at Unphogettable. It’s Claudio’s new favorite restaurant. Thanks Thai & Phil!


    Boys will be boys…


    A visit from the Oxelson’s early in the week was delightful!!


    Tommy & Andy still growing like weeds!

  • The Dog Days of Winter

    No politics this week….my family has forbidden it:

    So without Sarah Palin to bash again, I’ll have to resort to the other main topics of this blog:

    Kids, Dogs & Sunsets

    I was dog-sitting for Roscoe the Rottweiler all weekend, and we had a nice time.  Chazz & Rio came by for a play date, and the beautiful weather made for lots of outings:


    Winter in Los Angeles…dogs in the hood prefer fashion over function


    Another satisfied guest of The H.C.


    Ryan’s holding up the present I got him for Christmas


    Hot dogs in Beverly Hills…where’s the Perrier?


    At the dog park around the corner from my house


    Hooray for Roscoewood!


    The dog that ate Hollywood…in 3-D


    At the dog park under the Hollywood Sign


    Click here for more photos…


    Self Portraits

    Oh, and as for kids, Andrew always delivers.  Here’s how he responded when, instead of asking him what he learned at school, I asked him about the questions he asked at school.  Why this hasn’t gone viral yet, I don’t know:


    “OK, I think that’s enough Carey!”

  • His Name is Rio…


    His name is Rio and he’s such a scrappy pup.
    Found wandering the streets and now life’s looking up.
    And when he eats, he really gobbles like a hog.
    Best friends with Chazz now; Rio such a lucky dog.

    (Sung to the tune of Rio with apologies to Duran Duran)

    We got Chazz a brother on Saturday!  Mike and I picked him up from the vet’s office after the shelter sent him there to be neutered. (No, we didn’t get him neuticals!)  The minute Rio met Chazz, they were fast friends. Sometimes it’s hard to tell them apart, save for the ears!  He was emaciated and filthy, with some hair missing, but he had such amazing energy.  Even after just having the “snip snip” (as required by law with shelter adoptions), he ran around with Chazz like he knew about his new lease on life.  As the dogs exhausted each other, Claudio grilled up a traditional Brazilian barbecue and the sun set into the Pacific.  Welcome to the family Rio!


    Our first photo…love the dog biscuit in his mouth!


    Ryan, Chazz & Rio


    A toast to our new family member!


    Don’t they look like brothers?


    Finally getting tired


    Brazilian Barbecue!


    Sunset from the roof


    Best of the rest…click here


    Thursday night at The Irvine Spectrum.  More here…


    I also got my new glasses this week.  But everyone in the family looks better in them than me….even Grandma!


    Thursday Family Dinner

  • The Terrible Twos

    It was Chazz’s second birthday on Friday, and he celebrated in grand style.  Payton & Taylor were nice enough to send him a new “diamond” collar and doggy sunglasses.  LOL:


    Claudio helping Chazz open his birthday presents


    Thank you Payton, Taylor, Maureen, Pepper & Wrigley!

    We had a photoshoot up in the Hollywood Hills and he even got a doggy cupcake.  Over the weekend we saw “The Social Network” (loved it) and enjoyed the cooler weather after last week’s record heat wave courtesy of she devil Sarah Palin.  Speaking of the weather, the heat brought some amazing clouds last week, and even a couple of rainbows.  Below is a video from my roof and the rest of the week’s photos:


    Set to the song “Pure” by The Lightning Seeds


    More here…


    More here…


    Tommy & Andy


    Taken from my sunroof.  More here…


    From my rooftop Tuesday night.  More here…


    Chazz in the hood!


    Hooray for Hollywood!  More here…


    Ryan & Chazz


    Chazz and Anjali…More here…

    Happy Birthday Chazz!!

  • A Star is Born!

    Recently, I received the following email message from the good folks at the Animal Planet channel:

    Gmail Carey Anthony

    Americas Cutest Dog sent you a message: Animal Planet is interested in your videos for television!
    1 messages

    From: YouTube Service Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 8:25 AM
    To: CareyGLY

    YouTube

    americascutestdog has sent you a message:

    Animal Planet is interested in your video for television!
    Julie Cresswell here, with Animal Planet’s television show, “America’s Cutest Dog.” A team of us are currently searching for the cutest dog videos worldwide to air on our second special. I came across the following videos during my search and absolutely loved them .

  • Death of the Easter Bunny:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b20EuJTBYd8
  • Chazz Coke:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UiEGQM2WA9c
  • Dive Dive Birdie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bz32LaQjr9Y
  • Chazz & Daisy:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B97f1gVs0QE
  • Chazz at the Beach: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=me-X3ZiY1lQ
  • Andy & Chazz’s Nature Hike: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkyvJ8f6kv4
  • CJ Teaches Chazz the Rubik’s Cube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-1EuJ1oEAEk
  • Chazz & Brockton:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QVPhXExrJA

  • Your videos are really amazing, and perfect for our show.

    I wanted to reach out and see if you would be interested in submitting your video for “America’s Cutest Dog II”. Maybe you have other clips too! Submitting is easy, and can be done online in just a few minutes. Our show will feature the best videos of dogs and puppies doing the most amazing, hilarious and just plain adorable things, and we’d love to have your clips in the line up.

    If interested, please email my Production Assistant Heather Scudellari at hscudellari@xxxxxxxx.net with the information below.
    1. Please title your email ‘America’s Cutest Dog II’ (Attn: Heather)
    2. Please include:
    • Your full name
    • The name of the video(s)
    • The web link(s) of each video
    • Your dog’s name
    • Whether or not you own the rights to the video

    We will reply to your email with instructions on how to upload your video to our server.
    Thank you for your time. I hope to hear from you soon.

    Sincerely,
    Julie Cresswell


    This wasn’t Chazz’s first brush with fame.  Last year at the dog park he was approached by an agent who wanted him to come in for a screen test, LOL:


    It never panned out because Chazz wanted Lassie’s salary…not Rin Tin Tin’s! 
    They probably didn’t know that Chazz was already very close with Oscar winner Dustin Lance Black.

    Here now, for your viewing pleasure, are the videos you may be seeing on TV soon!

    Chazz certainly loves adventure!  He’s had a busy life


    Here are some photos from the past few days.  Have a good week everyone!


    Xangalebrity Chris, aka Cakalusa, paid a visit to The Hotel Careyfornia and even got to meet ElvisMore here…


    Din Tai Fung with Jon!  More here…


    Thursday Family Dinner!  More here…


    Another exciting edition of Clouds & Sunsets From My Sunroof!  More here…


    Dinner with Dennis at Phil’s new restaurant in West Hollywood, UnPhoGettable!  More here…

  • The Gandhi of Dogs


    Today would have been my dog Oreo’s 25th birthday, so I’m reposting this.  His biography rivals that of some people, but I think it’s a fitting tribute to a faithful companion. 

    Oreo was born on June 4, 1985 (the same day the Oreo cookie was invented in 1912) on a farm in Mattoon, Illinois.  He was an adorable puppy, mischievous, and ornery from the beginning, with a true mind of his own (just like his master!).

    I originally agreed to “watch” Oreo for a boy in my neighborhood who picked him up from a farmer during a summer job.  The boy’s grandmother said he could not keep the puppy, so I said he could stay at our house in Charleston, IL, (where I went to college, Eastern Illinois University) until a suitable home was found.  Needless to say, from that day forward, July 13, 1985, Oreo belonged to me.

    My friend Meg Slattery actually named Oreo.  When he was a puppy, he was all black, with white in the middle.  When she suggested Oreo, I knew it was the perfect name.  (Other names on the “short” list were: Thor, Bosco, and Ranger.)  The vet suspected Oreo was a mix of German Shepherd, Sheepdog, Wolfhound, and Wire Terrier.  A pure mutt!

    From the beginning, Oreo was a unique dog.  That first summer, I would ride my bike to campus, and he would  stick his little head out of my backpack the whole time.  I was only taking one class that summer, so I used to spend hours on campus, training him to wait for me whenever I went inside a building.  It took a whole summer, but he eventually learned how to wait for me for over an hour.  Of course, in the beginning, the slightest thing would distract him, and he would be gone.  He loved squirrels, children, even bugs.  Anything could get his attention.

    I remember that he always walked slightly diagonally.  He could never walk a perfect straight line.  The summer of ’85 was unusually hot in Illinois.  Oreo loved to go to the lake, and jump in the water any chance he got.  I have such fond memories of that year.  When Oreo was about 7 months old, he started wandering the neighborhood on his own.  It was a small  town, and most everyone knew him already.  He was quickly becoming a mascot on campus, and he eventually learned where every grade school in town was located.  He used to know when recess was at each school, and show up to play with the kids.

    The kids of course loved it.  Oreo would go down the slide with them, and use his front paws to push them on the merry go round.  Since I baby-sat for over 50 kids in town, nearly everyone knew him already.  The principals however, weren’t as pleased.  I used to get phone calls all the time, telling me that my dog was at recess again.  This practice continued for many years, even after I graduated and moved to Chicago. When I lived in the suburbs of Chicago, Oreo used to go to three schools within a five mile radius of our house!  He crossed some major roads to get there, but he always looked both ways before he crossed. I worked about 40 miles away at the time.  When the principals of the schools would call me at work (I had my work # on his tags), I would tell them to just wait until recess was over, and he would leave.  Sure enough he did.

    I actually spied on him one day to discover where he went on his travels.  I always put him in our fenced in back yard before leaving for my job at the bank each morning.  One morning I actually drove away, but parked around the corner, and waited to see what Oreo would do.  Sure enough, at about 9:00, he jumped the fence (a little reminiscent of this cute beagle) and started making his rounds.  He went to several schools, and stopped off at several different spots where he was assured to find an open can of cat food, or some tasty garbage to indulge in!

    He also used to play games with the dog-catcher.  He was on their “10 Most Wanted” List for several years, but  he always managed to foil them, and hide, or run back to the house and scratch the door to come inside, just in the nick of time!  He always learned quickly what the dog-catcher’s van looked like, in every city we lived in.

    Oreo is the only dog I know who graduated from college.  During my outdoor graduation ceremony in 1987, Oreo actually saw me cross the stage to receive my diploma.  As he had attended most of my classes with me, he naturally felt he deserved a diploma as well.  He would usually wait outside, but occasionally he would sucker a kind soul to let him in the door (puppy dog eyes), where he would proceed to sniff me out in whatever classroom I was in.  I still sometimes hear the jingle jangle his collar used to make, and remember the sinking feeling of my dog interrupting an important exam, or a complicated business law lecture.  More than a few times, he came “bounding” into a crowded lecture hall, and ran right to me!

    Oreo had such an interesting life.  He went all over the United States with me.  In my last job where I traveled for 13 years, certain customers of mine would ask for him by name.  Hotels that would not usually allow dogs, allowed Oreo.  He used to love the VIP (Very Important Pet) program at the Omni in downtown Chicago.  They would turn down his bed sheets at night, and leave him a minty dog biscuit!

    Perhaps the most famous Oreo adventure occurred in August of 1987.  I had just graduated from college, found a job and finally found a house to rent in the Chicago suburbs that allowed an 85 pound dog, and had fenced-in (all be it “jumpable”) back yard.  Our first night in the house, Oreo pawed the door open at about 4 AM, because there was another dog in the yard.  I heard him trying to get out, but was too sleepy to care.  In the morning, Oreo was gone.  It was a hot Saturday morning, I had not even lived there 24 hours, and my dog was gone!  I was frantic, and drove around the city looking for him. 

    I enlisted kids on the block to ride their bikes up and down all of the streets calling Oreo’s name, but it was no  use, he was gone.  By nightfall, I had a feeling I knew where Oreo was headed.  Home.  Charleston, IL, where I went to college, was 200 miles due south.  Oreo had grown up there.  He went to every class with me and waited outside every building.  It was all he ever knew.

    I went to bed that night with a heavy heart.  The next morning as I sat teary eyed at my mother’s kitchen table reading the paper, I saw it.  There, on the front page of the sports section of the Chicago Tribune, was a picture of Oreo, being shooed off the golf course at the Western Open!  I couldn’t believe my eyes.  The Western Open was being held in Oakbrook, some 45 miles south of our new house.  Oreo was definitely on his way back to Charleston. 

    In the picture, he looked scared and dirty.  My heart went out to him.  Luckily all of his tags still referred to our old address in Charleston.  That morning, I called Animal Control in Charleston, and told them to be expecting Oreo, and gave them all of my vital information.

    What I didn’t know, was shortly after the newspaper picture was taken, a kind hearted woman named Lola Proulx, had bought Oreo 8 hot dogs, and gotten a rope around his neck.  Lola, a true dog lover, with over 9 of her own, took Oreo to the Hinsdale Humane Society, and waited until Monday morning to call down to Charleston and trace his tags.  The Animal Control people in Charleston, gave her my work number, and that Monday morning I received the most triumphant phone call of my life.  “I found your dog”, Lola screamed.  I yelled out in the lobby of the bank “They found my dog”, and the whole office cheered!

    I got Oreo back that afternoon, leaving work early to drive down to retrieve him.  I never saw him happier to see me!  After that, he never strayed far again, though his adventures were never curtailed!  (Ever since that day, he was scared to death of trains and train tracks.  I suspect he nearly got hit by a train on his long journey, and until the day he died, I always went out of my way in the car, to avoid railroad crossings whenever Oreo was with me.)  After making a donation to the Humane Society that day, Oreo and I went home!

    Oreo adapted well to city living.  Everyone loved him.  He became friends with homeless people in downtown Chicago.  He continued playing with children everywhere.  He once had a close call with a herd of huge elk, whose fence he somehow penetrated.  It was a cold winter day, and I wasn’t paying attention to where Oreo was running.  When the herd began to charge him, a crowd of people started screaming.  When it looked as if the end was near (as the leader of the pack with a horn span twice the length of Oreo bowed to jab him with his horns), Oreo found the hole in the fence which he had entered through, and ran to my waiting arms as the crowd cheered!

    When I started a new job in 1990, I moved back down to Charleston to take care of some children who needed my help; Oreo was back in his element.  He loved college life.  Fraternity parties, beer blasts, and of course graduation ceremonies.  Homecoming was always a special time for him, as he renewed old acquaintances, and made new friends.  I can’t tell you how many times I heard strangers on campus say, “Oh that’s Oreo, he’s a campus dog, he doesn’t have an owner.”, or “That’s Oreo, he was at the Sigma Chi party the other night!”.

    He was such a kind dog.  He learned tolerance early on, when I worked at three homes for developmentally disabled adults while I was in college.  He suffered much abuse as a puppy, at the hands of these “big kids” who really didn’t know their own strength.  Oreo never bit anyone, though after a mailman threw a rock at him when he was a year old, he had a lifelong vengeance for the US Postal Service.  (He loved the UPS and FedEx drivers though!)

    In the summer of 1993, Oreo was shot with a 38 caliber revolver, by a disgruntled, miserable campus security officer, with nothing better to do.  It was late at night.  I was visiting a friend on campus, after all the summer classes had left and the school was deserted.  My friend was the only one left in her building, and Oreo was waiting patiently outside for me, with a bowl of water next to him.

    We had had run-ins with “Officer” Hall before.  He never liked Oreo, and always told me to put him on a leash.  I’m proud to say that I never once put Oreo on a leash.  There was no leash law on campus anyway, dogs were allowed to be under voice command.  This particular “officer” once made a fool of himself in front of many people, by trying to “arrest” me for not having Oreo on a leash.  Oreo got the last laugh though, when he ran away as the “rent-a-cop” was trying to catch him.

    That evening, with no one around, “Officer” Hall shot Oreo at point blank range in the chest.  When I came downstairs to check on Oreo, he was gone.  Oreo was NEVER not waiting for me when I came back from someplace, and when I saw the pool of blood on the pavement, my heart sank.  

    My best friend Dan and I, searched for Oreo for hours.  We finally found him, at home, a mile and a half from where he had been shot.  He had CRAWLED all that way, and lost over half his blood.

    Dan and I were in shock.  As Dan drove us to the vet, I cradled Oreo, now almost comatose, in my arms in the back seat.  The vet immediately started an I.V. and performed a blood transfusion.  Miraculously, Oreo lived.  The bullet missed his heart by an inch, and left an exit wound the size of a quarter.  From that day on, Oreo was scared to death of police officers, guns, and fireworks.  The 4th of July was always a horrible time for him, and to this day I think of him, and say in my head, “It’s OK Or..”.

    The response to the “attempted assassination” of Oreo was overwhelming.  Conspiracy theories abounded.  Was the gunman on the grassy knoll?  Was the mob involved? Perhaps a secret Post Office consortium?  A triangular shot pattern?  We may never know.  Dan even wrote a rather dark poem about it:

    Some bastard shot dog Oreo,
    And shot him in the chest.
    Some canine killer put a bullet through old boy,
    Trying to kill one of the best.

    If I should ever find,
    That man, that gun, that beast.
    I’ll chop his bloody head right off,
    And let Oreo have a feast.

    I’ll take an axe to the monster,
    Who tried to murder such a sweet friend.
    And wonder if that keen mutt realized,
    Revenge was taken in the end.

    I do know that I received cards and letters from all over the world!  I (actually Oreo) received my first telegram (from Brazil!), and kids in the neighborhood brought toys and treats at all hours.  The house looked like a hospital room after someone undergoes major surgery!  So many flowers.

    The bank I used to work at sent out a group fax to all 25 branches.  The Internet was not as widely used back then, but postings on a newsgroup alerted people all over the world of Oreo’s hour by hour recovery.

    At a Midwestern Banker’s Conference, Bob, the president of my company was giving a speech about a recent retreat he had been to, where Bill Clinton spoke about banking reform.  Later, in the receiving line several people wanted to know about Oreo’s condition.  “How’s Oreo?  We heard he was shot!” they said.  Our company president who was new, and not familiar with Oreo’s legacy at that time, could only think to himself, “I just met with the President of the United States, and they want to know about OREO??”  We laugh about it to this day, and it’s rumored that Bob’s dog Cody looked up to Oreo!

    I once gave Oreo a “dog IQ” test.  He scored as a genius!  I know a lot of people think their dogs are smart.  But Oreo was so intuitively humanlike it was scary.  When other people were in the room with him, alone, they would talk to him!  It wasn’t just me.  My friend Claudio used to teach Oreo commands in Portuguese, and he learned them!  In the later years when he lived with Dan and Angela when I traveled, he learned to care for the babies.  He knew Angela was going to give birth the night before Mia was born.  He slept by Angela’s side, and he took care of her.  Oreo had many nicknames, Dan used to call him “Bubba” or “Bubba Chops”. I often simply called him “Or”.

    I took him everywhere!  The President of one of the banks I used to work at, loved dogs.  I would take Oreo to work with me every morning, and he would lay outside the bank until the lobby closed.  At 3:00 he would come in and lay under my desk, or wander around to see if he could help in any way.  The tellers actually used to take him in the cash vault with them for “dual control”!  He was the hit of all the picnics and parties, and continued to visit schools at recess until he died.

    When a friend of mine in Los Angeles landed the 2nd Assistant Director job on the television show “Friends”, I was lucky enough to attend a taping in 1994, and meet the cast.  As I carried pictures of Oreo with me wherever I went, one of the crew put a picture of Oreo on the refrigerator on the set, where it remained for the remainder of the second season.  If you paused your VCR at just the right spot, you could make out Oreo’s handsome mug in several scenes!  Of course, after that Oreo wanted an agent, and the whole Hollywood thing started to go to his already swelled head!  Once I flew to from New York to L.A. and sat next to Meg Ryan.  We talked a little, and I showed her pictures of Oreo.  She thought he was a “beautiful dog”.  That too, went to his head! 

      

    His mannerisms were truly unique.  He would cock his head, on cue, with certain words:  “Treat”, “Ride”, “Walk” and his all time favorite “Rusty”.  Rusty was Oreo’s best friend when we were in college.  He belonged to my Finance professor Carol.  I used to baby-sit her kids.  They lived out in the country, and Oreo and Rusty would run through the countryside, and play for hours on end.  Rusty was tragically poisoned after I graduated, but the name “Rusty” always invoked a near 90° tilt of Oreo’s head for the rest of his life.  Other close dog friends that Oreo remembered all his life were Ginger, Cage and Pork Chop.  When you said those names, you could practically see Oreo’s memory at work.  Oreo used to do a trick when he was younger called “Fire”, in which he would literally drag himself across the ground like he was crawling out of a house in a fire.  He would perform this trick on cue, which often invoked quite a laugh when campus preachers were engaged in fire and brimstone speeches on the Quad!  Oreo would also howl hilariously.  Whenever we would howl, he would mimic us exactly.  Thinking of that, still makes me laugh to this day.

    Dan used to invoke a mischievous Pavlovian response from Oreo with the word “Buku”.  He somehow taught Oreo to “hump” whenever he said that word.  Though I did not approve, the simple mention of that word caused endless laughter at many college parties over the years.  Oreo was a master of physical canine comedy!

    Dan also used to do a drawing of Oreo every year for my Christmas cards.  It became an annual tradition that so many people looked forward to during the holidays.  My favorite drawing was the one Dan did the year Oreo was shot.  It shows Santa, going up the chimney, and Oreo sitting by the fireplace, after Santa had just left him a new ACME Bulletproof Vest!

     

    Everyone had unique stories about Oreo.  Some I never knew.  After he died at the ripe old age of 12, Michelle, a  little girl I used to babysit, created a memorial website called Oreonline, while the Internet was still in its infancy.  She did it out of loyalty to a friend she had known since she was two years old.  I received so many hundreds of emails, cards, and letters after Oreo died., and all of them were posted on that first website.

    A strange event occurred exactly a week after Oreo passed away.  After a business trip to Tokyo, I flew to Guam for some quiet reflection.  That day I was on a remote mountain top (more of a hill, really) on the island of Guam, waiting for the sun to set, and taking pictures.  As I climbed the small mountain, I was struck by the calm and serenity of the surrounding countryside.  At the top of the peak was a tree.  As I approached the tree, I saw rainbow colored ribbons adorning the branches, and dried, dead fish attached to the ribbon!?  When I reached the base of the tree, there was a dead fish, with ribbon, and six perfectly placed OREO cookies on the ground!?  These were not imitation cookies, they were Oreos.  What this meant, or means, I to this day have no earthly idea.  I asked local people if they knew of some strange custom.  They had no explanation.

    Suffice it to say, I will never know why I saw those cookies atop that mountain, but it did remind me of a true friend, who was there for me whenever I needed him most.  A friend who taught me love and compassion, discipline and how to care for a living thing, forgiveness and trust.  This was Oreo’s legacy.  He was the Gandhi of dogs.  His inner peace affected all who touched him, and all those he touched.  I have yet to get another dog, though any reader of this blog knows that I have many wonderful dogs in my life.  He can never be replaced, but his memory will live forever.

  • Cheesy Food Porn and a Daring Rescue

      
    A week of rare stormy weather was capped off by a beautiful sunny weekend full of friends, flowers and food (porn).  Picasa tells me I took 224 photos this week.  Here are a few of them:


    More storm photos here and here


    Before & After


    It ain’t Jesus, (Cheesus?) but Ebay anyone??  Make me an offer I can’t refuse and I’ll sell you my Cheenis


    A surprise mid week lunch visit from the family!


    This sunset was like a painting!


    Nothing like Grandma’s spaghetti on a rainy day!


    This was the cloud that spawned hail and downpours downtown as you can see


    January showers bring…January flowers


    The rain cleared away the smog and left snow capped mountains over Hollywood


    Owen with downtown Los Angeles as a backdrop


    Shopping at The Grove with Owen


    Hooray for Hollywood!


    Sunset tonight from my roof


    To prove the clouds weren’t Photoshopped, here’s a short video of the last storm

    I’ve been dog-sitting for Buster & Roxy all week.  I have them until Thursday, when I leave for the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.  The poor dogs had cabin fever this week with all the rain, but they got cured of that really quickly after seeing this riveting rescue of a dog trapped in the swollen Los Angeles River this week:

     
    The dog’s owners still haven’t been found.  Maybe I should adopt him and get Chazz a playmate?’
    This was really quite an amazing thing to watch.  The poor dog was so scared and the firefighter was so brave.

  • All GLY Things Must Come to an End

    Sabine (a founding member of the GLY Gang), left for Germany today by way of Boston (to visit Youenn).  It  was so nice having her here these last two weeks.  I miss her already.  (She just called to tell me that she saw Lauren Bacall in the airport after I dropped her off; who was in LA over the weekend to receive an honorary Oscar.  It was Bine’s first star sighting this trip and a fitting end to two weeks in LaLa Land!)  The past couple of   days have been jam packed with fun.  On Monday, we went to see the movie “Precious“.  Though I thought most of the performances were quite good; the movie left me rather disturbed.  Sadly, I fear that the situations portrayed in the film are not all that uncommon.  It’s worth seeing, but it’s definitely not the feel good movie of the year!  Last night we went to The Jay Leno Show.  Tyra Banks was supposed to be there, but she got stuck in NYC, so Kevin Nealon was the guest.  Bine and I got separated while  being seated, but I managed to smuggle my camera in and take a couple of shots before a mean security guard confiscated it.  He told me I had to delete the pictures, but I had already removed the memory card and discreetly slipped it in my pocket.  I told him the camera was “out of film”.  He pondered that for a minute while looking at the camera and realized I was fucking with him.  LOL.  Then I told him I was just using the camera for the telephoto lens!  I’m sure he didn’t buy that story, but there was no way I was giving him my memory card!  He finally got tired of arguing with me and walked away defeated.  During the commercial break, Sabine got to sing with Jay’s band.  The problem was, she didn’t know the words to Stevie Wonder’s, “Signed, Sealed, Delivered“!  After the show, we headed to the Los Angeles Film School for a special free screening of the movie “In The Loop“.  It was fantastic!!  The best way to describe it would be “as if Jane Austen and Monty Python collaborated on an episode of “The West Wing”.  It’s probably the funniest movie I saw all year.  Afterward, we sat in on a panel with the director and some of the cast.  What a great night! 


    Sabine’s 15 seconds of fame on Jay Leno last night!


    LaLa Land


    Jay came out to warm up the crowd before the show began


    The monologue


    Interviewing Kevin Nealon


    Outside NBC studios in Burbank


    After her failed signing performance


    Bye Jay!


    On the roof of the LA Film School


    A star in her city


    The director and cast of “In the Loop”.  From L to R, Armando Iannucci, Mimi Kennedy (Dharma’s Mom) and Peter Capaldi.


    Hooray for Hollywood!

    Sad to leave The Hotel Careyfornia, but she’ll be back next May!

    Update:  Thanks to all of you who wrote me about the Chocolate Lab, “D”, who we found over the weekend, and became Chazz’s best friend. 
    The owner replied to the Craigslist ad, and I got these texts from Claudio & Ryan last night:

    Even though, Chazz was sad to see her go, I’m glad the owner got her dog back. I can’t imagine losing a dog!  It turns out she was 2 years old and hadn’t been spayed.  I wonder if she’ll have puppies now??

  • Yes We Did – Get Over It (Levi Johnston Reads my Blog)

    9 PM:  UPDATE to the UPDATE:  Levi Johnston just posted my blog on his Twitter page and I got like 300 hits in 30 minutes! Which means that right now, Levi Johnston is sitting in a hotel room in New York looking at picture of Chazz!  LOL!!  Then I got a message on my phone from him that said this:

    Thanks Levi!  I appreciate the help!  If my blog can change one person’s mind about ever voting for Sarah Palin again, I’ll have done my job. 

     

    And Levi, I know you “dated” Kathy Griffin, but did you know she also loves my dog Chazz??  And Chazz knows President Obama, so it’s like 3 degrees of separation!  The four of us should do lunch next time you’re in LA! 


    Chazz, with Kathy Griffin and her Mom at the Prop. 8 rally in West Hollywood in May.



    7 PM:  UPDATE:  Well, Sarah Palin’s daughter’s baby  daddy, Levi Johnston, confirmed today, what I blogged about months ago:  Sarah Palin hates retards!  Now I just need him to confirm that she’s the mother of Michael Jackson’s son, Blanket!  LOL.  I just started following him on Twitter, so hopefully he will follow me and read all of my posts about his whack job, almost monster in law:  He’s actually a pretty funny kid.  He just sent this tweet from New York:
     

    Clever, right?  Of course, 5 minutes later he tweeted this:

    LMAO!!  Sarah must be SO LIVID!!  Actually, she’s already slamming him for “selling his body to Playgirl“.  And he slammed right back with a tweet about her selling her soul!!!  LOL.  Keep up the good fight Levi!!


    1 AM THIS MORNING: 1 year ago today, I wrote a post called “Yes We Will – Count On It“.  It was a exactly one week before the presidential election and I had a conversation with someone who could not fathom a black man in the White House.  This week that same person had the unmitigated gall to send me one of those ignorant emails that spread racism and hate (that I refuse to repost here), telling me I can’t deny “history” and espousing the same disgusting “we’re the greatest country on earth” blah blah blah rhetoric that angry white men like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh puke out (because an ‘uppity negro’ in power obviously makes them sick to their stomachs).  Guess what?  Racism is still alive and well in America one year later.  I am looking forward to this documentary on HBO next week though (almost as much as I’m looking forward to Levi Johnston’s revelations about Sarah Palin tomorrow).  Check out the kid in the beginning and end of the clip.  His name is Lorenzo.  He’s nine years old and he’s priceless:


    Because of copyright, this video only plays in the U.S., so here’s a news piece about the documentary that shows the kid I was referring to and some other nice scenes of the President with his kids and reflecting on his accomplishment.


    The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    George W. Bush’s Motivational Speech
    www.colbertnation.com

    Meanwhile, George W. Bush is giving boring speeches, charging $4.95 admission fee.  Oh, and the lecture series is being arranged by a former drug dealer.  LOL, what a buffoon.  Clinton is rescuing people from North Korea and W is resigned to meet and greets in Wal-Mart parking lots!

    The documentary looks good, right?  It’s so amazing to think that a year ago today, no one knew for sure that Obama would/could win.  It was also around this time last year that I went to the pumpkin patch with Hannah and Arielle.  Since this is Chazz’s first Halloween, I took him there on Sunday.  When we arrived, there were a ton of paparazzi snapping away as Christina Aguilera was just leaving.  Of course, once we got there, they fixed their long lenses on Chazz, and how great he looked against the backdrop of orange pumpkins and crimson sky:


    If you look closely you can see that as Christina Aguilera exited the pumpkin patch to the stars, the paparazzi waited for the perfect shot of Chazz!

     


    He even went on a hay ride!


    He also got to hang out with his pal Roscoe while Ann & Arielle look on


    On the way home, LA Lakers star Ron Artest was making milkshakes, and Chazz had to try one!  Just another day in Hollywood for a famous dog who has met the president and written his own children’s book!


    Click here for the best of the rest…

  • Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?


    In August, less than 2 months before he died, my Uncle George visited his hometown of Iron Mountain, Michigan and went fishing with his brother.  To say my uncle loved to fish was an understatement.  I think the only thing he loved more, was his wife, his grandkids and his brother!  Despite a cold rain that day, my 81 year old uncle and his brother hiked more than 100 yards through the woods, carrying a heavy canoe to a secret fishing hole.  They had quite an adventure that day, and his brother wrote a story about it that was published in the local paper:

    Oh, brother, can we fish …

    By JIM SNOWDON, for The Daily News
    POSTED: August 1, 2009

    IRON MOUNTAIN – It was tough, but the end reward was worth it all.

    Let’s just say our fishing trip seemed doomed from the start. It was a bright shining day when I picked up my brother George. Then things started to go a little bad.

    While in the truck, we noted we both forgot sunglasses – number one mistake. We picked up the canoe at the camp and drove a few miles to a lake in the Republic area.

    Then, two senior citizens still had to carry the canoe 100 yards through the woods to the lake. Got to the lake, ready to launch the canoe. We soon discovered that the paddles, life jackets, and fishing poles were back at camp.

    Back to camp we go and we were back to square one.

    Once again, back at the lake, ready to go. Then the minnow bucket tipped – minnows all over the ground. Hand-picked them up (a few even lived); now we are on our way.

    While pushing the canoe out, we sank in mud up to our knees. Two seniors stuck in mud. But we got out and soon were floating across the lake. We paddled quite a ways and got set to put a dead minnow on the hook.

    One hour into fishing and not a bite. We figured it was the minnows’ fault. We would not give up just yet.

    Brother George decided to have a sandwich, took a couple bites and it fell out of his hand into the bottom of a slightly wet canoe. It seems things were getting worse.

    But then the perch started biting.

    In five minutes we had three 12-inch perch on the stringer.

    Somehow, stinger and all fell out of hand overboard. All perch were gone.

    Now for sure he was ready to call it quits. I talked him into staying because the fish were starting to bite.

    Bottom line, 30 jumbo perch (10 to 13 inches) in a couple hours of fishing. We were happy and finally did call it quits for the day.

    Getting the canoe back out of the woods to the truck was harder than getting in. Somehow that canoe got at least 100 pounds heavier.

    I should mention on the way out I lost my pocket knife and Brother got poked in the eye with a tree branch and we crushed the minnow bucket.

    We were glad to get back to camp in one piece.

    But the doomed trip turned out to be a great success. We will both remember it for a long time and George now has a fishing story to tell when he gets back to California.

    I’m sure it was the highlight of his vacation.


    I’m staying with my aunt this week, and obviously there are reminders of Uncle George everywhere.  I smell his cologne in the bathroom when I shower.  I’m sleeping on his pillow, which I find comforting.  Tomorrow, friends and family will gather to celebrate his memory.  We’ve been trying to keep this week as normal as possible for the kids.  Last night we made caramel apples which they loved:


    Tressa, Andy, Dar & Tommy




    Great Grandma (Aunty LuLu) with kids




    Andy likes taffy apples!



       
    Oh Brother let’s go down…down to the lake and fish


    Obviously I can’t be with Chazz on his “special day”, so Ryan just texted me this picture of his first birthday cake: