Thursday, October 01, 2009
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
musicians kicking the bucket
The media makes such a fuss speculating about the causes of death for musicians like Michael Jackson and now Mozart. You'd think specifying the precise way they went was more sensational than what they left to us.
Thursday, July 02, 2009
alms
Male panhandlers in the subway are easy to pretend to ignore. But today a middle-aged black woman hobbled her way onto a crowded subway train. One of her eyes was screwed half shut and she had the most tragic and hopeless and crazed expression of anyone I'd ever seen in public. Light blue clothes hung off her body like ill-fitted hospital robes, and a single key was tied to one of the drawstrings, perhaps put there by someone who feared she'd lose anything that wasn't securely attached.
"Won't somebody please help me?" she uttered, and it was somewhere between a plea and a wail.
"Won't somebody please help me?" she said once, twice, thrice. Her cries, quivering with desperation and resentment and alarm, were identical down to the slightest inflection. A well-dressed young asian woman held out a dollar bill, which she accepted silently. She then made her way down the aisle in the opposite direction. I was unwilling to decide if something particularly horrible had happened to her today or if this was simply her routine.
The last time Andrew and I were headed to Penn Station, he was accosted by an angry young man who wanted to start a fight. "You stepped on my shoe and you didn't apologize. You were too busy looking at your pretty girlfriend. You're a tourist, huh? Somebody should teach you some manners." The strangest things happen on the 1-2-3. We came into the evening light on 7th Ave, but for a while I walked around Midtown South with a sadness headache, unable to forget the voice of this haunting, haunted woman.
"Won't somebody please help me?" she uttered, and it was somewhere between a plea and a wail.
"Won't somebody please help me?" she said once, twice, thrice. Her cries, quivering with desperation and resentment and alarm, were identical down to the slightest inflection. A well-dressed young asian woman held out a dollar bill, which she accepted silently. She then made her way down the aisle in the opposite direction. I was unwilling to decide if something particularly horrible had happened to her today or if this was simply her routine.
The last time Andrew and I were headed to Penn Station, he was accosted by an angry young man who wanted to start a fight. "You stepped on my shoe and you didn't apologize. You were too busy looking at your pretty girlfriend. You're a tourist, huh? Somebody should teach you some manners." The strangest things happen on the 1-2-3. We came into the evening light on 7th Ave, but for a while I walked around Midtown South with a sadness headache, unable to forget the voice of this haunting, haunted woman.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Sunday, May 03, 2009
The NYT declares Guangzhou to be the hottest new place to visit. Why does everything I read and do make me want to go to China?
Saturday, May 02, 2009
hypochondriac society
These are the new values of our enlightened post-embodiment hypochondriac society as set by the dean of the Harvard School of Public Health:
Masks carry both physical and psychological benefits, said Dr. Julio Frenk, former health minister of Mexico and current dean of the Harvard School of Public Health.
Masks are a "reminder to people that they should avoid close contact with other persons," he said. "They also have this effect of isolating people and reminding them that they should not be kissing people, shaking hands, things like that."
Masks carry both physical and psychological benefits, said Dr. Julio Frenk, former health minister of Mexico and current dean of the Harvard School of Public Health.
Masks are a "reminder to people that they should avoid close contact with other persons," he said. "They also have this effect of isolating people and reminding them that they should not be kissing people, shaking hands, things like that."
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Tiffany lights
If you know me well, you probably know my social aspiration to one day own a Tiffany lamp. Well, in the meantime we can be green and a bit more thrifty by getting a Tiffany Flowers lamp for me. Yes, that means you.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
A California vegan on the FBI's most wanted list? It seems a bit ridiculous for both parties involved, although I do have to admit this vegan gives us veggies a pretty bad name.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Friday, March 20, 2009
OMG somebody please enter me in this totally legit contest to win a $2 million house in San Francisco. Benefits go to the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. How'd they swing this one?!
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Monday, March 09, 2009
Who wouldn't want this nuclear reactor lamp? I'd put it up over the photo of me devouring a sandwich in front of the Doel nuclear plant.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
"If you haven't watched The Matrix, you'll have a hard time understanding this course."
I have to give up a new media course with a professor who can say that? *sigh* What I do to pursue the carillon... Feld's course is going to be amazing, though. The electric excitement in the room throughout the morning foreshadows as much.
I have to give up a new media course with a professor who can say that? *sigh* What I do to pursue the carillon... Feld's course is going to be amazing, though. The electric excitement in the room throughout the morning foreshadows as much.
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