The purpose of
The Best Part of Today
is to show that there is always something good about every day.
Check back every weekday
for your daily dose of positivity.


Tuesday, September 20, 2011

If only, if only, it were always like this

BPoT #203:
Homework as escape.

Has this ever happened before? I don't know. I only know that I had a rough day today, and all I was looking forward after finishing classes was lying and reading The Secret Garden. Imagine, looking forward to doing homework, in and of itself. It just proves that homework doesn't have to be an innately bad thing. I think this is something teachers and professors of all levels should devote more study to.

Monday, September 19, 2011

This is why I'm an English Major

BPoT #202:
Using homework to procrastinate for other homework.

So I have several reading assignments this week. Instead of reading Dr. Faustus (Satanic Motifs in Advanced Literature), An Ethiopian Story (Ancient Fictions), or a "Journalist's Introduction to Media Law," (Copy Editing) I'm reading The Secret Garden (Children's Literature). It's like pleasure reading disguised as homework.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Thank god for skype

BPotW #201:
Having another half.

Today my roommate and suitemates and I had dinner together and we all barely see each other cuz we're never in the room at the same time, except when we watch Project Runway together. So when my suitemate asked me how my week was, I answered "Considering this was the first week I've spent having a boyfriend in a long time, it was much better than last week." And it was.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

It can do anything

BPotW #200:
Love.

This was undoubtedly the best part of the week. Not to make excuses, but it was part of the reason I didn't post all week. I was rather preoccupied with getting ahead of this weekend's homework so that I wouldn't have to do any while I was visiting my boyfriend in Boston. Thusly I haven't had time yet to compile another 10Best for the 200th post (another reason I didn't post all week), but one is forthcoming. I guess we'll just have to do with suspense for now.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Bonus!

BPoT #199:
A fortuitous homecoming.

Despite my best efforts at preparedness, over the first week of school I amassed a list of things that I wanted to bring up at the next available opportunity. I was intending on going home the first weekend into the year, but with the hurricane leaving its destructive effects, my house lost power. My school didn't, and I contemplated staying at school until the next weekend, when we would hopefully have power. But then our electricity was miraculously restored on Friday, and I headed home. The better surprise, though, was when I found out that my best guy friend who go to school all the way up in Boston said he was going to be back home too, and I wouldn't have gotten to see him if I hadn't have come home. ^_^

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Awesome things

BPoT #198:
A most welcome surprise!

Great news! Because I mentioned 1000 Awesome Things in my post yesterday, I wanted to email Neil Pasricha and thank him as well as to share the post with him. I only half thought that he would email me back, thinking he'd certainly be too busy with other things, but there in my inbox this afternoon was a most gracious reply. Read the conversation below:


Dear Mr. Pasricha
I have been an avid follower of your blog for some time now, and will be very sad 167 days from today when we finally get to the end of the awesome things countdown. I just wanted to tell you how much of an inspiration you have been to me, both in life and in my own writing. I wanted to share this special blog post with you, since you have been such a positive and shaping influence in the creation of my own blog: http://livressontliberte.blogspot.com

I invite you to read it, if you can find the time, and if not, just know how much I have appreciated your daily words of wisdom.

I hope you all the best in your future endeavours.

Truly,
Eliza S

Ps. If you're not a nerdfighter, I think you would probably like being one. Google it. ^_^


From: 1000 Awesome Things
To: Eliza Smith
Sent: Thursday, September 1, 2011 12:53 PM
Subject: Re: Thanks

Hey Eliza!
Call me Neil! And I love your blog! Fantastic job. Keep up the great work and many thanks for the shout out. Blogging is so much fun. Keep being an Apostle of Awesome!

Neil


He obviously didn't say anything in response to my attempt to induct him into Nerdfighteria, but this response is further affirmation that he would be a perfect citizen of it. Calling someone "an Apostle of Awesome" is exactly something John or Hank might say (by the way, if anyone reading this doesn't know what I'm talking about, you should look it up too.) DFTBA

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Something equivalent to a deep breath.


BPoT #196 [Tuesday]:
Rewatching my original inspiration.

It was one of those times where you had a long first day of school and you wanted to relax in front of the TV but you didn't have the energy to select and insert a movie so you just felt like flipping around the channels to see what was good. For me, this selection was also affected by the fact that my TV remote is broken so I have to stand next to the TV and press the "up" channel button numerous times until I found something good. I found Julie & Julia.

I didn't remember liking it the first time as much as I liked it the second time, which was strange because what I did remember was that this movie was the (or at least one of the) forming influence(s) for starting this blog. In case you haven't seen it, Julie & Julia is about a woman who works an unnamed cubicle job by day, and cooks for her newly married husband in their apartment over a pizzeria by night. She decides to start "The Julie/Julia Project" in which she cooks her way through all 524 recipes of the 1961 classic Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child in 365 days and blogs about it. Through troublesome duck deboning, chicken trussing, and husband wrangling, Julie eventually amasses a readership and popularity that cumulates in a novel and, of course, this film.

I was so inspired by her story that I turned my nascent blog into something more structured, hence The Best Part of the Day. However, sometimes I don't post because I'm being lazy and don't exactly having people counting on me. But that lead me to today's BPoT:

BPoT #197:
It's not all about the fans.

If people did things only to get famous, there would most likely be a lot less art going around. It's important to like what you do, because that's often when your best work comes through and maybe becomes famous. Of course it's great to feel needed, and when you are you don't want to let anyone down, but it's important to do things for yourself too. Not that these two things are necessarily in conflict with one another, but it's important to always keep both balanced in mind. Whenever I get down on the fact that I'm not an internet star like Julie Powell or Zefrank or the Vlog brothers, I try to remind myself that this blog is just as much for me as it is for anyone who reads it.

All the writers I have ever talked to have told me the importance of writing every day. Not writing emails or doing homework, but just getting your thoughts out there and forming them into well-written sentences. In that sense I kind of treat this blog as an opposite-diary. I say opposite because I always felt bad for the purple Tweety Bird diary I had as a kid and only wrote in when I was angry or upset and couldn't talk to anyone about it (this was before the days of texting and im'ing.) Rather, I want to create a record of something positive, something that will lift people's spirits.
Keeping that in mind, I know that sometimes there are few more boring things than hearing someone talk about their day. That's why it's hard when I have really good days and I don't want to go on and on about every little thing, so most of the time I try to choose the one universal thing that I think would brighten everyone's day (or at least choose something resembling a theme that ties all the parts together). Remembering 90's cartoons, for example, or finding a dollar on the ground, or a stranger saying bless you when you sneeze. Things that, when read, bring a happy thought to your mind and a smile to your face. I know that not many people read this blog, but I'd like to say thanks to anyone who has.

I'd also like to again share one of my other big sources of inspiration (and my internet homepage), Neil Pasricha's 1000 Awesome Things, which does what I try to do, only better.

Monday, August 29, 2011

The last "ahhhh" before school stress

BPoT #195:
A great day before school.

I had another one of those all-around good days today. I kept running into people accidentally, like when my roommate and I went out the wrong door for breakfast, but then I saw some friends I hadn't seen since last year. Then the place we were going to go for breakfast didn't have power, so we ended up going to a cafe for breakfast sandwiches and passed a poster sale! Since we have so much wall space in our room, I had wanted to get some more posters but was going to go to the library for another errand first. We ended up going to the poster sale first though, and saw some more friends browsing the selection at the same time. After taking a long time deciding and buying what we wanted, we made dinner plans and then parted to go hang our new purchases.

Before heading home, I finally finished up getting all of my school books, after a long search in the library for an obscure tome of fairy tales in a subbasement with space-saving, electronic sliding bookshelves. After dinner, my roommate and I met some of our friends' other friends, and then we watched one of our favorite design competition shows. All in all, we got in a lot of fun and relaxation in before school officially starts.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

We're back!

Pretty unrelated, but it was a cute movie when I was little.












BPoTW #3:
A quest coming to an end.

Okay okay so I haven't written in more than a week, but that's partly because I was caught up in a whirlwind of pre-move-back-in-to-school activity. (As always, the other part is mostly cuz I was lazy.) But now that school has started I am(/should be) back for good ^_^

Last week, I was still searching the pair of TOMS' shoes that I wanted, a discontinued pair called Love is the new Black.











Unfortunately, couldn't find them anywhere. So I decided to buy a different pair online, but the shipping was $9! I was beginning to feel pretty defeated until there was a free shipping promotion exclusively for the pair I wanted to buy, and the best part was I could still use a coupon I'd found! So my quest for Toms has finally come to an end. Sort of. I'll still be on the lookout for any possibility to get Love is the new Black.














BPoT #192 [Wednesday]:
Triaelstrom!

What is a triaelstrom you ask? It's when you try to see as many of your friends as possible before you go back to school. In my case, it was three people but all at separate times because of the way planning works. I had coffee with one friend, lunch and a movie (Cowboys and Aliens, which was surprisingly entertaining) with another and then dinner and conversation with another. All in all a full and fantastically fun day.


BPoT #193 [Thursday]:
Back to school shopping.

Does anyone love this as much as I do? There's nothing like a shiny new batch of pencils, sticky notes, and notebooks to take the edge off of the end of summer and going back to school. Score.


BPoT #194 [Friday]
New and returning friends.

I was intending on moving back to school on Saturday, but with the impending storm we quickly switched plans and decided to move in a day earlier. This actually took away the opportunity to feel sad and nostalgic about leaving home since I was too preoccupied with packing up the car with my sheets, books, refrigerator and the like. Added to that, it was great to see my roommate again, and meet one of our new suitemates, who seems rather likeable as a first impression. I hope the coming semester will be as fun as last night ^_^

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Clean cars with personality


BPoT #191:
Car wash with love.

It was strange, I have always loved my silver '98 volvo but I have never felt closer to it than today when I gave him a full cleaning and hand wash. I meticulously vacuumed every part of the inside and methodically scrubbed every surface on the outside. As I knelt wiping the face of license plate and undercarriage I looked at my car head on and felt like I looking at a real person with a real personality, thinking I'm cleaning this hood with love. And when it was all done, and every window lever was scrubbed clean, every grain of sand was sucked from the cracks, I felt proud of my Norbert.

Yes, my car is a boy. Being a volvo with the male enameled on the hood insignia, I feel it's fitting. I also feel that people decided their car's sex based on the opposite of their own; that's why all guys think their cars/boats/motorcycles are girls. But I just can't think of my car as a girl; it's strange. My sister's green Saab: Salazar. My mom's Silver Honda: Percy Weasley Jackon. My friend's black Jeep: Frederick. The only girl I know with a girl-named car is the name of an owl: Hedwig.

I didn't realize this until later, but, with the exception of Frederick (who, granted, was the first named car I knew) , most named cars I know tend be Harry Potter names. Which says of course that "Words are our most inexhaustible form of magic." And what are names but words we give?

Clean cars with personality

BPoT #191:
Car wash with love.

It was strange, I have always loved my silver '98 volvo but I have never felt closer to it than today when I gave him a full cleaning and hand wash. I meticulously vacuumed every part of the inside and methodically scrubbed every surface on the outside. As I knelt wiping the face of license plate and undercarriage I looked at my car head on and felt like I looking at a real person with a real personality, thinking I'm cleaning this hood with love. And when it was all done, and every window lever was scrubbed clean, every grain of sand was sucked from the cracks, I felt proud of my Norbert.

Yes, my car is a boy. Being a volvo with the male enameled on the hood insignia, I feel it's fitting. I also feel that people decided their car's sex based on the opposite of their own; that's why all guys think their cars/boats/motorcycles are girls. But I just can't think of my car as a girl; it's strange. My sister's green Saab: Salazar. My mom's Silver Honda: Percy Weasley Jackon. My friend's black Jeep: Frederick. The only girl I know with a girl-named car is the name of an owl: Hedwig.

I didn't realize this until later, but, with the exception of Frederick (who, granted, was the first named car I knew) , most named cars I know tend be Harry Potter names. Which says of course that "Words are our most inexhaustible form of magic." And what are names but words we give?

Monday, August 15, 2011

Taste the [frozen] rainbow

BPoT #190:
Frozen candy.

Skittles are pretty good. Tropical skittles are better. What's better than tropical skittles? Frozen tropical skittles. Delicious. Also frozen Charleston Chews. Especially strawberry ones. Both of these things remind me of summer at the beach my family has been going to since I was little kid, where the snack bar with the best french fries squeezes all their candy in with their snowcones and ice cream sandwiches and power ranger powerpuff girl ice pops. There's nothing better on a hot day than getting a frozen rod of chewy nougat covered in chocolate and slapping it still wrapped on a picnic table so that when you opened the package it was full of chilled bite sized pieces. Or you could get a bag full rainbow pearls that cracked like pop rocks when you popped them in your warm mouth and slowly melted to the perfect chew, while leaving sticky rainbow remnants tattoed on your hand for you lick off when you were done. That's what summer tastes like my friends.



Birthday treat (with a catch)

BPoT #189: [Friday]
Free wings.

At this bar and restaurant called TK's near my town, on your birthday, you can get free wings in the number of years of your age. Since you have to be at least 21 to go in, that's at least 21 free wings. But here's the catch, if you want to bring them home home, you have to pay for them. So that's where friends come in. It was my friend's birthday on Friday and I was more than happy to help him finish his 22 wings. That's what friends are for.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Yay surprises! (the nice kind)

BPoT #188:
Xbox warming presents!

In a quite unexpected show of generosity, my sister bought a couple of surprise gifts for me to celebrate the arrival of my new xbox. Since I brought it home, I have been playing nothing Assassin's Creed, which is perfectly fine with me because I'm absolutely enthralled by that game. But my sister bestowed upon me the newest installment of my favorite Gamecube game in the Xbox version: Soul Calibur 4. I am fascinated by it, having played no other version of Soul Calibur on any other system besides Gamecube before. I am particularly interested in the Create your own Character feature, which allows you to adjust the finest details of your own player, from the clothes and the shades and hues of colors of his/her outfit to the hair style and color to the very tone of his or her voice. Interestingly you can also play as Yoda. This "guest character" in the Gamecube version of Soul Calibur 2 was Link, and Yoda is no less impressive in play.

The second cool present was a clear xbox controller that lights up green when you plug it in! This is good because up till now I was playing on the one plain black controller I got with the console and you need for multiplayer battle. Interestingly, we have a similar clear controller for our first system, the N64, but it didn't light up as mine does now. Now I'll never lose my controller in the dark! ^_^

Crazy about literature

BPoT #186:
A rainstorm by a window.

BPoT #187:
Getting more than you bargained for.

Books are behind both of the days that I missed posting for. (Technically Blogspot is behind yesterday's because it was "temporarily unavailable," but whatevah.) Tuesday was a perfectly lovely rainstorm during which I read The Subtle Knife by a window and took my dog for a walk and got perfectly soaked. Wednesday, I went looking for the next book in the His Dark Materials Series by Philip Pullman. The first bookstore I went to did not have it, but every other book in the store was $1, so I got a whole bunch of new graphic novels. And then I got The Amber Spyglass at the next bookstore. All's well that ends well.

Monday, August 8, 2011

The Secret Library

BPoT #185:
Attic? No, treasure trove.

When was the last time you poked through your own attic? How many of you have ever done it? If your attic is anything like mine, I would highly recommend it. Since I'm taking a Children's Literature class next semester I figured I'd look for some of the children's classics around the house before buying new ones. I was successful in finding my old copies of The Secret Garden, Goodnight Moon and Where the Wild Things Are, along with a heaping side of nostalgia. But while I was moving wrapping paper rolls and old coats aside to get to the kids book box, I discovered half a dozen other boxes of books I never knew we had! I never would have appreciated them before, but I found things like Little Women, Moby Dick, andInterpreter of Maladies, along some others I'd read before and lost track of like Bel Canto andBeowulf. I even found and old fabric hardcover copy of True Grit, which I was intending on buying after having seen the excellent new movie. Even though I love supporting bookstores, I have to say that the next time you need a book, I'd look in your attic first. But then go to your local bookstore the next time. ^_^


Fighting world suck, one awesome thing at a time

BPoT #184: [Friday-Sunday]
Nerdfighteria weekend.
A photo essay and list of the most awesome things one could do with other nerdfighters.

1. Sopio card game, courtesy of Alex Day's brain.
The perfect way to start any nerdfighter gathering.


2. The Princess Bride. A classic.


3. Strawberry Hill, from Looking for Alaska. We discovered Alaska has terrible taste in $4 wines, so we added strawberries.


4. Sleepover. Complete with cocoa and gossip.

5. Crumpets. An english breakfast to prepare us for what was to come.

6. The Harry Potter Exhibition.
The awesomeness was only slightly dampened by the inability to photograph the event because of the overpriced photo books for sale in "Diagon Alley."


7. Toys R Us.
Where an indoor ferris wheel isn't enough, so they also had a lifesize T-Rex from Jurassic park and a two-story Barbie house. And death eater lunch boxes with Draco Malfoy thermoses.


8. The M&Ms store. mmmm.


9. The Disney Store.
Where dreams comes true. Unless you want to buy something, in which you're out of luck unless you have a royal bank account. But still pretty to look at.


10. Forbidden Planet.
Dr. Who merch, real weekly comics, asian snacks, nerd patches for nerd messenger bags.
It's all there.


11. The Strand Bookstore.
Where a book lover can spend hours and never, ever be done.


12. Nintendo World.
Is there anywhere more nerdtastic? They have everything from a Gulf war era, half-burned gameboy to the 3DS Ocarina of Time (which is mind boggling). Awesome.



13. Sleepover and Cocoa, the sequel. Thrills! Spills! New mug!


Thursday, August 4, 2011

O brave new world, that has such video games in't!

BPoT #183:
New system!

One christmas a couple of years of ago, my sister splurged on her gift to me and bought a Nintendo DS. That was still the new thing back then, and I adored it. Over the next couple of years as my sister and I got more and more into video games, and I kept getting more and more enjoyment from my DS my sister started pining for her own. Even though something like that qualifies as a want more than a need, I have a method of deciding when to buy. If you're in the store, having a long time deciding whether or not you need the thing in your hand, then you probably don't want it. If this is the case, then you'll probably forget about it later. But if you find yourself thinking about something over and over then you probably should get it.

That's how my sister felt about the DS she eventually bought, and how I felt about the Xbox 360 I bought today! I've wanted one ever since my sister started dating her current boyfriend Greg, who frequently brought his over to our house and I became addicted to the different type of game the Xbox offered. While most of the Nintendo fare is sort more cartoonish, and family-friendly with titles like Mario Kart and Animal Crossing, Xbox is for a more mature audience. Most of the games have more lifelike characters, but that is kind of oxymoron because my attraction to Xbox is to games with a strong mythological thread. Games like Halo, Assassin's Creed and Dante's Inferno really pique my interest because of their immersive, historical feel and, I admit, their intense fighting sequences that are mostly absent from the gentler Nintendo games.

That's why today when I went to Gamestop to trade in some of my old games, I couldn't resist putting the credit towards the refurbished xbox they had on the wall. Most of the time, I find those promotions in which you get more in store credit than you do in cash, but today it worked in my favor when I got a for-all-intents-and-purposes new Xbox 360 with wireless controller and 20GB hard drive for $116. I broke it in with a used Assassin's Creed for $8. The one thing that always solidifies my opinion about buying something I'm not sure about is getting it for a great bargain; that way I feel like it was really worth it.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Vacation?

BPotW #181.5:
Otakon.

Wow. Hey. So BPotW #2, by my count. So much has happened since my last post. The one before that, number 179 is actually more indicative of the past week and a half's activity. The week leading up to the 28th was consumed by creating my second costume for the Rosalina character. Given that I'd spent Friday at my friend's birthday party made me kind of rush, and though the costume as a whole turned out well, there are still some things I would have liked to have done better. But overall I think they both turned out well and we had a great time.

Did you know that the energy to power a Gundam for 9.3 hours could power the United States for a whole year? (If you don't know what a Gundam is, look it up. No, they're not transformers; they're better than that.) Or that a teru teru bozu charm keeps rain away? Or that you can sculpt chibis using tin foil as a base for clay? These are just a couple of cool things we learned at Otakon this year. My sister Sara and I also snapped hundreds of pictures, which will follow on facebook soon (there's just so many!) We also, at Greg's insistence, did some gaming this year, unlike the past year, and it was great fun. We played a Taiko drum game much like rock band but entirely in japanese. We all played some Mario Kart, and even though it's not exactly my game of choice I won the first time and held a pretty steady second thereafter, which was quite pleasing. Sara and I didn't play last year partly because we thought it was only for those who had signed up for tournaments and partly because we thought anyone hardcore enough to play at a convention would easily destroy us. Happily, this was not entirely the case.

But then there's the not so great parts. Like how someone stole my badge right off my backpack lanyard as I stood admiring dealer's room wares and had to buy a replacement for $40. Or how Sara's car AC stop working on the drive home. And then started smoking. And then making a whirring sound. And then cutting out all together as we pulled into a rest stop and had to push it in neutral into a parking stop, have a mechanic look at it, then get it towed, find out it needed a new radiator, and then a new engine, and then finally decide leave it in Maryland, giving it to the junkyard for parts. So basically we were stuck in Aberdeen, Maryland for nearly 3 days.

But we still made the most of it by going swimming, mini-golfing, sightseeing at a Chesapeake Bay boardwalk, and sampling the local creameries and restaurants by the recommendations of our exceedingly friendly constant cabbie of Elk Cabs, and the folks at Thompson Towing.

After finally deciding to leave faithful Salazar the Saab with Thompson Towing, we then took a train home, since Aberdeen amazingly had an Amtrak station only minutes from the garage. And at last this brings us to:

BPoT #182:
Coming home.

After a very long and complicated weekend, it was wonderful to walk through my own front door again and be greeted by the delicious smells of a home cooked dinner just waiting for our arrival. Then I rolled into my own bed, where I can be sure there are no foreign bedbugs, curled up next to my puppy dog's warm little body and wrote this whole post. And the best part is, I don't have to check out by noon tomorrow.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Better now

BPoT #180:
A good book after a long day.

I may have already posted something to this effect (in fact I really think I did but it doesn't matter!), but this is just such a great feeling that it deserves more recognition. I had such a frustrating day today trying to finagle my rosalina dress, which is now mostly sewn together, to hang right, but it obstinately persists to be crooked no matter what I pin where. I wasn't even going to post today because I was so frustrated until I started reading The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman. It only took me six pages to calm down and realize, these are the days when I need this blog the most: when it seems like everything went wrong and the world is suddenly against you, that's when you need to find the one little thing that was pretty good and hang on to it until you get to a new day.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Much done, much still to do

BPoT #179:
Finishing one and starting another.

Today I finished my kimono costume for Yukina from Yu Yu Hakusho. I put the finishing touches on her blue obi belt and the big bow in the back and then went on facebook to relax for a bit and relieve my back from all the bending over that pinning and sewing requires. That's when I saw that Otakon is less than a week away and I hadn't even started my second costume yet! I know it seems a little overambitious to make two costumes, but since my sister already had made a Princess Peach costume, I wanted to make a Mario-themed Princess dress to match, so I decided on Rosalina from Super Mario Galaxy.


That's when I made an executive to finish Yukina's red hair-bow after I had the majority of Rosalina's costume finished as well. I figured it made sense to make all the accessories together anyway, since I would have to make Rosalina's wand, crown and earrings as well. Not to mention I still have to find shoes for both costumes.

I didn't realize this at first, but Rosalina's costume seems to be a bit more complicated than Yukina's and I probably should have started with hers; Yukina's kimono was essentially a robe and a wide belt with bow in the back, but Rosalina's dress involves a semi-off-the-shoulder neckline and wide sleeves with trim, a sipper closure, and a little peak at the bottom revealing a curtain of silver fabric.
But my sister wanted us to do our kimonos together first since she's doing a matching pink one for the character of Botan from the same show and she's already off teaching band camp, leaving me to complete my costumes on my own. There's nothing I could do about it now anyway, so I cut out all pieces and sewed half of them together. Hopefully tomorrow will show the same (if not more) progress!

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

An adorable aquatic activity

BPoT #178:
Baby baths.

One of the cutest things I have ever seen was to give the 2 year old girl I babysit a bath. I'm happy to say that the stereotype of kids hating baths is not true in my neighbor's case. She regaled with such verses of "I'm on ocean, swimming on a boat" and "If I was a mermaid I'd put jellyfish in the water." It's a good thing they're cute; putting kids to bed is way more difficult than bathtime.

Monday, July 18, 2011

A juicy one?

BPoT #177:
A contradiction.

At last the production of Will Shakespeare's A Comedy of Errors that I've been working on has concluded. Coupled with the end of the Potter series, I'm having a serious feeling of bittersweetness over the abrupt end of my daily exercises with a close group of awesome people. While it wasn't a surprise in either case, I still kind of miss it. (I think I miss HP a little more because that is well and truly over, while I will be able to work on another show next summer, but still.)

Yet, notice the "kind of." I didn't have anything pressing to do today (I could make two corny puns about sewing or the Royal Shakespeare warm-up, but I won't. Unless anyone asks.) I worked on my costume for Otakon, and then watched Design Star, House Hunters, the Daily Show and the Colbert Report. It was pretty nice.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

It's all good (most of the time)

BPoT #176:
A long day in a good way.

There are few worse things than a painfully long day that seems endless and yet you seem to get nothing done. But there are few better things than a great day that seemed to breeze by as you get work done, have a great hangout, get more work done, and still get to bed early. I often wish all days could be like this, but like I always say, life is a balance, and you need a couple of bad days in order in to know what a great day is.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Sara's BPoT

Hello all. This is Sara, Eliza's super totally awesome sister, for those of you that didn't know she had a sister. Eliza kindly offered to let me write in her blog and I happily obliged. I know her blog is supposed to be about a great thing that happens to her each day...but many great things happened to me today so I'm going to tell you about them! First, Eliza and I went out and bought the remainder of our accessories needed to finish our costumes for Otakon!!! If you don't know what Otakon is you should probably stop reading this blog and look it up immediately...yes, it is that important. Second, we went to the mall and the mall is always great but today I treated myself to a wonderfully pink colored nail polish. Now, nail polish might not seem that great but I've wanted a new polish color for a long time. And by long I mean like over a year, and my birthday happens to be this Thursday, so I figured why not treat myself to an early present! :happy dance: Lastly, I went out to dinner tonight with my best friend from high school that I haven't seen for years! Not only was it wonderful to see her catch up, but I got to eat my favorite food - sushi - and drink bubble tea!!! Which is also amazing and if you don't know what that is you should DEFINITELY stop reading this blog and look it up. Now.

And that is the end of my fantabulous day.
Enjoy :)


BPoT #173-5:
Having my sister save my butt.

Lately I've been consumed with trying to complete my first costume for Otakon, start (and finish) my second, all the while going to Shakespeare camp everyday. Though fun, it's been pretty tiring. That's why it was lovely when I was sitting in front of a blank screen, wondering how I was going to make up for three days of laziness, when my dear sister suddenly took an uncharacteristic interest in my blog and I gladly turned it over while I continued to half doze, half watch Cupcake Wars ^_^

Thursday, July 7, 2011

That's the way it is

BPoT #172:
Figuring it out.

One of the most annoying kinds of problem is one in which you know there is a solution but you just can't figure out how to get there. It's not like a situation where there seems to be no way; yes, this is frustrating, scary even, but at least you can think in the back of your mind Well, maybe there is no solution! Ironic as this may sound, the lack of a solution is sometimes more comforting than thinking that you're just not intelligent enough to realize the solution which you know exists.

This kind of problem is one of those little metal puzzles that taunts you by looking small and simple, but is infuriatingly complex. The easy way out is to throw up your hands and says it's impossible, even when you know it's not. It's the kind of problem in which you sit and stare at the source of your problem, hoping for a way through to manifest.

But the sheer vexation the problem causes is also the reason for the immense satisfaction you receive when you finally see the through. You might feel a little dumb at first for not knowing the answer right away, but tough luck, life sucks (sometimes). Life usually isn't a straight, well lit and nicely paved path but who'd want it that way anyway? Without trials, there'd be nothing to define triumph. You have to know failure in order to experience success.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Key change

BPoT [Tuesday] #170:
Frugality.

I do like shopping, but most of the time I hate spending money. That is why I am the sale MASTER. I hardly ever buy anything full price. Patience is the corresponding virtue here, because instead of spending more money to have something right that second, you can wait for it be marked down, and take the chance that the one you want will still be there, whether it be bag in the color or a shirt in that size. I recently rediscovered a shirt I had really wanted but declined to pay for. It was a size large, but for $6.99 I was just happy to find it again.


BPoT #171:
Praise from your mentor.

I have worked at the same Shakespeare summer program for 4 straight years now. It is the best summer job one could have. I love teaching middle school kids about Shakespeare and seeing them pull together a full-fledged production in 3 weeks, and working backstage just like I did in high school except that we work completely outside, but mostly I love my director. She is my idol. She is one of the friendliest, most knowledgeable and best-dressed women I know and I wish I could be her assistant dramaturg forever.

Today she pulled me aside and told me she was so proud of how far I'd come in the four years I've worked with her and how much I've learned and have been able to bring to the program. And then she hugged me. Suddenly I felt like my heart had turned into the sun and it was going to blaze through my skin if I didn't let it out through the biggest smile I could manage.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Irony by the sea

BPoT #169:
Seaglass.

And other seaside sundries. Today after I had kayaked out to a little rocky island in the middle of Long Island Sound I was enthralled by the vast quantity of whole shells with mother of pearl, sand and see smoothed shards of blue and green seaglass and enormous hunks of whole quartz. These treasures and their immense quantity far outweighed the meagre bits that drifted ashore at the main beach. With the salt water slowly sliding off my sunblocked skin and the sun, even slower, trying to dry my wet bathing suit, I suddenly I felt I was on vacation at a caribbean island.

I was also reminded of an ironic moment in Avatar: The Last Airbender when one of the characters, and older man called Iroh, brings in an armful of shells to his sullen Nephew, Zuko, saying "I will treasure these keepsakes for years to come!" Iroh was clearly pleased with himself, but Zuko snapped "We don't need any more useless things!"

Zuko was right, there isn't much they could have done with a bunch of shells. But in my case, every piece of mother of pearl I picked up, I thought about how I could make it into a piece of jewelry and add it to my homemade jewelry collection that I often sell. In the case of the bigger chunks of rocks and seaglass, it's true that they won't have any value past that day. Any intrinsic value, that is. And that doesn't matter. If a keepsake has value for one day only, it's still of worth. It gave the keeper enjoyment of that day, and happiness is always worth something.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Three item's the charm

BPoT #168:
Three-in-ones.

Any kind. They could be triple feature DVD's, three volume books, 3-in-1 dip containers. It could be Banana-Orange-Mango juice, a chocolate chip-oatmeal-raisin cookie or a buy-2-get-1-free deal. Anytime you get more than one thing in a single package it's triple the trouble and by trouble I mean AWESOMENESS.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Bliss with a view

BPoT#167:
Picnicking.

Not a picnic table. Not at a "picnic" event selling hot dogs. But a real, honest-to-goodness picnic. Bring out the blankets, the oversized beach towels, the worn out tablecloths. A sunny day, a stretch of fluffy green grass, a beautiful view and you have the perfect setting. The gardens at Boscobel, for instance, overlooking the beautiful Hudson River to the west, with the sun setting over West Point.

Other things that make it great: sitting with friends, all sharing food, not having to drive, getting to see a shakespeare performance afterward...

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

And the winner to the obscure bonus question is...

BPoT #166:
Trivia Night!

Because it's so much more fun to do something at a bar besides drink.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Sam is the real hero

BPoT #165:
Seeing your favorite movie in theatres.

Imagine your favorite movie of all time. Star Wars? Casablanca? Shawshank Redemption? If it's your favorite film, chances are that it's not in theatres right now. Especially if it's an oldie, you might have never gotten a chance to see it in theatres.

Mine's The Lord of the Rings. Okay okay this is actually a film series, but who's checking? Granted, I did see the Return of the King in theatres 5 times when it came out, but the extended editions of all three films came out after they were all out of theatres. Nearly a decade after its release, I saw the extended edition in theatres tonight. It was very emotional.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Get busy living

BPoT #164:
Getting ice cream with the family.

When my sister and I were little, my mom and/or dad would take us to a little corner Baskin Robbins and we would both their Rainbow Sherbet. We like it because it tasted great, of course, but I also liked it for two other reasons. I may have been little, but I knew that 1) Rainbow meant all the colors, and the Baskin Robbins was only Pink and Orange and sometime White. 2) It's spelled Sherbet but it's pronounced Sherbert. I didn't realize this distinction until I got a "rainbow" Beanie Baby Bear named "Sherbet." But I also like Baskin Robbins' Rainbow Sherbet for those reasons.

Anyway, years later my sister and I are riding in the back of the car with my mom like we used to, giggling hysterically for god knows what reason, and my mom decides we should go get ice cream. And that's what we did.

On a coincidental side note, I'm watching Shawshank Redemption with Tim Robbins.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

the Waking Draught

BPoT #163:
Reading in bed.

Reading oneself's to sleep is somewhat of a cliche, and also more of an inaccurate one as it relates to me. The only book that puts me to sleep is one that I do not want to read, such a something for school. But despite its somnolent properties, I am unlikely to read something I really don't want to before bed unless it's absolutely necessary for academic reasons. Normally, I reserve that little bit of time before sleeping for a bit of pleasure reading, but this isn't very wise because if I am reading something rather good, it actually keeps me awake out of a desire to further myself in the story.

That is why waking up in the morning and reading starts the day off right for me. I don't particularly like waking up early, but I do rather like the early morning, as times of day go. It's so quiet and peaceful; but, that's a post for another time. My real point is, for me anyway, when waking up just early enough at which you don't want to get out of bed yet, but you can't fall asleep, reading is the perfect thing to do. Particularly if I'm reading an exciting book, it's a way to chase away the last vestiges of the night with the characters' adventures. I also finished the book I was reading currently this morning, which gave me an excuse to get out of bed other than the need to fill my stomach to replace all that had vanished, or empty my bowels of all that had accumulated there during the night. Rather a more tasteful way to wake up, I should think.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Gotcha!

BPoT #162:
You're it!

All forms of Tag are great. I'm not much of a sporty person at all, but for some reason I love old school recess games like that: Tag, Hide and Go Seek, Hide-and-Go-Seek-Tag, Flashlight Tag, Sharks and Minnows, Pickle (aka. Running Bases), Sardines, Red Rover, Capture the Flag, Dungeon Master, Spud, Ghost in the Graveyard, and Manhunt (Hide-and-Go-Seek-Tag's older, middle-school brother who only comes out at night). Honestly, anytime anyone ever brings up playing one of these games (especially at my age) you can bet I'm all for it (under good circumstances; you can't play tag with a full stomach or something, but even then I'd probably endorse the idea).

That's part of the reason I love working at a Shakespeare camp over the summer. Naturally I love the old Bard, but one of the best perks of the job is that whenever we have free time, our middle-shool actors wants to run around and play, and since it is my job to supervise, it's more for fun for both us and them if I join in. (Though they do tend to get into one-game ruts; for example, all they ever want to play right now is Spud.)

Obviously, this would have made my day had I played any of these games today, but sadly, I did not. That may sound misleading, but that's why I prefaced that all forms of Tag are great. That's also why the actually BPoT is "You're it!" because the only game I played today was phone tag, and it was a relief that the person I was trying to get a hold of finally called back when I had my phone in hand. Fooledja' didn't I?

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

I'm not droppin' no eaves, sir, honest!

BPoT #161:
Surreptitiously hearing someone give someone else your own proffered advice.

Have you ever wished you could tell someone something without them knowing you told them, or find something out without that person knowing you know? I feel like this is a similar situation. It's one thing for someone to tell you something, whether it be praise or criticism or love or hate, the one thing I am certain of in life is that you never know what someone else is thinking. Never, no matter how good an idea you think you have, there's no way of knowing for sure. That's why when you overhear something you weren't necessarily supposed to, it has the ring of truth. Naturally, the speaker could be lying to the listener and there are lots of things at play here, like whether or not you were intentionally eavesdropping but let's just stick with the simple situation of truly (by which I mean, unintentionally) overhearing someone give someone else advice you had just previously suggested.

This way, you feel like there's proof that the speaker actually has faith in what you said, enough to relay it to someone else in distress. Hearing it being done, instead of hearing someone sya it had been done, is very gratifying and just enough to send you to bed with a slight perk-up of a smile.

Monday, June 20, 2011

The power of the printed word!

BPoT #160:
I thought this day would never come (in a good way)

In a first-removed relation to my last post, I powered through a book today. Where the Mountain Meets the Moon was only 278 pages so not too long, but still it was a nice feeling to blaze through it. Technically I am still engaged in Looking for Alaska which so far I am enjoying, but kind of seeing a lot of similarities between it and Paper Towns, the only other John Green book I have read (and it was really good.) I am still perfectly it though, so the only real reason I stopped to read the Mountain book is because it is the first real book I have ever actually witnessed my sister both buy and read of her own will. By "real" I mean a full length novel and not a picture book or something of the same caliber (being an elementary school teacher she has a lot of experience with those). I was also intrigued because the last book I ever read by my sister's recommendation was The Great Gatsby and no offense to Mr. Fitzgerald but I didn't like that at all. Granted, it was a school book so it doesn't really count.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon is a Newbury award winning novel based on old Japanese folktales that are beautifully weaved through a creative original story by Grace Lin, so it's no wonder that both my sister and I enjoyed it. It has always been a great sorrow to me, an ever-ardent lover of literature, that my sister always said she didn't like to read. Now I have hope that it's not reading she's against per se, but rather that she just hasn't been reading the right books. I will say that she at least likes Harry Potter and Memoirs of a Geisha (I've read the former and only just tasted the latter) so hopefully I can keep that list growing.

Friday, June 17, 2011

I wish this happened every time

BPoT #159:
Powering through.

Acquiring (and sustaining) the will to work is one thing, but it's also great when you start a project you intend on finishing later, and you end up just plowing through the whole thing. This leaves open the time you left for finishing it, allowing to proofread your essay, check your proofs, or nap. Whichever you feel like doing when the time comes.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

BPoT#158:
...

There aren't strong enough adjectives to describe the kind of fandom that Harry Potter evokes.
I'll let this speak for itself.




Much speculation over what this is as well. We'll find out at 7 a.m. on Wednesday, June 22.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

That was easy

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BPoT #157:
Finishing a book and getting a new one in the mail the same day.

It's like the postman read my mind.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Reminiscence Boulevard

BPoT #156:
Nostalgia.

Today I did two things of mention:

1. I saw Midnight In Paris
Spoiler Alert! Basically this movie is about a guy about to get married to this awful girl, but while they're visiting Paris, the guy gets swept up in a trans-era Peugeot off the streets and is brought to the social circle of Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Dali, Gertrude Stein, Picasso, and many other luminaries of the 20's. The main character of the film, Gill, is an aspiring novelist whose main character works in a nostalgia shop. While he's in his self-proclaimed golden age of 20's Paris, he meets Adriana, the sweetheart of both Picasso and Hemingway who falls for him, and is turn swept back to "La Belle Epoch" of Paris in the 1890's. In the end, she decides to stay in the past, while Gill has an epiphany and decides to return to his own time (and dumps his fiance, but he finds a nice french girl to stroll the boulevards with.)

2. I pulled out my old binder of Pokemon cards.
Date on the newest one: 2001. That was exactly a decade ago. A decade. I can't believe I've even been alive long enough to be able to remember doing things a decade ago.

The point is, I feel like most everyone has a little nostalgia. I especially do; I love old movies, old books, old architectures, typewriters and ballgowns, horses and good old chivalry. But you know what? I also love electricity, vaccines, hot and cold running water and video games. You can't pick and choose what's part of generation and what's not. You just have to take the bad with the good, and do the best you can.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Feel like crap? Step A. Find a puppy. Step B. Succumb to "awww!"

BPoT #155:
Puppies.

It had to be said. What makes you feel better when you're in a crappy mood? Looking at puppy pictures. Extra points if you get to play with actual puppies.

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Saturday, June 11, 2011

And then I just think of my favorite things...

So I missed Friday. But it's better than breaking out a whole BPotw.

BPoT #154:
When your favorites converge.

There are some things that always make your day. Going to a bookstore is one for me. I can spend unlimited amounts of time in bookstores, especially in little local ones where the crammed shelves tower over and aren't laid out in an organized way; kind of like the Stew Leonard's of bookstores but tinier and even more twisted. I also feel good spending money at one as opposed to buying a book at Amazon or Borders (now closed, giving me even more reason to shop locally) because I'm supporting a small business instead of handing money over to a huge company.

In addition to going to such a bookstore, I my sister and her boyfriend went to a new shop we've dubbed Cakes n' Shakes for its joint offerings of cupcakes and milkshakes. Just previous to that we went for a slice at my favorite crunchy-crusted pizza place. To top it off, we went to a small local record store where I bought two old DVDs for $4. I could have paid with the two $2 bills I got from the bookstore, but I figured I'd hang on to something like that for a little while longer.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

The M&M in the brussel sprouts

That's my updates version of "the diamond in the rough." Yay metaphors! Anyway...

BPoT #153:
A tiny ray of sunshine underneath a mountain.

You know that feeling where you've been working really really hard for a long time and it only seems to get worse? Those times where sleep is a luxury if only because it means you don't have to work anymore. Well that's why those little moments during which you can put your mind on something else for just a little while are so precious. Like watching a couple of episodes of your favorite show for instance. Even if you have to get back to the grueling grindstone later, at least you have the time to take a break. And if you you really don't have the time, you should still take a break anyway, for the sake of your sanity.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Make-believe go-fer

BPoT #152:
Feeling professional.

Today I was sent on an errand to buy wine glasses for an Art Show Preview Party. I went to three separate stores with specific instructions to find the cheapest glasses that were as close a match as possible to one bubble-wrapped in my purse. I needed them to be in boxes. And I needed 60. When I finally made my selection, I requisitioned at least 4 separate store staff persons to help me find three cardboard boxes, wrap the large, breakable quantity of glass in paper and put them in the cart. The most official part of it was having a tax exemption form, which knocked a couple dollars off the purchase price and made me feel even more of an extraordinary customer.

The best part of it, though, was having a blank check. It was longer and wider than personal checks, and had the name of the foundation at the top, and a signature at the bottom. Even though at first I was mortally afraid of losing it when it was first handed to me, it was cool in the end when I filled it out as if I did this every day. I had to show my driver's license to the store representative, who took down my license number and my DOB before running the check through a machine and calling over his superior to validate it.

Ironically, I think the reason why this was fun was because it isn't my real job. It was almost like playing pretend but as a grownup at work instead of a kid at play. If I really did do this every day, I imagine I would get inured to it and it wouldn't seem out of the ordinary to me. In fact, it would probably feel more like an irksome chore. But that's why I'm glad it wasn't.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Thoroughly enjoyable

BPoT #151:
A many-faceted gem.

Usually picking something to be the daily BPoT isn't very difficult. When I'm not having a good idea, I can always find one little drop of sunlight to expound upon in a few words. But from time to time, there are days so filled with awesomeness that it's hard to pick just one. So today's post goes out to those days where everything seems right. Or, even more satisfying, the days with the little worries that turn out just fine, emphasizing the enjoyment of the day's turn of events. The days that turn into nights when you can go to sleep smiling.

Monday, June 6, 2011

It's that time again

BPoT #150:
Deciding what to wear for a big event.

It's true that your personality is more important than the way you look, but for better or worse, your appearance is all you have for the everyday passersby. If someone you know well knows that you are generally a smart dresser, they'll understand if you show up to work looking slightly more disheveled than usual. However, those new people in the lobby who've never seen you before will not understand, and all they will is a slightly slovenly looking person. That's why it's important to dress your best whenever and wherever you can.

This particularly includes large events with lots of people where the expectation to dress up is high. Now imagine that the particular event in question places the focus on your personal craftsmanship of your outfit. People are not only looking at what you wear, but also how well you made it. They can either stand back in awe and gape at your garment, or pass by with a derisive look and an unspoken thought, Look at that stupid costume.

That's right, I'm talking about an anime convention. My sister and I will once again be attending Otakon with some friends, and after much deliberation, we have decided on what outfits to create and wear.

First of all, I shall be Rosalina, the caretaker of the Comet Observatory and the inhabitant Lumas in Super Mario Galaxy. Additionally, my sister shall be Princess Peach, and will carry her stuffed Turnip that will matched the stuffed Luma I intend to make.


Then, I plan to be Toadette. My sister will be a feminized version of Toad.

Given that neither of them are in fact human, the dimensions of the costume probably end up looking more like this:

It should be fun. Pics of progress to follow.


Friday, June 3, 2011

Pass Along Power

BPoT #149:
Remembering a grandparent.

Even though my grandmother was alive for most my life, I didn't get to know as much as I would have liked to now. But as I grew older and more aware, my grandmother grew weaker and less aware, so I didn't know her as she was, only bits of her in an increasing diminished state. I was sad when she died, but I didn't cry. I didn't cry at the memorial when the priest was performing his duties. But when my father stood forward to deliver his eulogy, there was nothing about the tragedy or how much she will be missed, but rather he spoke of what kind person she was. He told us about her positive attitude, her love of music and language and gardening, and he sang us her favorite lullaby that she used to sing, and it became harder for me to keep tears from sliding out from under my sunglasses. Not because I was sad she died, but because I was sad I didn't get to really know the wonderful person she was, magnified by the fact that I never knew my grandfather and have been told I would have liked him. But I'm glad that I at least got to hear how she was.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The only element you cannot see

BPoT #148:
The wind.

I always enjoy sitting out on my tree covered porch, where the sun paints irregular patterns of filtered light over everything and the wind shifts it here and there, like moving painting, never still. Frequently I found myself looking from my book at the massive trees above, swaying like they were no more than dandelions. The sound is one of an impressive magnitude too, and audible reminder of the wind's awesome power. Little seeds, leaves and broken twigs littered the porch, and me, with each gust, hitting the ground with a sound akin to rain. I was almost afraid to stay where I was lest something larger and considerably more formidable was forcibly removed from one of shivering towers. It's amazing to me that something you cannot see but can only feel is capable of so much.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Never ftba, or your gps

BPoT #147:
Reaching new distances.

If you're like me, driving is kind of stressful. Instead of putting me to sleep, driving wakes me up because I get so nervous about it. I'm not a really bad driver, just not very experienced. But today I drove an extremely long distance (for me) on the highway and am exceedingly pleased that I didn't die, or even get lost. The worst of it was only that I had to take my sister's car because she had taken mine, which had the GPS in it, so I had to go buy another one and got a great out-of-box deal on the floor model ($40 for a GPS: unheard of!)

I drove for about 50 minutes to visit my great friends from school, Britteny and Sara (the one with the awesome vlog) and our new friend George (who also has an awesome vlog) from New Zealand! Now that is a long distance, my friends. And apparently the airplane food was not good (but the real surprise is that they even served food at all.) Since we are all very big nerds, we named both Sara's and my GPS Cedric, because Hufflepuffs are particularly good finders. (What the hell is a Hufflepuff?) For the same reason, we watched Dr. Who and made a TARDIS cake, seen below. (However I have been informed that real TARDISs are actually grown, though no one knows how. Which explains why there are none just flying around by accident.)

Sadly, "kiddie sized" ice creams aren't what they used to be, so none 0f us had any room to ingest time and relative dimension, either here or in space, even if it was funfetti flavored. Still I managed the second leg of my journey without getting too lost (minor construction-related detour aside) or exploded from overindulgence in awesomeness.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

There are no words (but i did my best)

BPoT #146:
A trailer for the obscure things in your childhood.

When I was little, I absolutely adored a young reporter named Tintin. The intrepid Belgian and his fearless Scottish terrier Snowy did everything I wanted to do: fight pirates, go on archaeological digs (the exciting kind), find treasures, get captured and then cleverly break escape, and write. Unfortunately, despite being a little young for a reporter, he was a little old for me...by about 70 years or so.

The Belgian writer George Remi, aka Herge ("RG" pronounced with a french accent) had launched Tintin on the world back in between the two World Wars, starting with the French newspaper, Le Vingtieme Siecle, specifically its children's section "Le Petit Vingtieme." Now, "The Adventures of Tintin" has become a full fledged film directed by, in my opinion, the two greatest action movie directors of my life (perhaps ever), Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson.

Finally seeing the theatrical trailer for a film I have waited more than half of my life for, over a decade, made my previous night even better.

http://www.tintin.com/

Monday, May 30, 2011

The fruit or the rondezvous?

BPoT #145:
Dates.

When they go well. The bad ones serve only to provide good stories years later. And I'm not talking about the fruit. Though I suppose bad fruit-dates could also be a source of weird stories. Like why the heck you had dates with in the first place. Unless you're in Egypt, but then I suppose the focus would shift to why you were in Egypt...

Anyway! Back to dates (a. as in going out and b. the good kind) are very nice. Being single has its perks, but dates are nice too. Especially when they come (and are nice) after a somewhat long period of singleness. It might be somewhat nerve-wracking, but it's kind of in a good way, and you don't have the responsibilities of a formal relationship yet. Enjoy it while it lasts.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Fun that cools you off

BPoT #144:
Water gun battles.

When it's warm enough that you can spray each other with water and not get cold, and you're in that funny mood where these things happen, it can only mean a nerf battle. I just today impulse bought two Nerf water guns because they were a $7.99 set at Marshalls, of all places. It was pretty muggy today and we needed some cooling after sitting in our living room for 2.25 hours watching HP7. The best part about it was that we were battling in the house. The not-so good part was that we had to wipe up after, but it was worth it.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Don't slam the door on your hot pirate girlfriend

BPot #143:
Seeing a movie with a friend.

It's always nice to go see a midnight premiere with a big group and have masses of people, some of which are other groups you know, but sometimes it's nice just to go see a movie on Thursday night with one good friend and laugh really loudly in the near empty theatre. Extra points if it's totally empty and you can do whatever you want.

We saw Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides and were pleasantly surprised. It was a great improvement over the last two, which were loose stepping stones on a slippery slope down to awful. It took a couple leaves out of Curse of the Black Pearl, which was better, but noticeably similar in at least two scenes. Still, a definite improvement.

One place this movie succeeded where the last two failed was that it was more of a standalone story, much like the first one. Unlike Dead Man's Chest and At World's End, it did not try to continue a drawn out storyline eked from loose ends of the first film in order to make a trilogy. It leaves you with just enough little details that another more-or-less new storyline could be developed (evidence that a "Pirates 5" is forthcoming).

Strangely, I did not once find myself wondering where Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann and all those characters from the past three films were, a fact I find surprising in retrospect. Indeed, the only three consistent characters from the previous films were Captain Jack Sparrow, of course, along with Captain Barbossa and the portly, mutton chopped Mr. Gibbs. Standing in for Orlando Bloom in the post of muscular heartthrob was Sam Claflin, who has nothing else but looks in common with the swashbuckling Turner as his character, Philip Swift, a young missionary captured by Blackbeard.

While, on the whole, good, (a B+ I would say) there were a few points of the film's colorful fabric that varied from improbable to downright unnecessary. For one, Blackbeard, who has someone undefined magic powers, has a couple of undead crewman that serve no purpose whatsoever but to give the makeup artists something to do. The most attention they get is during one of the many sword battles of the movie; a soldier stabs one through the chest and watches in horror as the zombie pirate gruesomely draws out the blade and uses it to kill its former owner. Like I said, it hearkens back to the cursed and invulnerable pirate crew from the first film. There were a few plot points that made no significant addition except a few lines of witty banter, but this was not overwhelming, as it was in the third movie, which was entirely ruled by unnecessary explosions and witless banter.

One hopes that some of the occurrences left unexplained were done so intentionally, and will be attended to in the apparent next film. Hopefully Bruckheimer and his team have learned from their mistakes and will follow up with a new installment to the series that is at least as good as On Stranger Tides was.

Image from here (it's a good laugh).

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Thanks for nothing, you useless reptile.

BPoT #142:
Adult childhood.

Some things you never grow out of. For me, it's animated movies. I bought three today. Plus Harry Potter. Overall, it was pretty nice. I hadn't bought any movies in a while, and I was looking to fatten my collection a little. So my sister and split the purchase of How to Train Your Dragon, Kung Fu Panda, The Emperor's New Groove and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. We plan to watch them in that order too, having started with training dragons tonight. With garlic bread pizza. Fun times.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

I say, dear chap, how was your trip to Zurich?

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#141: AT LAST.

You know when you order something online (especially relevant if you're ordered it overseas) and you wait so long for it (months!) that you begin to wonder if it was a scam, or if it got lost or stolen? But then the moment arrives. You pour light into your mailbox and your heart jumps seeing the package with your name on it, the international post stamp in the corner. With hungry eyes and quick, trembling fingers you open it to find....(results may vary)

For a book geek like myself, few things matched the excitement of sliding One of Our Thursdays is Missing out of a bubble wrapper with a stamp that says Zurich on it. This made absolutely no sense given that the author, Jasper Fforde, is English and I won the book in competition on the website of an English newspaper, the Guardian. However, if the book that I won in March took a pitstop in Germany on its way to the states, that would explain why it arrived a week before the first day of June.

Nonetheless, I have to finish reading Peter and the Shadow Thieves first. I don't like not finishing books and starting others, (yet for a reason unknown to me, I probably have about 6 unfinished books in my inventory right now.) If I haven't mentioned it before, young adult literature is one of my weaknesses, along with bad action movies. I don't see good action movies as a weakness.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Look guys! Another blog!

BPoT #140:
Think ancient history is boring? Think again.

A while back I introduced y'all to my friend my Sara's vlog: http://www.youtube.com/user/SaradactylMichelle

Today I have a new one. There's no secret mist shrouding my love of mythology (it's like history but with magic and not boring!) but I understand that the original material is somewhat dense and dry. I don't just pick up the Odyssey for fun. But you will never get more fun out reading about myths from this blog, Myths Retold. (If you're not ok of obscene quantities of obscenities, I state in advance that I am not the creator, just the messenger.)

I gave the actual links instead of linking the blog titles because they both have pretty good url's. And fantastic content. Just sayin'.

The newest Myths Retold post is a review of sorts for Thor. Even though I knew it was going to a stellar cinematic achievement (I had read no reviews up til this point), I still hoped that Thor would have been at least enjoyable enough to see in a theatre. I hoped that despite the many liberties I knew they would take with the source myths (which already had been the victim of many liberties taken by the comic book that served as the film's source material), that the plot would still be good enough to slide you over those liberties in a way that you could at least enjoy the movie while you were there seeing and wait until you left the theatre and got in the car to start tearing it apart. Apparently I was mistaken in my hopes.

Halfway through reading this post I was thinking Thank god I didn't waste $10.50 to go see this. Later I was thinking Why would I need to even see it? I'm having more fun reading this guy sum it up while hacking it down than I would paying to see it. And then later I was laughing so much, I thought Now I really must see this movie so that I can laugh at how bad it is. There are films like that from time. Take from this what you will.