LINKS
ARCHIVE
« May 2007 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Open Community
Post to this Blog
May 24, 2007
How Sweet It Is To Be Shot By You
Mood:  hungry

I just had to share this with you.  It's a priceless rendition of "Sweet Baby Luke", written by pengwyn, and it made me snort tea all over the desk.  She notes, "It probably won't make any sense to you unless you've seen Dust and know the song Sweet Baby James (I like to go for the smallest possible demographic)."   Feel free to hum along!

***

There is a young cowboy that lives in the hills,
The Gospel of Luke is his only companion
As he rides through some wild Macedonian canyon,
Robbing and looting with filthy mercenaries...

As the moon rises, he sits by the fire,
Thinkin' about flashbacks and brothers with guns;
Closing his eyes as the fellows retire,
Cuddling with young sheep or sucking their thumbs,
It's then very softly he hums:

Goodnight, you red-light ladies,
Rockabye, Sweet Baby Luke,
Gunfights and brothels
Make life seem less awful,
And sometimes I drink till I puke,
Then rockabye, Sweet Baby Luke.

Now the pruney old lady, as she tells the tale,
A saintly young woman perturbed our bold hellion,
And he threw all his gold on a ripe watermelon,
Shot up the bad guys and made a heroic stand...

There's a song that they sing in that poor messed-up place
Of a strange blue-eyed hero who turned back to die;
It's true that he plugged Teacher's wife by mistake--
Well, martyrs-in-training can't get everything right.
But we'd rather take him alive,

Singing Goodnight, confusing ladies,
Rockabye, Sweet Baby Luke,
I'll bite the dust
As my fate says I must--
(Chorus of Fanfic Writers, Fazgul, etc., breaks in) Or perhaps he'll
survive by some fluke,
And we'll rockabye Sweet Baby Luke!


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 12:30 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
May 22, 2007
'Scuse Me While I Kiss This Guy
Mood:  accident prone

"Beast of Burden" by the Rolling Stones came on the radio this morning while I was driving to work, and I realized how horribly I've misheard the lyrics over the years.

For a long time, back in the day, I thought they were singing "I'll Never Eat Your Pizza Burnin' ".  My naively youthful ears interpreted "you're a pretty pretty pretty pretty pretty pretty girl", as "You're Richard Richard Richard Richard Richard Richard Pryor".  At one point, I swear, Mick Jagger sings "suck a duck".

It's not just that song, either.  Initially, I heard "Spirits In The Material World" as "There Are Spirits In My Hot Cereal Bowl".  It took me years to figure out that in ELO's "Evil Woman", Jeff Lynne was singing You found a fool lying in a daze, not You found Ethel lying in a daze.  And don't even get me started on Elton John.

I've never had this problem with David's narration.  His voice is clear as a bell, even on my ancient TV with muddy sound.  Maybe that's why he's an actor, not a rock singer.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 4:52 PM EDT
Updated: May 22, 2007 5:17 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
May 21, 2007
Worse Than Sex
Mood:  d'oh

Our local theater is staging a production of The Full Monty this Friday night, which is incredibly brave of them, considering the small population of our town.  The sign at the ticket booth explicitly states “mature audiences only”.  (The very fact that I am thinking about going qualifies me as immature).

As long as I can be assured that none of the actors are my neighbors or co-workers, I might be willing to chance it.  I’ll bring along some lye to fling into my mind’s eye just in case.

***

Having said, in an earlier entry, that I was one of 3 people in America who’ve never been on television, I’m now forced to recant that statement.  Several people came up to me this morning and said they saw me on the news last night.  (I was out of town, and had no idea this transpired).  It was a clip from Saturday’s Dennis Kucinich rally, of me listening raptly and looking, in the words of one friend, “bemused”.

Now, I had deliberately made us sit in the back, so as to be out of camera range.  But cameramen can sense fear.  They'll hone in on you like a leopard on a wounded Thompson's gazelle.

I was at the rally because Dennis Kucinich is running for President, and I've always liked him.  He’s a short vegan Congressman from Cleveland with a lot of radical ideas about peace and environmentalism and social equality and fair trade and international cooperation, which means the press totally ignores him.  In true Wellstone Democrat style, his life and actions deeply support his convictions.  He reaches out and connects to ordinary people and grass-roots causes as a natural extension of his beliefs and aspirations.  (Sound like any socially aware actors we know?)  Kucinich was also one of the very, very few in Congress with the courage to vote against the USA PATRIOT Act.  Not because he loves terrorists, but because the 300+ page bill was hastily introduced at 2:30 am.  Nobody had a chance to read through the thing before the vote was called, but they all voted “yea” anyway, motivated by post-9/11 fear.  Now there’s some responsible legislating.  I bet you could easily sell used mattresses to these people over the phone.

Speaking of the USA PATRIOT Act, why is it (I ponder parenthetically) that the most toxic legislation, programs, and think tanks are often gilded over with innocuous-sounding names?  Like “Focus on the Family” (the organization that "outed" SpongeBob Squarepants), or “The Clean Air Act”.  If there’s a lobbying group called, say, “The Basket Of Puppies Foundation”, chances are it’s actually a neo-nazi Dominionist organization that wants to tattoo the Ten Commandments onto everyone’s rear end and require preschoolers to carry guns.  Generally speaking, these fluffy, cozy-sounding names are a sneaky way of making weird social policy sound palatable, and automatically branding the opposition as traitors.  After all, only a coldhearted monster would be against puppies or patriots.  And if you're against puppies, you're against mandatory tattooing.  And if you're against mandatory tattooing, you're against America.  Why do you hate America, you basket-of-puppies-hating America haters?

So anyways, now I’ve lost my television virginity, goldarnit.  I’m not special anymore.

Since the gods are determined to make a mockery of me, let’s try an experiment and make a few more sweeping, categorical statements:

I’m one of 3 people in America who’ve never won the lottery.

I’m one of 3 people in America who’ve never gotten a MacArthur genius grant.

I’m one of 3 people in America who’ve never been shipwrecked on a tropical island with David Wenham, a crate of champagne, and a shipment of Yankee Candles.

Go ahead, universe!  I dare you to make a liar out of me once again!


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 4:45 PM EDT
Updated: May 21, 2007 5:16 PM EDT
Post Comment | View Comments (1) | Permalink
May 18, 2007
ALERT: Be a banquet
Mood:  lazy

Today's blog title is taken from some spam that oozed into my inbox yesterday.  Consider yourself alerted (in case you were only planning to be a midnight snack).

So, the other day, I found myself utterly mesmerized by a PBS program called "When Sharks Attack".  Predictably, most of the stories were about unlucky surfers in Florida, California, Brazil, South Africa, and Australia.  The story that horrified me the most was a guy whose teenage son got eaten by a shark while swimming after dark in a lake in Queensland.  That's right, a lake.  Apparently, there is a system of open canals and lakes which connect to the sea.  Baby sharks occasionally swim through the sluice gates, then grow too big to get out again.  After the boy's body was found, fishermen caught three sizable tiger sharks out of the lake.

Let us all pray that the cast and crew of Australia remain safe from shark attack (including land sharks, pool sharks, and card sharks).

Sharks don't give me the willies nearly as much as snakes (I didn't see Jaws, but I did see the Indiana Jones movie where they get trapped in the tomb with 80 gajillion snakes and one torch.  Brr.).  It's just one of those unexplained phobias that one is born with.  One day, in Kentucky, I saw a water snake swimming down a stream.  I nearly passed out.  It's bad enough watching a snake undulate across the grass in two dimensions, but watching one writhe freely through space made me want to crawl out of my skin and up the nearest tree.  Virtually all water snakes are poisonous, which added a few extra jeebies to my heebies.

We used to have a "snake man" in the Old Port section of the city, a neighborhood where sailors on shore leave mix with drunken college students, drug addicts, magicians, tourists, and people with eccentric opinions scrawled on cardboard signs.   (The Old Port also has the most fabulous concentration of restaurants this side of San Francisco.)  Our snake man wasn't a professional like the one at La Perouse.  He was just a regular guy with a pet 8-foot python named Gus.  In the summertime, Snake Man and Gus liked to stroll around the sidewalks and attract crowds.  In particular, Snake Man and Gus liked to pose outside the window of whatever restaurant I was eating at.  I didn't mind, so long as there was a pane of glass safely between me and the muscular, scaly flank of Gus.  And so long as Gus wasn't being fed.

A couple of years ago, the cops cracked down on public python mongering.  Gus and his owner no longer roam the streets, delighting tourists.  And the Old Port is just that much less colorful for it.

Mercifully, sharks are even less of a threat here.  The ocean water is much too cold.  The biggest worries are kelp drifting inside your bathing suit, and your feet going numb from frostbite (the signal that it's time to get out of the water).  A crab might pinch your toe, but you're not going to get munched on by anything bigger than you.

Perhaps I should change the subject line to ALERT: DON'T be a banquet.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 9:38 AM EDT
Updated: May 18, 2007 10:48 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
May 11, 2007
Death Wore A Feathered Mullet
Mood:  energetic

Lately, interviewers have been joking with David about his newly acquired fight skills -- "So, do you think you could beat up several menacing thugs in an alley?"  "Do you think you could whip Russell Crowe?" -- which I think is absolutely hilarious.  That's the classic schoolyard nerd debate, to argue over which superhero would win in a fight.  Superman or Blue Lantern? Batman or Aqua Teen?  Luke Skywalker or Harry Potter?

It's very tempting to apply this nerdly debate to David's characters.  Let's make a few matchups, and ask ourselves:

WHO WOULD WIN?

Sam Flynn vs. Yogi Bear  Hey there, Booboo!  Yogi is smarter than the average bear, and Sam is smarter than the average park ranger.  Unfortunately, Sam Flynn doesn't have the resources to stop Yogi Bear from filching pic-i-nic baskets from tourists.  Even though Sam's got a truck, he can't be everywhere at once.  Jellystone Park is a huge place.  Also, Yogi can violate the laws of physics.  We'll have to give this one to Yogi Bear.

Brett Sprague vs. Dr. Phil  Can lovable, avuncular Dr. Phil rescue Brett from his darker demons with his homespun, vaguely nonsensical wisdom?  "You don't need to feel bad to get all uppity!.....You don't need feelings to wax your elbows!.....You don't need an avocado to buy my book!....You don't need the Power of Cheese to make a coffee table!"  Sadly, Brett is beyond the redemptive power of words.  Brett wrecks a few chairs, utters several bleeped-out curse words, and leaves.  Cut to commerical.  Brett Sprague 1, Dr. Phil 0.

Carl vs. "Ring Around The Collar"  Ring Around The Collar:  man's eternal nemesis, since the dawn of consciousness (or rather, since the dawn of collared goatskin pelts).  Often seen with its scheming sidekick, Ring Around The Bathtub.  Carl's headgear gadgetry is of no avail here, but his flask of holy water, in combination with a silver chalice of Sanctified Whitening Detergent, vanquishes these enemies instantly.  Victory: Carl.

Johnny Spitieri vs. Johnnie Cochran (O.J. Simpson's lawyer) 
"If it doesn't fit, you must acquit."
"If what don't fit?" 
"It. IT!" 
"What about it?" 
"If it doesn't make sense, you must find for the defense."
"There you go again, sayin' 'it', when youse don't even know what 'it' is.  Your Honor, he's tryin' to verbal me."
"If you don't know what 'it' means, you must improvise more courtroom scenes."
"There you go again, tryin' to confuuuse me.  Who's defendin' who here?" 
Result:  Johnnie Cochran pays for Johnny Spit's lunch.

Murray Whelan vs. A Package Of Baloney   "E-Z Open Seal", says the package.  "Tear Here" is printed in alluring letters across the top.  Murray tugs at the seal with his fingers, then tries with his teeth.  The package laughs at his feeble efforts.   Murray gets out a butter knife, but the dull blade makes no headway, and he bruises his knuckle on the sink.  Then Murray clips off the top of the package with a pair of scissors, only to discover that there's no longer enough purchase to get past the diabolical Zip-Loc Fortress Of Freshness.  Grabbing a steak knife, Murray growls in frustration as he stabs and stabs and stabs and stabs.  Eventually, he manages to gouge out a piece of baloney the size of a postage stamp, in the process getting blood and divots all over the counter.  Verdict:  A tie.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 9:31 AM EDT
Updated: May 11, 2007 10:39 AM EDT
Post Comment | View Comments (2) | Permalink
May 10, 2007
Bonfire of the Insanities
Mood:  on fire

Excerpt from an LA Times interview with Frank Miller, in response to criticism of 300's portrayal of Persians:

"Miller scoffs at those notions. "I think it's ridiculous that we set aside certain groups and say that we can't risk offending their ancestors. Please. I'd like to say, as an American, I was deeply offended by 'The Last of the Mohicans.' "

*sigggghhh* Nothing gets my dander up faster than a bad analogy.  I sort of understand what Frank Miller is trying to say, but it's not a great example.  The Last of the Mohicans doesn't depict British settlers as a mutant army of goat-headed perverts led by a gay giant.  Nor are we currently at war with the British.  Nor are they worried about their global image, or about becoming the targets of hate and discrimination abroad.  So STEP OFF, GIRLFRIEND.  Don't make me wag my forefinger at you.

(Side note: my brother, whom faithful Grove readers know as "Dinky Davey Diddums", was an extra in Last of the Mohicans.  I haven't seen the movie, though, so I don't know which senselessly slaughtered background Native American is him.  However, as an American, I am deeply offended by Frank Miller's being deeply offended by this film.)

Now, it's not really Frank Miller's fault that the right wing has hijacked 300 as a rallying point for the perpetual Wo-ah On Terr-a.  But I'm still going to wag my forefinger at him anyways, because all of his stories are riddled with the same stunted black-and-white morals that are used to justify perpetual war and belligerent foreign policy in the real world (or at least, in this country).  Some of our loudest cheerleaders for war actively avoided combat and military service: George Bush, Tom DeLay, Dick Cheney, Rush Limbaugh, Trent Lott, Dennis Hastert, Dick Armey, Bill Frist, Rick Santorum, John Ashcroft, Karl Rove, Newt Gingrich (need I go on?).  Yet they've made a career out of trashing the records of those who did serve (John Kerry, Jack Murtha, Max Cleland, Al Gore, Ted Kennedy), in order to further their own political interests.  Max Cleland lost three limbs in Vietnam, for God's sake, and his opponent ran ads denigrating his service, impugning his courage, and practically accusing him of tongue-kissing Osama bin Laden.  It's hard to imagine anything more cowardly, hypocritical, and profoundly unpatriotic. 

And yet, we see 300 constantly being invoked by these same right-wing commentators as a moral guide to the universe.  I can't even count how many rah-rah-war-is-great editorial pieces I've read that cite 300.  I think these people actually do envision themselves in leather diapers, delivering spectacular slow-motion ass-kickings to terrorists.  That is, they WOULD put on a military uniform and go all Leonidas in Iraq, but America needs them to sit behind a keyboard and blog about how evil all the "surrender monkeys" are.

George Orwell, in his essay "Notes on Nationalism", defines nationalism as "the habit of assuming that human beings can be classified like insects and that whole blocks of millions or tens of millions of people can be confidently labelled 'good' or 'bad'."  He further defines it as "the habit of identifying oneself with a single nation or other unit, placing it beyond good and evil and recognising no other duty than that of advancing its interests."  To Orwell, nationalism was a form of blind moral insanity.  But the phenomenon will be instantly familiar to viewers of '300', and anyone who's paid attention to the political scene in the US over the past 7 years.

So I say, let's not confuse foreign relations with WWF Smackdown matches.  Or fantasy with reality.  Or manhood with continual, unrelenting violence and misogyny.  Anybody who gets their moral values from comic books, as David would say, "needs to have their head read."

On a completely unrelated topic, my house got sprayed by an albino skunk last night.  Nothing - and I mean NOTHING - lingers like skunk.  We once had a weiner dog with a Napoleon complex, who got into a scrap with a skunk one night.  The weiner dog latched on to the skunk's butt and clung on for dear life.  The skunk sprayed directly into his open mouth and all over his head.  For about 18 months afterwards, every time it rained, the weiner dog exuded skunk, like one of those plug-in air fresheners.

Baking powder and tomato juice help, but if you get any eau de skunk on your own skin, it will be a long time before anyone will want to slow-dance with you.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 12:44 PM EDT
Updated: May 10, 2007 2:27 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
May 7, 2007
Getting in touch with one's Inner Carl
Mood:  caffeinated

Once in awhile, I dream up new inventions (literally, while I sleep).   Last night's dream invention was an accessory called the TastePod.  Similar to the iPod, the TastePod will allow you to upload food flavors and then sample them any time, anywhere.  Instead of headphones, it comes with a little straw thing that you put in your mouth and suck on.  In the dream, I had the TastePod connected to a jar of grape jelly and a chocolate bon-bon with a mystery center (probably kumquat), and was uploading their flavors to my Dessert Play List.

Now, this product may sound revolting, but I believe it would have many practical applications.   The dieters' and ex-pat market would be huge.  If you've ever lived in a different country for a period of time, often you develop severe cravings for certain foods from your native land.  Maybe you find yourself craving kiwi in Kamloops, kippers in Kansas, or yearning for a ham sandwich and a shot of vodka in the middle of Riyadh.  With the TastePod, you can indulge yourself without offending your Muslim hosts or spending a fortune at a foreign foods specialty store.

The second practical use for the TastePod: preserving the tastes of long-gone foods from childhood.  I don't think I could actually bring myself to eat a Space Food Stick or a bowl of Kaboom cereal, but I sure wouldn't mind tasting them again and reliving hyperactive Saturday mornings of yore.  Similarly, Grandma's apple pie could be digitally archived for future generations to enjoy.

The third practical application: partaking of expensive meals on a budget.  For a few dollars, you can download Emeril Lagasse's latest e-meal from the iTaste website (and skip the rack of lamb if it doesn't sound appealing), dine at the Commander's Palace in New Orleans without leaving your living room, or balance out the $1.99 meatloaf special from "Heimlich Pete's Greasy Cauldron" with a mouth-watering infusion of virtual Chateau d'Yquem sauternes.

Even antisocial types can find things to love about the TastePod.  Instead of blasting rap music from your car, you can blast the scent of liver 'n' onions.  (Stick it to The Man!)  Punk aficionados will revel in the shuffle feature:  root beer/goat haunch/Altoid mint.

In the interests of full disclosure, I feel I should mention that this entire TastePod dream was set aboard a naval destroyer in the South Pacific.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 11:53 AM EDT
Updated: May 7, 2007 1:03 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
May 3, 2007
Pushing up the...er....Daisies
Mood:  amorous
Now Playing: Hymn number 7833291

In one respect, David fans are extremely lucky:  We can be fairly sure he'll still be alive when the end credits roll.  His characters are remarkably durable.  By and large, he's played either good-guy survivors, or the sort of indelible villains who would survive a nuclear blast along with other indestructible creatures such as cockroaches and Keith Richards.  Rarely, if ever, does he hand in his lunch pail during a film.  And even then, it tends to happen towards the end, so we don't spend an inordinate amount of movie time sulking over the sudden drop-off in hotness.  Off the top of my head, I can only think of three on-screen incidents that proved fatal to our Daisy:

1. Gunshot wound

2. Leprosy

3. Neck stab/topple into a well

If David were interested in expanding his death repertoire, there's no shortage of characters with interesting demises to choose from.  There's Aeschylus, who got beaned by a tortoise when an eagle mistook his bald head for a rock.  George, Duke of Clarence (Edward IV's brother), who was drowned in a butt of malmsey.  Jack Daniel (founder of the whiskey distillery), who kicked a safe in anger, injured his toe, and succumbed to blood poisoning.  Henry I, who died of a "surfeit of lampreys".  (By the way, Surfeit of Lampreys would be an excellent name for a blog, if I were ever to start a real blog, with interesting topics, that people actually read.)

Even Sean Bean has a Death By Cow website, listing an array of spectacular ways in which the British actor has perished on film.  Boromir's arrowy death ranks as relatively pedestrian compared to getting crushed by a satellite dish, or getting blown away by Christian Bale while reading Yeats.

Not that I want David to die in films, you understand.  It's just that if he does, his demise should be memorable and distinctive, like his craft.  Alligator, lightning, errant golf ball -- something along those lines.

And now, because I'm too lazy to split this off into a separate topic, we come to the fun part of today's post:  Ethical Dilemmas for David Wenham Fans.  Read the scenarios below, and decide what YOU would do in each situation.  There are no right or wrong answers.

1.  You meet your soulmate: the one person on this earth who completes you.  However, there is a catch.  Every three months, your soulmate will be horsewhipped in public by a simpering, bowler-hatted English guy with a mustache, unless you agree to take a pill.  The pill will cause David to resemble a sweaty slob from a beer commercial, and his performances will seem horrendous.  (Only to you; he'll appear normal to everyone else.)  Also, the pill causes all music to sound to you as if it were being performed by Alice in Chains.    Do you take the pill?   

2.  David has just wrapped work on a new movie.  All reports indicate that this will be his best role ever, guaranteeing him widespread critical acclaim, an Oscar nomination, and unlimited offers for years to come.  The role is funny and deep and sad and breathtaking and romantic, and also requires him to spend a fair amount of time shirtless.  There's just one catch: the distributor refuses to release the movie unless you agree to have a fiberglass unicorn horn surgically grafted onto your forehead for a period of two weeks.  Do you agree to do it? 

3.  You are standing next to a set of railroad tracks.  A little ways down, the tracks branch into a "Y" shape.  There is a switch nearby that causes oncoming trains to switch tracks.  Father Damien is napping on one branch of the "Y".  Doug, Luke, Josh, and Eddie Harnovey are asleep on the other branch.  A freight train without brakes is currently bearing down on Doug, Luke, Josh, and Eddie.   By taking action and throwing the switch, you can divert the train to the other branch and save the four of them (but then you'll be killing Father Damien).  By doing nothing and not throwing the switch, you'll be killing four people (but then you'll be saving Father Damien, and the lives of many leper patients).  Do you throw the switch?

4. You are a doctor in a hospital.  Doug, Luke, Josh, and Eddie are patients of yours.  All four are very ill and need organ transplants.  You look outside and see Father Damien strolling down the sidewalk.  If you take action and kidnap Father Damien and transplant his organs into the other four, you'd be killing Father Damien, but saving four lives.  If you do nothing, Father Damien will live, but the other four will die.  How is this any different from problem 3?

5.  You are given two boxes. Inside one box is a hamster.  Inside the other box is Brett Sprague's blood-stained undershirt.  You must select one of these items for your home.

If you choose the hamster, you agree to keep the hamster alive for two years, feeding it daily, giving it clean water, changing its wood chips, etc.  If the hamster dies, you will forfeit $999 to the state.

If you choose Brett Sprague's blood-stained undershirt, you must agree to display it prominently in your living room, without commentary, for two years.  You are not allowed to tell anybody what it is or why it's on display in your living room.  The state will pay you $25 a month if you meet these conditions.  Which box do you choose?

6.  You are shopping with a heroin junkie who keeps stuffing packets of potato chips into his shorts.  If you report him, he'll go back to jail, and neither of you will get square.  If you don't report him, the store owner won't be able to afford insulin for his diabetic parakeet.  Do you dob him in?


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 4:08 PM EDT
Updated: May 4, 2007 10:09 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
April 27, 2007
Run, Forrest, run!
Mood:  not sure

Yesterday morning, while driving to work, I passed a school playground filled with happy children running laps.  My heart swelled with secret schadenfreude, and tormented memories:

1.  Running half-mile laps around a hoarfrost-encrusted playing field at 7:45 am.

2.  Our high school track coach, driving slowly behind the team in her beige "Le Car", loudly berating us with a megaphone.

3.  Ducking out of the practice run with my friend Sonja, savoring a hot fudge sundae at Friendly's, then nonchalantly rejoining the rest of the girls' track team as they straggled back from their far-flung odysseys.  (Mark Twight would have loved us.)

I didn't feel terribly guilty about the sundae transgressions, because my events were sprints and jumping.  Events that were over quickly, and required zero stamina.  We didn't even have a field coach.   Field people were regarded as minor freaks by our distance-running coach, who spent all her time out on the road, nurturing the milers.  We were simply sent off on our own to flounder across the long jump pit or break windows with the discus.  I spent a lot of time lying on the high jump mattress, watching the clouds go by.

Senior year, at our final track meet, the coach from a rival high school pulled me aside after observing my terrible high jump technique, and gave me some pointers.

Pointer #1: Jump over the bar, not through it.

Pointer #2:  Duh.

Pointer #3:  Try not to show up at track meets with hot fudge breath.

With her advice ringing in my head, and one jump left at 4'10", I curved through the approach and cleared the bar with inches to spare.  One by one, the other competitors dropped out.  Much to my shock, I ended up winning the event, with a personal record that would have qualified me for states (had they not already been held a week earlier).  Now that, I felt guilty about.  The other coach could have easily kept her mouth shut, allowed me to foul out, and gotten her team 10 points.  Instead, she opened my eyes to new possibilities.

Two days later, I graduated, and thus ended the track career.  But somewhere in all of this, there's a touching lesson about sportsmanship and laziness.

Such ruminations got me thinking: if Faramir can play forward for the Dom-Land Caribou, and pitch for the Atlanta Braves, why can't we put together a track team composed of David characters?

 100m dash:  Eddie Harnovey

   200m dash: John Francis "Spit" Spitieri

  High jump:  Carl

 

  Hurdles:  Sam Flynn

 

  Javelin:  Carl

 

  Javelin:  Dilios

  Pole vault:  Murray Whelan

  Long jump:  Jim Doyle

  Miniature shotput:  Murray Whelan

 

 


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 3:29 PM EDT
Updated: April 27, 2007 5:44 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
April 25, 2007
Death, Taxes, and Bellbottoms
Now Playing: Celebrity Fruit Window

Goodness me, have we ever gotten spoiled over the last few weeks with all the 300 publicity.  We've been awash in articles, interviews, videos, and photos, not to mention the movie itself (in two different formats, no less).  And now, suddenly, the spigot has been turned off and life is back to normal.  But we David fans are a hardy lot.  Like dromedaries, we can travel for months at a time between the distant oases of David projects, fueled by the occasional mention of a film festival or charity event.  Yes indeed.  Only the strong may call themselves Daisy fans.  Only the masochistic.

As we embark upon this latest desert stretch, across a barren expanse in which no Daisies grow, it will be important to keep your morale up with happy thoughts.  Let's begin with this one: Close your eyes, breathe deeply, and be grateful you weren't mail-audited by the IRS last week, to the tune of $3000.  (Thankfully, most of that bill will go away, once I track down the paperwork proving that I already paid taxes on that set of stock options from 2005.  I like how the IRS generously awards themselves 15% interest, though.  Just try to find that rate in a money market acccount.)

So, as part of this spring's Serenity Now! campaign, I visited an acupuncturist yesterday.  She took my pulse, peered at my tongue, and diagnosed me with mild Spleen Qi deficiency and Blood Stasis.  I'm to abstain from cold drinks, ice cream, and salads, eat only warm foods, and incorporate into my diet more mulberries, kelp, squid, vinegar, abalone, and bladder wrack.  Well, no wonder I'm low on Spleen Qi.  My abalone intake has been seriously lacking.

If anyone has any good recipes for bladder wrack hotdish, let me know.

After the acupuncture visit, I stopped by the local Patagonia outlet, which used to be a reliable source of workout clothes for people who, like, y'know, actually work out.  I came away empty-handed.  Their women's clothing line has mutated into eeeeeentsy cute halter tops and pink size 0 lycra shorts that look like they'd disintegrate if exposed to sunlight or mild breezes.  All the pants are copiously flared, with a 1" rise.  I want clothes you can actually climb rocks in, not clothes that merely suggest that you climb rocks.  Clothes you can sweat in.  Clothes you can stretch in.  Clothes you can be tall in.

It's not just Patagonia.  The Tiny Pink Princess Virus has infected women's athletic clothing everywhere.  Is this a symptom of some sort of post-millennial feminist backlash?  "It's OK for girls to explore Antarctica, but you MUST LOOK CUTE while you're doing it."

Do not go gently into that pink night!  Rage, rage against the flaring of the pants.

That's one reason I admire David: because when it comes to fashion, he wears what looks good on him, not what the magazines tell us all men should be wearing.  He has the courage to buck the tide and dress like an individual.  Gender stereotypes are boring.  And limiting.

Speaking of gender stereotypes, I finally saw "Blades of Glory", after nearly killing myself laughing at the trailer (which was right next to 300 on the MTV site).  It was stupid and wonderful and moronic and outrageously funny.  They got all the figure skating tropes and cliches exactly right, from the overused Sarah Brightman tune "Con Te Partiro", to the overwrought choreography (created by Sarah Kawahara, Michelle Kwan's coach), and most especially the contrasting styles of the two male skaters.  It reminded me of the classic Alexei Urmanov - Elvis Stojko rivalry from the Lillehammer era.  I was a fervent Urmanov partisan, because he drew so much ire for his frilly, ruffly swan costumes, and because of all the kneejerk North American sports commentary dissing the balletic Russian skating style.  Urmanov's Olympic victory may have been a fluke, but he deserved every bit of that gold.  He had far superior speed, line, technique, and edge quality.  Wearing leather and doing choppy straight-line footwork to rock music may excite the crowd, but it ain't skating.

Actually, I wouldn't have minded if Kurt Browning had won in '94.  He's quite possibly the greatest male singles skater of all time.  Gene Kelly on blades.  He can do a program containing nothing but school figures, and still be mesmerizing.  Despite being the first skater to land a quad jump, and winning four world championships, he never medalled at the Olympics.  Just goes to show, you can't judge talent by trophies.

So, to sum up:  IRS and bellbottoms bad.  Acupuncture, Russian skaters, and David Wenham good.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 10:03 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink

Newer | Latest | Older