Monday, January 31, 2005
Happy Birthday, Sunil!
Happy Birthday to my friend Sunil, born one day, and quite a few years, after yours truly. Sunil is pictured here with his boyfriend Fernando; I met them both last summer through Denis & Christian, my friends visiting from Paris who know their friends from Paris... Sunil and Fernando were on hand at my wonderful birthday party yesterday. In fact, just about every friend I have in greater New York turned out. I hope to post pictures of the party in a few days, when I resolve a few technical glitches...
Not So Hard To Swallow
Many have needlessly shied away from "Maria Full Of Grace" fearing 100 minutes alone with a difficult topic: drug mules, as the women who transport heroin from Colombia by swallowing small containers of it are called. I strongly encourage you to see it (it's out on Netflix) This movie doesn't beat you up with tragedy or hype it with melodrama, but tells an interesting story in a matter-of-fact way, and is very engaging and thought-provoking. Even more amazing: stellar acting from people with no acting experience or training, which makes it feel even more like they're living it rather than acting it.
The film's final half takes place in Jackson Heights, the South American immigrant barrio where I lived for a surprising 15 years.. For four of these years I lived was living with Andres, my South American first boyfriend. I can tell you that the network of support and connections shown in this movie are quite authentic.
Another thought: Maria longs to escape her dead-end life in Colombia, where she's stuck living with her mother and sister, earning minimally in a dreary job. It's poverty, I guess, but her standard of living is no worse than that of tens of millions of Americans, rural, urban, and suburban. It's not squalor - it's the soft poverty of limited opportunities...
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Sunday, January 30, 2005
Saturday, January 29, 2005
Friday, January 28, 2005
Men Screw Up Romance:
How's my driving?
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Thursday, January 27, 2005
Fun-ion
From yesterday's Onion, my favorite feature, “What Do YOU Think?
Question: “After a delay caused by Congressional Democrats, Condoleezza Rice will be confirmed as Secretary of State this week. What do you think? ”
Answer 1: "Great. Now the public face of U.S. diplomacy is that of a pissed-off terrier."
Answer 2: "So she had to explain why she's the best candidate for the job? Big deal. I had to do that last week when I applied at Panda Express."
Answer 3: "I say, why not give Condi a shot as Secretary of State? It might help her self-esteem and encourage her to start taking an interest in her appearance."
Answer 4: "Ms. Rice should make an ideal Secretary of State. She's already proved to the U.S. that she can evade questions in front of a Congressional panel."
Answer 5: "Twenty years ago, I never would've believed that we'd have a black, female Secretary of State, much less one who was a conservative warmonger, too. We've come a long way."
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Wednesday, January 26, 2005
Months Not Years
Estimate revised! The subway wheel that squeaks, gets oiled? I rarely soapbox here, but some more socialized and progressive societies don't have people out on the street in frigid weather - this wouldn't happen in Canada. or Sweden. Also, thanks to Mr Pataki and Mr Giuliani for skimping on the subway budget for a decade while passing a 100% cumulative fare increase to commuters... There, I've said my piece : - )
And now, here's something we hope you'll really like...
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Tuesday, January 25, 2005
Five Years, Huh?
Somebody Pinch Me, Please! No C train and a 33% capacity A-train? We need to replace hundreds of 60-year old switches? Which were barbecued by freezing homeless people trying to build a fire in a control room? And now they must direct trains by hand signals? And we should walk instead if we can? As Richard M. Nixon used to say, "(Expletive Deleted)"
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Powder To The People
or, 'A Penny For Your Thaw' : - ) More Humor Below...
Happy Birthday, Erik! (pictured left in Kenya with Dr Dawa, maker of potent spirits drowned in honey)
Erik's birthday bash in Boston was beaten by the blizzard... (and avoid asinine alliteration :-) )
Click here for more of Erik
From this week’s Onion, my favorite feature, “What Do YOU Think?
Question: “Last week, a U.S. district judge ordered a Georgia school district to remove stickers reading, "Evolution is a theory, not a fact" from its textbooks. What do you think?”
Answer 1: "The thing is, they're right. Evolution is nothing more than a well-supported, predictive, scientifically rigorous theory."
Answer 2: "I hope they replaced the old stickers with new ones that read, 'Do not burn.'"
Answer 3: "Good. Now could New York please take the sticker off my literature textbook that says Surrealism is just a school of thought often in conflict with Abstractism?"
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Monday, January 24, 2005
Me, Go Outside? Brrrrrr
Spent yesterday indoors. Alas, work awaits me, as does a "Preventing Sexual Harrassment" workshop at 8am. Brrrr
William Safire leaves the Times today, not to retire at 75, but to head a charity foundation. I enjoyed his quartet of farewell op-ed pieces, the best of which is "How To Read A Column."
This contains perhaps his best line: "And avoid all asinine alliteration"
Cartoon:
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Sunday, January 23, 2005
Snow Place Like Home
My lazy powder white weekend continues.. Sunshine poured through my windows for a few hours but I chose not to venture forth. Perhaps I shall sally yonder to ye olde gymnasium before my dinner date...
Movies watched, to be reviewed this week, included "Spirited Away" and "Maria Full Of Grace." My Mom noticed today that I posted a page of early childhood pictures to my permanent site late last year - click here to enter the world of Little Aaron... Or just click on my little kid picture on the left side of my blog page, it'll take you there...
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Saturday, January 22, 2005
Snow Patrol!
What is it about the weekend that makes me so blog-lazy? I've been lost in music today, as the snow accumulates and slowly buries our fair city. I am NOT in Boston - poor Erik was obliged to postpone his 50th Birthday Bash (sob).
I finished "Before Sunrise" this morning, after sunrise, and found it very captivating for a movie that is essentially a 24 hour conversation, sealed with a kiss. Boy meets girl, boy talks girl off train, boy and girl exchange impressions and insights as the hormonal current flows beneath the surface. Ethan Hawke and French actress Julie Delpy(pictured below) bring depth and nuance to their strangers on a train, the dialogue is sharp, the minor players are colorful, and Vienna charms with its Italianate strudel of relaxed old-world rococo.... Next week I'll watch the equally-admired sequel, "Before Sunset"....
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Friday, January 21, 2005
Cartoons:
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Thursday, January 20, 2005
Brothers/Sisters Of The Envelope
Netflix Nation! This DVD mail-rental service delights both busy urbanites and cinephiles in the great heartland. For the former, no more late fees, you can keep the rented DVD weeks, months, until you have time to see it. You can, in fact, have 3-4 movies out simultaneously, for as long as you want. Out in the vast prairie, mountain, and desert, Netflix provides access to a vast library of classic, independent, and foreign films that Blockbuster just isn't going to stock.
Now, with Netflix's "Friends" feature, I know what my pals and my Mom are renting, and what they think of what they see, and vice versa! It allows, encourages you to grade the films you rent and those you've previously seen, with a click, on a scale of one to five stars. This way, they can zero in on your taste, and find the movies that you haven't seen yet.
Let's close with a cartoon:
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Wednesday, January 19, 2005
Stroll Through Botswana With A Smile
The book reports cometh, as promised-eth : - ) In December I had the joy of "reading" Alexander McCall Smith's Number #1 Ladies' Detective Agency on audiotape. Episodic and meandering, the book is more than the sum of its several mysteries, at times more a comedy of manners and cultural study than a page-turner. Its heroine, Mma' Ramotzwe, is a wise woman of a certain age who decides to use her meager inheritance to hang up a shingle and be Botswana's first lady gumshoe. Flashbacks tell us her story, and her dad's story as an itinerant miner in neighboring South Africa. Her narration places you right into the Botswanan mindset, fatalistic and wry, proud to be one of black Africa's success stories but cognizant of how much is still lacking. I learned, for instance, that the African ideal of female beauty is a full figure, robust and plump, and that America's models look to them emaciated and sickly. The book gave me the feeling of visiting an exotic place and being taken around by locals, each sharing their unique perspective. Those who fall in love with this universe will be delighted to learn that there are several acclaimed sequels. Pictured right is the German edition of one of the sequels, 'A Cook for Mma Ramotzwe'
Here's a cartoon
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Tuesday, January 18, 2005
BLOG-A-VERSARY!!! (Today Marks One Year...)
Who's Bad (Enough)? As a kid I enjoyed "The Adventures Of Rocky And Bullwinkle," the ironic and campy serialized cartoon exploits of a perky flying squirrel (Rocky) and his sidekick, a corny, dense, but ultimately endearing moose (Bullwinkle). I later learned that this 1959-1964 series, created by Jay Ward, was considered well ahead of its time: droll, self-mocking, and gently satirical of topics such as The Cold War, with Russia represented, as "Pottsylvania," by the villainous Boris Badenov and his protegé, Natasha (pictured right). (We won't even discuss the dreadful 2000 live-action Rocky and Bullwinkle movie, foolishly conceived and funded by Robert DeNiro.)
Over 25 years later I learned that Boris's name was really a pun from Mussorgsky's opera titled "Boris Godenov". The Russian last name sounds like "Bad Enough," yet another pun. So when "Rocky and Bullwinkle" was released on DVD I ordered it. And it does have a twinkle in its eye. Here's an example of its humor:
Bullwinkle: You just leave that to my pal. He's the brains of the outfit.
General: What does that make you ?
Bullwinkle: What else? An executive..
If you enjoyed that, this Rocky & Bullwinkle quotes link further captures the flavor of my erstwhile companions... As an adult I found it slower and more repetitive than I remembered, but in exchange its charm now includes nostalgia. I do love the animation. An extra bonus is the subversive "Fractured Fairy Tales" segment sandwiched between Rocky and Bullwinkle episodes. In these, Edward Everett Horton throughly lampoons Goldlocks, Rumplestiltskin, etc, providing good, wicked fun.
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Monday, January 17, 2005
Coppola's "Lost" Art Film....
While nursing a cold and a three-day weekend, DVDs I perused included "The Conversation," Francis Ford Coppola's brilliant 1974 meditation on privacy, paranoia, and the morality of surveillance. Gene Hackman is indelible as an expert in bugging who shuts out intimacy and is increasingly haunted by the sometimes deadly fallout from his work. Episodic and moody, but very tight, this movies delivers a knock-out ending that makes its inspiration, Antonioni's "Blow Up," look like a major cop-out. Hackman (pictured left), btw, is the trimpuh of acting depth over prettiness, God bless his sould. Finally, you may ask, how "lost" can a film be that was nominated for 6 Oscars including Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Director. Plenty lost, actually. Has anyone under 40 ever heard of "Sounder"? "The Dresser?", "Bound For Glory"? Coppola made "The Conversation" between Godfather Parts 1 and 2, whose breatheless narrative, iconic stature and pop-culture omnipresence clearly overshadowed our "little art film." Note as well 1974 was the year of Watergate, heightening relevance for a film about wiretapping... Thank goodness for Netflix... : - )
Cartoon:
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Sunday, January 16, 2005
Jan Pahechan Ho...
Or, in case your Hindustani is rusty, "oh, come with me, my little darling..." These golden words, sung in the mid-60s by Bollywood legend Mohammed Rafi (pictured left) came to me riding a wave of Ventures-like surf music. Picture Busby Berkeley directing in a turban. Such was the black & white musical opening sequence of "Ghost World," an excellent 2001 indie movie about alienated singles and struggling with the parameters of stunted lives... I hope this blog post isn't too 'stream of consciouness' for you. If it is, worry not.. Below you'll find a cartoon for your amusement...
Do all of you know about Rhapsody? It's the most happiness you can buy for $10 a month... It's a musical E.T. beckoning through your cyberwindow. If you're intrigued, ask me about it...
There is a logic, a theme, running through this post. I haven't gone mad, you know. : - )
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Friday, January 14, 2005
Gefeliciteered met Je Verjaardag, Joost!
And here's wishing a very happy birthday to my good friend Joost Van Kranen from Amsterdam, pictured here (right) with his legal husband, Ronald Vendelmans, in my apartment a couple of years ago...
Below's an earlier picture of Joost, from October 1993 when I met him during a four-country swing through Europe. Amsterdam is a really lovely place with a wonderful vibe. Creative, free-living, while its 17th century exteriors are a snapshot in time.
Joost has lived there since school, but grew up an hour away in Utrecht, said to be picturesque. Joost, like me, is a language enthusiast, speaks Spanish, and has dabbled in Portuguese, Turkish, and others...
Happy Friday... Feeling much better, I'm back at work!
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Thursday, January 13, 2005
Fucking Åmål
Åmål is a town, not a person. And Fucking, here, is an adjective, not a gerund... This charming movie about a lesbian's coming of age, after winning awards in its native Sweden, was rebaptised "Show Me Love" for its US release in 1998, an FCC-ready title six full years before we new you need one. : - ) The film concerns the travails of Agnes (pictured left), a smart, low-key teenager whose parents have moved to the small town of Åmål, the armpit of the Swedish universe. At 16, Agnes feels the stirrings of her sexuality, and is suffering a hopeless crush on Elin, a popular and wild girl she knows from high school. Beautifully acted and written, and directed with a deft hand by Lucas Moodysson, this small movie makes an indelible impression with humor, pathos, unpredictable plotting and smart editing, all in less than 90 minutes. Highly recommended.
Just learned that I've seen Moodysson's subsequent film, Together, already, in a NY theater with Brian in 2001. It was also great, about life on an Swedish urban commune in 1975, capturing the whole hippie-70s-mother earth vibe with a sharp eye for character and human interaction. This guy is major major talented.
I was home sick today, I woke up with a bad sore throat, and decided to sleep it off. I will work tomorrow, and rest over the 3-day weekend. Bye, mates....
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Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Free...
Aaron was not selected for jury duty yesterday, and has been released back into the work force, not to be called for another two years (not four, alas - that changed).
I'd like to serve on a jury one day. But today is not that day...
Finished "eXistenZ" last night, what a great mind trip of a movie.. Full report later...
For now, cartoon time...
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Tuesday, January 11, 2005
You've Come A Long Way, Baby...
That was actually a cigarette commercial jingle, back before such TV ads were banned in the mid-70s, for Virginia Slims, which they were pitching to the lungs of liberated ladies... But it applies to the former mayor of Carmel, Mr Clinton Eastwood, junior, and his blossoming from action hero (bridging the western and inner-city-crime eras of that genre) to brilliantly subtle actor/director. All this, to add my accolades to Million Dollar Baby, which I saw Sunday with Christi - this film is yet another high point for the man as both actor and director. Mind you, I am totally uninterested in boxing, and that didn't even matter here. It's a character movie, but the pacing is just right, with deep currents swirling beneath its wry and weathered surface, it's life-sized but packs a wallop... What beauty in the etched, ravaged, but endlessly expressive faces of Eastwood and Morgan Freeman, their talent aging like vintage wine. And Hilary Swank leaves an indelible impression in her second role of a lifetime...
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Monday, January 10, 2005
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Sunday, January 09, 2005
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Friday, January 07, 2005
The Envelope, Please?
Cowabunga! Our favorite gay music group ever, NY's Scissor Sisters, have been nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Dance Recording, for their inspired neon-bright "reimagining" of Pink Floyd's "Comfortably Numb," which channels both the Bee Gees and Kraftwerk. They sure deserve recognition, but they're up against two dance music powerhouses, Chemical Brothers and Basement Jaxx, and two tabloid legends from opposite sides of the pond, Britney Spears and Kylie Minogue. Sadly, my money's on Britney - the Grammy people are that clueless... (eg, Rolling Stones have only won one Grammy, celebrating the album cover art on "Tattoo You"...)
Lots more this weekend, I promise... While I bask in home-based leisure... But in the meantime, enjoy these cartoons....
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Thursday, January 06, 2005
Aaron Shrugged
I "read" six audiobooks over the past months, and today I begin a series of book reports with the novel I least enjoyed: Ayn Rand's stiff, heavy-handed, telegraphic, stark-raving right-wing diatribe of a novel, "Atlas Shrugged." My curiosity dated from my teen years, when the dog-eared paperback lay in my parents' basement. That back cover intrigued me with questions such as "Why did a philosopher become a pirate? Why did a brilliant businessman become a worthless playboy, and why does he fight his greatest battle against the woman he desperately loves?" However, the book's epic length dissuaded me.
Rand believes that the talented elite drives all human progress and that selfishness and profit are this elite's natural reward. In "Shrugged," this elite 'goes on strike' when the 'looters' of socialism force them to use their talent only to satisfy other people's needs, rather than their own profit; this 'strike' brings the world to a halt. Political objections aside, I think "Shrugged" is bad literature and is better filed under "philosophy." This is because the characters behave like walking concepts and principles, not flesh and blood human beings - the heroes and villains are cartoonish, and given to long expository speeches that underscore Rand's beliefs. Though "Shrugged" is breathlessly paced, and vividly written, its propagandistic stridency was too much for me, and I myself "shrugged" and abandoned ship after 7 of the 10 CDs.
Rand's pro-capitalist fervor made her a hero of the right during their long dark exile in the FDR and post-FDR era (1933-1980), until captialism was championed by Reaganism-Thatcherism and perhaps vindicated by collapse of the cold war. But oddly, "Shrugged" seems even more cartoonish today, since it goes so far to the other extreme - even George W. Bush might be too liberal for this late lady.
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Wednesday, January 05, 2005
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Tuesday, January 04, 2005
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Kelly On The Great White Way!
Friends, Romans, Countrymen! Thrilled here to inform you that my friend Kelly AuCoin (left) will make his Broadway debut as Octavius in Julius Caesar opposite Denzel Washington's Brutus! Previews begin March 28, I'm so excited...
Hit The Ground Running: My first day back, kind of congested, and I Nyquil-ed through my 6:15am alarm... Oh well. If at first you don't succeed, try, try again...
Can't Put It Down: I am enthralled by "The Time Traveler's Wife" by Audrey Niffenegger. Very smart, imaginative, well-paced storytelling and keeps your brain on its toes with all the time-hopping. I now owe you people several book reports...
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Monday, January 03, 2005
Where in the World...
is Aaron Holsberg?
Home! That's Where! Woo-Hoo! And all refreshed from vacation.
Btw, Should've included 'Kinsey' on my Best of 2004 list (see my 1/1/05 post for the list, and my 11/21/04 review of 'Kinsey'. )
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Miss My Wheels
Requiem for 'Suburban Car Boy' : - ) In 12 hours I must hand in my silver Chevy and hop a plane to NY. 'twas a delicious, relaxing, sun-drenched vacation. Will miss this level of pampering in the work-heavy weeks ahead....
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Sunday, January 02, 2005
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Saturday, January 01, 2005
Aaron's List of Happiness,
End-2004 Edition
That's The Way (Uh-Huh, Uh-Huh): As promised, a quick look over my sunny shoulder at six movies you should not miss, and five albums that could delight your brain and your heart, and increase your enthusiasm for music in general....
Movies Not To Miss, and Why:
1. Napoleon Dynamite: Hilarious nerdiness and dysfunction, with a rosy, rhythmic ending.
2. Garden State: Engaging characters, unpredictable plot, great soundtrack, and the lead actor looks like me at 25!
3. Bad Education: Brilliant story, acting, directing, and set design, even by Almodovar's high standards. I could eat lunch off any portion of Gael Garcia Bernal.
4. Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind: Smart mix of romance, satire, and science fiction carried off with wit, another indelible transformation by Kate Winslett, and a Jim Carrey that is unrecognizably substantial, talented, and downright likeable.
5. Sideways: Life-sized character movie that's beautifully written, acted, and directed. Crazy little thing called 'emotional honesty.'
6. Meet The Fockers: Pop culture, shmop culture. I laughed my head off, and they deserve the gazillion dollars this will earn - I can't resist the collision of uptight WASP and let-it-all-hang-out Jew. Hoffman and Streisand walk away with it, though Stiller holds his own. (but you must see Meet The Parents first)
Music To Bring Light In:
1. Shins - Chutes Too Narrow. Rare and captivating, utterly new: unusual and lovely melodies, intelligent lyrics, vocals that soar...
2. Scissor Sisters - Debut. The kaleidoscope that was the 70s, reconstructed with an ironic, contemporary gay eye. And what a stage show! Can't wait for the DVD..
3. Franz Ferdinand - Debut. Art students from Scotland revive New Wave and make it exciting and fresh. Hooks galore, and an anthemic romp about the pleasure of dancing with another man. Awesome. (There's lots of great CDs in this genre if you like it).
4. Delgados - Universal Audio. Quirky Scottish melodicists break through with mid-60s pop clarity and a light touch missing from their previous masterpieces.
5. High Dials - A New Devotion. A festival of mid-60s mod-rock, psychedlia, and garage all served as delicious three-minute pop nuggets.
Hope the above brings some of you enormous pleasure in 2005.
Love, Aaron
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Hope, 2005
I started 2005 off right, with a donation to help the the South Asia Tsunami Relief Effort through Unicef's Tsunami Aid site. 5 million people for whom a drink of water and a spoonful of rice could make the difference between life and death. Unfathomable. Peace be with you. Love, Aaron
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