Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Music & Lyrics (but no RomCom)

Time for the year-end music meme! Now, I'm not sure if this is an existing meme or if I've just invented it, but the rules are simple.

  1. List the five songs you listened to most often in descending order
  2. Include four lines from each
Here I go:

Ladyhawke - Magic  
You stayed in my head where I saw you all the time
I didn't think you'd care, I didn't think you'd care

I found you one day with a mouthful of attitude
And you stole me away, you stole me away

Bat for Lashes - Siren Song
My name is Pearl & I'll love you the best way I know how
My blonde curls slice through your heart

And the stars are exploding in your eyes
It won't be long until you'll be running

Ellie Goulding - Guns and Horses
It's time to come clean and make sense of everything
It's time that we found out who we are
Cause when I'm standing here in the dark
I see your face in every star

Fleet Foxes - Quiet Houses 
Don't give in
Don't give in
Don't give in
Don't give in

Bell X1 - Flame
You brought your flame
Into the chambers of my heart
You brought your flame
Where all's been condemned to dark

Feel free to tag yourselves. Allez-y!

Monday, December 28, 2009

My Not-So-Secret Shame



Now Playing: Auletta - Meine Stadt

Here it is, the year-end TV meme of shame, ganked from Indiequill. The rules are simple:

  1. Bold all of the following TV shows which you've ever seen 3 or more episodes of in your lifetime.
  2. Italicize a show if you're positive you've seen every episode of it.
  3. Highlight new additions with an Underline.
Now, I honestly don't know where I found time to watch all these shows. I suppose a future version of me could have come back to the past with time-dilation technology which she lent me to do good works with, I wasted it on TV, she threw her hands up in despair and left, but not before erasing my memories of her and said technology - but the more likely explanation is that I'm epically kamchor. Also, there are some shows on this list that I know I must have watched, but for the life of me I can't recall a single episode. What happened on The Nanny besides Fran Drescher being shrill?


  • 24
  • 30 Rock
  • 90210
  • 7th Heaven
  • ALF
  • Alias
  • American Gothic
  • American Idol
  • America's Got Talent
  • America's Next Top Model
  • Angel
  • Arrested Development
  • Ashes to Ashes
  • Babylon 5
  • Batman: The Animated Series
  • Batman Beyond/Batman of the Future
  • Battlestar Galactica (the old one)
  • Battlestar Galactica (the new one)
  • Baywatch
  • Beverly Hills 90210 (original)
  • Benidorm
  • Bewitched
  • Big Love
  • Blackadder
  • Bonanza
  • Bones
  • Bosom Buddies
  • Boston Legal
  • Boy Meets World
  • Breaking Bad
  • Brothers And Sisters
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer
  • Burn Notice
  • Californication
  • Castle
  • Catherine Tate Show
  • Chappelle's Show
  • Charlie's Angels
  • Charmed
  • Cheers
  • Chuck
  • Clarissa Explains it All
  • Columbo
  • Commander in Chief
  • Crossing Jordan
  • CSI
  • CSI: Miami
  • CSI: NY
  • Curb Your Enthusiasm
  • Dark Angel
  • Dark Skies
  • DaVinci's Inquest
  • Dawson's Creek
  • Dead Like Me
  • Deadwood
  • Degrassi: The Next Generation
  • Designing Women
  • Desperate Housewives
  • Dexter
  • Dharma & Greg
  • Different Strokes
  • Dirty Sexy Money
  • Doctor Who
  • Dollhouse
  • Dragnet
  • Due South
  • ER
  • Everwood
  • Everybody Loves Raymond
  • Extras
  • Facts of Life
  • Family Guy
  • Farscape
  • Fawlty Towers
  • Felicity
  • Firefly
  • FlashForward
  • Frasier
  • Freaks & Geeks
  • Friday Night Lights
  • Friends
  • Fringe
  • Futurama
  • Gavin and Stacey
  • Get Smart
  • Gilligan's Island
  • Gilmore Girls
  • Glee
  • Gossip Girl
  • Grey's Anatomy
  • Grange Hill
  • Growing Pains
  • Gunsmoke
  • Happy Days
  • Harry Hill's TV Burp
  • Have I Got News For You
  • Hercules: the Legendary Journeys
  • Heroes
  • Home Improvement
  • Homicide: Life on the Street
  • House
  • How I Met Your Mother
  • Ideal
  • I Dream of Jeannie
  • I Love Lucy
  • Invader Zim
  • Invasion
  • Hell's Kitchen
  • JAG
  • Jackass
  • Joey
  • Kim Possible
  • King of Queens
  • Knight Rider
  • Knight Rider: 2008
  • Kung Fu
  • Kung Fu: The Legend Continues
  • La Femme Nikita
  • LA Law
  • Laverne and Shirley
  • Law and Order
  • Law and Order: CI
  • Law and Order: SVU
  • Law and Order: UK
  • Legend of the Seeker
  • Leverage
  • Lie To Me
  • Life on Mars
  • Little Britain
  • Little House on the Prairie
  • Live At Apollo
  • Lizzie McGuire
  • Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman
  • Lost
  • Lost in Space
  • MASH
  • MacGyver
  • Mad Men
  • Malcolm in the Middle
  • Married… With Children
  • McLeod's Daughters
  • Melrose Place
  • Merlin
  • Miami Vice
  • Misfits
  • Mission: Impossible
  • Mock The Week
  • Modern Family
  • Mod Squad
  • Monk
  • Mork & Mindy
  • Mumbai Calling
  • Murphy Brown
  • My Life As A Dog
  • My Three Sons
  • My Two Dads
  • Mythbusters
  • NCIS
  • Ned Bigby's Declassified School Survival Guide
  • Nip/Tuck
  • Numb3rs
  • One Tree Hill
  • Oz
  • Paradox
  • Peep Show
  • Perry Mason
  • Power Rangers
  • Press Gang
  • Prison Break
  • Private Practice
  • Privileged
  • Profiler
  • Project Runway
  • Psych
  • Pushing Daisies
  • QI
  • Quantum Leap
  • Queer As Folk (US)
  • Queer as Folk (UK)
  • ReGenesis
  • Remington Steele
  • Rescue Me
  • Road Rules
  • Rome
  • Roseanne
  • Roswell
  • Royal Pains
  • Sanctuary
  • Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?
  • Scrubs
  • Seaquest DSV
  • Seinfeld
  • Sex and the City
  • Six Feet Under
  • Slings and Arrows
  • Smallville
  • So Weird
  • South of Nowhere
  • South Park
  • So You Think You Can Dance
  • Spaced
  • Spongebob Squarepants
  • St. Elsewhere
  • Star Trek
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • Star Trek: Voyager
  • Star Trek: Enterprise
  • Stargate Atlantis
  • Stargate SG-1
  • Starsky & Hutch
  • Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip
  • Superman
  • Supernatural
  • Surface
  • Survivor
  • Taxi
  • Teen Titans
  • That 70's Show
  • That's So Raven
  • The 4400
  • The Addams Family
  • The Amazing Race
  • The Andy Griffith Show
  • The A-Team
  • The Avengers
  • The Beverly Hillbillies
  • The Big Bang Theory
  • The Brady Bunch
  • The Colbert Report
  • The Cosby Show
  • The Daily Show
  • The Dead Zone
  • The Dick Van Dyke Show
  • The Flintstones
  • The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
  • The F Word
  • The Golden Girls
  • The Good Wife
  • The Honeymooners
  • The Jeffersons
  • The Jetsons
  • The L Word
  • The Love Boat
  • The Magnificent Seven
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show
  • The Mentalist
  • The Monkees
  • The Munsters
  • The Nanny
  • The O.C.
  • The Office (UK)
  • The Office (US)
  • The Powerpuff Girls
  • The Pretender
  • The Real World
  • The Shield
  • The Simpsons
  • The Six Million Dollar Man
  • The Sopranos
  • The Suite Life of Zack and Cody
  • The Twilight Zone
  • The Vampire Diaries
  • The Waltons
  • The West Wing
  • The Wire
  • The Wonder Years
  • The X Factor
  • The X-Files
  • Third Watch
  • Three's Company
  • Top Chef
  • Top Gear
  • Torchwood
  • True Blood
  • Twin Peaks
  • Twitch City
  • Unfabulous
  • Ugly Betty
  • Veronica Mars
  • Weeds
  • Who Dare Wins
  • Whose Line is it Anyway? (US)
  • Whose Line is it Anyway? (UK)
  • Will and Grace
  • Wings
  • Xena: Warrior Princess
I think I may have to renounce the material life and live out the rest of my life in a monastery with no wifi or TV reception.

Christmas/Boxing Day Roundup

Now Playing: Ravel - Une Barque Sur L'Ocean

Look what Santa left under the tree:


A Keurig B30 Mini Coffee Brewer! For all my gourmet-coffee-at-home needs. I can recommend Timothy's Columbian Fair-Trade Dorado, but you can use your own regular coffee blend with a reusable coffee filter. Now, I generally prefer teas or tisanes, but this machine makes a damn fine cup of coffee.

Boxing Day Haul: I picked up these kickin' boots at Scarborough Town. Plus Lush had a buy-3-for-the-price-of-1 deal on their soaps, so I now have Sexy Peel to last me months.

Also saw Sherlock Holmes on Boxing Day. A few quick thoughts:

  • Robert Downey Jr, why so fabulous? Also Jude Law, I find myself surprised that I have taken in none of your work since The Talented Mr Ripley.
  • Holmes and Watson have an epic bromance. In fact, you don't even have to squint to see it as a straight romance, really - they have a bad breakup, Watson seeks consolation in the arms of Mary Morstan, Holmes sulks.
  • In terms of their general interaction, though - Holmes is outrageous, Watson is exasperated - they reminded me less of Holmes and Watson 1.0 than House and Wilson - who are obviously a modern, medical take on Holmes and Watson 1.0.
  • When they cast RDJr, they must have filled their American cast quota because the two American roles - Irene Adler and Ambassador Standish - are played by Canadians.
  • I thought it interesting that it was the villain - by Mark Strong - who looked most like the classical Holmes - tall, hair pomaded, the long jacket reminiscent of an Inverness cape.
  • Finally, this movie is definitive proof that the rating system is completely ridiculous. It was released in Canada with a PG (Parental Guidance) rating, though it features a close-up of a dead body with maggots, boxing violence, people-being-set-on-fire violence, etc etc. Imagine the hapless parent who doesn't have time to watch trailers, and buys a ticket to watch this movie with his or her family based solely on the film's rating? "Daddy, why is that man so pale? And why are their worms on his face? Why is he sleeping in a coffin?"

Friday, December 25, 2009

Merry Christmas!


To you and yours, my very best wishes during this festive season.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Reindeer on Standby...

Now Playing: Metric - Gold Guns Girls

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Everyone says we're fine (but we're not)



In all the talk about how we're all exiting the recession - as if it were a cheesy house of horrors ride at an amusement park - no one seems to remember the underlying cause of the whole mess in the first place: real estate debt and the securitization thereof.

Some $3,500bn (€2,355bn, £2,125bn) of commercial property debt is outstanding in the US alone. (emphasis mine.) Of that, about one-quarter was securitised, where groups of loans are packaged and sold to investors in tranches offering different levels of risk and profit.

Moody's has warned that commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) issued during the boom are set to incur significant default rates, given an average fall in values of 43 per cent since the peak in the US. The holders of certain riskier bonds are already expected to have had their investments wiped out.

Troubles will grow as maturities approach on bonds issued at the peak of the market, according to Moody's. It is estimated that up to $153bn of CMBS will come to maturity by the end of 2012 and $100bn will face refinancing difficulties. The US government has already been forced in effect to underwrite the CMBS market.

(...)

A property recovery may yield only limited benefits. "It is questionable whether a recovery will be in time and in sufficient magnitude to absorb the wave of bullets falling from 2011 onwards," says Euan Gatfield, analyst at Fitch.

Although CMBS can be extended, securitisation rules are not simple and most of the products have a legally finite life.

(Source)


Now you might point out that the US housing market is up 7.4% in November, month-on-month. That is absolutely true, but that was due in large part thanks to the $8,000 tax credit for new home buyers, as well as the $6,500 tax credit for existing home owners of five years standing who want to relocate. Unemployment, by the way, is at 10%, the highest it's been since mid-1983. Now that the tax credit has been extended till April 30th, we're likely to see a levelling off in demand, followed by a fresh spike in sales in April. As with the Cash for Clunkers program, this tax credit is basically the US Government throwing cash at its people, yelling, "Buy, bitches, buy! Keep the wheels of the economy turning!"

The operative letter here is W, as in W-shaped recovery, if we're lucky.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Queen, Lush & I

Now Playing: Placebo - For What It's Worth

95% of the time, I'm hella risk-averse. I know the flavours of ice cream I like - mango in summer, chocolate in winter - and I stick with them; when I went skiing, it wasn't so much skiing as much as it was a slow, agonizing sort of inching down a bunny slope/piste verte; recently I went shopping for leggings and thought myself daring for buying them in red.

The other 5% of the time though, I'm the Queen of Whimsy. I'm not sure what brings these fits of impulsiveness on, but they do seem to be learning experiences. For example, thanks to my alternate persona, I've learnt that honey-flavoured icecream is surprisingly rubbish, as is chartreuse, empire waists are evil as are skinny jeans, and tall girls are allowed to wear heels and look good in them too.

Nevertheless, I'm wary of the Queen. "COME ON," she says, "YOU'LL LIKE IT! PUCE* IS TOTALLY YOUR COLOUR." I believe her, being a sheep, and pain and cracked mirrors is the result. This is generally why I try not to shop by myself - I need other people with me to say, "Seriously, puce? No."

Sadly, other people are not slaves to retail as I am, and so sometimes I do find myself alone in a mall, with no defences against my own impulsiveness. When this happens, as it did last week, I shuffle quickly along, eyes down, hoping not to see something in a window that the Queen will like. Since the queen is an omnivorous compulsive hoarder, this is difficult to manage. "SALE ON MEN'S TIES? WHAT IF YOU STARTED WEARING TIES?" For Christ's sake, I thought, and dragged myself away into another corridor. "MEXX! WE LIKE MEXX!" the creature yelled. Boxing Day Sales! I yelled back and fought on. "LUSH! IT'S HANDMADE!" It screamed, maddened. No, we like Body Shop, I thought, or Fruits and Passion at a pinch. "BUT IT SMELLS SO GOOD!" It did smell good. "GO ON. YOU DON'T HAVE TO BUY ANYTHING." I always fall for that one - this time was no exception.

Now, Lush does smell fabulous - it's one of those stores where you want to pick up everything and smell it - but the problem is that it's overpriced. I bought a bar of soap and a tub of shampoo and the bill came to $30. My inner puritan is still weeping over it. My inner hedonist, on the other hand, loves the soap. It's called Sexy Peel, and it is just sensationally citrus-y, more grapefruit than orange, and it smells so good you will have trouble leaving the shower.

The shampoo, on the other hand, is a bit problematic. Like the soap, it smells great, coconut with a fruit undertone, which works great for me because as a Malayalee, I have a mystic affinity for coconuts. Total Trufax! Proof: My Mum, who has no sweet tooth to speak of and is a wee little thing, will hurt you if you stand between her and a Bounty Bar. Ah, the coconut, it calls to us, it is bred in the bone, it is applied on the hair, it is used in our food... but I digress. Curly Wurly shampoo, however, has actual coconut flakes in it, which is just a tad much, because the flakes are the devil to rinse out of curly hair, and you know what coconut flakes look like in curly hair? Huge flecks of dandruff. It's a shame because my hair smells fabulous and curls better, but I hate to run the risk of leaving the house with bits of coconut on my head; I might pour extracted coconut oil by the bucketful on my hair, but I draw the line at actual bits of fruit. Next time I go to Lush, I'm sticking to the soaps. No matter what the Queen says. I hope.

*Example provided for illustrative purposes; I am proud to say I own nothing in puce - yet.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Hallelujah Blues

Me and the family - "The Family and I," insists Mrs-B-in-my-head, but I shush her - have just been to hear Handel's Messiah performed at Roy Thompson Hall by the TSO and the Mendelssohn Choir. The only word for it is Epic. Actually, there are many other words - proper, music-critic-type words - but the other one that I will pick is capslock-inducing. "WASN'T THAT AWESOME?" I said on exiting the hall, in a remarkably even tone considering all the capslock. "DIDN'T IT SEND SHIVERS UP YOUR SPINE?" But sadly, not all the capslock was CAPSLOCK OF AWESOME; thanks to the fellows sitting in front of us, there was also an unhealthy dose of CAPSLOCK OF RAGE, which means it's time for another edition of Dear So-And-So.

Dear Jackasses,

I get that you are excited to be at this performance. I was too! But excited does not mean you get to videotape huge chunks of it on your iPhone. One shot, or one recording, I would have understood. But you, Jackass-on-the-right, did it six separate times - and then left ten minutes before the end, which, what? Come back, man! Stay and record the ending too, so you can paste it all on Facebook!

You were a class act, Jackass-on-the-right, texting when you weren't taping, which I'm curious to know how you managed because I had no reception in the hall, and as far as I know, most music halls have anti-cellular-reception-hardware in place to stop Jackasses like you. Is this some special iPhone voodoo of which I am unaware? Also, that nose piercing? Makes you look a total wanker, just so you know. The ear piercings were very anthropology undergraduate - and thus, I suppose, understandable - but the nose piercing was 14-year-old high school girl (I know whereof I speak.)

Jackass-on-the-left, you weren't really that bad. In fact, you're mostly on here because you were friends with Jackass-on-the-right, and thus contaminated by his douchery. But seriously, was it necessary to bring your grandfather's old binoculars? If he told you those were opera glasses, he was lying. (Also, Santa? Not real. Sorry!) And it's not like you were watching the stage with them anyway! First you were looking at your friends in the left parterre, then you were observing random audience members. My mother goggled (excuse the pun) when you extracted that contraption from its case, but she was polite enough to wait till the intermission to whisper, "What is he doing with that thing, birdwatching?"

And the both of you, was it necessary to talk through the whole thing? You will probably never read this blog, and so you will never know how close I came to kicking the two of you in the head, and then yelling, "SCARBOROUGH REPRESENT!" But as it stands, you escape unscathed - but I admonish you now with a quote from part II of the oratorio, from the book of Psalms, chapter 2, verse 4: "He that dwelleth in heaven shall laugh them to scorn; the Lord shall have them in derision."

Go forth and sin no more, jackasses - or atleast, not where I can see you.

Yours irritatedly,

Sharon

Friday, December 18, 2009

It's like you hit me with lightning


Awesomely, Ellie Goulding made Auntie Beeb's Sound of 2010 list! Have a listen:



Like all the boys before, like all the boys, boys, boys

You left a blood stain on the floor
You set your sights on him
You left a hand print on the door
Like all the boys before, like all the boys before

This is our luck, baby, running out
Her clothes were never off
We still have our lives to run about
To steal the map, steal the map, to get us back on track
I've seen you in a fight you lost, I've seen you in a fight

We're under the sheets and you're killing me
In our house made of paper, your words all over me
We're under the sheets and you're killing me

(Like all the boys before, like all the boys, boys, boys)

In here the world won't bring us down
Our plan is golden
Out there a lonely girl could drown
In here we're frozen

Where did the people go?
My hands are empty
You're not the answer I should know
Like all the boys before, like all the boys before
(whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa)

We're under the sheets and you're killing me
In our house made of paper, your words all over me
We're under the sheets and you're killing me

We're in a mess babe, we're in a mess babe
Your more is less babe (oh, oh)

We're under the sheets and you're killing me
In our house made of paper, your words all over me
We're under the sheets and you're killing me

(I've seen you in a fight you lost
Like all the boys before, like all the boys before)

We're under the sheets and you're killing me
In our house made of paper, your words all over me
We're under the sheets and you're killing me

Killing me, killing me, killing me

Mama's Got A Brand New Bag

Now Playing: Justice - D.A.N.C.E.

New Layout! This happens when you're tweaking your blog layout at two in the morning - you accidentally delete the old layout, the backup copy has gone walkabout and you figure, what the hey, time for a change anyway, and why not a new title into the bargain? Electric Abacus is so 2002.

A Gammerstang, in case you're wondering, is a very archaic term for a tall, awkward woman; a Stridewallops - antiquated Yorkshire cant - also refers to a tall, awkward woman, but one who's long-legged into the bargain. Most days, I'm definitely the former; when I slip on my heels, I'm a credible imitation of the latter. So, Gammerstang / Stridewallops is here! Pull up a chair, grab a drink and join the conversation...

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Fifteen Seconds

Now Playing: Cocteau Twins - Alice



I've always loved long-exposure night shots. Fifteen seconds is a bit much, but the end result is just so shiny, I can't help myself!

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

This Is How You Remind Me... How Much I Hate You.

- Che... You haven't heard?
- What?
- Maybe you should sit down.
- No, just tell me! Oh God, what is it?
- I didn't want to be the one to tell you -
- WHAT IS IT?
- Nickelback is Billboard's group of the decade.
- Nooo...
- Here, sit down... Can I get you some tea? Coffee?
- Hemlock!!!
- It's not that bad...
- Not that bad?!
- This Is How You Remind Me is only the 4th biggest song of the decade.
- Ohhh.
- Yeah.
- My soul hurts.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Through A Glass, Darkly

Philip Glass' new work, Violin Concerto No 2, may be called "The American Four Seasons" but try as I might, I really couldn't hear anything like Vivaldi tonight at Roy Thompson Hall, where the work was played for only the third time since it was premiered there on Wednesday, December 9th.

Despite the distraction of the title, the piece in question is georgeously complex and darkly soul-stirring. It evokes flight and pursuit, a labyrinth with no centre, discord and intrigue, and when it is finished you want it to begin all over again. A good deal of the credit must go to Robert McDuffie, the solo violinist for whom the piece was composed: his vigorous yet thoughtful performance was the perfect anchor for the strings section and synthesizer, conducted by TSO music director Peter Oundjian.

Structurally though, the piece is hobbled by the cadenza, which comprises the prelude as well as the three "songs" that appear between the four movements of the main piece. In Glass' own words:

"... I would only add that, instead of the usual cadenza, I provided a number of solo pieces for Bobby - thinking that they could be played together as separate concert music when abstracted from the whole work."

Perhaps because of their stand-alone nature, these solo sections, though testimony to McDuffie's undoubted skill, seem to bring the momentum of the concerto as a whole to a screeching halt. During the first song, as McDuffie valiantly sawed away, a cellist looked at his watch, a mini-epidemic of coughing and sneezing broke out in the audience, and another cellist looked out as if to say, "What? Haven't you people heard of Halls?" When this piece is released on CD, it would be intriguing to listen to it without the songs, and see how different the energy of that Concerto No 2 Redux might feel.

Beethoven's Symphony No 6 in F Major, "Pastoral" was the appetizer for the evening. Romantic and richly evocative of the countryside Beethoven loved so much, it is, as John Terauds noted in the Toronto Star, more counterpoint than counterpart to the Glass piece, which made it quite an intriguing symphonic palate-cleanser.

Friday, December 04, 2009

Murder For Less


Amazon.ca has season 1 of Castle for only $19.99! Granted, that's only ten episodes, but there's all those delicious extras (not to mention delicious Nathan Fillion.) Oh, I wants it...

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Dravida Kazhagam!

Now Playing: La Roux - Quicksand

Major Malayalam Fail: For the longest time, I thought 'nammal thammil' - between us - was actually 'nammal thamizh' - we the Tamils - which I understood to be some expression of pan-Dravidian identity, which I further took to be a very, very macro way of saying 'us.'

Really.

And then I was always so confused why people were using such a large-scale expression for such personal situations.

It's hard out here (for a Leafs fan)


Dear Maple Leafs,

It is difficult to maintain the delusion of the Leafs attaining Stanley Cup Glory when the only team with a worse win percentage are the Carolina Hurricanes (who've only won 18.52% of their games thus far this season, compared with our 24%.) Now granted, I'm a hockey-illiterate chump who still doesn't know what offside is - but please, Leafs, do something, anything to stop the Habs fans mockage. There's really something wrong when the most valuable team in the NHL hasn't made the playoffs since 2004 (Pat Quinn I miss you!)

Maple Leafs, I understand your lack of motivation. Your fans are among the most fanatical/delusional in the NHL, so you could be ice-dancing and people would still pay money to see you... (Really, Kaberle and Beauchemin doing a pas-de-deux, I am so there - but I digress.) Last year, you guys ranked 121 out of 122 professional sports teams in terms of fan satisfaction - and that's not just the NHL, that's including the NFL, the NBA and MLB - and still people will pay an arm and a leg with a couple of fingers thrown in as loose change to watch you. The only other team I know that gets that kind of mindless rabid adoration is the Indian cricket team, which - when they're good, they're good, when they're bad, it's all with the hoyvin-and-the-glayvin-and-the-CARNAGE! - and from my experience with them, I know the only thing to do is to fasten my seatbelt, put my tray table in the upright position and wait for the turbulence to end.

To conclude, Maple Leafs, the last time you won the Stanley Cup, my parents were still in high school. Sometime in the future, I expect to procreate, and if you could bring home the Cup before my kids graduate high school? That would be great.

With my best wishes,

Sharon

Friday, November 27, 2009

Dear Rihanna


Regarding your decision to send naked pictures of yourself to your boyfriend, and the subsequent decision to justify yourself in the following words:

"If you don't send your boyfriend naked pictures, then I feel bad for him."

Are you mental? I'm not even getting into your getting back together with Chris Brown after he used you as a punching bag, which, also stupid, but this? "Hello impressionable youth! Ok, so going back to CBrown was stupid, but take it from me, certified relationship expert, y'all should totes be sending your bfs nekked pictures of yourselves! Just because my nekked pictures leaked doesn't mean yours will!"

No love,

Sharon

PS - That umbrella song? Still annoying.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Want, Order, Have


Now Playing: Steve Miller Band - Fly Like An Eagle


I was watching Demons the other day - the show is nothing special, except as a showcase for Philip Glenister's inexplicable "American accent" and if I were him, I wouldn't draw attention to it - when a character was told to read Bram Stoker's Dracula and asked, "Can I watch the movie instead?"

We - Generation Y for Youtube - take it for granted that a given text has been adapted for either the big or the small screen and further assumes that these adaptations are readily accessible, whether through Blockbuster, Netflix, or any of the plethora of legal and illegal download options. Caveat Lector: the faithfulness of the adaptation is never guaranteed. In fact, it cheers my cold, cynical heart to think of some hapless high school student writing about Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale's happy ending and promptly getting an F for his or her troubles.

In fact, we're not just the Youtube generation, we're the on-demand generation. I remember being lectured by a TA, "You guys have it so easy! When we had to look papers up, we had to actually go down to the library and look up references on index cards! All you guys have to do is sign on to Pubmed, work some key-word magic, and BAM!" (By this point, I realized that an extension on that assignment was highly unlikely.)

The cliche is coming true: the internet can bring most of the world to your finger tips if (a) you have a credit card or paypal account and live somewhere covered by major retail websites' shipping policies, or (b) you have good bandwidth and flexible ethics. The flipside of this is that "getting it done online" has gone from being one option among many to the only choice. If some horrible, Jericho-esque apocalyptic scenario does occur, the sound of clicking Ctrl + Z en masse will fill the land, fading out slowly as people die of radiation poisoning.

Or how about that other classic of apocalyptic fiction - the zombie epidemic?

"We're out of ammo and the zombies are getting through!"
"Don't worry, I ordered us fresh supplies from Amazon. One Day Rush!"
"There is no more Amazon, f***er!"

And then the crazy, right-wing, right-to-bear-arms, guns-and-ammo-stockpiling nutjobs will inherit the earth.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Stephen Gately, 1976 -2009

Now Playing: Boyzone - Words

Stephen Gately, Boyzone member, died this month. He was only the second celeb I ever had a crush on - the first was David Duchovny - and hearing of his death makes me feel old in ways a simple birthday could never do.

Rest in Peace, Stephen. I still have my Boyzone tapes, and your autograph, and that embarrassingly large poster tucked away somewhere and when my (imaginary, hypothetical) girls go through their boyband phase, I'll think of you and know how to deal. My teen self sends all her love.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Oh, what's the point?

There is no justice in the world when Tracey Emin makes enough money to qualify for the UK's top tax rate.

Tracey Emin - whose most famous work is arguably My Bed, which was pretty much her bed and associated detritus - stained sheets, used condoms, underwear stained with menstrual fluids (yes, really) as well as more workaday items such as slippers - earns more than 150,000 pounds a year. That's atleast 248,000 Canadian Dollars or 873,000 UAE Dirhams per year.

Don't even get me started on Damien Hirst.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Nostrada-Me

Now Playing: Bomba Estereo - Fuego

I've said it here already, but I want to repeat it so I can grumble, "I called it!" when Palin romps to victory in 2012:

Obama winning the Nobel Peace Prize is less a Norwegian sigh of relief at the Bush Jr years coming to an end and more a giant right-wing conspiracy to ensure a Republican victory in 2012. First, moderate voters are going to think, "Well, what did Obama even do to win that Nobel? If he doesn't deserve the Nobel, why does he deserve the presidency?" Goodbye popular vote, goodbye landmark Northern Democrat electoral college victory! Next, this is going to hella cement the right-wing vote. "Anyone but Obama 2012! The Europeans like Obama, and everyone know's they're socialist and going to HELL!"

Seriously, that's the only way this award makes sense. I like Obama as much as the next left-wing pinko bleeding-heart liberal, but... no. Just, no.

Wednesday, October 07, 2009

Oh Dearie Me

Now Playing: Antonio Carlos Jobim - Desafinado

A bit of background - a woman is hanging with her friends on King Street in Toronto, guy comes up to her all SuperSmooth, she gives him her card to get him to go away, and he calls back. Via Jezebel, here's a transcript of the two messages he left her - that she forwarded to local radio station Z103.5 (Today's Hit Music!).

Message the first:

Hey Olga, it's Dimitri.

Sorry I had to leave such a rushed message with you when we met the other day. I just wanted to quickly give you my phone number, and needed to get the heck out of the area. In any event, I thought I had better leave you a more detailed message and explain why I approached you. I am single. I have no trouble meeting women; I mean, women approach me six or seven times a day. But I'm extremely particular about what I like.

You're an extremely elegant woman. I couldn't take my eyes off you, and your friends were very jealous — even if they say they weren't, they were envious of the fact that I approached you, and I was very taken by you. Elegant women are very rare. I'm Greek and I'm extremely particular about what I like. So I'm giving you an opportunity here. I don't know if you picked up the message on the weekend but I'm working on a movie script so I'll be doing that all weekend…

This looks like a land line, and if it is you may not get the message till Monday. But when you do, call me and we'll get together for coffee or drinks, and let the romance begin. You looked very taken aback by my approach, and I hope that wasn't timidness, I hope it was just shock at being approached so directly. Because I don't really date timid women, because I'm a very direct, very passionate, very assertive man, and I want a woman who is very independent and strong. So… we'll talk about that, but I just wanted to formally introduce myself. I leave the ball in your court. You call me as soon as you have the courage to. Okay, Olga? Talk to you soon, bye.

Message the Second:

Hi there, Olga it's Dimitri calling again, the guy from the street.

I left you a message several days ago you said you were interested. Now, here's the way I work. I don't like leaving second messages but I like you, you're a very elegant woman, you're very attractive, but, you know, I don't play that game. I know your friends tell you not to return calls; you're playing games like you see in stupid TV shows.

So here's how it's gonna work. It is now 4:30 on Wednesday. Now I'll assume, I'll assume that you've already left work, because, you know, some people leave work early, so I'll grant you that. But if I don't receive a phone call back from you by 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon I'm no longer interested and I'm going to erase your number. I don't play games like that.

I'm completely single, I'm very intelligent, I'm great in bed, I make great money. Believe it or not, I'm a complete catch. I've only been single four months; I had a long distance relationship for about a year, it's very tough to maintain it like that; there's nothing wrong with me. As a matter of fact I'm one of the few men in the city that has nothing wrong with him. So I'm giving you the three o'clock deadline. If I don't hear from you by then, you lose my number — I'm erasing your number right now, so you won't be hearing back from me.

So that's it: three o'clock tomorrow, or you can just completely forget it.

Now I understand if you've got other issues, maybe you're not playing games, I don't know… maybe you were abused in childhood?…Maybe your mother has cancer, and you're going to chemo…maybe you're just a person who's extremely frightened or has an anxiety disorder, maybe you're on some medication for that…I don't know, there could be another issue that I'm not aware of. But nobody says "Call me," hands a person a business card and then doesn't return calls. It's extremely passive aggressive. You should actually look that up, passive-aggressive personality disorder. You let me know, if you've got issues, psychological issues, if you're on any sort of medication for anxiety or depression, I'm not interested. But if you're psychologically normal, and you haven't called me because there's been some horrible thing that's happened in your life that's prevented you from returning my calls, that's fine. But otherwise? Don't call me. Okay, bye.

You can listen to the original recording here, but this, Ladies and Gentlemen, is why people still go for arranged marriages in this day and age.

[Caveat Lector: It's not entirely clear, but this Dimitri the Doofus recording is probably a fake, created as a viral marketing campaign for a movie (Douchebag: The Movie? Send in your suggestions!). It's probably why the Jezebel post refers to the initial encounter happening in San Francisco rather than Toronto, though the names remain the same.]

Saturday, October 03, 2009

On Polanski


Now Playing: A Fine Frenzy - Think Of You

I've only seen two Roman Polanski movies. The first was his 1971 version of Macbeth, which we watched in OAC English class, and the second was Chinatown, which was being shown as on TVO's Saturday Night at the Movies. I had a Penguin's Guide to Classic Films, and two of his films were featured - Chinatown and Rosemary's Baby - so I knew he was a director of no small skill.

Somewhere around this point, I discovered Wikipedia, and I looked Roman Polanski up, so that I could figure out what movies of his I should watch next. I learnt he escaped the Warsaw Ghetto and survived the Holocaust, though his mother died in Auschwitz; his pregnant wife Sharon Tate had been murdered by members of the Manson family; when he was in his mid-forties, he admitted to having sex with a child of thirteen.

I use the word 'child' deliberately, because I think to refer to the victim here as a girl of thirteen is simply window dressing that disguises the true nature of Polanski's crime. The survivor, Samantha Greimer, was an aspiring model whose mother consented to a private photo-shoot with Polanski. At the very least, Polanski had sex with a child thirty years his junior; at the worst, he drugged her with a combination of champagne and quaaludes before raping her.

Once the wheels of justice were set in motion, Polanski accepted a plea bargain that saw him pleading guilty to statutory rape, rather than go to trial for rape by use of drugs, perversion, sodomy, lewd and lascivious act upon a child under 14, and furnishing a controlled substance(methaqualone) to a minor. Rather than go to prison, however, Polanski fled the United States for France, where he held citizenship and from whence he was unlikely to be extradited. He has since not visited either the United States or the United Kingdom, remaining in mainland Europe to live and work.

Last week, however, Polanski visited Switzerland to attend the Zurich Film Festival, where he was to receive a Lifetime Achievement Award. He was arrested at the airport and is being held while the Swiss review his case and decide whether or not to extradite him to the US. This has led to a wave of support for him from members of the entertainment community as well as figures in the french and polish government - Polanski holds double citizenship of both these countries - and an opposing movement which calls for justice to be carried out.

I present a sample defence of Polanski from Joan Z Shore, who is (cue double-take) the co-founder of Women Overseas For Equality, with my comments in bold, a la the fabulous Malene Arpe:
Arresting Roman Polanski the other day in Zurich, where he was to receive an honorary award at a film festival, was disgraceful and unjustifiable. Polanski, now 76, has been living in France for over thirty years read - has evaded justice for over thirty years, and has been traveling and working in Europe unhindered, but the Swiss acted on an old extradition treaty with the U.S. and seized him! Yes, how dare the Swiss uphold an international treaty! The Swiss Justice Ministry will decide whether to extradite him to the United States. Which is toooootally unfair, since he's not even Swiss, you guys!

The judge in the 1977 statutory rape case is dead. Well, if the judge is dead, you obviously get to go off scott-free... Polanski had agreed at the time to a plea bargain, but then the judge reneged on it. Um, correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Polanski flee before he was sentenced? After a grand total of 42 days in jail? Polanski has tried to appeal.

But there is more to this story. The 13-year old model "seduced" by Polanski had been thrust onto him by her mother, who wanted her in the movies. Mommie Dearest foisted the girl at him! So that makes it totally okay! Candy for everyone! The girl was just a few weeks short of her 14th birthday, which was the age of consent in California. (It's probably 13 by now!) Um, I don't even know what to do with this. And you claim to be the co-founder of what appears to be a feminist organization? Rape is okay if you're close to the age of consent?!? Which I'm fairly certain is not fourteen?!? Polanski was demonized by the press, convicted, and managed to flee, fearing a heavy sentence. Well, that makes it okay then, since he was afraid of a heavy sentence. *headdesk*
Whoopi Goldberg, on The View, said, "I know it wasn't 'rape' rape. I think it was something else, but I don't believe it was 'rape' rape." So having sex with a child of thirteen was only kinda rape? sorta rape? decaf rape?

Polanski's friend, photographer Otto Weisser, was quoted on CNN as saying, "He's a brilliant guy and he made a little mistake 32 years ago -- what a shame for Switzerland."
Um, yes, I can see how sleeping with a thirteen year old was an easy mistake to make. No, actually, I can't. Please explain? And yes, definitely, it's Switzerland that should be covering itself in shame.

Harvey Weinstein, formerly of Miramax, chimed in with an op-ed piece in The Independent:
Roman Polanski is a man who cares deeply about his art and its place in this world. What happened to him on his incredible path is filled with tragedy, and most men would have collapsed. Yes, his life has been filled with horrible tragedy. Instead, he became a great artist and continues to make great films. And along the way, he found the time to have sex with a child. I was with him the day he won the Legion of Honour in France, which was a spectacular day. I remember the incredible love and affection that people have for him. Come oooon, you guys! People like Roman! You can't send him to jail![...]

Whatever you think about the so-called crime, Polanski has served his time. Forty-two days in jail. Yeah, that should do it. Plus the past thirty years that he's spent having a family, making movies, yep, he's definitely done his time. [...]

I hope the US government acts swiftly because because film makers are looking for justice to be properly served. I will be organising the effort myself by emailing everybody I know to sign the petition. And I know that Thierry Fremaux has got hold of Nicolas Sarkozy. Sarko, mon pote! C'est moi, Thierry. Bah, ecoute, on va laisser les Americains extrader notre gars Polanski? C'est pas cool, ca, quoi?

We will have to speak to our leaders as well – particularly in California. I'm not too shy to go and talk to the Governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and to ask him once and for all to look at this. Thankfully the Governator has already ruled out a gubernatorial pardon for Polanski. I never thought I'd say this, but yay Republicans!

It is a shocking way to treat such a man. Polanski went through the Holocaust and the murder of his wife, Sharon Tate, by the Manson family. Free personal trauma pass, people! How do you go from the Holocaust to the Manson family with any sort of dignity? In those circumstances, most people could not contribute to art and make the kind of beautiful movies he continues to make. This is true. I am fairly certain though, that despite their artistic deficiencies, most people might manage to keep their hands and assorted appendages off thirteen-year-old children.

I would also further direct your attention to Andy Ostroy's demolition of Robert Harris' unctuous Polanski defence in the New York Times - though I suppose you can't blame Harris, Polanski is directing a movie based on his novel The Ghost:

Harris begins with: "...His past did not bother me, any more (presumably) than it did the three French presidents with whom he has had private dinners, or the hundreds of actors and technicians who have worked with him since 1977, or the fans who come up to him in the streets of Paris for his autograph."

French presidents? Is he kidding? Middle-aged Frenchmen accept and forgive Polanski's sexually deviant behavior and that's a defense? Perhaps Harris would welcome support from Italy's scandal-plagued, teenage-girl-chasing Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi too? Are we really to let Polanski off Scot-free because movie people like him? Or because fans seek his autograph? Perhaps Harris has never witnessed the throngs of idiots who still drool all over O.J. Simpson as if he's America's former football hero instead of the brutal monster who butchered two people. And this may come as a shock to Harris: America's judicial system couldn't give a rat's ass whether certain criminal behavior bothers you or not.

Harris then asks, "Why now?" To which I reply, why the fuck not? The argument that he's been allowed to roam free for 30 years, therefore he should be allowed to stay free is moronic. Just because some lame-ass law-enforcement authorities had their collective thumbs up their asses for three decades does not give Polanski a get out of jail free card. Should we not arrest Nazi war criminals because they've been living in Argentina for 65 years and might be "liked" by their neighbors? Who cares when justice ultimately gets served, as long as it gets served. Let's keep things in perspective here: the Los Angeles DA's office has not committed any crimes. Polanski has. [...]

Harris ends his convoluted diatribe by claiming Polanski is a "doting father" who's children "want him home." I'm sure O.J.'s kids want him home, too. Again I should remind Harris that in America we don't let children decide the judicial fates of their law-breaking "doting" dads.

In his closing line, Harris smugly quotes the Romans: "So cui bono," or, "who benefits?" The criminal justice system benefits, as does every single child who can feel some comfort and security that we still have laws that protect them from sexually-perverted adult predators who seek to horrifically abuse them.

*sigh*

I am angry and saddened that so many people have reacted as if Polanski had received a life sentence for jaywalking, and then fled the the USA for Europe and its less draconian traffic laws. What Polanski did is not a little boo-boo. Not being able to travel to Los Angeles to receive your Oscar in person is not justice; it's what happens when you're on the lam from justice.

In conclusion, I just want to underline why I'm so angry, with a little help from Melissa Silverstein:
Feminists everywhere are aghast about the fact that we have lost sight that this man raped a 13-year-old girl. Feminist everywhere stand up against rape because it is endemic in our society.

So to just remind people why we are all livid about this:

  • 1 in 6 women will be sexually assaulted in her lifetime.
  • In 2007, there were 248,300 victims of sexual assault.
  • Every 2 minutes, someone in the U.S. is sexually assaulted.
  • Approximately 73% of rape victims know their assailants.
  • Only 6% of rapists will ever spend a day in jail.
  • 44% of victims are under age 18.
I never did order those other Polanski films; I don't doubt his brilliance as a director, but his behaviour has been both criminal and repugnant, as is his refusal to accept the consequences for his actions. It's my own little boycott, and I'm happier for it.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

"I'm on TV! I can do what I want!"

Because Leverage is awesome and y'all should be watching it -

Sunday, September 27, 2009

The Horror


Statutory Warning: Please don't read this if you suffer from high blood pressure.

So, recently I came across this website called Ladies Against Feminism. Now, if I had a modicum of sense, I would have Alt + Left Arrowed my way back to my Google home page, but as has been demonstrated previously, I am an idiot, so -

The writers who contribute to this website believe, variously, that feminism is responsible for society crumbing into anarchy and that a woman's place is - as God ordained - in the home, caring for her children.

Competitive sport is not recommended for women for the following reasons:

"This rigorous physical and mental training tends to make women more masculine. I think it is prudent to often ask ourselves “Can a woman do this activity and retain a Biblically feminine character?” With sports I think it will be difficult in most cases. Even some of the traditionally more feminine sports like gymnastics and ice skating are now influencing women to be more masculine.

The Bible talks about women developing a quiet and gentle spirit; I think sports fosters anything but that. They instead develop a competitive and contentious spirit that will cause them to have great difficulty in their marriages. I already mentioned that the effort expended on sports will hinder the development of wifely duties around the home; even worse is when a man has to compete against his own wife in the workplace and community."
These women would, as a point of principle, not vote for Sarah Palin because that would force Mrs Palin (no Ms for the Ladies Against Feminism) to put serving the country above serving her husband:

"
I would be putting Palin in a position to neglect her highest calling as mother and wife in exchange for a lower position as Vice President. Her generational impact would probably be far greater over time investing in being there for her children and teaching them diligently from home."
I cannot even begin to catalogue all the very many things I find wrong with their reasoning. I'm generally a to-each-their-own person, but this website makes me want to smash things. I - I could rant for paragraphs on this, but I'll just quote Rebecca West instead:
"I myself have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is: I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat."

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Kaminey


Now Playing: Vishal Bhardwaj - Pehli Baar Mohabbat


When Zac Efron decides it’s time to shed his pretty-boy image for something more macho, he would do well to find a project like Kaminey, which manages to simultaneously make a hard man out of Shahid Kapoor and establish his acting chops.

Charlie is a small-time thug with big-time dreams while Guddu is an earnest social worker who passes out prophylactics to prostitutes. They’re also identical twins who haven’t spoken to each other in years and have non-identical speech impediments – Charlie lisps and Guddu stammers. Is it a coincidence that Charlie, who admits to taking the fast and dirty road to riches over the slow and steady, turns his s’s to f’s? Probably, but the picture is full of tiny delightful details like that one.

Vishal Bharadwaj abandons the Shakespearean roots of his previous films for a Tarantino-esque sensibility and a denouement that seems like vintage Guy Ritchie. As good as Omkara and Maqbool were, it’s nice to see that the director is capable of playing in a different sandbox. The acting is generally good; apart from the above-mentioned Shahid Kapoor, Priyanka Chopra shines as Guddu’s pregnant girlfriend Sweety and Amol Gupte is riveting as her politician /goonda brother, professional marathi manoos Bhope Bhau. Chandan Roy Sanyal has less screentime as Mikhail, the youngest member of a Bengali fraternity of crime, but his relationship with Charlie is fascinatingly ambiguous, fraternal with a definite homoerotic subtext.

There were three things about Kaminey that I really liked. First, there were actual, literal Chekov’s guns – I actually squealed, “CHEKOV!” when the guns made their second appearance. Secondly, there’s a scene where Guddu is being held by a pair of corrupt policement for questioning. At this point, the audience expects violence, pliers, electrodes, or any manner of torture from the policemen, who are desperate anything to elicit the information they believe Guddu has – which he doesn’t, as they really want Charlie. To complicate things further, there’s Guddu’s stutter, which worsens with stress. However - instead of increasing the physical inducement to get Guddu to talk, the senior policemen tells Guddu to sing, which reduces his stammer drastically and is not, surprise, surprise, a segue to a song sequence. Finally, while the hilarious irony of a guy who preaches safe sex knocking up his girlfriend never ceases to amuse, the Guddu- Sweety relationship is, though stormy, tender and loving. She manages him, and he’s happy to let her, and you really feel that these two crazy kids might make it after all, despite all the kaminey around them.

Friday, September 04, 2009

Let me whisper in your ear


Now Playing: Bell X1 – Flame


Five things you don’t know about me – at least, I hope you don’t, as otherwise this is going to be rather pointless –

  1. I’m not at all a very sociable person. Anton Chekov wrote a story about a man who bets a large sum of money on his being able to stay in completely solitary confinement for fifteen years, with books and food provided. This was part of the English Lit curriculum in grade 9 or 10 and even then, this didn’t seem like such a bad bet to me. I enjoy company when I have it, but I’m just as content with reading material and music.
  2. I have a secret weakness for shiny, frilly clothes – probably in reaction to the fact that the clothes I wore as a child were rather sober (thanks Mum & Dad!) Generally, I’m able to keep this magpie-like craving under control, but every now and then – as the budget allows – I come home from the mall with awfully loud purchases that I never wear, but would never, ever dispose of.
  3. I’m not talkative because of any innate gregariousness, it’s just that I babble when I’m nervous.
  4. When I had access to a lending library, my preferred genre was crime – the grislier the better. At one point, I even had this really macabre interest in true crime. Now that I’m thousands of kilometres away from the TPL, I have to confine myself to whodunit TV shows and am fast running out. Recommendations, anyone?
  5. When fêted musicians or albums leave me cold, I always feel the weakness is in me. Why is it that The Arcade Fire does nothing for me, musically speaking? Do I have a tin ear? Is this because I watch MTV? Why do other people like the Strokes so? Why am I not in on this?
Voilà, go forth and ponder the sheer triviality of these 'revelations,' and feel free to tag yourselves if you feel like playing.

Thursday, September 03, 2009

"On what planet do you spend most of your time?"

Following on from this post -



Marry me, Barney Frank.

For a Brit's take on how Universal Healthcare is supposedly The Return Of The Nazis, go here.

Monday, August 17, 2009

The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of


 

Now Playing: Fleet Foxes – Quiet Houses


 


 

(Continued from last time - The family has arrived home with the new addition.)


 

Me: Be careful! SUPPORT THE NECK! IT'S DELICATE!

Brother: First of all, it's an iPod, not a baby, and second of all, THERE IS NO NECK YOU DEMENTED CREATURE.

Me: Don't listen to your uncle, my sweet baby, there's a dear. (aside) Don't hurt its feelings! It can't help being neck-challenged!!!

Brother: …

Me: Now that you're home, we have to get you all charged up, don't we? YES WE DO! OH YES WE DO!

Brother: Oh sweet Jesus Christ, she's baby-talking the iPod.

Parents: We find it's best to keep quiet and hope that she doesn't do this in public. Much.

Brother (is aghast)

Me: Is it time for baby's first feeding?

Brother (is even more creeped out): By that horrible metaphor, I take it you mean to upload your music now?

Me: (covers iPod's headphone port) Do you mind? Baby doesn't know it's not…

Brother: ALIVE? SENTIENT?

Me: I was going to say organic, but those things too.

Brother: Heaven help us all when you really do spawn.

Parents (see their hopes of grandchildren evaporating)


 

(fast forward to a few weeks later)


 

iPod: feeeeeeeeeeeed meeeeeeeee….

Me: But! I have no more CDs left! I even ripped my Teach Yourself German CDs to feed your unending hunger AND THAT WAS TWO HOURS AGO YOU FIEND.

iPod: Denkst du, das genug war???

Me: Um… Ja?     

iPod: NIE!

Me (contemplates iPod-icide)

iPod: There's always the cheap CD bin at Carrefour.

Me: What? And soil myself with Best of the 90s: The Hits You Love Performed By Underpaid Soundalikes?

iPod: Du hast KEINE WAHL.

Me: Oh, Woe.


 

[German bits:

Did you think that was enough?

Um… yeah?

NEVER!

You have NO CHOICE.]

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Open Letter, or, a Clueless Canuck Seeks Answers

Now Playing: Friendly Fires – Lovesick

For all that the United States of America is Canada’s closest trading partner, our cultural brother-from-another-mother and the South to our True North Strong And Free, there are aspects to American Culture that I find unfathomable.

First of all, what is up with the one-dollar bills? This may seem a trivial point to many, but one of the things that really feels ‘alien’ about the US – when visiting from Canada –is the one-dollar bills. Why hasn’t there been a movement en masse to Sacagawea dollars?

More seriously, I have trouble understanding the mindset of people who do not think that universal healthcare is a right – who believe that adopting universal healthcare will turn America into a third-world country like Canada. Gee, is that why we’ve been calling Scarborough Scarlem all these years?

Why isn’t healthcare seen as a fundamental essential that everyone has the right to, like education? You’ll educate a child at government expense, but someone with a life-threatening illness has to shift for themselves? Alright, I’m unclear on the exact working of the US system – if you’re uninsured, are you treated at all? Or do you get treatment and then get slapped with a giant bill afterwards – and if you had the money to pay that, wouldn’t you have gotten insurance in the first place?

Answer me this - why defend the right to bear arms, but not the right to universal healthcare?

It is almost fashionable in Canada to complain about our healthcare services – the waitlist to see a specialist can run more than a month – but atleast we’ll never be in the position of not being able to afford cancer care.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

No Love for Love Aaj Kal


Now Playing: Ladyhawke - Magic


As the first half of Love Aaj Kal ended and the lights came up in the theatre for the intermission, I felt distinctly underwhelmed. This was an Imtiaz Ali film, and yet it didn't pop – unlike his previous picture, Jab We Met, whose heroine's middle names were probably Snap, Crackle and Pop. It was halfway through the movie – and yet the most noteworthy thing I'd seen was the use of the word 'gist' in a hindi song (they needed something to rhyme with 'twist.') Por que, Imtiaz, por que?


The plot unfolds, with lots of flash-backs and a few flash-forwards (damn you, Lost!) thusly - In present-day London, Jai and Meera meet (the second time) in a club, sparks fly and soon they're in a relationship. After more than a year, Meera decides to move to Delhi, where she's been offered the chance to do mural restoration work and they decide to break up – long-distance relationships never work and they're both mature individuals, not star-struck lovers. So mature, in fact, that they have a combination send-off and break-up party, at which they slow-dance, with long, lingering gazes. The camera does not linger on the faces of their guests, but I'm sure they must have been thinking, "This is soooo awkward. Are they together or not?" Anyway, after the party, the owner of the restaurant, Veer Singh (Rishi Kapoor) tells Jai he's an idiot to have let that girl go, and tells Jai the story of his passionate and all-consuming love for Harleen (Giselle Monteiro) back when he was played by a polyester-clad Saif Ali Khan.


One of the main problems, I felt, is that the present-day romance is supposed to be 'realistic' – Jai does not fall madly in love with Meera the first time he sees her, which is the very first scene of the movie - only they don't really meet and they're simply sharing an elevator. They enter the elevator, they don't look at each other, they exit the elevator. Realistic, right? Who knows, you might have met your future spouse already and not yet know it. But hold on, back up a second. I find it difficult to believe that there are men – purportedly heterosexual men – who are capable of getting into a lift with someone who looks like Deepika Padukone without giving her so much as a glance, let alone a double-take. The very first scene of the movie, and it rings false.


The present-day part of the film isn't helped by the fact that neither Jai nor Meera come across as very sympathetic. Jai comes across as selfish and clueless – he won't see Meera off at the airport because he's lent his car for the day and the flight leaves from Stansted, as if there's no public transport in the greater London area. 'Oh, Meera's fine with that," he says, and I think, "You idiot. You've been dating her for the better part of two years, you've met her family, the least you can do is show up at the airport and wave goodbye!" Alack, the idiocy of men. Later, when he sees Meera after her wedding to Vikram (darling, darling Rahul Khanna) he blathers on and on about his feelings – and which the blathering may have been meant to be a part of the character's charm, it really didn't work for me all the time. Afterwards, he moves to San Francisco as part of his life's dream to work on the Golden Gate bridge and finds the dream isn't all that great without the girl by his side, and I swear, the song picturization at this point was like a Raymond Suitings commercial – see Saif pose around San Fran in nice suits and varying degrees of stubble to match his character's inner angst! I laughed.


Deepika… oh dear, the fact of the matter is that the girl may be ridonkulously pretty and a fabulous clothes horse, but she can't act her way out of a paper bag. The Jai-Meera story is first of all, mostly Jai's story, and Deepika has comparatively little to do besides looking pretty. She does get one really meaty scene – when Meera realizes that perhaps, you can't use logic to deal with relationships; that maybe, the person who seems to not fit with where you are in life makes you happier than the person who is your perfect match. Unfortunately, this realization happens after her marriage to Vikram which inevitably leads to a meltdown. It's Deepika's big moment in the film – and it doesn't work. In stronger hands (Kareena Kapoor or maybe Konkona Sen Sharma) this would have been oscar reel material, but Deepika comes across as more high school drama club. The whole Jai-Meera relationship comes across as rather weak, even platonic sometimes, because Jai, while a bit of a prat, is played by Saif at 100W while Deepika flickers pleasantly at 40W.


Now, the other storyline, where Veer sees Harleen once and falls madly in love is cute, charming and unfortunately, can't account for more than a third of the film's running time. Saif may not be the best choice to play a Sardarji, but the character is easily more lovable than Jai – for example, contrast Veer running to the train station to see Harleen one more time and Jai whining about Stansted being too far out of town. Harleen has maybe two lines in the whole movie (seeing as how the actress is brazilian and doesn't speak hindi) but she comes across more vividly with all that silence than Deepika does with her surfeit of lines. The music, with the exception of 'Dooriyan' is hardly memorable - though can someone tell me why the costumes in the big dance numbers are so fluorescent and gaudy? They were like the costumes in Jab We Met's 'Mauja' number only with more glitter.


I did like the fact that Jai doesn't run to Meera's wedding yelling, "yeh shaadi nahin ho saktaaaaaa!!!" and the fact that Vikram and Saif's girlfriend Jo aren't portrayed negatively simply because they're the other guy and girl, respectively – but that's not enough to make me like the movie. Rent it if you must, but save the cost of a movie ticket to watch Kaminey.



Monday, August 10, 2009

A Question of Identity


 

Now Playing: Belle and Sebastian – Cassaco Marron


 

I haven't always had identity issues. When I was young, it never occurred to me to question what I was. I was Indian, my parents were malayalee though my mother's family were settled in Bombay, and that was that.


 

Things began to change when I was in grade four. That was a strange year; in IV-C, there were, by some administrative stroke of genius, three Sharons. With myself, Sharon Fonseca & Sharon Pereira in one class, teachers were forced to resort to, "Sharon! No, I mean you!" to identify us. Attempts to call us by our middle names died quick deaths; I refused to answer to Maria and the other Sharons were similarly fond of our common first name. That was probably when I realised – at a subconscious level – that I was no longer as special or as unique as I had thought myself to be hitherto.


 

One day, my mother said to me, "Sherrie, you must do well in maths and science. All malayalees are good at maths and science." I've since come to realise that this was a particularly fallacious piece of racial stereotyping – some of the most profoundly stupid people I have ever met have been malayalee – but I suppose it was my mother's way of telling me not to let the side down. Anyway, it was then I really recognized that I was apparently part of a larger, sub-national collective – I had a state team of my own, and it was Kerala. I belonged somewhere!


 

It made sense, I thought, to try and become a part of whatever malayalee cultural life I could. So, the next time I heard a fragment of an announcement on the school PA system about events at the local Kerala Samajam (a sort of malayalee social club), I went on full alert. The Kerala Samajam was, in theory, my own personal clubhouse, if only I knew exactly what they were doing there. Off I went to ask a malayalee classmate (MC) exactly what that might be.


 

Me: Did you hear what they said about the Kerala Samajam?

MC: Why do you want to know?

Me: Well – I'm malayalee, right?

MC: What, really?

Me: Um, yeah?

MC: No way, I thought you were Goan.

Me : N-no, why would you think that?

MC: You just don't seem malayalee.


 

Huh, I thought.


 

Me: So what was that announcement?

MC: Oh, some Bharat Natyam recital at the Kerala Samajam. You don't do Bharat Natyam, do you?

Me: No-

MC: So it's not meant for you, don't worry.

Me: Okay…


 

I was dumbfounded. These were my own tribesmen (tribesgirls?) and apparently they didn't even recognize me. Was I doing something wrong?


 

Me: Mama, the malayalee girls at school thought I was goan!

Ma: That's because they're stupid.

Me: …


 

I resolved to try again to reconnect with my peeps (not that that particular bit of slang was in vogue yet, but if it had been, it would have been absolutely apropos.) This time, the conversation got off to a more auspicious start.


 

MC: So, where are you from?


 

Safe ground, I thought. Isn't that the first thing one malayalee asks another when they meet for the first time? Nadu Evede?


 

Me: Oh, my Dad is from Kannur and my Mom's family is from Trichur originally, but they're settled in Bombay.

MC: Chee! Bombay is so dirty!


 

Huh?


 

MC: And there are beggars everywhere!


 

Wha-?


 

Apparently, my malayalee bonafides had been examined and found wanting. While I might have been totally malayalee in terms of parentage, spiritually, I suppose, I had been contaminated with Bombayness – after all, was the city not a centre of fast living, loose morals and God alone knew what else? To top it all off, I didn't even speak the mother tongue! I could see the judgement crystallize into being: Not a Proper Malayalee, Polysyllabic House Name Notwithstanding.


 

I was incensed. Who were these, these people to call Bombay dirty? To hell with it, I thought. I can always say I'm from Bombay. It was, in a quite literal way, true – I had been born there, as had been my mother and brother. That would be my new tribe, I thought; after all, the malayalees clearly didn't see me as one of them.


 

This was easier said than done. Bombay is to India what New York or Los Angeles is to the USA and Toronto is to Canada – the Big Bad City. Having been brought up in the safer, slower UAE, it was made abundantly clear to me by all my Bombay relatives – especially my mother – that I was an especially easy target for someone to rob, kidnap and perpetrate any manner of crime upon. Bombay people, I was told, were fast in thought and action, and I was quite the opposite. Too, I spoke no marathi and my hindi was halting and hesitant. And, in the background, there was the Shiv Sena and its various attendant subsidiaries and spinoffs trumpeting, "Maharashtra for Marathis!" Considering all these facts, could I really claim to be a mumbaikar?


 

This whole Question Of Identity was made a moot point when the Family packed up and moved to Toronto, Canada. Faced with the prospect of going from an all-Indian school to a multi-cultural Don Mills school, regional identity faded into the background – I was an Indian, adrift and friendless in this snowy wasteland. For the first time in my life, I had a sense of a wider South Asian identity as it dawned on me that most of the 'brown' people at my high school weren't Indian; they were far more likely to be of Sri Lankan or West Indian origin.


 

For those first few months, I clung obsessively to everything Indian I could find. I played my few hindi CDs over and over again (alack, one of those was the soundtrack to Mohabbatein, ew) and watched our small library of VCDs till I knew the movies line by line and scene by scene. I was terribly homesick; even the sound of an Indian accent in a bus shelter reminded me of 'home' – a place where my accent wasn't strange and somehow English and I didn't constantly feel self-conscious and out of place.


 

Slowly, though, Canada - more specifically Toronto – became less foreign. It became second nature to talk of loonies & toonies and – surprisingly – to append 'eh' to one's sentences. This is not to say that the key to Canadian-ness lay in currency denominations or in linguistic pecularities; I felt, I really felt that Canadians generally were friendly, helpful and genuinely welcoming. Gradually, that us vs them divide began to dissolve; we were really quite a nice bunch, we were the first nation of hockey and we had the best French-fries-related concoction ever invented.


 

Before we moved to Canada, some of our family friends told my parents to think twice. "Your children will become Canadian!" they hissed. And we had done (though not in the way often seen in hindi movies – where the anglicized children drink, smoke and sleep around while their parents weep and think of the old country.) To me, Canada was now home; no matter where I went, home would still be waiting for me. After a lifetime of not knowing exactly where home was, it was a relief to finally find out.


 

Then, a month or so ago, I was introduced to a fellow Canadian by two very good friends. "He's one of yours," they said, "so now you can go on about Tom Hortons all you like to him instead." "Tim Hortons," I murmured, as introductions were made. Afer the usual small talk was done with, the other Canuck turns to me.


 

"So, they tell me you're Canadian?" says he.

"Yeah, you too, right?"

"As in, you're an actual Canadian citizen?"


 

Huh, I thought, and walked away.