Archive | March, 2009

Cats On Newspapers

25 Mar
No one ever comes to L.A. and thinks that the Subway is a choice for public transportation. However, with plans for expansion in the years to come, it’s becoming a more viable option. Alas, the L.A. Metro does not stop at all cities, such as Santa Monica, but it can get you downtown and to the airport. For my purposes, it’s an easy $1.50 novelty ride from Hollywood to Little Tokyo. Just don’t get on after 6pm, the muttering homeless and generally sketchy characters seem to gather on the platforms after this hour.






Union Station, the Main Portal

Train tracks to my Left

Finally, the Light

Ah! The most unexpected offering of the day. Low lights, cool atmosphere

Sweet Bean Paste Fried in Little Cakes

Local Japanese News…LA, LA, LA..

Mochi, a strange exotic dessert with interesting texture of smooth ice cream wrapped in rice cake.

A View of the Town

Arrow This Way

24 Mar

If you see this sort of sign around L.A., follow it to a catered lunch. Because this particular sign points you in the direction of a film set in town. The actors, the trailers, the movable toilets, the trays of munchies. It’ll be there.

Fool

23 Mar

My review

rating: 3 of 5 stars
Christopher Moore admits that he has been accused of awkward prose, and I am one in a long line of finger pointers. There is no mistaking his singular diction, a style I liken to tripping over pebbles. The errors are not huge, but the verbage a little ungainly. In Moore’s new book Fool, his bubbly delivery is entertaining. This re-telling of King Lear is not a new adaptation of Shakespeare’s masterpiece, and Moore does not advise a comparison. In this parody of Shakespeare’s King Lear, the Black Fool, named Pocket for his small stature, presents himself as author and actor – a sarcastic, horny, but all around noble and loyal jester to King Lear. King Lear is dying, and his failing health turns his thoughts to mortality, and in haste, he gives away his kingdom to two selfish daughters who, one fateful night, profess their love and devotion in boisterous display. When his third and youngest daughter fails to do the same, she is banished. Thus sets the stage for a dark tale told in a light-hearted way. Moore has taken the framework of King Lear and used it to determine how much mid-century shagging can be done during a five act show against the backdrop of bloody tragedy, love, deceit, forgery, war, bad marriages and regrettable children. Moore is unstoppable when it comes to comedic and bizarre twists throughout his narratives and Fool is no exception. Fool takes ultimate delight and pride in the sarcastic humiliation of its players. Finally, Moore leaves no ties undone and no hearts broken; you either die or live happily ever after. Overall, Fool is another fun book in Moores repertoire.

View all my reviews.

Watchmen

17 Mar

Back at the Arclight for an evening movie…

I am always amazed at how small actors really are. They look statuesque on the screen, their costumes so perfectly matched to their form. For a movie like Watchmen, they appear godlike – each wrinkle ironed out, freely moving in latex and hard plastic. But these forms were human, Silk Spectre quite petite.

These costumes felt as they looked. Hardly wearable. I am disappointed that the visuals of Watchmen, which were spectacular, were overshadowed by it’s terrible plotline.

Sorry it’s so fuzzy…



Supergraphic

6 Mar

Supergraphic Me!

Free Art

6 Mar

Arts Day LA…a day of free seminars facilitated by successful professionals in several different fields, many of whom currently teach classes at UCLA. There are four seminars for each subject – Creative Writing, Design Communication Arts (Graphic Design), Film, Interior Design and Landscape Architecture – spanning instruction on inspiration, tools and finally your life and career. Although at times I felt I was watching an infomercial for extension classes at UCLA, the information provided was well worth sitting through a little PR. Although Arts Day LA is only held once a year, UCLA sponsors several similar events through Summer and Fall.

UCLA EXTENSION

Trueblood?

Writer Barbara Abercrombie & Playwright Leon Martell

Writer Jessica Barksdale Inclan, memoirist Diana Raab, mystery writer John Morgan Wilson & short fiction writer Victoria Patterson

Lunchtime: L.A. style

A closer look….

Goodbye UCLA!

A Lilting Scent

3 Mar
For a Californian, seasons are a trivial and uneventful occurrence. Fall doesn’t come with falling yellow leaves, and winter doesn’t arrive in snowstorms – there’s simply a subtle change in temperature. Only cooler nights indicate that winter is ascending, but the days remain sunny and snowy peaks appear in the North (snowboarding is only a few hours away!). Since California’s weather is historically sunny and clear, with the exception of this year’s fifteen days of dripping clouds (and counting – crossed fingers for more rain so there’s no droughts!), there are certain occurrences that mark the changing seasons.

Instead of melting snow, I’ve got the new scent of Jasmines in the air to melt my chilly winter heart and turn my thoughts to beach volleyball and tan skin; unlike so many, I do not tan during the winter, I’m Nicole Kidman pale and scared to show any sort of leg at work for fear of scaring someone. Soon, the Jacaranda trees will start sprouting their purple flowers and rolling blackouts will become part of the regular routine.
Jasmines are the first sign that spring has come again, and if you don’t enjoy the sun, (because it gets redundant) at least you’ll have a nose full to be happy about.