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14 February 2008

In re: Valentines

The Rant:

>   As part of my anti-Valentine's day gig, I want to
>   remind you all that today is Frederick Douglass'
>   birthday.  Yes, the same Frederick Douglass that
>   appeared in your sixth grade English class in a
>   Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An
>   American Slave.  So, while ya'll are whimsically
>   enjoying candies and dinner and kisses and the like,
>   consider a moment of silence to reflect upon the
>   birth of one of the most influential figures in US
>   History.

Then...

Just before I head out on the anti-Valentine's Day pub tour, I visit my mom and dad.  My mom calls me shy.  My dad says I'm oblivious (and recounts how some non-cougar eyes were following me at church).  I say that I don't care.  I'm "single by choice," or so goes my cop-out, and besides "if I get married now, I'm just going to get screwed... royally" screams that jaded side of me, that won't give love a chance.

So, I remembered.  I can give, today.  And this I give to you: Obama for Valentine's Day...  sexy obama loves you too. [ via Hill and Bluntest ]

Obamavd_05


Obamavalentine_2


I guess I'm not so good at this "bitter-anti-lover" thing either. I'll enjoy my yam fries and cherry wheat sam now.

11 February 2008

When it's this cold outside

Nd_grotto_to_lakes_snow_sunset

The windchill in Boston this morning is something like negative 16 farenheit.  Brrrr.  This is totally what one would want to expect in Boston, though.  After all, what good would New England winters be (and all the lore around it, from something about Walden Pond to something about ski towns that want to secede from the States) without a couple of shots and blasts of Arctic cold?  And besides, it has been much too warm this winter, even though it's snowed a bit.  Winters back in the day were always colder and snowier... oh wait, I think that's my "bare foot walks in the snow uphill bothways" gene starting to kick in.

Seriously, though, crisp cold weather makes me daydream on the way to the bus stop.  I love breathing out of my mouth to try to form a little smokestack--a throw back to being 5 or 6 or so--and all the while, conjure up the warm, green thoughts of how distant and askew summer time and canobie lake rollercoasters and cranes beach seashores fade in my head.  The cold and the walk make me appreciate the MBTA bus when it shows up, even if it is late.  The walk in the cold makes me second think the whole iPod and sappy music thing because (a) the earphone chord seems to freeze on up, and (b) missy elliot and nelly furtado and other booty-shaking music works a lot better.

Snow's coming, too.  Snow.  And with that, the crisp cold bright sunny morning seems just perfect in my mind, because I know that tomorrow (or really the day after), I'll be hauling ass trying to shovel the longest driveway in Charlestown.  Yay!

03 February 2008

Eli Manning--Wha?! Wha?!?

Ifoots_eli_manning_wins_pats_lose

Errr, ummm, what just happened? I know, Notre Dame football blew this year, so I've been a hater when things have come to Patriot's football.  But wha???  TNY Giants win Superbowl XLII in a score of 17-14 over the New England Patriots. Quarterback Eli Manning was the game’s MVP but it was the Giant’s defense that really secured the win.  Ughhh.  I never win (and I didn't even get to do a keg stand at MW's Super Bowl partayyy).

31 January 2008

Errr another one down

They're going down like flies.  I literally just went to bed and woke up.  Damn.  So long, Rudy Giuliani.

Campaignmatters

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30 January 2008

Goodbye to You

Campaignmatters

Wall_street_journal_law_blog_edward

Well, well, another fallen soldier.  John Edwards says goodbye to his bid for the presidency.  I feel like a little bit of Michelle Branch should be playing in the background; the guitar strumming in the background ("[a]nd it hurts to want everything and nothing at the same time").  The word out on the street is that Edwards won't be endorsing either Hillary or Obama any time soon.  I wonder if his endorsement would make much of a dent in what is basically a two-person race for the Democratic nomination... just in time for Super Tuesday!

According to the Nation, in the Florida primary Clinton was at 50 percent. Obama was winning 33 percent. Former North Carolina Senator John Edwards was at 14 percent. And Dennis Kucinich, who is out of the race, pulled 1 percent.  But what I thought was interesting was what lay in those small Florida towns -- J.E. pulled 31% of the vote in those towns.  And even more weird, what J.E. demonstrated was that, with his "of the people" attitude and appeal, he could pull off a strong turnout in rural areas in states where he didn't even campaign.  So, what's to come of states like Oklahoma, Tennessee, Minnesota and those states with vast rural stretches? With J.E. saying aloha, it looks like the heat is off of Clinton in rural areas that aren’t exactly an urban base for Obama.  I like Obama/Edwards, but we'll see... we'll see...

28 January 2008

A SAGging Profession of Love

I'm having trouble watching the State of the Union address with my complete and undivided attention.  Something about being tired and "having ADD" and instead being distracted by some of the fotos from the 2008 Screen Actor Guild Awards.  Let me tell you, some hideous clothing and hairstyles draped the bodies of our friends in Hollywood.  But, some things don't change (completely).  That includes the eternal hotness of Jeremy Piven and Eva Longoria.

Eva_longoria_and_jeremy_piven

I've professed my mancrush before (scroll down to 'Piven my Pivens').   I still haven't upgraded my Comcast package to include HBO, though.  That's too bad, since I'm missing all this Entourage.   

Ok, maybe I should pay attention to the SOTUA a bit more closely.  I'm a Government major for Christ's sake!

27 January 2008

Change is Inevitable II [In re: United States Gypsum Company]

United_states_gypsum_boston_plant_2

I went to the 6pm Mass Young Adult Mass at Saint Mary's with my parents, and sat up near the front with my mom and my dad.  I really didn't say much to my parents.  I happened to bump into them on the way to church as I rushed down Main Street, and with our coat collars up and wool hats pulled down near our ears, I abashedly asked my dad up what he was going to do.  So we talked, and there was a lot of "I think, I feel, I'll figure" it out type of conversation going on.  Finally, we happened upon the great granite and brick structure that is Saint Mary's, and felt obliged to walk in.  When we got to the pew, my dad commented on my shirt: "Varitek" he said.  Then my mom asked, with Filipino accent and all: "oh, why, honey, you're not cantoring tonight?"  I kind of shrugged it off.  It was the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time, and the first reading, from Isaiah chapter 8, verse 23 or so. 

Anguish has taken wing, dispelled is darkness:
for there is no gloom where but now there was distress.
The people who walked in darkness
have seen a great light;
upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom
a light has shone.

I let the reading sink in my head and the thoughts process the matrix of my mind.

Now there comes a time when you really do begin to worry about your parents.  I don't know if it's part of the natural life cycle or what, but it seems like, in the midst of weddings and engagements and pregnancies, talk of the parents is the next in line hot topic among my friends and my junior associate co-workers; we're either tackling the fact that some day, our parents will get old and die, or we're avoiding the topic because we're too scared to confront the change and the love-anguish associated with the idea.  I always thought I'd be long off from thinking about my parents in that way, and luckily, I think that's a far ways away still.  But somewhere admidst the homily and the Nicene Creed during Mass, I started thinking about the United States Gypsum Plant at the end of Terminal Street in Charlestown.  I really couldn't comprehend that USG was going to idle a good portion of the Boston plant come the end of March; that all these employees, who watched me and my siblings grow up, were being W.A.R.N.'d under the Workers Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act; that, even though all of these people survived USG's Chapter 11 reorganization and crazy USG company picnics at Canobie Lake and even crazier times working just beneath the Tobin Bridge, in an instant, they were all suddenly being let down and let off.  I'm sure, for some, this was like the miracle in the works waiting to happen.  And I can assure you -- there will be many a commuter who will be happy when they don't have to drive over the Tobin Bridge through the steam from the USG Plant's steam stacks. But I, I felt like a piece of me -- even though I didn't work at USG (my sister, though, worked in the lab all through undergraduate and graduate school summers) -- was dying off.  And I felt like, suddenly, I was worried about what my dad was going to do.

I'll always remember when I got into Notre Dame.  It was my birthday in 1999, and since I had been feeling a bit nauseous at school, I dodged my friends after seventh period, called in sick to work, and just went home (I didn't know, at the time, that I ended up missing my own surprise 18th birthday party).   I came home to find a thin letter from the ND Admissions office.  And so, you know how the urban legend goes "if the letter's thin, there's no way you're in."  Well, I eventually mustered up the courage to open the letter.  The rest is pretty much history, but I did call my dad and hiked down to Terminal Street to the USG plant to show him the letter.  And in lockstep Rudy style, I put on a green hard hat and walked through the USG plant with my dad.  "Little Neal's going to Notre Dame" he'd announce proudly.  And of course, all of the familiar, tired faces at USG lit up a bit -- whether congratulatory or a bit bitter -- and extended manly hands to shake my soft  adolescent paw.  I remember the way the fine dust from crushed gypsum rock felt with every shake; it dried the hands and crusted in the same way thin layers of overly diluted plaster crusts on the surface of a spackling spade.  I recall the tears that were in my dad's eyes when he read the letter at the front entrance of the plant.  And I'll always remember the thought I had standing there under the bright, orangish lights inside the factory: "thank you, USG, for helping our family pull through.  And thank you, USG, for making sure I didn't end up throwing cement bags for the rest of my life."

As with any good post, I guess I don't know where this is heading.  But what I do know is this: with the USG Plant idling along the shores of the Mystic River, another piece of middle America, industrial America as we know it in Greater Boston, will move into askew memories of an (industrial) time that once was.  Another opportunity for some middle-class, blue-collar, working-class family to live on the hope of getting ahead -- much like the family I was born and raised from -- and subsist on at least a half decent living, will ride away on the waves of what is, to many, a vibrant and transforming economy.  And with that, I'm left to wonder what else is left for the working-class folks of Greater Boston to do.  I wonder, with pause, what my dad will do.

26 January 2008

Mike's, Juno and HIPAA forms

What a great, lazy day.  Some people from Northwestern Mutual came to my house to interrogate me for life insurance stuff.  I napped.  I blogged.  I went to the gym.  And me and Jess took the Corolla up to Showcase Cinemas in Revere, saw Juno, and then came to Charlestown (stopping off, of course, at Mike's Roast Beef on Broadway).  Ok, I just sounded like a first grader writing a composition on "what did you do on Saturday?"

So, Juno was ok.  So were the chicken finger platters from Mike's.  But for some reason, the rerun of Saturday Night Live from October is friggin' hilarious!  I think the Amy Moehler skit with Bon Jovi started off a night of goodness.

Anyway, here's the quote of the day: "So, do you want me to sign you up a HIPAA form so I can release my sex records to you?"   ooops...

25 January 2008

In re: Addicted to House

The image “http://www.housemd-guide.com/images/occams.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Alex, through his girlfriend, has got me addicted to House MD now.  I guess it's not surprising that I like another hospital-based or CSI-based TV show.  And I'm not surprised that I'm opting to stay in tonight and watch season one.  This has got to be the good side of the writer's strike: there's a lot of catch up to be done, so now, it's being done.

The House quip of the night came from Chase, the seminary school quip.  I guess it's not really his entirely; some of it comes from the Bible:

"I was in seminary school. They asked us once what our favorite passage was. I chose 1 Peter 1:7. 'These trials only test your faith to see whether or not it is strong and pure. Your faith is being tested as fire tests gold and purifies it.'"

22 January 2008

The Library of Congress Flickr Pilot

Caribou_maine_1941_library_of_congr

Trucks outside of a starch factory, Caribou, Aroostook County, Me. There were almost fifty trucks in the line. Some had been waiting for twenty-four hours for the potatoes to be graded and weighed (LOC)

Edward_hopper_library_of_congress_m

Grand Grocery, Lincoln, Nebraska.

Who knew?  Now, you have an opportunity to contribute to describing the world’s public photo collection by adding tags or leaving comments on the 3100 or so photos from the Library of Congress. No known copyright restrictions on the photographs, the LOC’s use of Flickr is a brilliant idea.  And it's absolutely amazing seeing the 1930s-40s in color.  I just always think it happened in burnt sepia or black and white.

The Library of Congress' buddy icon Library of Congress Flickr pilot

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