New Joizy

Jan. 26th, 2009 03:26 pm
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Wall Street Journal article:

New Jersey: Hidden State of Culture

Somewhat rambly - sleep is for the weak! )

Charmian: heh, you should post on this
rally ur jersey peeps
me: i have strong feelings towards my home state
it's like francis bacon said, the greater the initial hate, the greater the eventual love
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Sitting around feeling sorry for myself because I haven't finished any fiction in almost 18 months -- which is backwards, I should be feeling bad about my productivity (and motivated to change) not bad about my reception (and motivated to whine). But the writer's guilt machinery melted down sometime around when I left college. XD;; Best course of action is probably to pick something short and easy and just knock it out without thinking about it too much.

In the meantime I'm gonna take the lazy person's way out and post something ancient. Fanfic WIPs are all on the old (dead) laptop harddrive but here's an academic paper you guys might enjoy:

Praise Song Analysis )

Pretty fun paper to write as I recall. The prof did a lot of the analysis in class and Choge's song by itself is very funny.

Here's the book with the translation in it: this came with a CD which I might still have.
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Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis were a(n extremely popular) double comedy act in the era before rock 'n roll. Dean Martin sang and looked handsome while Jerry Lewis did dumb things to get his attention, was the basic premise.The act ran 10 years to the day -- from 1946 to 1956 -- though Martin and Lewis were apparently not on speaking terms during their last year together. Before breaking up, both performers made a lot of money together, spent a lot of time on the road together (often sharing hotel suites), drank a lot of booze -- separately and together, hobnobbed with a lot of Italian mobsters -- again separately and together, and appeared -- together -- in a lot of scripted movies and television specials, a few of which can now be seen on Youtube. The pair's true talents, however, lay in improvision and ad-lib (at least according to Lewis). Here's an example:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuqKswMLJtw

...In other words this is not as lame as it looks, I swear!

What *is* somewhat lame is my real reason for checking Dean and Me: A Love Story out of the library, which was -- seeing as the book's title and also the mere fact of its existence screams "codependency!" -- that I was curious to see whether what these guys had together in any way resembled what Pete and Carl (Libertines) had together, and if so in what ways.

The answer is: yes and no )

In conclusion this is actually a very good book, though I felt like a complete and utter dork the whole time I was reading it.
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First off:

2008 in books!

It's so not a coincidence that most of the books and most of the reviews come from the first half of the year. I've read lots of novel-length fanfiction in the last six months, if that counts.

What I said over there goes double over here: if I "forgot" to review a book and you wanna know what I thought, just comment and ask! ...Although I've said that before, ahaha. (But this time I mean it!)

Secondly:

2008 in writing!

...There was none. ^^; Man, that was easy.

Thirdly:

Happy Birthday [livejournal.com profile] jullllier!
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Left my list of books-read-but-not-blogged at work, so no updates on that front until Tuesday. (Which is the inauguration!!!) Actually I think I am going to follow Tari's example here, and just give myself a clean slate. On that note:

Linkblogging

Anti-Love Drug May be Ticket to Bliss: talking about oxytocin as the be-all and end-all of human pair bonding (on the female side). Also about taking drugs in order to fall in or out of love at your convenience. The wikipedia article has a long list of positive effects, and only one listed negative effect (adversely impacts memory and ability to learn). But I'm skeptical, not even in a philosophical we-are-more-than-our-brain-chemistry way, but in a biological brain-chemistry-is-complicated way. Like it seems to me, as a layperson, that bad things happen when pharmaceutical companies (let's just suppose) focus on a single chemical and don't think hard enough about the way it works within a system.

The End by Michael Lewis: Everyone's gonna think I got this from [livejournal.com profile] petronia, but she got it from me! ^^; First-hand accounts from skeptical cogs within the financial machine. Speaking of being freaked out, this stuff is *really* scary, because half of the bad loans and bad assets Lewis discusses haven't come out in the wash yet. Anyway this is a good article because it follows individuals and has a sort of narrative framework - my father and I thought this would make a good movie, with Eismen et al. as "antiheroes" since they were making a lot of money at the same time as they were disrupting sales meetings. "We fed the beast until it exploded" is a great line.

An oldie but a goodie: Gender Differences in Emoticon Use. Man I wish I could read this. Academic journal subscriptions are wasted on university undergrads, who don't have the time. ^^;

Was reading a book I found in my office, on language and communication styles. Nancy Bonvillain is our best-selling anthropology author and she's especially good with gender. Women in general speak with more pitch variation and expressiveness than men, she says, because they are expected to be emotional while men are expected to be able to control their emotions. That's the one everyone knows. Two other theories Bonvillain mentions, and that I hadn't heard before, are 1) women have developed this speaking style because it holds attention, and they are institutionally less powerful, and 2) women speak this way because they spend more time around children, who haven't yet been socialized to attend to verbal cues. This made me think of Pete Doherty, but then again what doesn't. XD

As long as I'm discussing books lying around the office that my obsessed brain was able to somehow relate back to the Libertines: here's another one. The "cutting edge" articles in this book were published in 2005 and aren't so cutting edge anymore, if they ever were -- I'm sure you'll all be shocked to hear that imaginative people are more likely to develop false memories than unimaginative people -- but there was an article on group brainstorming I liked. The basic point was that, contrary to popular belief, brainstorming in groups is almost always less effective than brainstorming alone, first because each person must wait his or her turn, second because people often hold back. Suggestions for constructing a group that will be more than the sum of its parts are: Read more... )

The Glass Cliff. Meant to blog this weeks ago, forgot. The idea is that companies/governments are more likely to appoint/elect women/minorities to leadership positions in crisis situations. Good news for peeps in business or law school right now, I guess. XD; One thing that summary doesn't make clear is that this isn't necessarily a conscious decision - we can spare this person, let's set her up to fail! - often it's an unconscious decision - let's try a new direction, and tap into talent we've mysteriously not tapped into before now!

Currently reading

Possession by A.S. Byatt, for bibliophages. Finally gave up on my assigned book(s), so I am reading this instead. Have been avoiding comments for that reason, but you all should feel free.
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Saw the Clarks with [livejournal.com profile] apintrix in NYC last Friday. If the object was to pick a semi-decent band we could see cheaply + whose fans would not be younger than us, we succeeded.

Also met up with [livejournal.com profile] fiendery and picked up Silver Diamond, Mainichi Seiten! at Kino. Whoever rewrote the SD translation did a fantastic job -- it reads really naturally.* Mainichi Seiten, on the other hand....XD;; It's bad enough that this manga is adapted from a novel and is full of significant pauses and unspoken thoughts. Combine that with an overly-literal translation, and it's not always clear WHAT, exactly, is being implied when the characters exchange Meaningful Looks.

One thing I really like about this series though, and which isn't ENTIRELY destroyed by the mediocre translation, is the way the characters will go off on these marathon slapstick sessions - exaggerated accusations and childish squabbles - and you assume it's comic license, until someone says something really cutting and the whole thing comes crashing down. At that point what seemed normal, like a literary/manga convention, suddenly becomes heartbreaking, because now you are being invited to evaluate the characters' actions in light of the way real people behave.

Also read Honey and Clover volumes 1-4. So far so great. XD Mayama's my favorite, I think. Something about the way he looks like he should be popular and successful - and he is successful - and yet he is still so needy, it's ridiculous.

*But the adaption would be perfect if the notes explaining the untranslatable puns were on the same page and not stuck at the back.
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Missed a week but that's probably a good thing. ^^;

  • Someday I will make the Syaoran/Sakura music video this song always reminds me of. Link.
  • Another by Fastball. (Familiar opening!) Link.
  • Free Amazon download...Link
  • ...reminds me of this. CHECK OUT THE YTUBE VID, it's got their charismatic frontman staring at you from like two feet away. Link.
  • Long car trip wherein my parents revisted John vs. Paul: Stupid rhymes, no substance! (Dad) v. There is MUSICAL substance you philistine! (Mom) Link.
  • (Speaking of hippies) Jupiter really IS aligned with Mars: http://tinyurl.com/5fkrpb. Won't happen again until 2052 - go see it! Link.
  • But imagine the emotional catharsis of TEN THOUSAND POP FANS singing "get through it" with you. Link.
  • I was in marching band in HS - we used to play the hook at football games, until the director told us we had to stop. Link
  • nostalgia trip pt II. Link.
  • pt III. Link.

Decisions

Dec. 13th, 2008 12:28 am
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Mos Def on January 9th at Highline, or Mark Olson and Gary Louris on February 7th at Canegie Hall? I can't afford two $40+ dollar shows (plus train fare) in two months when I probably won't be employed full-time starting next year. On the other hand, since my workplace is reducing my hours in January, I could probably make Mark and Gary's show on February 9th in Sellersville.

The real problem is convincing anyone my own age to come see two sort of folksy guys -- one of whom is old enough to be my father -- touring in support of their reunion CD which is 100% sappy love songs.

YouTubin' - There are actually videos up now! So exciting )

That's the last you guys'll hear from me on this front, I swear. (Until February anyway.)
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Wrote a book review for last month's bibliophages:

http://community.livejournal.com/bibliophages/18319.html

I also ended up reading I, Claudius and Claudius the God for this round -- the second mostly during the long car ride back from Montreal -- made me extremely nauseous but it was worth it.

The theme this month is Love Overcoming Obstacles (Or Not). Please sign up! The deadline is, um, tomorrow. -_-; Well, but would any of you be willing to join in this round with a recommendation list -- you only need to put three books on it -- if the deadline was extended to Friday? Because I totally would extend the deadline if I thought that even one person would be interested.

Montreal, by the way, was awesome. Met up with [livejournal.com profile] petronia Friday night and we saw Stars. XD My main thought is that this is perfect music to fall asleep to if you happened to have stayed up the entire night before reading (for instance) some autobiography by some guy in some band. Kind of like a light show with soothing pop noise. (I don't think this was supposed to have been the point. ^^; Oh well.)

Saturday night I went out for dessert, coffee and beer with my brother's friends, half of whom had ALSO been to the Stars concert. XD They are a great bunch of people, Alex is lucky to have found them. He keeps telling me that they are nothing like his (mostly male) high school friends, but there's an injoke-ness that's the same, even if this (mostly female) group is much more inclined to like 2-hour phone calls at one in the morning.
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The Girl Friday with the Mod haircut wore Michelle's Obama's dress -- only in black and silver instead of black and red -- to the fancy dress party she and Bond attended at the villain's request.

Spoilers )

What else. Daniel Craig is a great actor so Bond in this movie wasn't just a vengeance-seeking robot -- sometimes the mask slipped -- but that level of nuance certainly wasn't in the script. I liked the movie okay, but I'd only recommend seeing it if you saw Casino Royale and also plan to see the third movie in Craig's trilogy. This is definitely the bridge.

****

Got a half-day at work on Wednesday so I am going into the City. Anyone free? V and I have sort-of plans to meet for lunch, [livejournal.com profile] fiendery and I have sort-of plans to meet for dinner, and I have sort-of plans to shop for clothes around Soho and also to hit up Kinokuniya for two recently-licensed BL titles Borders isn't carrying, but other than that I am up for anything. Like...karaoke, maybe?

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