Friday, December 31, 2010

Hello Twenty-Eleven

“Before, this city was like a geeky kid sister, and now it's getting noticed by all the older boys. We've got curves now.” [Helena Andrews, one of BLTWY's 35 under 35 who is changing Washington D.C.]
2011 means a lot to me as a soon-to-be college graduate. So I, more than some, hope 2011 shapes out to be one of my best years yet. I might still consider myself the geeky kid sister (despite being an older sister), but by the middle of the year, I hope to be sitting in or around D.C., making a life for my twenty-something self.

I've also started a new tumblr for excerpts of news articles and some commentary if anyone wants to check it out.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Monday Music; Water & Candy

Another blog reboot fail. One day I will make it past two posts!

I did manage to make a mix for a friend, so here it is:


01/ All Summer; Kid Cudi, Best Coast and Rostam of Vampire Weekend
02/ All Day Day Light; The Morning Benders
03/ Release Me; The Like
04/ Boyfriend; Best Coast
05/ Paris (Ooh La La); Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
06/ Your Easy Lovin' Ain't Pleasin; Mayer Hawthorne
07/ Bullfighter Jacket; Miniature Tigers
08/ Eat That Up, It's Good For You; Two Door Cinema Club
09/ Prince of Tacoma; BOAT
10/ The Greatest Light is the Greatest Shade; The Joy Formidable
11/ Generator ^ First Floor; Freelance Whales
12/ Animal; Neon Trees
13/ The Ghost Inside; Broken Bells
14/ Suzie; A B & The Sea
15/ Camera Talk; Local Natives
16/ Home; She & Him
17/ The Cave; Mumford & Sons
18/ What's In It For?; Avi Buffalo
19/ Ghosts; Laura Marling
20/ Older; Band Of Horses
21/ Science Fiction (Demo); Timothy Rabbit

This mix is longer than my usual because it was originally intended to be a birthday mix. It ended up being five months late, but better late than never, right?

I have been keeping better tabs of what I read and see on the internet, so maybe that will help in organizing and getting posts up. I'm also considering that I need to cut down on sleep to get more things I want to do in my life.

**Maybe I'll even let my friend take pictures of me again, but probably not because I am the most awkward model in the world.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

TV Round Up: 30 Rock, The Office, Fringe, and Undercovers

Hello patient readers! I'm going to try to start a better posting schedule so I can refresh my brain and organize my thoughts better. Of course, this is not the best week for me to be starting, but we shall see how it passes!

Out of schedule, I would like to share a few little snippit thoughts on some shows this week. This Thursday in particular was amazing for me as a viewer.

30 Rock, The Office, and Fringe were my far my favorites. Those episodes are some of my favorite of the entire series of the shows thus far.

30 Rock because I am a sucker for politics and I loved Queen Latifah's Representative Regina Bookman. I hope she comes back. The race dialogue in the show was especially interesting as I just finished reading Watching Race by Herman Gray that dissects presentations of blackness in television in the 1980's and early 90's, including the role of exceptionalism (Twofer) that is explored in the episode.


The Office was just pitch perfect for me. I'm one to still have high regard for the show since Jim and Pam got together. I think the writing is still superb week-to-week, even if my fan enthusiasm has waned, but this week just filled me with joy. Seeing Andy sing, the unrequited aspect of his feelings for Erin, seeing Jim and Pam grow up, Michael's silly shenanigans, Darryl. It all just worked so perfectly. I laughed, I ached, I did all the things that needs to be done. It probably comes down to seeing Andy in Sweeney Todd.


And Fringe. Playing with the new alt!world is allowing the show to grow more than it would have normally. Watching Olivia try to retain her old memories and getting to know the alt!world is more memorizing than I expected. It's like seeing another side to the characters you know and love.

As far as least favorite, Undercovers was underwhelming for me this week. I am a fan of the lightheartedness of the show, and the spy genre in general, but this week was flatter than the other two. I'll keep on it because I still find the show charming and cute, nothing serious to wrap my brain around, but I am finding their trope a little trite and I don't know how long I can keep it up if every episode is the same. Let's see some development! Just a little? It doesn't have to be a super serious spy show to have some substance.

These are not the only shows I watch, but I just felt so much love for these episodes I had to share.

{Photos from FOX and NBC}

Monday, September 13, 2010

Monday Music #001


I was thinking about how I have several playlists sitting on my computer that I feel like sharing a couple months ago. I am now posting them. No cover art for this one, I just wanted to get back to posting.


01/ 3 Rounds And A Sound; Blind Pilot
02/ You Can't Force A Dance Party; Dent May & His Magnificent
03/ Sofia's Song; Sufjan Stevens
04/Hold the Morning; Hey Marseilles
05/ The Garden That You Planted; Sea Wolf
06/Cover My Eyes; La Roux
07/ Passing Afternoon; Iron & Wine
08/ This Boy; James Morrison
09/ You Got Growin' Up To Do; Joshua Radin
10/ Mosquito; Ingrid Michaelson
11/ Open Fire; Sarah Mac Band
12/ Gone For Good; The Shins
12/ Blue Eyes; Mika
13/ Jodi; The Dodos


Between classes, work, fashion week, tv premier time, upcoming election, and the constant news cycle, my life is in shambles, however I am considering starting a fashion blog with a dear friend. It'll probably be on Tumblr because I love that platform a lot. Maybe I'll get my butt into gear and post about my fall tv schedule. It's pretty packed at this theoretical point trying to figure out what new shows to watch.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Distracted Media: Islamaphobia versus important stories


{image source: uzairm, NASA}






Really, this fiasco surrounding the Islamic community center two blocks from ground zero is completely absurd, but I figure I would officially put my claim to the "endorsing it" camp. There are a million other places to get a play-by-play of all the hatred flowing around surrounding Park51 and, I guess since it matters?, the is-Obama-a-Muslim debate, which of course matters.

Instead, I'll focus this little post on the tragedy occurring in Pakistan right now.

  • 20% of the country is flooded.
  • 5-6 million are displaced.
  • 20 million affected, 6 million children.
  • 2.7 million in need of life-saving medical attention
Ways to help:
More photos:

For more cheeriness, UN Dispatch's top five most ignored humanitarian crises.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

In defense of: The Jonas Brothers

I've been sitting on this post for a while (it's been sitting in my drafts for a couple weeks) and this topic has been running in my head for quite a bit longer than that. I figure since I haven't posted in a while, I figure I will just throw caution to the wind.

The first in my "In Defense Of" series, I will try to explain my undeniable love for, of all things,The Jonas Brothers and most things they touch.

I hate the term "guilty pleasure", because as the wise John Mayer once said "I don't believe in guilty pleasures, I believe in pleasure". He might be talking about prostitutes, I'm not sure. The point stands that if you like it, you shouldn't feel pressured to feel like you shouldn't. If that makes sense.

This is my relationship with the JoBros since I'm a little bit older than their normal demographic, and, I hate to use this phrase, but cool (because I don't really know what cool is - but most of my music is described as indie, another term I hate to use, but describes what I need for now). I've never seen an episode (or even a clip) of Jersey Shore, I don't have the taste for trashy reality tv. It doesn't make me feel better about myself (as my friends and reviewers have mentioned for watching such entertainment).

But I do have an affinity for saccharine sweet, hooky pop music at the right time. Summer is usually my peak of such notes, this one is no exception. Yes, they're a little bit hokey, but that's part of the fun. And I like to think they don't take themselves seriously.

This would't really be a problem if I didn't have so many opinions about these boys and their endeavors that I have no one to share with. But I think it's easier for me to deal with this group in particular (I also enjoy the occasional country-pop no-longer teen, but don't have the same fondness for her character - and constantly pick at the grammar and structure of her songs) because I feel they do all this with a little wink the to side. Sometimes I will listen to a song and burst out laughing (often...). I feel I'm laughing with them and not at them, but who knows. My delusions save my feelings of guilt from becoming too powerful. Maybe I think they're more self-aware of themselves than they are, or maybe not.

I'm not sure what I'm trying to prove with typing this out, this has just been something on my mind often. How I do have reasons for enjoying music aimed at audiences half my age; it's hooky, they write their own music, they haven't folded their personal values (as far as we know), they're hilarious, adorable and growing more and more attractive (thank goodness they have left behind the long-straighten-their-hair days), and have better style than most kids. They strike me as genuine, which is hard-to-come by in this fast-paced, self-edited world we live in.

I will probably never see them live as much as I find them to be great entertainers and would love to see it, something about the price and the thousands of screaming tweenage girls repels me, but they make me happy and I shouldn't feel guilty of that.

Reading list: July/August 2010

First. Happy Belated 49th Birthday to my President.

Second. A little relief in the overturning of proposition 8 in California for now. Longer thoughts later. (A little bit from me here.)

And third, my pile of books and other readings:
From left to right. You Shall Know Our Velocity by David Eggers. I'm almost done with this one and it's brilliant, as Eggers is to me. A fictional travel memoir about two lost boys in their twenties. Pretty great.

The Mars Chronicles by Ray Bradbury. This is not your light and fluffy read, though it is short (268 pages, big font and small pages). Series of vingettes (are they that?) during the time Earth starts expeditions to Mars. As Ray says, it's not really a sci-fi novel, it's a human novel that takes place on another planet.

Livability by Jon Raymond. Short stories about middle-class living in America to cleanse the palate.

So, I call myself a geek, but I'm not a comic book reader, as much as I've wanted to be. I'm starting now. I did read a few Scott Pilgrim graphic novels a couple summers ago, and soon I will start with Watchmen.

I don't know why this photo is vertical like this because the file certainly is not. I like fashion magazines. Pictured are Vanity Fairs and Elles and a New Yorker. I also enjoy Entertainment Weekly, Vogue, Lucky, The Atlantic, etc.

Now it's bedtime because I have to wake up in eight hours to get to work. (I was able to get my work study job a few weeks early!)

find what you want