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September 30, 2007

Reviews

There probably won't be any opera reviews this season -- I may try to get to Aida in the spring, but I didn't subscribe.  One of the reasons I love opera is the connection with the historical, and I'm put off with the number of avant-garde (or would be) productions. Also, there are no more opening Saturdays, just opening Fridays.  Ugh. 

I'm so opinionated, though, I couldn't help myself but review other things in my life, so here's a smattering of my recent diversions. 

Wives and Daughters (DVD).  I enjoyed North and South (the book) and bought Wives and Daughters (the book) in the hopes I'd get around to reading it.  I didn't, but I also had the DVD set, so over the course of a couple of nights, when I was feeding Eden, I watched all 300 minutes.   

There's no unifying theme to it, say like Pride and Prejudice, but it has a similar classic chick lit appeal.  In a nutshell, a young woman  gets an evil stepmother and a scheming but charming stepsister, and there are love interests and secrets and missteps along the way.  It's Elizabeth Gaskell, which means it's on the syrupy side (none of the biting social commentary of Austen - Gaskell is kinder and gentler), but for all that, I enjoyed it.  Eden seemed to.   A

How Doctors Think.  I've been wanting to read this for months, ever since I heard an interview with the author on some NPR show (Fresh Air, maybe) and I read the first chapter online.  I heartily recommend it to anyone who, like me, is spending a god-awful amount of time with specialists and having dozens of tests performed.  It's somewhat chilling -- I didn't really want to know just how often radiologists screw up -- but very practical.  For example, "I'd like to see X sooner -- maybe in two weeks instead of four weeks," is pediatrician talk for, "I'm quite concerned about your child, but am using soothing and neutral language so you don't get alarmed."   (And now I'm not annoyed that the doctor doesn't want to see Eden very much -- the first month she was followed closely, but now we just go in every couple of months, like normal.  It had bothered me, but no more!)   A-

Intervention.  I watched this show on A&E yesterday.  I don't go in for reality
TV (other than "Who Wants to be a Superhero" - at least the first run), but it was on and I was interested.  I watched an episode with a narcotics drug user and an episode featuring a woman with a severe eating disorder.  The narcotics boy was sad and predictable.  The eating disorder girl bugged the hell out of me -- whiny and insecure and bitchy.  I couldn't stand to watch it to the end of the episode -- hopefully someone put her on an SSRI.  C+

Das Leben Der Anderen.  I'd been wanting to see this since it first came to Portland, but life interfered.  Finally out on DVD, Matthew and I got it through Netflix.  It was fascinating for a number of reasons - for one, I really enjoyed seeing Matthew go down memory lane (his father was Army Intelligence in W. Germany and they lived there during the 70s).  Second, the similarities of the Stasi then to the American intelligence complex today - well, it was impossible not to draw the comparison.  Third, it's simply a damn good film.  Fourth, I studied German for five years, and enjoy any opportunity to listen to it spoken. 

And finally, it was the most upbeat German drama I have ever seen.  Only two suicides! Das Happy-End, indeed.  A

The Blighted Cliffs: Book One of the Reluctant Adventures of Lt. Martin Jerrold.
  I'm usually pretty skeptical of age of sail naval fiction.  For one, I'm a detail freak when it comes to both historical fiction and the age of sail, and an error or two will ruin a book.  Also, I'm familiar with the lives of "real" naval heroes of the era, and can't stand it when events in those lives are blatantly ripped off and called fiction.  My experience has usually been that if the details are right, the novel is dry and dull, or if the writing is good, the details are spotty.  I don't bother most of the time. 

This series -- written by someone younger than I, which I found disconcerting but cool --  was different.  For one, there's humor.  For another, the hero is a scapegrace.  There are some weaknesses -- I felt the author tried too hard with some of the humor (a bit too Fry and Laurie), the female characters were  two-dimensional, and I wasn't entirely happy with the way the hero interacted with those female characters.  But the story was compelling and historically accurate, and most of the characters were intriguing.  I'm hoping the weaknesses are resolved in later books.  B+

Eureka.  Matthew and I have been following Eureka from the beginning, but it's declined this past season.  Our take is that the show went from quirky to grand far too quickly, and once a show has gone there, well, there's no going back. The same two scientists work on whatever random problem appears, in every episode, while good ol' Sheriff Carter (with his 111 IQ) always suggests some folksy remedy that the two brilliant scientists somehow managed to overlook, but is always the key to the problem.  B-

House.  The first episode of the season was lame.  I can't believe I'm dissing a House episode, but there it is. Who cares if he "needs" his team or not?   I'm not sure why the writers keep belaboring this issue, but just get them back ASAP. (Last season's opener completely dispensed with the previous finale with little to no denouement - annoying at the time, but this time it was like watching that eating disorder girl on A&E.)  C 

Scrubs.  Matthew and I have recently watched the first two seasons.  Entertaining, quirky, but am I the only person in the world who doesn't like Zach Braff?  The guy bugs me. We watch it for the secondary characters. B+ 

October 11, 2006

My foray into Finnish music

Brother Phil spent a few weeks in Finland with his drop-dead gorgeous girlfriend (who is Finnish), and the one thing I asked him to bring me was some Finnish music. They made this awesome mix CD for me, which Phil gave me last weekend.

I listen to a lot of international music, mostly Arabic, Celtic, and German. I have no idea what the Arabs are singing (I have a 10 word Arabic vocabulary, and ditto the Gaelic), but if I stop and listen, I do understand the German.

Back to the Finnish music. I was listening in the car and got hooked on this song MC Koppakuoriainen. I made Matthew and Walter listen to it a half-dozen times -- it's so catchy! And then I looked up the duo, Ella ja Aleksi -- and learned they're a four-year-old rap duo. Not that they've been together that long, but that they are four years old.

It really is a catchy song, though. If you go to the band website and click on one of the albums in the right hand corner (the one with the pictures of the children on it), you can cycle through the songs to hear it. (I have to give you these directions, because I'm guessing you can't read Finnish, either.)

September 30, 2006

Risking a jinx here, but can't help it!

Today, I predict, is going to rock. Yes, my head is killing me (still) but migraines are ordinary around these parts (seeing colors when the dog barks and the sound reverberates through the piano -- fun, ordinary stuff).

However, two things make today unusual.

1. I'm getting a new iPod! Matthew's federal agency is the friendly federal agency (unlike his last federal agency, which is better known for employee shootings). They give each other awards all the time, and the awards are redeemable for gift certificates and coupons. Usually he picks Fred Meyer cards, and we use them for groceries. However, this time decided to cash his in and get me a new 30 gig iPod. This is exciting for me, because iPods are 5th generation now and my 20 gig iPod is 2nd. This is great for Matthew, because he gets my 20 gig iPod. (His died, and I fixed it, but we're not sure how long it will last.) Finally, I will have an iPod big enough to house my music collection (around 26 gigs currently).

2. I'm going to my first live hockey game! Matthew and our friend Alesia and I have center ice tickets to the Winterhawks' opening season game. I've been looking forward to this since the end of the Stanley Cup.

I did something completely out of character for the post-law school me, too -- I made a real breakfast, including pancakes made from whole wheat and oat flour. It's been years since I made pancakes, though it used to be an every Saturday sort of thing.

June 28, 2006

Sunday Bloody Sunday

You've just got to watch this...

June 24, 2006

Kick in the Eye

Today I was organizing the TV room/den while watching "We are the 80s" on VH1 Classic, because I am that dorky.  Anyway, the insipid Chicago song "You're the Inspiration" (that I think everyone my age has slow-danced to at one junior high function or another) came on, and out of morbid curiosity I watched.  And I saw the strangest thing...it looked like Peter Cetera was wearing a Bauhaus t-shirt.  Never, ever, ever would have figured on them as a Chicago influence...

May 30, 2006

Slight Disconnect

What was on iTunes:

Boy, you're going to carry that weight
Carry that weight a long time

What I heard on iTunes:

Shell, you're going to carry that weight
Carry that weight a long time

I'm doubting the Beatles meant the song to be about pregnancy, but with all the crap they were smoking at the time, who knows?

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