Words to Go

An astrologer I read regularly on the web has said that in two hundred years we will have moved beyond the printed word. That means this whole blogging concept will become obsolete. If print disappears, will life be as interesting as it is now?

Sunday, March 16, 2008

How To Do Nothing Fast

I have a thousand and two things I need to do or start to do which is the crux of the matter. Where to begin when there's way too much tugging at my sleeve, screaming, "Do me, do me!" Do me screams create conflict, and often I end up doing nothing.

I thought I had come up with a way to choose what to do next without having to think about all those chores waiting for me to begin. Confession: Writing this post was on the list of things to do. That I am keyboarding this right now means that my method for eliminating priority conflicts can work. I repeat--can work. Just not necessarily quickly and efficiently. Perhaps the method will work more swiftly for you--or not. Destiny, hm, fate, hm, no--life is fickle and can get in the way of careful planning.

  • How to Choose What To Do When You Don't Know What To Do Next

  • Take slips of index card

  • Write one task/chore on each slip

  • Fold slips where it is impossible to read the slip

  • Place folded slips into a baggie and shake well

  • Draw out one slip and read your assignment. . .if you choose to accept this assignment. . .(if you don't like that task, refold, replace slip in bag and redraw)

  • Complete that job before you even think about taking another slip out of the baggie


So where did I go wrong? It's like this, ya see. . .

I thought I'd give myself a break and put in one slip that said, "Do nothing. . ." After all, I would need a break sometime. . .

What was written on the first slip I pulled out of my collection of work to be done items? Guess.

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Answers to Reverie quizzes, trivia

February 6, 2007

Who was confused about the origin of matzo balls?

Marilyn Monroe

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Helping Talent Get By

What happens when you don't fit the mold? Suppose you have a great voice and talent to spare, but you don't look like today's rock star? Kathy Brier currently playing Marcie on One Life To Live took her talent in her own hands and produced a rock and roll CD. She found the writers, the musicians and the way to get her dream done.

Check it out:

Kathy Brier's self-produced CD Heartbreaker (rock and roll) on sale at http://www.kathybrier.com
or at the ABC Store Web site, Brier performs songs from her CD at the Triad, 158 West 72nd St. in New York City, on August 19 at 9 pm.

The woman can sing!

kathybrier




Tried it out and bought the CD! Sounds great.

Sunday, June 18, 2006

Ten Years Later

I recently purchased American Gothic: The Complete Series on dvd. Ten years ago I watched most of the episodes for the first time on CBS. The network didn't have the collective executive wisdom to do right by the series which has since become a cult hit after being re-broadcast on the scifi channel on cable as well as being seen around the world (a big hit in Great Britain and Australia).

My copy of the series has given me no problems though customers who bought it when it was first released in Autumn of 2005 found several glitches due to the poor transfer process done by the plant Universal hired in Mexico to produce the dvds. Another problem with the set, mine included, is that the episodes are recorded out of sequence. You have to go to the net, find the proper sequence, and then hop up and down to change out the discs and flip them over (did I mention Universal also chose to record the show on doublesided discs which are more prone to damage?).

411mania

The 411: It's frustrating knowing that there are only 22 episodes of this great series, but the show ended with one perfect single arc, much like a feature film. Everyone winds up very different from where they started. Alliances are made and broken. People slide back and forth from Good to Evil, many times in the course of the same episode. The acting is superb, especially from Cole and Black. I thought of Bakke as the weak link during the show's original run, but watching these now I can see she's as good as anyone on the show. Add to that the subtle and often intricate writing, and you have one of the finest series ever produced for television. Unfortunately, it was about ten years ahead of its time.
All the complaints are by the way. The show is just as wonderful as I remembered it. Gary Cole is superb as Lucas Buck, the Sheriff of Trinity, South Carolina (just down the road from Ascension), who may or may not be the devil himself. A stage trained actor, who is also a character actor par excellence experienced in television and feature films (Midnight Caller, The Brady Bunch Movie, Office Space, Win a Date with Tad Hamilton, etc.) and on the short list of my favorite actors of all time, gives the devil a humor and charm that makes him seductive indeed.

A bonus is Alabama native Lucas Black (currently starring in The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, ) who plays Caleb Temple, Buck's illegitimate son. Brenda Bakke plays sultry bar troller by night, prim elementary school teacher by day, gives Selena Coombs a tragic Faulknerian flavor (she played Lana Turner in L.A. Confidential so well, I didn't even recognize her as being a highlight of American Gothic). Nick Searcy is Buck's deputy Ben who is torn between his conscience and not getting on the wrong end of the Sheriff's GRAY, not RAY gun. Paige Turco plays Gail Emory, Caleb's cousin, a reporter who wants to find out how her parents were trapped in their newspaper building the night they died in the fire that gutted the building. Sarah Paulsen plays Merlyn Temple, Caleb's sister (killed by Lucas the night her father Gage Temple attempted to murder her with a shovel--Lucas uses a shovel later to knock out the man who attempts to rape Gail, saying dryly, "These things have a thousand uses."

The citizens of Trinity are mostly happy (at least for a while) with their Sheriff who has a habit of doling out favors (though he eventually comes around expecting repayment in one form or another). Corruption, ghosts, violence, passion, horror, family ties, possession, flesh eating beetles, deals gone wrong, suicide, murder--just your typical small Southern town on the gothic side of the tracks.
Another Review:
And actually, the episodes written by Cassidy are really good. But then, the writing in general is far beyond what I’d remembered. The dialog is razor-sharp - Gary Cole playing the sheriff is a stroke of genius casting - the femme fatales are slick and cunning, and the stories are not only clever (and twisted with a good amount of sheer creepiness), they’re completely engrossing, making for one addictive DVD set.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Words to Go

Pandora.com is a new website that allows you input musical artists and/or songs. The site will select similar music for you to test drive before buying (another option offered in addition to creating a "favorites" list for you). You can minimize the window and continue with other computer projects to musical accompaniment. You can give a thumbs up or down to each selection. If you ask, the program will tell you the musical criteria it used to select a particular song for you to hear. Registration is free for the version including ads. You can buy a premium version that eliminates the advertisement component.

You create virtual radio stations (multiple stations allowed) according to the type of music you select. Remember it's your original selection and additions you make which determine what kind of music will be selected for you. This is a wonderful idea and I love it. Hope you love it as much as I do.

Sunday, May 07, 2006

ModerrnTimes

Quality degrades?

Time passes and I lament the loss of quality in most things: my soap operas, the romance novels that used to be such caramel chocolate substitute pleasures, movies, the music I hear on the radio or television, the sodas I once drank, the television dramas/comedies. Sometimes I wonder if I'm just jaded because I've partaken of these things for so many years.

Naaahhh. They really aren't as good as they once were. Too many people seem to be settling for too little. We talk about soap operas on a forum I belong to (yes, I know it's ending with a preposition, so sue me!!). The members in their teens, twenties, thirties know the soaps have declined in quality. But they'd rather watch crap than fight for what they want.

Apathy rules. They quote banal song lyrics from recordings made by singers who can't carry a tune. I'm disgusted by the hopelessness. Yet, if these younger people don't have the will/energy to turn things around. . .I'm too old. And stubborn. I can manage without the new stuff, living on memories. The younger crowd aren't so lucky. Their memories will suck.