Thursday, August 31, 2006

Happy Labor Day! Roy Wood, Jr. Style

Wait - that is the holiday this weekend, right?

Whoa - I need to seriously take a break. Sorry to be MIA for a couple of days - I'll be out of town, but will try to get online at some point...

I leave you with a prank phonecall made by Roy Wood, Jr., a hilarious comedian whose shenanigans include doing prank phonecalls from radio stations, pretending to be outlandish characters.

The people he calls, however, are the ones that are the real characters.



This one is my favorite: when he pretends to work for the government and calls a woman in Alabama to tell her that her Social Security check is going to have to be reduced...and just listen to the shit hit the fan.

This is some seriously hilarious shit.

I present:
MY CHECK

Or, you can just play it here - just click the play button (if it comes up correctly in your browser):


"I'll skin your ass like I skinned that catfish last night!"

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Song of the Day: The Hives - Hate to Say I Told You So (LIVE)



The Hives - Hate to Say I Told You So (Live in London)

The original of this song can be found on the album Veni Vidi Vicious and other "singles" albums or special compilations.

I scored this Live in London bootleg from a torrent site. As I've stated before about other live shows I've posted, you might be able to purchase it somewhere, but I think some cat in London just posted a gig he went to up on a torrent site.

If you know what show this is (i.e. the date, the venue, etc) and can help me out here, I'd appreciate it - I am a nutjob about facts concerning my music collection, especially the live shows that I score.

I love love LOVE this song - it just rocks and is so much fun - it's naughty, dammit. I'd also like to dry-hump Howlin' Pelle's leg for a while. I'll play his Mrs. Robinson anytime. He looks like a young Malcolm McDowell.

Check out The HIVES WEBSITE, too...these cats are freaks.

Friday, August 25, 2006

Verizon Sucks: Can You Hear Me Now?




This was something that I came across on the way to work today. Somebody had painted this on their car.

It was so wonderful, all I could do was cackle maniacally and take pictures. It's always great to see something that makes you laugh on the way to work in the morning, when you just spent 20 minutes with your nose in somebody's armpit during a horrible train commute, going to a place that will be mind-numbing at best for 8 hours.

I'm annoyed with Verizon right now, so it works for me!

Confessions: A Rather Addictive Internet Space

A couple of the folks who are the brains behind Blogmad.net (and I'm sure just damn good bloggers) have put together a very cool and addictive blog called Confessions which is basically a place where you can post a confession about something - totally anonymously.

The addictive part is not so much confessing (I even left a confession!) but reading the other confessions. You can even rank them, as to how far out they are, etc...

It's fun and entertaining. Like watching gladiator death matches, accidents on the side of the road, and flinging insults to the police officer writing a ticket on your parked car (causing him to get angrier and write more offenses)...and it's not your car.

It reminds me of the lame site that Secret antiperspirant tried - I always wanted to write in "I like to watch midget porn" or something on their site...

But this is cooler - it's totally anonymous. And it's not linked to deodorant, for chrissake.

Thursday, August 24, 2006

Song of the Day: Iggy Pop - Nightclubbing

Photo: John Stoddart


Iggy Pop - Nightclubbing

One great album it's on is Nude and Rude: The Best of Iggy Pop
and another is the Trainspotting Soundtrack (Disc 1)

My mentor, William, once told me "Damn - this song's got fuckin' BALLS!!!"
He's totally right.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Song of the Day: Max Roach - Garvey's Ghost



Max Roach - Garvey's Ghost
from the album Percussion Bittersweet
another great album it's on - albeit edited - is Red Hot on Impulse!

One of my favorite classic jazz tunes - to me, it is one of the cuts that truly defines so much of what Bop was about in the 1950's and 60's.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Book Geekery: A (Small) List of My Favorite Books

Maritza (Jump In the Ocean) tagged me on her blog to list some of my favorite books. She has listed some that sound rather yummy. Please go by and check out her blog Jump In the Ocean; she is a great blogger with an enjoyable site. She's also a really cool chick.

This is somewhat difficult, because I have QUITE a few, but here goes; I'm including books that I haven't read in YEARS, but whose pages effected me even to this day:

1) Faeries - by Brian Froud
This is a book that is basically an encyclopedia of the various kinds of Faeries that exist in the world. The illustrations are gorgeous and it reads matter-of-factly about the legends and lore - and takes you into the world. I first read this when I was 9 years old. When I found out that I had an opportunity to write to the author, I sent him a letter letting him know that I really believed in Faeries and appreciated his book because "...a 9 3/4 year old needs to know the different kinds of Fairies that are out there in case I run into them."
He wrote me back a very kind letter and asked me to always believe. The beauty he brought to that book has always stayed with me.

2)Dubliners - by James Joyce
A collection of stories by Joyce that exemplify the beauty of his writing. I think it's a must for any writer, because these stories are rich with the simple art of telling a story - the "show, not tell" if you will, that so many writers strive for and miss. My favorite story is "An Encounter," about a boy's day off with his friend and their encounter with a pedophile. That word is never used, of course, but simply from the behavior of the characters and the beauty of the writing, you gather so much.
One great site that lists the TOC from this book as well as the text, is this one.

3)It - by Stephen King
The classic Stephen King novel about a group of friends and the monster that tried to destroy them as children...and whose return calls them back as adults. Again, another novel that inspired my writing. King's characters are so damn vivid they come off the page; the little details of the entire surroundings are amazing.

4)Naked - by David Sedaris
A book of essays by one of the funniest writers ever. This collection made me laugh out loud so many times...it's classic. Hilarious stuff about what it's like being Sedaris.

5) Neuromancer - William Gibson
The classic cyberpunk novel. What inspired the Matrix and opened the doorway between science fiction, the information age, and the internet. A must for anyone who is a tech geek and sci-fi nut.

6) The Crying of Lot 49 - Thomas Pynchon
A beatnik-y satire that focuses on a worldwide conspiracy - and the growth of one woman who feels like she's either losing her mind or getting swept up in the heart of the conspiracy.

7) Junky - William S. Burroughs
The classic first-hand account of drug addiction and homosexuality in the 1950's, by one of the founding fathers of the Beat Movement.

8) Interview With the Vampire - Anne Rice
The poetry that rice uses in her tale of the Vampire and the humanity that she gives to him, and the rich world that she creates in New Orleans changed the way that I looked at writing about horror...There is a sexuality and sensuality that she adds to her writing that is so important in this genre - at least when dealing with this topic.

9) Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov
I read this when I was 12 years old. I think, in respect to my love life, the rest is history...lol. Classic tale of Humbert Humbert, the man in his 40's who falls in love with a 12-year-old girl. Told from his point of view, he is attracted to pre-pubescent girls who are supposedly very aware of their sexuality. He meets Lolita and her mother and marries the mother in an attempt to be closer to the girl.

10) The Fermata - Nicholson Baker
The protagonist is a geek who has learned how to stop time with simple motions (like shoving his glasses on his nose). He uses this ability mainly to become a voyeur and find an outlet for his over-charged sexual desires. Reminiscent of Henry Miller novels, I love this because it combines erotica, humor, and sci-fi.


Okay, I could keep going, but I'd never finish (I've been working on this on and off for quite a while now). Obviously there are many more books I love, I've been reading since I was a wee tot...

I hereby tag:

1) Pendullum at Dribblingwit
2) Aspie Goddess at Aspie Goddess
3) NYC Beauty at Views From A Broad

Let the games begin!!!

Song of the Day: Jane's Addiction - Then She Did

Photo: ScreamStudios.com



Janes Addiction
- Then She Did
from a live recording at the L.A. Palladium, 1990, called Live and Insane

I scored this recording at Revolver records in NYC; I'm not sure where to get it, perhaps any store nowadays...This song is amazing, Perkins is incredible. Perry is all trashed on something strong, and goes off on a monologue...but it's eerie and poetic at the same time.

Couple of good links pertaining to live Janes albums and set lists:
Justin Hall
Gavin's Live and Rare Recordings

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Stories From Mississippi: Pt. 1


In a recent Song of the Day post I did of Johnny Cash, I made reference to experiences that I had had in Mississippi during the time I lived there, because the song I chose was Starkville City Jail. Pendullum commented a suggestion that I share one such experience - and I think it's high time I started doing just that.

First, a little background:

I went to the University of Mississippi in the 90's for three years. I chose this school because my mother was filming Miss Firecracker in Yazoo City, MS when I was in high school; and after going on location with her (during which time I hung out with the crew and locals of the town, and first experienced drinking, pot, and fooling around with boys) I associated all the fun I had that summer with the state of Mississippi itself. When the time came for college hunting, I applied to several, but Ole Miss had all the fun plus other things like a great English department that I wanted, so I decided to go there.

Most of my friends thought I was insane. Here I was, a private school brat from the Upper West Side of Manhattan, who was about to embark on a journey to a part of the country that most of us city kids couldn't even find on a map, and what most of my peers associated with racism, incest, farm animals and Ned Beatty taking it up the ass by banjo-playing Lenny Small wanna-be's (the fact that those kinds of Mountain Men are usually found more often in upstate New York than in even the deepest of the Deep South did not factor into their minds).

However, although in retrospect my mind was focusing on all the partying I was going to do once I got to Ole Miss (it was voted by Playboy as one of the Top Ten Party Schools in the nation at the time), I kept telling everyone that I was going to benefit from the extreme cultural experience of moving to a small town from the big city - and expand my horizons. I truly believed that myself, and to this day, think it was the best thing I could have done.

Would I have done it differently when I was there? Some things, yes. Absolutely. I partied too much and missed out on a lot of the education opportunities that Ole Miss had to offer - it's a great school. Socially and culturally, though, I grew a great deal, and came to appreciate so many things that I had taken for granted here in the city. But I will get back to that another time...

Now, for a little story that feeds into the angst of what it must have been like for Johnny Cash to get locked up for picking flowers after curfew in a little town of Starkville, Mississippi...

Nothing quite so dramatic, but here is a little something that was one of my introductions to the Ole Miss campus:

I was walking back from a friend's house one night during my sophomore year. By this point, most of my friends had moved off of campus, and although I had as well, I lived very near campus. I was with about three male friends, all of us sporting long hair and and either tie-dyes or crumpled t-shirts. At least two of us were wearing sandals. We were very stoned and obviously leaning more toward the "hippie" side than the "frat boy/sorority chick" side. We were all headed toward my crib, where we were going to probably engage in something highly intellectual and cerebral like doing bong hits and play "Road Rage" on my Sega Genesis system. I had on an Indonesian ankle bracelet with little bells on it that I picked up at a Grateful Dead show; it jingled when I walked. The scent of patchouli followed us.

I remember we were having an interesting conversation; I was always the female advice section to these guys who were trying to figure out women like a Rubik's Cube. Two of the three had hardly any experience with girls, and I felt like it was my job to help them gain some insight. That was part of the joy of being the only chick among male friends.

Boy 1: "So should I call her? She gave me her number, and I want to call her tonight, but is that going to seem too desperate?"

Boy 2: "I dunno, man. Maybe you should wait a few days and then call her. Make her sweat it out."

Me: "That's ridiculous, man, why play games? Dude, if you operate that way, you'll still be a virgin by the time your in your 30's."

Boy 2: "I'm not a virgin."

Boy 1: "Dude, your Mom doesn't count."

Boy 3: (taking a drag of his cigarette and trying to look cool) "Yeah, besides, by the time you wait to call her, she'll have found someone else. Like me, for instance."


All of the sudden, we hear a CRASH next to where we're standing/walking. Glass goes everywhere, and we hear yelling and hollering as a car is speeding past us.

"FUCKING HIPPIES! Take a fucking SHOWER and get the hell off our campus!!!"

At least two more bottles were thrown at us as the car's tires shrieked and it raced off into the night. A car full of boys with baseball caps and fraternity stickers on the bumper sped off, weaving a little bit. I don't care what anyone says about smoking pot vs. drinking alcohol, the legalities of one vs. the other; pot doesn't make you a dangerous ornery asswipe, and four people walking around high are much safer company than four people drunk and driving.

Immediately, playing mother hen, I checked the boys to make sure nobody got glass in their eyes or cut at all. I was worried that I might have gotten my foot cut by the glass, but everything was okay. We all shook out our hair and any possible shards that might have flown into it. One of my friends had long blond hair, beautiful stuff, about as long as mine, but much thicker. He didn't brush it out often, so it was starting to dread in some places, but just looked like a big bird's nest.

We were in shock.

All three boys were from Mississippi and I'm sure that they had seen similar attacks or knew of things like that happening, but I don't think it had ever happened to them. Getting assaulted because we were long-haired hippies? I know one of us had seen drug wars and had witnessed a friend being gunned down years before, but there is still something different when you are minding your own business one minute, and then having bottles thrown at your head the next because you're wearing a t-shirt with psychedelic colors and big mushrooms.

I think of all of us, I was the most surprised and horrified; the girl from the big city of New York. I started to cry and then I got mad, and then I wanted to go after them, and then I started to curse like a sailor...every word that came out of my mouth sounded like a mafioso from Brooklyn about to kick somebody's ass.

But what scared me the most was that I had thought I was safe in Mississippi - and it seemed that I had been safer in New York. At least there I expected this kind of thing; perhaps a different situation or reason for the attack (getting mugged vs. this) but it wouldn't have been such a shock.

So there's one story.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Song of the Day: Tom Petty - Time to Move On



Tom Petty - Time to Move On
from the album Wildflowers

David and I just got back from seeing Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers with The Allman Brothers and The Derek Trucks Band at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center this past weekend. What an amazing show...Tom Petty was so humble and kind, very appreciative of both his audience and his fellow performers.

It was such a groovy time. In between sets we were laying out under the stars and saw part of the meteor shower that was going on - caught a couple of shooting stars. How awesome...

Friday, August 11, 2006

Song of the Day: Johnny Cash - Starkville City Jail

Photo: Jim Marshall


Johnny Cash - Starkville City Jail

from the live 1969 concert At San Quentin

If you don't already own this album, go out and get it. Not only is it just great because it's Johnny Cash, but it's raw and funny and gives you a bit of Cash as the man as well as the performer.

This song is amazing - it's hilarious and a great little ditty; it reminds me of the horseshit that I had to put up with when I lived in Mississippi for three years - three of the best years of my life.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Song of the Day: Jerry Garcia & David Grisman - Shady Grove

Photo by Jon Sievert


Jerry Garcia
and David Grisman - Shady Grove

from the album Shady Grove

Another great compilation album this is on is Songs of the South: Farther Along...which I'm sure you all can tell I listen to a lot, since about three songs of the day are from here so far...and counting.

A great article about this song is at www.puremusic.com.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Song of the Day: Henry Rollins - Liar



Henry Rollins - Liar
from the album Weight

An amazing song...A nice reminder of all the true assholes out there just waiting to pounce on you and tear your heart out... Great for all of us neurotic people who already are scared to death to get involved in relationships and get our hearts broken - yes, I'm being facetious.

Rollins is a genius - and a total hottie. Damn.

Mother and Daughter


Mother and Daughter
Originally uploaded by Billychic.
Just a brief note: I recently downloaded a bunch of Flickr pics of my niece's birthday party and a July 4th bbq I had last month...and I am just amazed at how beautiful my sister-in-law and niece are...

I am blessed to have such wonderful family.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled programming.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Song of the Day: The Cardigans - Happy Meal II



The Cardigans - Happy Meal II
from the album First Band on the Moon

I love this album - several of the songs are so sad, so eerie - almost depressing, actually, but still really enjoyable...I used this song in a student film I made in the late 90's, which I hope to post at some point when I get my shit together. I'm one to cringe at "pop" and what that has come to mean nowadays...but this is a band of Swedes that can groove out with the pop tune and still feel like you just did some emotional bloodletting.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Pigs in Zen: Mother Tiger Takes On Piglets



Now I'm sure these pictures have been kicking around the internet for a bit, but I just got a forwarded email this morning from my Dad, of all people, with this fascinating tale of a mother tiger whose triplet baby tigers died from birth complications - who ended up fostering a whole litter of piglets who were orphaned.


Apparently, after her cubs died, her health went on a rapid decline, and the vets were sure it was due to her loss. They thought that if they gave her another litter to be a foster mom to, perhaps she would perk up in spirits and get her health back on track - as well as giving a mommy to a an orphaned litter.

The only litter available immediately was a litter of piglets. They wrapped the little pink cuties in tiger fur and prayed they wouldn't become a breakfast side dish to dear old Mum.

Far from it. Mommy Tiger and Little Piggies bonded and became a happy family.


I'm having a great weekend...it just got better with these pictures. I wonder if CuteOverload has them? Probably...they must.

If anyone knows the rest of this story, or when it happened, let me know...I will proabably just google it, but I'm lazy and I need to clean my crib.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Song of the Day: Damon Albarn - Closet Romantic



Damon Albarn - Closet Romantic
from the fabulous Trainspotting soundtrack

For all of you James Bond 007 fans out there...

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Song of the Day: Massive Attack - Risingson



Massive Attack - Risingson

from the album Mezzanine

This is a very trippy, sultry album, by a band that practically started trip-hop...this particular song is great to have sex to, btw.

Hee.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Blossom Vegan Restaurant Revisited



So, despite the nasty-ass heat wave we've been dealing with here in New York City, I decided on a whim to take a walk and have dinner over at Blossom, a vegan restaurant where my dear pal Robert is the manager. Some may recall that I wrote about this lovely little organic haven of delectable vegan cuisine in a post a little while back, dishing out praise over their awesome chocolate cake, organic wines, and yummy veggie side dishes.

I'd like to take a moment, if I could, to express how FABulous their field green salad is. I think the name sucks, personally, because it doesn't do the dish justice at all. If you check out their menu, you can see that it's really a mixed green salad with grilled pears (they have some kind of delicious sauce, or maybe it's just the au natural juice from the fruit, but it rocks), miso tofu (that is marinated and cooked - dude, this stuff is incredible; I could eat it by itself) and candied walnuts. The dressing is spicy and delicious.

I think some kind of title with reference to the groovy pears would have been neat. I have worked in several restaurants in my life, and two of them had their own "pear salad". Each was tasty - but nothing in the world like this.

I've been making it a habit to go over to Blossom about every week or two, because I find that as I try to make my diet healthier, it's just easier to do if you get food that is not only healthy but YUMMY. I get one of these salads (I accidently got the large salad yesterday and got a little too stuffed - they don't skim on the servings) and one or two glasses of killer red wine, and I'm done.

That, and of course, I get to chat with Robert - one of my best friends, fellow actors, and former co-star.

So please go in and visit Blossom vegan restaurant- there are all kinds of yum yum on the menu and if you haven't eaten vegan before it's no sweat; you won't miss the meat and dairy.

Robert only owes me $60 now; please remind him to pay up when you see him.

Song of the Day: Miles Davis & John Coltrane - So What




Miles Davis & John Coltrane - So What

This juicy gem is a live recording from Germany, that I scored from a torrent site. The title of the "album" was Miles and Coltrane: Live Over Germany, and I've been trying to find out the exact album this is from. There are two other jams of this song on the same album. It might be a total bootleg, but like most bootlegs, give them enough time around and they become an album that's sold everywhere.

I've rummaged through the Live in Zurich albums and some others online; I can't seem to find this cut.

If anyone knows, please let me know what show this is or where the title of the album is; I'm kind of a nut about the music facts, but after a while it just boils down to sitting back and listening to the tunes.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

The Circus Act of Relationships



When I hit my 30's, one catch-phrase that many of my friends are sure to have heard me say is "my threshold for bullshit has gotten really damn low" or something along those lines. I was always talking about other people's bullshit; my inability and refusal to put up with crap dished my way from lovers, partners, friends.

I forgot to take into consideration my own bullshit. I think I can dish out more on to myself than anyone else ever could.

How many of us self-sabotage and have a history of doing so? Oftentimes in relationships? I know I can raise my hand on that one. It's very sly, this little worm in our brain that causes self-defeating behavior; it can raise it's head in a myriad of ways. From simply picking potential partners who will eventually screw us over (or the relationship really will never work); to finding a good thing and creating obstacles in the relationship that will eventually send it down in flames; to simply ignoring the handwriting on the wall (and what they say early on) and then acting surprised when the shit hits the fan...it all boils down to issues within ourselves that create this inability to allow good things to happen to us - and avoid the pitfalls.



The bottom line is that those of us who have a tendency toward self-defeating behavior/thinking need to really look at this issue. I can stand here and wax poetic about how much it sucks that I do this, but that and a token will get me on the train toward a happy life if I don't do anything about it. Self-awareness is the first step, I suppose; but after that, it's almost like re-training yourself to think, act, and express yourself.

I know that I have a certain amount of self-confidence that has grown over the years as I get older and go out and conquer more things and gain experience in life. But I know that there is a part of me that is so insecure that I can't believe it when something good comes into my life, romantically, - kind of a what? why on earth would that person want to be with me? and I almost find myself waiting for the other shoe to drop; the catch, if you will. It's only been in the last two years that I've really been able to recognize this. It's completely unfounded, for I'm a great person who would be a fabulous partner for someone - but saying that and really believing it are two different things. I also have a lack of faith in the intelligence and emotional stability of others to recognize that I'm an absolute rockstar. Having done the "divorced/separated/single woman in her 30's living in the Big City" bit for two years, I've met some serious assholes. I could do my own version of Sex in the city and play the roles of all four girls.



I suppose, then, that a couple of things I and others like me need to think about working on are:

  • Listening to what they tell you early on - not what you want to hear.
    If they say "I guess I want to have kids", that isn't really a whole-hearted desire. "I guess I can handle a monogamous relationship" is not very encouraging if that's what you want. My problem in the past is that I heard the sentence but deleted the guess out of it, so I wasn't really listening. Then I'm shocked years later when he announces that he really isn't sure he wants kids and wants to boink his co-worker.
  • Believe that I deserve a good relationship - really believe it.
    Because if I don't, I'm always going to either expect it to end, do something to make it end, or spend my time waiting for the other shoe to drop. When I'm in something good, I find myself watching myself in the relationship, almost like an observer, not a participant, unable to believe that something this groovy is really happening. I need to quit doing that and live in the moment.
  • Avoid creating obstacles - and don't allow them to, either..
    This is a big one. Allowing the other person in the relationship to create them is as bad as creating them yourself, and goes back to the initial picking of the partner that would do that...but sometimes two people can overcome these problems if they just talk it out and each work on themselves. I have to really watch it sometimes that I don't create a situation that sets me up for disaster - like getting too much in their space or, the opposite, worrying so much about getting in their space that I almost avoid them. This leads to the last one, for now:
  • Don't over-analyze the damn situation.
    Sure, I can rant about how important it is that I take all of this into consideration, but after a while you just have to let go and freefall. I sometimes will come home and replay what it was that I said or did and their reaction to that in my head and it drives me nuts. Like a nutty professor, I'll play it all back and dissect moments where perhaps I did this wrong here...fooled around with him too soon there...gave the wrong impression here...DAMMIT!!! Then if the person is just living their life and maybe having a bad day and doesn't act quite like they did they day before, I get bent out of shape and think it's something that I did. What a fucking horror show. I don't do this as much anymore, but it still rears its ugly head now and then.

Whatever. I just hope that things continue to move in the way that they are, and that I can surf the ride without crashing into a huge wave - of my own making.


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