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August 10, 2004
Gondor Bros. Dry Cleaning
Mood:  accident prone
Now Playing: Scrabble
Test passed, PFaz!

Today's topic: The FTA. Over the past year, the U.S. and Australia have been involved in a series of high-level negotiations for bilateral free trade. I don't know all the specifics, but my impression is that in exchange for access to American markets for Australian farmers and agribusiness, the Australian government is prepared to make concessions that will impact its film and television industry. Namely, the weakening of protective measures, and failure to set local-content quotas. That could prove very bad for the industry, which is already dominated by global processes.

Numerous Aussie actors have spoken out against this threat to their culture and livelihood. I have to agree 100% here; if anything, given the sorry state of U.S. television, I think the trade imbalance should run in the other direction. I'd much rather watch a series like After The Deluge than Am I Hot Or Not? At least Aussie television doesn't actively try to kill your brain cells. I would also hate to see a situation where Aussie filmmakers and actors are forced to compete against one another for scarce jobs and resources. We already don't see enough of David Wenham in the U.S. as it is.

As long as I'm ranting, I'll close with a minor pet peeve of mine: Why are modern-day fiction books ALWAYS labelled as "A Novel"? For example, Snow Falling On Cedars: A Novel. Are the publishers worried we won't recognize it as such? That we might mistake it for an encyclopedia, or a set of dinner forks? It seems vaguely redundant and pretentious, a shorthand indication to the buyer that You Are In The Presence Of Literary Greatness. If I ever write a novel, I'm going to insist that it be labelled "A Bunch Of Paper Covered In Squiggles".

Is this labelling practice going to extend to other consumer areas? Cheerios: A Cereal. Sony: A Television. Etc.

-- make_it_stop: a ranting nutcase

Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 1:24 PM EDT
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August 5, 2004

Mood:  flirty
Ok, this is a test to see if I can get the image working:


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 3:20 PM EDT
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Yeah, you can order space food sticks online through NASA, PFaz...

According to this guy, you can also upload images to your entries....

I foresee much time being wasted here in the Grove.

-- make_it_stop

Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 2:30 PM EDT
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August 4, 2004

Space food sticks are still around? Kewl...

I said all my important stuff in my comment...

Can I really post an image here???

Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 4:36 PM EDT
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How It Began
Having announced the opening of "Daisy's Sacred Grove" with great pomp and fanfare, I then went on vacation for three weeks and left this blog to lie fallow. Sorry about the hiatus.

At any rate, here are three reasons why I love Australia:

1) Footrot Flats.
2) Space Food Sticks are still manufactured there.
3) David Wenham.

I first saw David in The Two Towers, and was impressed with his performance (albeit not so impressed with the changes to Faramir, though I understood the rationale behind it). Then I promptly forgot about the whole Lord of the Rings enterprise, and went about my business.

Several months later, I went to see Return of the King with a 103 degree fever singing in my ears. Sometime around the pyre scene, I realized I was in the presence of an incredible performance. (I may have been identifying overly much with the feverish Faramir, as he lay simmering on the screen without so much as an aspirin).

Long after the credits stopped rolling, David's emotional portrayal of the nearly-barbecued, less-favored younger son continued to haunt me. Back at home, I ripped the shrink wrap off my Two Towers Extended Edition and spent the rest of the week on the couch with a ginger-ale IV drip, marveling at the "Sons of the Steward" scene. Watching him swallow Denethor's abuse was like being punched in the stomach. The economy and subtlety of David's gestures and facial movements were just incredible.

This is going to sound incredibly stupid, but prior to then, I'd never particularly noticed acting as a craft before. I thought that, like many other endeavors in life, 90% of acting was memorizing lines and showing up on time. WRONG, wrong, wrong, wrong. So very wrong. Once the flu cleared up, I sought out David's other work (not easy to do outside his native Australia) and discovered that, apparently, there were dozens and dozens of different characters living inside this one guy. His presence drew attention to small things I'd never paid attention to before: timing, gestures, mannerisms, inflection. It was an astonishing revelation. I wanted to run out and grab people on the sidewalk and say "Look! ACTING!"

Hence the Dessicated Coconut website, my attempt at pamphleteering on David's behalf. It beats harrassing people at airports, anyway.

-- make_it_stop

Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 1:42 PM EDT
Updated: August 5, 2004 2:24 PM EDT
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July 15, 2004
Daisy's Sacred Grove: A New Beginning

WELCOME to our peaceful, consecrated grove. Yes, it's official: Dessicated Coconut now has its own community blog. A place for insane, foaming jeremiads; bloated rants; sharp invective; babble; and polemic.

Or, a place to write down grocery lists and gush about pet hamsters.

Or, a doodle pad. \\@//

Or, a place to post minimalist entries of pure blank space.

So many possibilities. I'm getting teary-eyed just thinking about it.


-- make_it_stop

Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 4:06 PM EDT
Updated: July 15, 2004 4:27 PM EDT
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January 1, 2002
Stalk Lobster

One of the ironclad rules of Dessicated Coconut (besides "No wearing white before Memorial Day") is: Absolutely no paparazzi articles or photos, whatsoever.  The rule is observed out of respect for the privacy of David and his family, and also because I don't agree with the underhanded, stalker-ish methods they use to obtain photos and information.  If anyone's going to make stuff up and spread scurrilous rumors on DC, it's me.

Having said that, I'm going to violate that rule just this once, here in the Grove, because I think it's important to address this.  There's been a small kerfuffle in Daisy Nation lately, after a German tabloid published an article which claims Kate Agnew and David are a) married and b) pregnant.  The text of the article (translated by bellis) runs thusly:

In Lord Of The Rings he rode a horse and in Berlin he lets a limousine drive him around

Actor David Wenham (42, alias Faramir) were together with his pregnant wife Kate Agnew, daughter Eliza Jane (4) and a nanny driven from Hotel Concorde to a playground (somewhere, Tiergarten means Zoo) on Thursday.

After an hour they continued. The married couple went to the National Gallery and looked at black-and-white photos by Japanese Hiroshi Sugimoto (59). Afterwards they went to a designshop in Auguststrasse.

What is Wenham doing here? A couple of days off and sightseeing before the filming of his newest project starts. He's to be in Sönke Wortmans (48) next flick Die Päpstin (Pope Joan) and will be in front of the camera from next week on.

The film also stars John Goodman (56) Johanna Wokalek (33).

****

Personally, I think it's always prudent to consider the source before jumping to conclusions.  BZ Berlin, from what I've been told, is a German tabloid, along the lines of the Sun or the National Enquirer, which has a somewhat carefree approach to the truth.  The reporter who wrote the article obviously didn't speak to the family, just surreptitiously followed them around on what was supposed to be a private day off.  If Kate really is pregnant, I doubt they would break the news to a random papparazzo from a German tabloid, particularly if it was early in the pregnancy.  Generally, cautious people, and especially celebrities, don't publically confirm a pregnancy until they're well into the second or even third trimester.  (Unless you're the Duggars, and you announce it on the Today show even before the second line shows up on the pee stick).

As for the married part, Kate has been referred to as David's wife a few times before, mostly as the result of reporters making inferences and assumptions from what they've observed.  It's part of their job to sculpt a lively narrative about their subjects, but sometimes it leads to inaccuracies.  So, I would caution everyone not to accept any of this as gospel until there's corroboration from a more reputable source.

On a different topic, I saw a bizarre film the other day called The Norman Rockwell Code,  a spoof of The Da Vinci Code.  It had something to do with a cult of lobsters trying to stamp out mermaids.  At the beginning of the film, a director is found dead on the floor of the Norman Rockwell museum with a harpoon through his chest, clutching a lemon and a can of tuna fish.  The bad guy, who's half lobster and half human, is sort of like Silas, the albino Opus Dei monk from The Da Vinci Code.  He flagelletes himself by dipping his claws into a pot of boiling water and going "Ow!....Ow!...Ow!....."  Eventually, he's subdued with melted butter, and the police arrive and put giant rubber bands over his claws.

The director and lead actor were at the screening, and they introduced themselves afterwards, to much applause.  The lead actor said he was the youngest in a large Catholic family ("It gave me a HUGE ego!" he joked), and got bitten by the drama bug early on.

That reminds me of someone, but I can't quite put my finger on it....  Hm.  Oh well.  It'll come to me.


Posted by dessicatedcoconut at 1:00 AM EST
Updated: August 31, 2008 12:01 AM EDT
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