oscars and vampires

My apologies to all! It has been over a week and I have not contributed anything. My life has been taken captive by…wait for it….HOMEWORK. Woah. Yes, I know. I’ve actually been doing it- mostly. There is a lot of schedule setting and laying down to get life in order the first couple of weeks in the semester, but now I think we’ve all found our swing. Last Monday when they announced the Ocsars I meant to publish this.

I had the privilege of seeing Precious. It is a not a feel good- but if you can handle such a heavy subject I recommend it. The acting is so strong and the story propels itself, you will not be disappointed. Also I saw Avatar for the second time with a friend who hadn’t seen it yet. And I will say after all the glory and press and hubub – it lost its shock and awe to me. My friend was glad to see it, and said despite its ‘orgasmic’ visuals, it was an old story. The first time I saw it was a couple days after it had been released and my dad practically dragged me to it- neither of us had ANY idea what it was about. I can say it is award worthy, but not necessarily Best Picture material. On a side note: if you have not seen The Hurt Locker, do so now. Also something that I didn’t know James Cameron and Kathryn Bigelow (director of the Hurt Locker) are now divorced. I think it adds a little something interesting to the Best Director race, and Best Picture race.

To keep up with the Ocsars, feel free to bookmark this. It is the Times’ blog on the Awards Season.

The Hurt Locker

If you are looking for a little something, I just stumbled upon this. It is a retrospective of Vampires in film. Note that the only one that looks out of place is the crazy hunky one from Twilight (which I have still never seen or read any of, and I am not ashamed to admit I am curious and wouldn’t be opposed to seeing the first movie one day- just the first.)

Now I know you are thinking that I must have a deal with the Times (I wish!!) because I am always posting and blogging about their sites and information. Indeed I don’t. It my favorite site and news source that I read the most and trust the most. So be it.

If you are looking for more Olympic fun- there is a great photo essay in the Sunday Times Magazine. Check it out.

Now, go enjoy the Super Bowl!

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29 years

john_lennon

29 years ago today John Lennon was assassinated by Mark David Chapman outside of the Dakota Hotel on the upper west side of New York City. If you have not made it to Strawberry Fields, I recommend it. When my senior class in high school got the week off to go to Disney in Florida, I did the unnatural thing and stayed home. My dad and I spent one of those days in the city and seeing Strawberry Fields was one of our activities we wanted to do together. While we were there, we saw countless tourists just like ourselves, a man propose to his girlfriend and two homeless men who looked like they had experienced the full effect of the 1960s. Its a cool place to visit. Maybe next year I’ll make it on December 8th for the 30th anniversary. But I figured it would be cool to go at 40 and especially 50 years- which we will definitely see the day of.

Its a story among us Beatle fans that is kind of common sense once you reach a certain age. It is as memorable in comparison to ask ‘where were you when JFK was shot?’ Lennon and Yoko had returned from the recording studio. He was in the midst of making Double Fantasy. Released three weeks before his murder, its his best selling solo album and won him the 1981 Grammy for Record of the Year. Mark David Chapman was posing as a fan, trying to get his autograph and then he shot him. The story is unclear to me as to why MDC wanted to murder one of the most peaceful and beloved human beings. A movie was made about Chapman were Jared Leto played him and Lindsay Lohan is in it too. But that’s besides the point. The point is, don’t see this movie. I’d rather you read the Wikipedia article on him if anything.

Last weekend on the Breakfast with the Beatles show I did a feature of all John Lennon solo work and his best Beatles stuff. It was really fun, actually and very well received by my normal listeners. Although he is not my favorite Beatle (George is, of course) I still have a hard time recognizing his extreme amount of talent. After I read John by Cynthia Lennon, his first wife, I kind of lost respect for him because of how he broke Cynthia’s heart and was an absent father letting his family fall to pieces as he fell for this artist, Yoko, and continued on with life as if nothing existed before her. Cynthia even came home from a weekend away with girlfriends to find them sitting on their living room floor in their his & hers bathrobes. But every once and a while someone will remind me of why he was everyone’s everyone. This time I think it was explained the best.

The beauty about John Lennon as an artist is that from the beginning when you sat him down to interview him, or just to talk whether or not it was an audience of five or five million, he always poured his heart out. He treated everyone like his brother, being honest and pleasant just, literally, trying to make the world a better place. That is what made Lennon so likable. It is what continues to make him so lovable. Despite his many, many, faults and crazy life, he was a genius. But he was also a tortured soul. People of every generation will continue to fall in love with him and his music. Lennon just wanted to tell the truth and sometimes it really pissed people off (like when he said the Beatles were bigger than Jesus Christ- who can argue with that….?!) But the truth is the best policy, maybe not all the time. But it was for him. Lennon wanted truth, peace and love. I think we can give it to him.

Also if you are interested there is an exhibit going on at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Annex Museum in NYC commemorating his life in New York City- his favorite part of his life and his favorite city to be in. It opened this May and I’m quite sure it goes through next month. Every time I look for an end date, I can’t seem to find one.  So check it out. Also, if you have not yet seen A Hard Day’s Night- watch it. Funnier than anything: it is English comedy before Monty Python. Also, Help! is also tremendously funny.

"are you listening to me, Lennon??"

"are you listening to me, Lennon??"

So if you haven’t yet today, play a little Lennon.  Do something he would do. Happy December 8th.

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the fantastic

Mr. Fox.
Read.
Interact.
Watch.

can you dig?

can you dig?

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I figured that the fanbase/general readership of this blog would be into this. I have read quite a few of the essays/chapters from this book- and it is QUITE a read. I highly recommend it: purely for fun, it serves no academic purpose but does have witty “smart” writing. I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell is on many college students’ bookshelves and is found in the “college humor” section (whatever that is….humor for adults perhaps? are we out to create a new genre—-YUP) written by Tucker Max- the most made up name you could ever try fictionalizing. He claims it all to be true and even though this reader hopes it is not- I’m glad it is because not only is honesty the best policy but it makes for the best reads. Enjoy.

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fall in love, all over again

geniuses

geniuses

My love for the Coen Brothers continues to skyrocket. I just came across the trailer for their newest film that is being well received at the Toronto Film Festival, “A Serious Man.”

When they won their Academy Award for Best Director(s) for “No Country for Old Men”, it was the first time a duo had pulled that off since 1961 (West Side Story’s Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise).

Their films are so dark, intelligent and humorous.  I think they have something here. Check out the trailer- yet another example of ground breaking audio editing and work. I think they are two of the greatest storytellers of our generation: please do not over look  or underestimate them.

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i think i want to handle this one.

absolutely

absolutely

Hey friends— get this new bundle of joy.

There is going to be a Harry Potter theme park. 20 acres of pure wizardly love. They are building an addition to the Islands of Adventure at the NBC Universal Theme Park in Orlando, FL. I am pretty sure the park is in the smallest of it’s development stage- so stay tuned for more here.

I never read past the blue book- the title always escapes my head. And I snuck in watched 40 minutes of the latest movie (which was real decent!) but never kept up with the rest of the flicks. But I will say that I approve of the man Daniel Radcliffe has grown into. He has matured from quite the young English lass.

My appreciation for his sexuality may get lost in the fact that he plays Harry Potter, represents dorks all over the world and has grown up without any privacy. But I’ve always loved myself a nerd. And someone who is smart is sexy. That’s just how it is.

But all in all- despite attraction- the event of a Harry Potter theme park was inevitable. I am not hating. At first I was shocked, but after writing this- I see that it only makes sense.

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funny person

now trust me, no one was more excited for this movie than i was. since the trailer came out in late march i was anticipating this movie- and even bummed that i had to wait until late in the summer to see it. and i’m not saying that it wasn’t good because it has a lot to offer and there is a lot to say about it.

after following all of the terrific press from TIME magazine, to the New Yorker– even the View, i knew all the details about the movie going in, the back story, why apatow wanted to make it and what he wanted from it. but now, after seeing this movie i see how flawed it is. and maybe that is because it isn’t at all what we expected from him. apatow even said himself that he wanted to make a movie that could be funny without a chest waxing scene, or the crowning of a birth. he is the man of dirty humor (this movie certianly confirms that), stoner magic, and- for god’s sake he created the modern day bromance that we all love. but in the end, it’s hard for me to say that he successfully made this new type of humor effective. you can’t let your previous engagements with his stories impact your expectations. and i can admit that i knew all of this from studying up but i may be guilty because of my love for him. in the end the story was messy and the chemistry wasn’t right at all. and when a movie is long enough for you to forget whole parts of it, its hard to completely focus on what’s going on because you can’t remember the beginning of the plot.

i am not disapointed and i am not overjoyed. my biggest concern is critics and reviews giving it too much praise because of who made it. not everything this man will make will turn to gold. we need to remember that. and i have to fight that within myself, trust me.  in retrospect it wasn’t his movies that made me fall in love with apatow– i am a Freaks & Geeks nerd to the core. so all i can hope that comes of this is great conversation- because that is why people create media: so we can talk about it and let it simmer into something new.

fng

now don’t let me discourage you from seeing it. that is the last thing i want to do. please go see it, talk about it and decide for yourself. until then….

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