zap.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Default | Wednesday 18 November 2009 9:53 pm

A friend recently fanned the flames of my obsession with figuring out what would happen if an actor in a movie could rent a movie and see themselves in it. Or is it that I wonder if each movie is simply set in an earth-like place, but obviously one where certain films don’t exist?

Bill Murray and Woody Harrelson were both in the 1996 film Kingpin.

In the movie Zombieland, Woody Harrelson plays a character named Tallahassee, but Bill Murray plays himself. Tallahassee tells Bill Murray that he’s seen every film he’s ever been in. It then follows that he would have seen Kingpin, in which he stars, alongside Bill Murray.

ALL I’M SAYING is that this is impossible. Kingpin must not exist in that world.

so saith.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Beautiful | Monday 16 November 2009 11:07 am

‘I hope no great sorrow ever will come to you, Anne.’ said Gilbert, who could not connect the idea of sorrow with the vivid, joyous creature beside him, unwitting that those who can soar to the highest heights can also plunge to the deepest depths, and that the natures which enjoy most keenly are those which also suffer most sharply. – found via the littlest stenographer

very necessary.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Beautiful | Sunday 15 November 2009 8:37 pm

there are a few things I day dream about, one of them is running a lifestyle etsy/ebay shop. Filled with clothes, little trinkets, small furniture items, books, records… you know.

To do that, I would need:

a. a capable computer
(a2. also a wacom tablet and photoshop) 
b. more income with which to purchase the clothes and sundries to sell
c. a good camera

I am always finding things at Buffalo Exchange for super cheap that could be marked up if styled correctly.   Anyone want to invest two grand in a style-wise enterprise?

night cheese.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Conversations | Saturday 14 November 2009 10:02 pm

I am sitting on the couch, with a blanket. It is Saturday night and I am watching all the television I did not see last week. In my hand is a knife, and on that knife is some brie.

After about ten minutes I look at the knife and giggle, and sing-song-say something like ‘night chee…” and then I stop because this is not only sort of like the Night Cheese incident, this is Night Cheese.

A sobering thought if I’ve ever had one in my entire life.

union song, union battle.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Library | Thursday 12 November 2009 10:48 am

My hair seems to be growing, finally.  Next year, it will be as long as it should be, but probably won’t be as long as I want it for another two years.  I don’t want shoulder-length hair, I want crazy Burberry model long hair.  My hair will be the perfect length as soon as I graduate from grad school.  I’m going to grad school, can you believe that? And as soon as I’m done with my first semester, I’m going to look at continuing on in the PhD program offered through my school, which hopefully wouldn’t add more than another 2 years to it all.

There is definitely something to be said for waiting.  In so many areas, I wish I had been more patient.

we all shall be received in graceland.

Posted by Amanda Mae | All of Us | Monday 9 November 2009 8:06 pm

Mad Men this season killed it.  Season 3 was the best season of television I’ve seen since season 1 of The L Word, (which held such amazing promise and then squandered any good will it garnered with five following seasons of unbearably shameful dreck.)  I won’t spoil it for you if you haven’t seen it, but I wasn’t entirely taken by the first two seasons. I wasn’t a fan, in fact the show made me angry, but season three has taken all the goodwill given to the show and CAPITALIZED on it in the biggest way. I haven’t felt as excited for a new season since season 3 of The Office, and Jim and Pam’s first kiss.  (I’m not counting The Wire even though I was more excited because it was all a’ready out on DVD when I started watching.)

One of these days I’m going to write a post where I rank all the vampire stuff out there.  Vampire Diaries is not good, kiddos. Not good. At. All.

Instead watch Taylor Swift and Bill Hader in a Twilight parody. I laughed, aloud.

fear mongering.

Posted by Amanda Mae | All of Us | Sunday 8 November 2009 11:00 pm

I have just finished reading Eula Biss’s fine article which appeared in the 2008 copy of Believer magazine.  About six times during the article I started to open an email to send to Andrew telling him to read it, or this very blog post to tell whoever is reading this to read it, but I sat still and continued.

Laura Ingalls Wilder and the pioneer mentality is taken to a logical conclusion in the modern problems of gentrification.

Most victims of violent crimes are not white. This is particularly true for “hate” crimes. We are far more likely to be hurt by the food we eat, the cars we drive, or the bicycles we ride than by the people we live among. This may be lost on us in part because we are surrounded by a lot of noise that suggests otherwise.

Biss articulates something that I have felt for a very long time, (ever since I began to explore and love Los Angeles) but have been left largely unable to articulate.  The subject matter is one that I have felt timid when approaching or discussing for fear of apparent or real racism.  College only amplified this fear when my enlightened ass began to get annoyed at the barrage of Racial Reconciliation meetings, and the endless attempts to bring together these “opposing forces” on campus.  I began to protest that this wasn’t a problem that kids growing up in California faced.  The conversations could become paralyzing, discussing race relations from a middle-class white background entirely devoid of integration.  I feel as if college bred racism, I know for a fact that it certainly bred resentment.

It’s not racism if it’s true,” how often I have repeated that when motoring along behind a slow Asian female driver, buzzing past them snarling. Or heard someone remark while watching a home security ad, “Oh of course it’s a middle aged white man breaking into that home.” (Perhaps he used to work at Goldman-Sachs?) Racism can often feel safe, comfortable, smug.

This year, because of my extensive traveling I have answered many questions about the area in which I live, and have come to the conclusion that I live in a bubble, removed from any urban environment and from anyone who is different. I drive from my home to my job, to my stores.  There is no walking to and from a corner market or engagement with anyone I do not know intimately.   This isolation from others is a product of my living environment, and something I have been considering in the possibility of moving to another city.  There’s something tactless and embarrassing about a white girl attempting to find a more wholly integrated city to partake in, but I believe it may be important enough.  

My feelings about Portland (6.2% black population), which come to me through a year or two’s reading of the internet (which functions much like a large reflecting pool upon which various threads of thought are visible, and it takes time to gather them all up and see what you have) and through conversations with various friends, have lead me to believe it is a white city where white artistic people live.  I mentioned this to a friend while I was in Kansas City (22.7% black population) and he said ‘That sounds great!’, but I can’t shake the idea that there is some sickness in moving to a place where everyone is the same, and happily so.

“I think you should define the word gentrification,” my husband tells me now. I ask him what he would say it means and he pauses for a long moment. “It means that an area is generally improved,” he says finally, “but in such a way that everything worthwhile about it is destroyed.”

This is interesting to me, given what happened in Los Angeles’ neighbourhood of Silverlake over the past four years. I first remember the stirrings that Echo Park and the adjacent area was becoming hip, and now it has already lost it’s cool edge, but the rents have risen, the area is mid-transformation, and it has become a mecca of insufferability.   

I am as guilty as anyone of the wrongs Biss outlines, the adherence to fear and to allowing Fear Mongering by others to affect my opinion of others and of places.  Though one wishes to avoid such bleak attempt as a college professor who told us that he moved his white family into an entirely black neighbourhood, or my parents who attended an entirely black church until my sisters reported that after a year, none of the other kids would interact with them.  (This all is interesting when I consider how much importance I place on adoption as a necessary element of life.) 

Ted and I talked about this extensively during my visit to Chicago. His neighbourhood, Pilsen, was predominantly Hispanic, though it had been originally settled by Polish immigrants.  We walked the streets and the only other white people I ever saw were mid-20’s white artistic types. Ted said that he was worried the area would gentrify, that it was already beginning, and immediately acknowledged that his presence there was a part of that.

What is to be done, then? Like Biss, I want to believe in the promise of what real diversity and unification might mean, but have not yet discovered how to actualize this process in my heart and life.

taken.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Beautiful | Saturday 7 November 2009 11:49 pm

It was late last night the dog was speaking of you;
the snipe was speaking of you in her deep marsh.
It is you are the lonely bird through the woods;
and that you may be without a mate until you find me.

You promised me, and you said a lie to me,
that you would be before me where the sheep are flocked;
I gave a whistle and three hundred cries to you,
and I found nothing there but a bleating lamb.

You promised me a thing that was hard for you,
a ship of gold under a silver mast;
twelve towns with a market in all of them,
and a fine white court by the side of the sea.

You promised me a thing that is not possible,
that you would give me gloves of the skin of a fish;
that you would give me shoes of the skin of a bird;
and a suit of the dearest silk in Ireland.

My mother said to me not to be talking with you today,
or tomorrow, or on the Sunday;
it was a bad time she took for telling me that;
it was shutting the door after the house was robbed.

You have taken the east from me; you have taken the west from me;
you have taken what is before me and what is behind me;
you have taken the moon, you have taken the sun from me;
and my fear is great that you have taken God from me!

———

I don’t like poetry, on the whole, but I was watching The Dead, one of the characters gave a this as recitation. The line, “You promised me a thing that was hard for you,” may be one of the softest and saddest things I’ve ever heard. But the idea about shutting a door to a house after it’s been robbed, how many of us are trying to shut those doors?

I also read A Handful of Dust and it was very harsh.  Waugh waugh.

understanding.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Default | Friday 6 November 2009 11:26 pm

Sometimes when I watch a movie the plot is excessively unclear to me. For instance, when we watched Where The Wild Things Are,  I didn’t really understand it until Abigail said “Oh, that wild thing was his sister, oh that’s his mom.” And then I just felt dumb.  This happens with alarming alacrity and I get worried about brain problems, but I don’t know what’s actually wrong with me.  I never used to think I was stupid, but when the simplest metaphors begin to escape you…?  I try to pay attention harder, and when a movie is revealed to me in all its glistening glory, it feels like actual relief.

garurasana.

Posted by Amanda Mae | Alex James, All of Us | Thursday 5 November 2009 11:33 pm

Garurasana is known as the eagle pose, and works to loosen all the major joints of the body.

Eagle pose is begun by standing straight, feet planted firm. Swing arms overhead and bring them down quickly, crossing right under left to bring them to prayer in front of the face. Then shifting weight to the left leg, one sits, bringing the right leg high over the left, twisting the leg.  It’s a relaxing and strong pose once you get into it. 

______________

I saw the worst movie today, I had to screen it for film.com, and it made me too sad to want to write anything.  Bikram Choudhury, the founder of Bikram yoga says that he believes 90% of women are born good and 10% are born bad, and that 90% of men are born bad, and only 10% are born good.  I’m starting to agree with him.

In other news, I found a Blur tape at Amoeba tonight, and heard Alex James say: “I’ve got long legs and a good hair cut, I don’t think you can underestimate the importance of those things.”

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