WRITING CULTURE 2012: Film, Food & Beyond

I just got a tweet from the President

January 3, 2013Written by | No Comments

Social Media on Election night was abuzz with everyone who’s anyone’s opinionated stance on what should happen, what is happening, and who should be the next President of the United States.  Some of the commentary a little more entertaining than others, with entertainers such as Kathy Griffin cracking jokes on her twitter feed, and Presidential mocker Donald Trump spewing words of disdain for the Democrats; it makes for an entertaining, as well as informative means of knowing what is going on in the election.
All the news outlets have twitter feeds now; some of them, numerous accounts: CNN News, CNN Election Coverage, and you could replace CNN with Fox or NBC or ABC, or NYtimes, or NYPost – any news outlet imaginable at this point; you can tweet with them.

They each claim to be unbiased; we all know this is really not true, but the NY Times does do a semi-good job at appearing fair, with enough media content for both sides of the parties.

I have to wonder what the election looked like pre-twitter/facebook/television…

→ No CommentsCategories: Convention Coverage

Obama stood tall…

January 3, 2013Written by | No Comments

As he acknowledged to the country that he had won his second term as President of the United States.  With a tear in his eye, and amounts of happiness and appearing gratitude that overflowed, he took his place as a two-termer.  It surely was late enough into the evening, after his opponent Mitt Romney all but refused to concede – his hopes of winning getting smaller by the second as each state came in with who their votes were going to… almost every one adding to Obama’s already significantly higher number of electoral votes.

It was semi-brilliant watching FOX News’s anchors look pained as they announced Obama as the winner; the clearly biased news source would have loved to have announced Romney as our new president, but were denied the pleasure of their Republican candidate winning.  They held on until late in the evening as well, while other news outlets had announced much earlier that Obama was clearly getting the Presidential nod.

The fun really to be had on election night though was on social media – everyone with their “I am going to de-friend you’s” being threatened to their Facebook counterparts publicly endorsing their particular candidate.  I, personally, (while happy with the current president), would love to see Hillary Clinton in office; she would rock it.  http://hillaryclinton.com/

→ No CommentsCategories: Election Night · Uncategorized

Philly AIDS Thrift.

December 19, 2012Written by | Comments Off

Philly AIDS Thrift is arguably one of the most fun thrift stores ever. The window displays and mannequins are always provocative and stylish. The walls are covered with art and eye-popping displays. Everyone is sincerely friendly and there are always interesting people to shop or chat with at PAT.

Philly AIDS Thrift

Philly AIDS Thrift

I especially love spending money at PAT since they contribute to 29 different AIDS/LBGT related charities in the Philadelphia area.

Wander around all the different rooms packed with lamps, TVs, furniture, paintings, clothes, jewelry, and records. Nearly all clothing items are under $10, and most are half of that. Pick up one of their neat PAD logo tote bags or t-shirts made from recycled items.  Besides all that, my favorite thing about PAT is that they have A LOT of books.

PAT has more books than a small bookstore. Boxes are piled on the floor because the shelves are often overflowing.  Philadelphia is a well read city and the book selection reflects that. If you’re looking for mass-market bestsellers, try the $1 room. CAM00070

The books are neatly organized by genre, Art, LBGT, Politics, Poetry, History….. One afternoon, I spent at least an hour  just looking at art books.

Even if you leave empty handed, you will leave smiling. It’s just a fun place to go. But I usually find something, and often leave with a bag full of clothes for around $20. You can find anything here. They have lots of vintage as well as gently used designer items.

CAM00068 On this visit, I noticed lots of nice jeans, a few shirts and a French Connection pencil skirt for just $1, but I didn’t buy anything.  I just didn’t see anything I really needed.

Sometimes it’s hard to pass on things that are nice and a great deal, but if you don’t need it, it’s really just a waste. I’ve been thrifting for years, but sometimes I still have to remember to be mindful, and not buy stuff I don’t need. At these prices, it’s easy to do.

Buying stuff you don’t need defeats the purpose of thrifting. You don’t save money or the environment by buying and hoarding stuff you don’t need, even if it is a great deal, and for a good cause like Philly Aids Thrift.

 

Next post, this “thrift store” has mostly NEW clothes.


Comments OffCategories: Art · Charity · Cheap · Culture · LBGT · Philadelphia · Philly Aids Thrift · Recycling · Shopping · Thrift stores · Used Books · Vintage

Beasts of the Southern Wild… a beast.

December 18, 2012Written by | No Comments

To be as objective as possible and keep my subjective-ness removed, if possible.  Beasts of the Southern Wild is a beautifully filmed, and well executed film.  It is not my taste – I would much prefer to watch a romantic comedy where someone is in love and out of love and there’s something funny and lighthearted and a happy ending.  This is not that movie.

Hushpuppy and her father live in the ‘Bathtub’ of Southern Louisiana, where life is hard and the people who live there are die-hards.  They are born there, raised there, and die there, and it will take something terrible to get them to leave – and even then, a lot of them won’t go.  This is somewhat realistic for a place like the Bathtub in real life – however, in the midst of a terrible storm (it is assumed it is a hurricane without actually being told that it is), it is time to go.

Hushpuppy’s father,  who seems to be a relatively small minded, wife-beater, is raising this poor little girl on his own (and mostly she is raising herself) is adamant they will stay, and so they do.  They stick out the terrible storm and get stuck in the ‘Bathtub’ with the other folks who refused to leave.  They have none of the things they need to survive, and it is all too real to watch them struggle the same way as the people who in real life refuse to leave before a storm and then get trapped and are in trouble.

We also learn after the storm that Hushpuppy’s father is very sick, another thing to make this little girl’s life harder.  The only redeeming qualities of this film (to me) are the beautiful cinematography and the fact that there is a semi-happy ending.  I would actually recommend going to see it – if only for the beautiful camera work and the fact that it did win the grand jury prize at Sundance.

→ No CommentsCategories: Film Review

No Internet, No Big Deal

December 18, 2012Written by | 3 Comments

As a former Girl Scouts, the motto, “be prepared,” is engraved into my brain. With both parents as scout leaders, we were prepared. We took out the candles, changed the batteries on the flashlights and set the hot pot stove (aka butane stove), therefore, in case a black out occurred, we would still have light and a way of cooking food.

Fortunately, the worst didn’t happen to us. The worst we experienced during Hurricane Sandy was the loss of internet connection.  It took Time Warner Cable two weeks after the storm to return the service to my house. The commute to do homework at school made my parents uneasy, especially after the hurricane. But nonetheless, compared to others, I’m thankful that I still have a home and a family.

→ 3 CommentsCategories: Hurricane Sandy · Recovery

“Lolita” by Nabokov: Literature or Pornography?

December 18, 2012Written by | Comments Off

“Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta. She was Lo, plain Lo, in the morning, standing four feet ten in one sock. She was Lola in slacks. She was Dolly at school. She was Dolores on the dotted line. But in my arms she was always Lolita. Did she have a precursor? She did, indeed she did. In point of fact, there might have been no Lolita at all had I not loved, one summer, an initial girl-child. In a princedom by the sea. Oh when? About as many years before Lolita was born as my age was that summer. You can always count on a murderer for a fancy prose style. Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, exhibit number one is what the seraphs, the misinformed, simple, noble-winged seraphs, envied. Look at this tangle of thorns.”
Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita

Have you heard of Nabokovs “Lolita”? This book is located in the “banned books” section in “Strand Bookstore”. My boyfriend does not read books at all, so to make him interested in reading, I got him one of those.

And this is not just a weird love story of a 36-year-old man and 12-year-old girl, this is life.


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Chekhov.

December 18, 2012Written by | Comments Off

“Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass.”

Anton Chekhov not only was one of the brightest Russian writers, but also one of the kindest people on Earth!

If you ask who my favorite writer is, the answer will be Chekhov. He was the smartest man, and his writing was just brilliant. He felt the Russian soul, he knew what it was to live in Russia of 19th century.

He died at 44. If he lived today, the tuberculosis would have been treated and he could have written much more..

image credit: http://www.google.com/imgres?q=chekhov+the+cherry+orchard&um=1&hl=en&client=firefox-a&tbo=d&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&biw=1280&bih=852&tbm=isch&tbnid=UnlxVwsNYidLBM:&imgrefurl=http://www.oocities.org/warrickw/lit/chekhov1.htm&docid=5GE-iosDqCT4zM&imgurl=http://www.oocities.org/warrickw/lit/Chekhov.gif&w=304&h=294&ei=6NrQUJTtIezK0AGU14GwBg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=810&vpy=259&dur=705&hovh=221&hovw=228&tx=154&ty=159&sig=113842195199827723178&page=2&tbnh=158&tbnw=155&start=33&ndsp=39&ved=1t:429,r:64,s:0,i:284


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Visiting Philadelphia, 90 Miles Beyond NYC

December 18, 2012Written by | Comments Off

Let me explain, I know this blog is supposed to be about NYC,  but I just have to post from wherever I happen to be thrifting.  I will get back to NYC soon, but I must tell you about my day in Philly.

I Love Philly. Photo from Fodors.com

I go to Pennsylvania a lot looking for antiques, and some of my best thrift store finds are found in Philly.

I love hitting up the shops in and around Philadelphia as much as I can. I find they have similar items found in NYC, but at extremely reasonable prices and with less crowds and attitude.

Like NYC, there is so much to do in Philly besides thrifting. I usually eat at the Reading Terminal Market or in Philadelphia’s version of Chinatown or Little Italy.

Philadelphia is a gorgeous city, rich in culture, food, art and of course thrift stores.

You can take a two-hour bus ride to Philly for about $8, and they run nearly every hour. It’s worth the trip.

I highly recommend that you check it out, and I will be writing more posts about my visits.

Philly Aids Thrift always has the best displays.

Philly Aids Thrift always has the best displays.

Next post will be about one of my favorite thrift stores in Philadelphia….Philly AIDS Thrift.


Comments OffCategories: Chinatown · Philadelphia · Philly · Philly Aids Thrift · Reading Terminal Market · Thrift stores · Vintage

Here Comes the Bride….at Goodwill.

December 18, 2012Written by | Comments Off

Goodwill

809 State Route 17

Paramus, NJ 07652

Driving home from Albany I stopped by the Goodwill in Paramus, NJ.

CAM00037Normally, I wouldn’t review a Goodwill since they are everywhere, all similar and most people have most likely visited a Goodwill Store. I only will post about Goodwill if there is something special or unusual at a location.

Right now this Goodwill is packed with wedding dresses, tuxedos and bridesmaid dresses. At first glance, I thought they were used, and there were just a lot of them.  But no, they are brand new.

When I asked why there were so many wedding dresses, I was told this “rare occurrence” is the result of a wedding shop going out of business.

Prices from $69.99.

CAM00035These dresses are beautiful! If you are getting married soon, I hope you get down there soon and check it out.

Save your money for the honeymoon!


Comments OffCategories: Bride · Cheap · Frugal bride · Goodwill · gowns · Paramus · Thrift · tuxedos · Vintage · Wedding dress · weddings

Nikolai Gogol. Skull less

December 18, 2012Written by | Comments Off

Nikolai Gogol

“I am who I am and that’s who I am” ― Nikolai Gogol

I did not like to read boring books by him when I was in school. I re-read some of his stories recently and rediscovered a brilliant writer!

Some interesting facts about him:

  • -He was only 42 when he died, some people say he died a virgin, because no one ever saw him with a woman
  • -He burned the book he wrote.
  • - Several years before his death he asked not to bury him until after one can see him rotting, but no one listened to him and they buried him right after his death. When re-burying the body, the workers found him skull less and turned around (I was told this when I was a kid and everybody would tell this scary story in class.)

Image credit: http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-6rO3xKDCRG8/TpHqKcKFxaI/AAAAAAAAB6s/J8J0XLDls6w/s400/gogol.jpg&imgrefurl=http://wwwbillblog.blogspot.com/2011/10/kind-of-face-you-slash-day-9.html&h=400&w=400&sz=16&tbnid=P3o_RaJLkyAwVM:&tbnh=92&tbnw=92&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dnikolai%2Bgogol%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=nikolai+gogol&usg=__-_8imd4mZjyXKx32Z7IkXE-RHqw=&docid=758VVcNVNGsM9M&sa=X&ei=E97QUNf0JKiF0QHCpICQCg&ved=0CJYBEP4dMBI


Comments OffCategories: I did not get th · immortal and get studied at school for some reason. When I went to school · Writers become so famous