Monday, July 28, 2008

summer fun

Exhaustion has set in after a whirlwind weekend. Well, for homebody me it was a whirlwind anyway. The plan was:

Friday - Brookfield Zoo with my parents, then back into the city for the birthday celebration of Jillybean's BF
Saturday - BBQ on Montrose Beach with some friends, one of whose mother was in town from China, then a Bachelorette party for a friend in from NY
Sunday - possible brunch with NY friend, then Wicker Park Fest with some pals from work

That was the plan, anyway. However, Friday morning I got a text cancelling Saturday's barbecue, because the host had to get his appendix and gall bladder taken out. Yikes. After ensuring he was okay, I decided to rearrange my activities, and move the trip to Wicker Park Fest to Saturday so I could see The 1900's play. Well, after the Friday at the Zoo, and the Friday night of drinking too much whiskey at the birthday party, any activities during the daylight hours of Saturday were pretty much out of the question. I had to make a quick trip to the grocery store to purchase appetizer ingredients, and then made my way (late) to the Bachelorette. (Side Note: The Baton Club is an experience definitely worth the price of admission, in case you're ever in a position to go.) It was already 12:30 by the time the show was over, so I decided to forgo the clubbing and cut out early, relatively speaking. Brunch was a no-go on Sunday due to the timing of flights back home, so around 3:30, I left for WP Fest. A small snafu in plans led me instead to my friend's girlfriend's house, where we chilled for a while, and then eventually made it out to the Fest, running into a random assortment of work friends and colleagues. But a couple hours later, I was pooped. The yawns were flowing in direct proportion to the sangria. I got home at 9 and wanted to go straight to bed, but ended up watching a very sleepy hour of TV before finally hitting the sack.

And I wish I was still there.

NEXT weekend, I am super excited to be going to Lollapalooza! Another crazy weekend is certainly in store. 3 days of outdoor music, and a Monday vacation day for good measure (and recovery). Friday especially promises to be brutal - in a good way, of course. Lolla all day long, then the Gogol Bordello after show at the Metro, and THEN a gypsy-punk-themed after party at a friend's place ... if I make it that far, that is. ;)

Good times.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

convergence

I don't meet many people with the same name as me. It's not really an unusual name, but it's just uncommon enough that I've only known maybe 2 or 3 others in my life. Maybe met a couple more, fleetingly.

Today I was sitting in my office when I got a phone call from "the other Heidi" with whom I used to work in the same department, and sat across from (causing endless confusion). At the time of the call, I had a man sitting in my office with me. His last name? Heide.

Cue Twilight Zone music.

PR5 ep. 2

More Project Runway! Aren't you the lucky one! :)

Episode 2 was something that I don't think they've ever done on the show before. That is, the clients that the designers had to work with were the models themselves. AND, the models were the ones who had to do the shopping for them! How scary that must have been for all of them. A few people were victims of too little fabric bought, and more than a few were victims of crappy fabric bought. The OTHER catch was that this was a green challenge, and all the fabric they used was supposed to be environmentally friendly. (It's funny, when Tim Gunn told them that the fabric had to be green, I thought he meant green, the color, at first. Maybe because he was standing in front of a display of all green accessories! D'oh!)

For some reason, many of the models ended up buying the same fabrics (maybe not a large choice in organics?), so the competition was heightened with everyone's efforts to create something different from those with the same materials. But other than difficulties with the fabric, and a rush to get things completed in time, (and an excess of criers in the bottom 3) there really wasn't much drama that happened this episode. They did get a surprise guest judge (Natalie Portman), which was kind of cool ... though I thought I remembered seeing her in one of the promos, so not much of a surprise for the viewers. Oh, and there was a hilarious montage of Stella reminding everyone how much she lurrrves working with leather, after which Blayne was mocking her in the sewing room. "My cat is leatha, my husband is leatha ..." Stella ended up overhearing him, but instead of getting angry, which would have been boring, she good-naturedly scolded him. Then they hugged and Blayne said "I love your leather face." Too cute.

As far as the designs go, they pretty much ran the gamut from really pretty to really butt-ugly. Some of my favorites weren't even in the top 3. For example, I really liked Keith's design. He had the same shiny champagne-colored fabric as many of them, but he made it look really different and very pretty. If it were longer, I would actually wear his dress. Blayne actually surprised me this episode, and I really liked his design as well. The pink was unexpected. But he has GOT TO STOP with all the "licious"ness. Makes me want to kick him in the face. Stella went from being in the bottom 3 last episode to the top 3 this episode. Go Stella! Though I must say, I didn't really care for her dress! As hopeful as I was for her, I didn't think she deserved top 3 for her design. I did like the other two of the 3 a lot (Kenley and Suede), though I thought Kenley should have won this one instead of Suede. Yes, what Suede did with his fabric was very innovative, but it just looked messy and bumpy to me. Daniel's dress was kind of pretty, and I liked the pockets and the black fabric. Emily's dress I would have really liked if it were about 6 inches longer. Waaaaay short, that one. Jerell's dress was kind of unusual, but I liked it. I wish they'd shown more of how he made it. Jennifer's weird orange and gray thing ... u-g-l-y. That's all I can even say. And I'm almost disappointed to say that I really didn't care for Kelly's design this week. It looked like I was going to like it while she was piecing it together, but the finished product just didn't float my boat for some reason. Terri's design, I was very impressed with. I loved the bodice part with the ruffles. But Joe's design was about as blah and boring as one can get. (I do give Joe props for being the only one using the brown shiny fabric who did NOT end up in the bottom 3.) Which brings me to the bottom 3. Poor Korto went from top 3 last week to bottom 3 this week, and she did not take it well. Girl's gotta grow a thicker skin if she plans on sticking around. But I agree with the judges that her dress was pretty awful. It gave her model no chest to speak of, yet made her hips ginormous. Putting the darts on the outside of the dress might have been a creative and interesting move if she hadn't added those horrible fins to the sides. The other two, Wesley and Leanne, were there for pretty much the same reasons. They had both used the brown shiny fabric, which is very unforgiving, so it showed how overworked their designs were. And both were too short. I guess I agree that Wesley's final product looked worse than Leanne's, but I think it was more due to the fabric than the actual design. If they had both used a different fabric, Wesley's would have come out looking much prettier, but Leanne's would still have been a muddled and cluttered design. Regardless, Wesley was eliminated, which made me sad. I was much more interested in seeing his work than Leanne's.

Runway Rundown: (most fave to least fave)
Kenley - She's my top pick now. Plus, I really like her personality and Bettie Page-like personal style.
Daniel - He had a harder time with this challenge, but I still see potential there. Plus, he's cute. ;)
Kelly - I still want to see what more she has to offer. She has a very believable confidence and I'd like to see where that comes from.
Keith - I really liked his design this week, but I hope it's not a fluke. Let's hope he continues to grow on me.
Suede - Challenge Winner - His design this week redeems him somewhat from the boringness of last week. Again, I hope it's not a fluke. Oh, and he really needs to just not talk. Ever. Unless it is followed immediately by people making fun of him.
Jerell - Interested to see where he's going.
Terri - I think I have an idea of her design aesthetic, but I also think she has to kick it up a few degrees.
Stella - Maybe she should have risen a bit farther in my ranking for having a dress in the top 3, but like I said, I didn't love it. Still think she's cool, though.
Emily - Still don't know what she's about.
Korto - She fell far this week. Whether or not the first challenge was a fluke remains to be seen.
Joe - He's gonna have to show some serious creativity in the weeks to come if he doesn't want to bore the judges to death.
Blayne - Rising a bit in the ranks, but he's still got a ways to go.
Jennifer - I don't know what it is about this girl (her teeth?), but I'm just really uninterested.
Leanne - Just bad. She needs to go home.
Wesley - Eliminated :( This surprised me because I really saw potential in Wesley. Oh well. Shows what I know.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

PR5 ep. 1

Project Runway Season 5 is here!!! Yay!

Well, it started last week, so I'm a bit behind in my recap, thus it's likely to be short 'cause I don't know how much I really remember. Second episode is on tonight, though. Woo hoo!

Okay, here we go!

The Good:
There seem to be a couple stand-out designers this season, as well as a couple stand-out drama queens. Both good things on this show ... as long as the drama isn't forced, anyway. And I am absolutely thrilled to pieces that they reprised the grocery store challenge from Season 1!!! Fun! In my many fantasies in which I go on the show and win it with the refreshing aesthetic I've developed despite (and perhaps due to?) my lack of formal training, I often imagine what I would do in a grocery store challenge. Usually, it involves Campbell's Soup labels, which sadly no one has used so far. Probably can't show the brand names or something. Hm. Anyway, sorry for the tangent.

The Bad:
The thing about the drama queens is that sometimes instead of creating drama that is fun for the casual observer to watch, they just annoy the crap out of everyone. Blayne, Suede and Jerell all have the potential to be that person. Suede and Jerell worry me most because they seem almost like they've rehearsed this act so much that any hint of their true personalities will be completely squeezed out in editing. I hopehopehope that is not the case, because that would mean my favorite "competition" show is ruined forever and doomed to the level of the Real World/Road Rules Challenge. Blayne, however, as stupid as his "girlicious" catchphrase was, he might actually end up winning me over with his complete cluelessness, self-proclaimed addiction to tanning, and look of perpetual surprise (and what was with the sniffing? snorting? snuffling?). He might be fun to watch as long as he doesn't overdo it. And it seems that Jerell is already hating on him, so maybe ... catfight? Heh heh.

The Ugly:
What exactly was "girlicious" about Blayne's design anyway?? She looked like a messy black triangle wearing a diaper. Or maybe some kind of weird bird. There was nothing "girl" or "licious" about that outfit. But I'm glad Jerry was the one to be eliminated, and not Blayne or Stella (she's cool, I want to see what she can do). His design was just ... yuck. There were lots of blahs in this challenge, and not a whole lot of wows. I guess I can forgive them since it's the first challenge and maybe they haven't hit their stride, but still. Tablecloths?? Are you kidding me? They should have told the grocery store employees to take them off the shelves.

Runway Rundown: (in order from my most fave to least fave)
Daniel - His plastic cup dress was everything this challenge was meant to be. Nothing short of genius.
Korto - Her yellow-tablecloth kimono dress was actually very pretty in an I-would-wear-that kind of way. Of course, I would probably take off the vegetables first.
Kelly - Challenge Winner - I loved what she did with the skirt on her dress, but I was not as crazy about the top half as the judges seemed to be. Still, she's got potential for fabulousness.
Wesley - The proportions on his dress seemed a little bit strange - either that or his model is just oddly shaped. But I really loved what he did with the yellow plastic cups and fly swatters.
Kenley - Her dress was just fun. The red bouncy-ball bodice made me want to go out for recess.
Joe - I wanted to hate this dress when he was describing what he was going to do. But I ended up liking it a lot! Maybe it was due to the lack of worthy competition, who knows.
Terri - Before the challenge even started, I pegged her as one of the first to be eliminated. I may still be right about that, but even so, I liked where she went with her outfit, and she made mops pretty!
Keith - His dress might have been really cool if he'd made it out of something other than a tablecloth.
Emily - Kinda neat, kinda not. Just blah.
Jerell - He made his model look like a clown. I don't remember this being a circus challenge.
Suede - Another tablecloth dress. Another blah. Just boring.
Stella - I'm perhaps giving her more credit than she deserves, but I love her personality and want to see what she's capable of. So she screwed up the first challenge. I don't think she'll make the bottom 3 a habit.
Jennifer - Her dress was incredibly boring and dated, and the lipstick kisses seemed very childish to me. I don't think she'll be around for long.
Leanne - Didn't like this pink poufy candy-covered mess at all! If there was a bottom 4, she'd be the 4th.
Blayne - Ugly, ugly and more ugly, all in one outfit! If that was his goal, he's done a great job.
Jerry - Eliminated - This one was just a mess. Not even worth a description. The worst part was when he told the judges it was for a night on the town. Jerry, you're not even convincing yourself.

Okay, I was really wrong about this being short.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

on republicans and scrap metal

I got this thing in my inbox this morning (copied below) from a VERY conservative coworker who must just assume I feel the same way, even though we've never once had a discussion about politics. However, I can't really blame him for making that assumption since about 90% of the people I work with (the whole industry, really) are conservative. Hey, when there's a Republican in office, we get more money. Stands to reason, right? Anyway, being a more left-leaning individual, this e-mail infuriated me. I must also be a masochist because I read the whole thing, knowing full well where it was going. Now it's your turn:

2010 Was Not A Good Year To Be President

Welcome to Toastmasters, June 13, 2033. That's right: 2033.

Today Rick Campbell, one of our senior members at age 87, is here to reminisce a bit and give us a history lesson. He says he is so old that he learned to drive an internal combustion engine car (remember those) with a manual transmission. He once owned a typewriter. He remembers when bicycles had one speed, phones had two-party lines, and cameras had something called film. As incredible as this may seem, he says that when he was young, it was common for people to smoke in restaurants and public places. He is
from a different time; almost a different world.

I'm sure all of us are far too familiar with the tragic events of 2010, so Rick is not going to plow that fertile field again. Instead, he is going to give us a personal look back at the conditions which led up to that fateful year, in a speech titled "2010 Was Not A Good Year To Be President."

"2010 Was Not A Good Year To Be President"

Yes, 2010 was long ago and far away. As we look back on history, it appears that some Presidents had an easy ride- times of growth and stability. Teddy Roosevelt, Warren G. Harding, Dwight Eisenhower, Bill Clinton come to mind. Those were good years to be President. Others were elected just when the Republic was facing terrible crises: Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, George W. Bush. They rose to the occasion, even though they were controversial and widely hated while in office. Not such good years to be President.

Just a few years prior, in 2008, the country began foundering. We were in the sixth year of the Iraqi Occupation, and the economy was flat. The mainstream press clearly wanted a Democrat elected.

Although we didn't know it until some years later, oil producing nations had colluded to secretly buy their own oil on the open market, driving oil prices to shocking levels above the true demand price- reaching a high of $162 a barrel in October, 2008, just before the general elections.

Their purpose was simple: to effect regime change in the United States.

And of course, the U.S. economy was already in a real estate slump and also suffering the curse of stagflation; slow growth and high inflation. There were a million home foreclosures. Independent truckers went under by the thousands. Airlines failed. Airlines with names now long-forgotten: United, Delta, Northwestern, American. All now merged, of course, into the one lone U.S. carrier we love so much: Southwest.

Against this backdrop of weariness of the war on terror, and economic distress, the American people were ripe for a demagogue, and they certainly got one in Barack Hussein Obama. He and his running mate Kathleen Sibelius inspired them with vague notions of hope and change; of a world in which diplomacy settled all international problems, of free universal health care, of abundant alternative energy, of peace and love. It was a vision too good to resist.

The Republican nominee, a name you probably haven't heard in years anyone? Yes, it was John McCain, an obscure Senator from Arizona had no clue how to run a national campaign, and a platform nearly as liberal as Obama's. The selection of Condoleeza Rice as his running mate looked brilliant at first. Unfortunately, black voters viewed her as white, and women voters viewed her as one of the guys.

Even so, the McCain/Rice ticket would have won the election if it weren't for the fact that 16 percent of conservative Republicans voted for anyone remember? That's right, Bob Barr, another name that's a footnote in history.

After Obama's narrow win, thanks to recounts in Broward County, Florida, the country was positively giddy. A Democrat House, Senate, and President. At last an end to gridlock in Washington. Camelot!

When Congress convened in January, 2009, the 44th President of the United States did something unique in history: he made good on his campaign promises. Certainly most Americans never really thought he was serious during the campaign. But whether because of inexperience, idealism, or simply incompetence, he followed through. In Obama's first One Hundred Days, the Congress passed his initiatives, and he signed them into law as he said he would. He repealed the Bush tax cuts, and increased capital gains taxes. He enacted a windfall profits tax, and instituted price controls on gasoline and diesel fuel. He passed universal health care, which added an additional 10 percent tax increase on all working Americans. He signed the Immigrant Amnesty bill which created 12 million new citizens instantly, each with entitlements. He closed the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, and summarily released all the detainees. He repealed the Patriot Act, and cut funding for espionage, and eliminated all terrorist listening and wiretaps. Most important, he began the complete and immediate withdrawal of all American troops from Iraq. He ignored the advice of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who wanted to retain bases in Kuwait and Qatar. Instead, he went with the recommendation of Secretary of Defense Dennis Kucinich, and ordered all troops back to U.S. soil. Voila!

In One Hundred Days, by May of 2009, it was all done, and the vision was complete. He did exactly what he said he would do.

And so it was in the summer of 2009 that things began to unravel for Obama. Of course, the economy needed a tax cut, not an increase, and unemployment quickly rose to 12 percent. Even attorneys and economists were put in the bread lines. Hard times! Price controls on gasoline immediately led to shortages and gas lines. The global cooling trend we have seen for the past 25 years first became obvious in 2009, exposing the CO2 global warming fraud. People were justifiably angry. Federal deficits increased massively because thousands of baby boomers, facing job loss and much higher taxes, simply gave up and took social security. Although the superb U.S. health care system was thrown into disarray, the bright spot was the creation of the Federal Department of Health care, and the immediate hiring of 250,000
administrators, inspectors and auditors, the only job growth in any economic sector in 2009.

By February 2010, the U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq was complete. It was a very expensive undertaking. And then in March, the gradual Shiite insurgencies from Iran turned into a true Iraqi civil war. In May, Iranian tanks crossed the border and quickly took Baghdad. Although the exact number is not know, at least 230,000 Sunni Iraqis died as we stood by. Iran also quickly moved into undefended Kuwait. President Obama did exactly what he said he would. He sent Secretary of State, Maria Cantwell, to Tehran to meet with Iranian President Ahmadinejad. After two weeks of high level talks, the United States agreed to allow Iran to retain Iraq and Kuwait to create stability in the middle east, with the understanding that Israel would not be disturbed. Cantwell returned to Washington, and explained the agreement in her famous speech, in which she proudly noted that the Obama administration had finally achieved "peace in our time" in the Middle East.

So there was some surprise at the rocket attacks on Tel Aviv on August 14th. President Obama said, "This is not the Mahmoud Ahmadinejad I knew." The Obama administration decided it would be de-stabilizing to take sides in the conflict, and approximately 29,000 Israeli civilians died during the summer and fall. American Jews were appalled at the inaction. Yes, in 2010 most American Jews were Democrats, but because of 2010, they are solid Republicans today.

As awkward as it was, everything might have turned out all right for the Obama administration going into the fall mid-term elections of 2010, if it hadn't been for the dirty bomb in the Port of Long Beach. The administration had cut funding for the inspection of containers, because they felt it showed a "lack of trust" in the international trading community. It wasn't really a very big bomb, and thank goodness, not a real nuclear device, but nonetheless it contaminated some expensive real estate-Newport Beach, Palos Verdes Estates- and ultimately caused the death of 14,000 Americans. People were especially annoyed that Disneyland had to be closed for decontamination.

And so, in the midterm elections, Republicans regained control of both the House and Senate, and the rest is history.

The impeachment proceedings against President Obama for "failure to protect and defend" were swift and nearly unanimous. Vice President Sibelius resigned. Newly-elected Speaker of the House, J.C. Watts, became the 45th President of the United States. But you know the rest of the story well.

Republicans finished the war on Islamic fundamentalists, largely by aiming ICBM's at Mecca and Medina. No Democrat has been elected President since. Republicans have held both Houses of Congress. History of Western Civilization and Economics are now taught in all public schools, and in English only. Marriage is defined as one man and one woman. And there are border fences, north and south.

We old codgers remember the ancient Confucian curse: "May you live in interesting times." Well, 2010 was an interesting year, but it was not a good year to be president."

(Far fetched? We are likely to find out if we continue to be unaware of the issues and vote with our emotions rather than be studious in our approach to electing our "public officials".)

Where do I even start?? There are so many things about this that I find offensive, I can't even begin to articulate. Granted, it's a hypothetical, written by a conservative who is not an expert in politics, but it is so completely one-sided that the only conceivable purpose seems to have been to get the other side riled up. Congratulations. Mission accomplished.

Two things I have to mention before I change the subject: 1) This manifesto is basically telling everyone that there is only one "correct" way to vote. DO NOT vote Democrat because they will ruin your country. NO NOT vote Third Party because that takes away votes from who SHOULD be in power. Well, then what's the point of having a bipartisan government, I ask?? 2) The supposed utopia that is described as existing in the US after everyone miraculously decides to vote Republican for the rest of their lives ... that is not a US I would like to live in. My question is, will the border fence to the North prevent ME from escaping in that direction?

Even though this isn't exactly related, it served to feed my frenzy when I read this post on one of my favorite blogs this morning. I've never been to Detroit, but I feel like if I go there, I will be catching a glimpse of the apocalypse.

People are crazy.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

shoppingshoppingshoppingshopping

I have a very unhealthy relationship with shopping. It's kind of like a serial dieter's relationship with food. In order to save money, I will ban myself from all shopping establishments, other than what is absolutely necessary. I'll be doing really well for a long time, and then suddenly, BAM! I realize that since I haven't updated my wardrobe (or decor, or music/movie collection, or kitchen gadgets, etc.) in for-freaking-ever, I am in serious (imaginary) need of new things, and I'll go out and buy everything that I see. So you see, it's kind of like how a dieter deprives them self of some kind of bad-for-you food, and then one day SNAPS and does an all-day binge on that very item. And of course, in the end, I really haven't saved myself any money, and now I have a bunch of guilt on top of it.

Well, my latest shopping moratorium came to a screeching halt on Tuesday when in a fit of the wants, I went over to the mall after work. I still haven't totalled up the damages (fear!!), but let's just say that I ended up with 3 sundresses ... and I wear a dress maybe once a year. The rest of the purchases were maybe a bit more sensible (some tank tops, a pair of shoes for work, a new bathing suit), except I went to Victoria's Secret and bought two things that I only sort of needed, neither of which were in the color that I actually needed. Fail.

Yesterday after work, I decided to try everything on again that I had bought, and see if there was anything I didn't like so much the second day and I could whittle it down and return some things. Only instead I ended up falling more in love with each and every purchase. Another fail.

The highlight of the shopping trip, however, really had nothing to do with any purchases. I'd been wearing my hair up in a ponytail that day, and the combination of the ponytail and the unforgiving lights in bathrooms/dressing rooms made my gray hairs so painfully obvious that I felt about 10 years older. I resolved that very day to make an appointment asap to get my hair colored (I'm thinking a dark auburn, what do you think?). Anyway, after feeling old before my time all day long (Hmmm, I wonder if maybe that had anything to do with the sudden need for shopping?), I went up to the register at a department store for my final purchase of the day. The young girl behind the counter took my U of I Alumni Association credit card and said to me, "I like your card! Do you go to school there?" She will never ever know how happy it made me that she said "do" and not "did."