Friday, October 02, 2009

Photo of the day: Posing



The kitten nursery closed this week. But I'm staying on with a few others to continue to care for the remaining kittens until they go out to foster or up for adoption. That means the cute kitten photos will be running out soon, so I'm posting them while I can. The good news is that once I have more free time I can go out and start taking pictures of other things again.
Photo of the day: You Can Never Have Too Many Cute Kitten in Box Pictures

At least not where I'm concerned.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

Because sometimes...
...you just need to laugh at white trash people. Check out People of Walmart.
Photo of the day: Being Stared At

These two are extra curious about the world around them. And the ladies with the food.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Crazy
I read a news story today about animal abuse. It was a particularly cruel event (complete with photo) and it upset me greatly. You know how material people get when they read about child abuse? All "let me at them and I'll rip their heads off?" That's how I am with animals.

I've always loved them. Now, I suppose, I'm fanatical. I just cannot understand the viscousness required to hurt a defenseless animal. What kind of warper person thinks of, and decides to act on, the desire to hurt a cat or a dog?

Seriously makes me crazy. Makes me want to pick up a baseball bat and go after the motherfucker.
Photo of the day: From the Outside Looking In

From inside the outer looking into the inner.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Scenes from Silver Creek: The Sentinel

Silver Creek’s answer to the New York Times was the Silver Creek Sentinel. Known to every kid in town as “the Senile,” it was a true mom-and-pop operation that was written, edited, formatted, printed, and delivered by Keezer and Edie Palman.

Keezer’s claim to journalistic experience was limited to writing a weekly “new recruit” column in the Ft. Dix newsletter while a medical clerk in WWII. Edie had a natural flair for gentle humor but a deplorable lack of attention to detail, which made each week’s issue a haven for unintentionally hilarious headlines and stories and howling misspellings. For example, after a rash of car break-ins the local police offered a reward for information. The Sentinel posted this news under the headline “$50 Reward for Car Thefts.” Which made it sound like a quick way to pick up $50. Notable typos included stories about the fundraising “carp wash,” a review of the high school’s production of “Our Twin,” and a fire at Birningham’s “Cry Cleaners.”

The heyday of juvenilely funny headlines came during the five years when Thomas Hooker was mayor. Every week there would be a story such as “Hooker Speaks to Kindergarten Class,” “Hooker Lands 20 lb. Trout,” and my ultimate favorite “Local Bishop Visits Hooker.” When you’re 12-years old, this is great stuff.

The rest of the paper was made up of such useless information as the attendees at a child’s birthday party, an out-of-town guest visiting some local citizen, or an interview with exciting luminaries like the postmaster and the head librarian. And, of course, each issue included must-read features such as the week’s menu in the high school cafeteria and a run-down of the local police blotter. The latter was where Edie really shined. I still have a clipping that reads: Mrs. Philip Carpenter of Blossom Road was mystified by finding one of her three garden gnomes repeated tipped over. Police identified the culprit as Lucy, the cocker spaniel of neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grover. Lucy has been sentenced to several days of “bad dog” and the withholding of milk bones.”

One of my favorite features was “Simon Sez,” which highlighted quotes by Simon Lang, the requisite odd duck and our own Yogi Berra. Simon was known for his incomprehensible homilies, nonsensical statements, and imponderable observations on life. Nearly every issue of the newspaper included at least one of Simon’s statements. “Sweaters don’t grow on trees,” “It takes a pigeon to see a statue from all sides,” “George Washington didn’t need a wife,” (which seemed highly unfair to Martha), and “If you don’t want the truth, don’t talk to the cat.” Many of these wonderfully weird comments became catch phrases in our family and to this day one of my brothers still says, “having pants don’t make you a man.”

When I was a little girl, every woman in town that received a mention in the Sentinel was referred to by her husband’s name. It was always Mrs. Louis Feldman or Mrs. Daniel Shaefer. Never Mary or Lorna. This always bothered me, but that was the way of the world back then. Married women had no identity other than that provided by their husband. Unmarried women were allowed to be Miss Jane Doe, but as soon and Jane married she magically lost her first name. Even if the woman were to be the center of the story, it would still be Mrs. Husband. “Mrs. Erwin Haefner Beaks Leg in Supermarket,” or “Mrs. Ralph Meeks to Visit Paris with Sister.”

Like most families in Silver Creek, our family received its share of column space. My siblings’ birthday parties, my sister winning a spelling bee, my father getting a promotion. All was considered public domain.

The one thing that always perplexed me was the inexplicable, invisible line drawn by the Palmans when it came to bad news. I could never understand why a wedding got a mention, but a much gossiped about divorce never did. Funeral notices were reverent and sanitized. A “lengthy illness” was always mentioned but anything tragic wasn’t. When Libby Rossman was killed in a skiing accident there was a brief news story with very few details, but her obit was full of phrases like “taken too soon,” and “unfortunate tragedy.” Even though we all talked about nothing but the grisly details, the Sentinel remained coyly silent throughout.

They were also careful not to name names of the guilty in the police blotter or short news pieces. When the Fowler twins were found to be responsible for setting fire to Mr. Meerson’s garage, the paper stayed mum about whodunit, despite the fact that we all knew. And Floyd Paulson’s penchant for public drunkenness was mentioned only as “a local tippler” although half the town had driven him home when found wandering around town.

Sadly the Sentinel closed down before I was out of high school. But it lives on in lined drawers all over town.
Photo of the day: Two for One

The only thing better than a cute kitten sleeping in your arms is two cute kittens.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Photo of the day: Cookies

A new recipe. Next time I'll cut back on some things, add a few others. They look lovely, don't they? But I'm not yet pleased with the taste.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Photo of the Day: Riding the Wind

A beautiful day on the bay.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

I Am Not a White Supremacist
But my TiVo thinks I am. I recorded a program about hate crimes a week or so ago and since then it's recorded programs about skinheads, the Klan, fringe white supremacist groups and racial crimes in prison. I just saw an ad on the National Geographic channel entitled "American Nazis" and something tells me I'll find that in my TiVo suggestions within the week.

In the midst of all this I received the latest "Teaching Tolerance" from the Southern Poverty Law Center; a fine organization that Husband and I support. Oh the irony.

I'm amused at the Tivo brain that takes one program and then stuffs my "Now Playing" box with any show about racist, homophobic bigots. It's almost like it thinks I want to commit a hate crime and it's giving me all my options. I had no idea there were so many programs about people beating the crap out of anyone they feel is inferior. Kinda makes me want to beat the crap out of someone I feel is inferior (the aforementioned racist, homophobic bigot). (And yes, I'm kidding.)
Photo of the day: Me and My Shadow

But I was not strolling down the avenue. Nor was I feeling blue.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Photo of the day: The Bouncer

He ma be cute, but if you try to get past this doorkeeper you'll need all your wits and most of you cat toys. And even then you'll find once you get inside the box that you don't fit after all.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Photo of the day: Wrapped Up in Cute

The nursery will be closing next week, though I might stay on as part of the skeleton crew to take care of the ones still in quarantine. But until then, I'm still free to post amazingly cute kitten photos. This is from one of the kittens in residence earlier in the season. He's already gone home with someone. Yay!

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Photo of the day: The Benefits of a Classical Education

My favorite line from Die Hard.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Football
I am outrageously happy that football season has started. Don't get me wrong, I'm still tuning in to watch my Giants play baseball. But there's something about football that, to me, signals the arrival of fall and the beginning on Sundays where I never want to leave to sofa. Typically there's only one game that I really care about; OK, sometimes two. As a native of the SF Bay area I naturally follow the Niners. As a native Philadelphian, Husband favors the Eagles. I've become an Eagles fan too (no offense, Niners, but the Eagles have been more fun and far less frustrating to watch the past few seasons). But this year we're boycotting the Eagles and not watching a single game because they stupidly went and signed noted prick and convicted dog hater, Michael Vick. We refuse to support any organization that hires him, so no Eagles for us this year. Which is sad, as I absolutely love Donovan McNabb.

But from the 10 am game, to the 1 pm game to Sunday Night Football (still have a hard time with it not being on Monday. Yes, there's a Monday game but it's not the same without Al and .... oh wait, he's retired. OK, Al and Kris.) I could easily sit there and not move except to get up to pee or get something to eat. And the thing is I'm not all that interested in most of the teams. I just the ritual of it all. Even if it's just on in the background as I'm doing something else, there's something surprisingly comforting about the familiarity of it all. The cheering. The bad beer ads. The truck commercials. The hilarious close up of the vapid cheerleaders and trying to figure out who has the skankiest of them all. (Here's a hint, I call the Eagles cheerleaders "the Ho-Hos."

But whether I'm actively engaged, swearing at the screen and making a general ass of myself (because they can't hear me and they're all dopes because they haven't had a passing game all day and yet they keep trying to connect). Or if I'm barely paying attention and focusing on making catnip socks or reading the Sunday paper, it's still a fall ritual that I love.
Quarantine
The nursery is coming into its last month and, sadly, it's ending on a quarantine. Ringworm. We've already lost some kittens but I think the ones left will be fine -- aside from getting too big for their kennels and in desperate need to get out.

Quarantine presents many extra precautions and, as a consequence, a bit more work. We wear plastic gowns (lovely in the heat) and gloves. Everything has to be extra bleached after each litter (the scale, the tables, the food bowls, etc.) Plus lots of floor mopping, extra hand washing, and general cleanliness. We even have to step in bleach whenever we leave the nursery to we don't track ringworm to the rest of the shelter.

But with the nursery closing I'll have more time on my hands. I'm at the shelter every weekday now: three days at the nursery, three days with the cats. Once the nursery shuts down I'll be doing three days of cats. So that leaves me with two free weekdays to get involved in something else.

I'm trying to figure out where I'd like to volunteer next. I'm considering a local food bank, a homeless shelter network, or something with a local environmental group (Save the Bay, Peninsula Open Space Trust, that kind of thing). But if any of you know of a worthy organization, preferably in San Mateo County, that needs a day or two a week of volunteering, please let me know,
Photo of the day: Abstract Patterns That Become a Blanket

One of the few things that belongs to my grandmother than I actually like, aside from her bedroom furniture.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Photo of the day: A Hatbox Full of Girl Groups

One of the best CD boxed sets ever designed. Love the hat box.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Photo of the day: The Sky is Falling

Well, the paint is, anyway.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Photo of the day: Go, Seabiscuit! Go!

As immortalized in the book, the movie and, of course, the shopping mall.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Photo of the day: At Sail in a Sea of Green

Dramamine not included. Or necessary.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Photo of the day: Air Cooled Gorilla

Because how could I not?

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Go Left at Walgreens
Women give directions differently than men. This is not a news flash. But it constantly amazes me at how much easier it is for I, as a woman. to follow directions given to me by another women.

Females are associational and, to my mind, more helpful men when it comes to telling you how to get from A to B. "Turn left on Main, go two blocks. At Pierce there's a Bank of America, turn left. At the third stop sign, turn left on Center Street and then turn right, at the McDonalds, onto Walker.

Men will say "Go northeast on Main. Stay on Main for 2.3 miles and turn south onto Pierce."

Really? Northwest? South? Let me get my compass and sextant. Who the fuck am I, Magellan? Don't make me base my trip on the position of sun. Give me directions I can follow.
Photo of the day: Come On Now and Sing it with Me....

...at the carwash, yeah.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Photo of the day: The Case of the Curious Kittens

These two are my prime suspects. They certainly look guilty, don't they?

Monday, September 14, 2009

Scenes from Silver Creek: Watson

Watson was a fat orange tabby owned by our next-door neighbors when I was growing up. One of the four redheaded Orr kids did the old “he followed me home” bits and Watson moved into their house and our street.

Watson e thought any yard with a sunbeam was fair game, any door open to the summertime heat an invitation, and any lap his rightful domain. He would follow anybody down the street, indignantly meowing at a lack of pets. During the morning parade of kids walking to school in the morning he would sit in front of the Orr house and we would all dutifully pat his head as we walked by. Once the first child made his appearance on the sidewalk Watson would pad over, plunk his plump butt down, and wait for the pilgrimage. Every kid on the street, even the ones who didn’t like cats, would bend down to stroke his head or scratch his twitchy ears. Then, the ritual completed to his satisfaction, he would head off to start his day. It was a busy life with butterflies to chase, birds to chirp at, squirrels to scold and other cats to intimidate.

Of the five or six cats on our block at any one time, Watson was definitely the ringleader. He was the one who always held his ground when another would dare to invade his turf. He was the one that cruised the lady cats who always seemed sadly unimpressed with his strutting bluster. Although fixed, he never seemed aware of the fact and his attempts to play Romeo were numerous and legendary. A conscientious would-be suitor, his best effort involved bringing the corpse of Rudy Gardoff’s hamster, Dutch (recently and too shallowly buried in the Gardoff’s rose garden) to the Arthur’s brown tabby, Mona. Mona, at that time enamored of a black monster of unknown parentage and ownership seemed pleased at the offering but still preferred to keep company with someone else.

In spite of his masculine bravado, Watson was endlessly patient with any bored child who wanted to play dress-up or war. One of my favorite childhood photos shows me holding him, overfilling my chubby child’s arms, as he looked with surly acceptance at the camera in a tiny sailor hat. When my Barbie married Melissa Garth’s Ken, Wilson was both flower girl and minister. And when the Orr kids reenacted by Battle of the Bulge, Watson was (for some reason historically incongruous reason) George Washington.

Watson lived to the ripe old age of 16 and when he died the whole street turned out for his funeral. Mr.Orr played “Amazing Grace” and “The Alley Cat Song” on the harmonica and Mrs. Baciagaloupi made a mouse-shaped wreath from the flowers in the back garden. (Although she had to explain it was a mouse because we all thought it was Idaho.) He was buried under their oak tree, in a spot where he would while away the hot summer afternoons in the shade. And for many years there was a small wooden cross on which was painted “Watson Orr. A fine cat.’
Photo of the day: Thank You Neighbors

For planting flowers and making our street look lovely.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Photo of the day: Garnish

When it's on a building, it's architectural interest. When it's on a plate, it's garnish.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Photo of the day:World's Cutest Swastika

Four tiny heads arranged for maximum sluppage around the lunch bowl.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Photo of the day: Going Green

From the bamboo that will not die.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Once Again the Animal Kingdom Proves its Superiority
Pigeon beats broadband.
Photo of the day: A Door You Don't Want to Go Through

At least not if you're a lost cat or abandoned dog. This is the door next to the night depositories for when people have animals to bring in after hours. I suppose it's not too scary. You'll have a nice vet tech look you over and will be given a warm, safe, comfy place to sleep. Plus food. And when people show up in the morning they'll talk to you nice and pet you and make sure you're OK. But it's still not the best way to arrive. It's also how volunteers arrive when the shelter is closed on a holiday. So on Labor Day I aligned myself with whatever critter was making noise in one of the drop cages and had to wait for someone to come collect us.

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Photo of the day: Gated

I don't know why I find this gate photogenic, but I do. So you have to live with it.
Crazy Cat
No, not ours (though she is crazy. No, it's this guy who turns a cat's love of running water into the weirdest way to get a drink I've ever seen.

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Beware of Hot, Naked Space Vampire Chicks
In a fit of lazy lunacy the other day, Husband and I spent the entire day in bed. We watched two good movies (Ghostbusters, and Still of the Night), 20-minutes of a crappy movie (The Mist), and about an hour of a truly memorable extra-crappy movie Lifeforce.

We didn't make it through the whole thing, but here's the plot: spaceship finds three naked aliens in Halley's Comet. One female, two male. Group of astronauts spends moments ogling the hot naked female alien in her glass coffin. They don't even seem to notice the guys. Naked aliens brought on ship. Again, camera shows us hot naked female alien (hereafter known as HNFA). Spaceship doesn't come home so rescue ship goes up. Inside of ship crispy. Inside and outside of crew, crispy. Naked aliens in glass coffins fine thank you. Everyone comes home to England where the two naked guys are ignored but HNFA is, of course, put in a separate room. Horny guard comes in for a closer ogle, HNFA wakes up and sucks the life out of him. Unnamed scientist sees this on the security cam and runs through 17 doors to do his own tonsil dance with HNFA. Luckily she just tires him out, doesn't do the life suck thing. HNFA wanders through headquarters where more security guards try to offer her a sammich. Not interested in a midnight snack, she does a little zap-dance and leaves. Still naked.

Frank Finlay says something scientific. Peter Firth does his best James Bond as some weird secret service guy with bad hair and a "don't fuck with me, I've done Shakespeare" attitude.. Steve Railsback, who I've never heard of and who looks like the love child of Charles Manson and Eleanor Roosevelt, walks around with a perpetual expression of pissed confusion. He was captain of the original spaceship and has this hot Vulcan mind-mend thing with NHAC. He even has a dream about her coming to his bed and inviting him to do a little hot naked alien Charleston and is such a wuss that he wakes up screaming. As he was under video observation by everyone on the planet, I suppose it's probably best he didn't get a woody. But really? HNAC wants to do you baby and that's a nightmare?

Meanwhile they finally remember the naked male aliens, who look like gay love twins. They last all of about 15 seconds until they start to do the vampire zombie come-hither dance at which point the SAS plug them with 321 bullets. (I counted.) So much for the naked male aliens who weren't that hot and not much naked either.

The rest of the movie involves hot chick picking up bloated old guy in a beat-up Volvo, Patrick Stewart (!) practically mincing as the head of an insane asylum where a gigantic male nurse will pump anyone full of sodium pentathol provided anyone in the world who outranks him tells him to. We find out the Peter Firth character is a natural voyeur and that if some reincarnated guard un-dies again in the exact way Frank Finlay predicted that Frank's sympathetic response is basically "I told you so." We get Captain Steve slapping some hapless nurse and getting damned close to kissing Patrick Stewart because HNFA is inside Patrick and old Steve has this love/hate thing going on with her. Oh and we learn the valuable lesson that if you lurk in parks hoping to see some girl-on-girl action that you're liable to find a sucked-out body.

I think we lost interest after the "are you Captain Picard or are you HNAC?" pseudo-kiss so I have no clue, nor any interest, in how it ends. But I have to wonder how they got so many good actors (plus music by Henry Mancini) to participate in such a huge cinematic pile of doo-doo/
Photo of the day: It's All a Facade

Architecturally speaking, of course.

Monday, September 07, 2009

Photo of the day: Bricked

Not where you want to be standing during an earthquake.

Sunday, September 06, 2009

Photo of the day: Tiled

Geometrically speaking, today was a wonderful day.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Photo of the day: You've Got to Urn It

It's gray out today, so this seems a suitably atmospheric shot.

Friday, September 04, 2009

Photo of the day: Go Ahead...Pounce

This little guy in the kitten nursery hasn't gotten the knack of pouncing. He's great at getting down low. So low you can't see his body. But then he'd just stay there, for minutes. It wasn't like he was curling up to nap because he had that "big eyes following all the action" head swivel going on. His siblings were chasing a pipe cleaner and this one was fascinated by it. But he never attacked....just sat there looking as menacing as possible (meaning not at all). So cute.

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Photo of the day: Looking Up

Because looking down was boring.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

My Shameful Secrets
I saw an ad on TV the other night for a bra that had as its big selling point "special privacy panels." What they meant was "extra fabric over the nipples."

Here's the deal. I have nipples. Phew, so glad I got that out. I also sweat (because if I don't, I explode). And yet there are all these companies that want me to spend money hiding such natural things. Everybody in the world has nipples. Big shock. Why should I pay extra for a bra to hide them? I mean it's not like I walk around with erect nipples all the time. And sure, I don't want to smell like a locker room. But when it's hot (like today) I sweat. Yes, I wear deodorant. But there's an ad that shows these women embarrassed to raise their arms because of sweat under their arms. Oh, how shameful! OK, who is that fussy?

People are weird. They get all freaked out by whatever Madison Avenue tells them to get freaked out about. Obviously I don't want to offend anyone with my BO, but I'm not going to stop picking up cats because someone might see that my shirt is damp (it was close to 90 today for goodness sake!). Sorry, but I just can't get upset because I have a body.
Photos of the day: Barbed Wire as Gift Wrap

A sign, so securely tied that it's a model of efficiency. And still manages to be picturesque.

Just unwrap at your own peril. Oh, and the barbed wire IS the gift.

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Photo of the day: Rumanian Peasant

Go ahead, speak to one. Then call your dad.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Photo of the day: My Own Best Dressed Man

Some of Husband's beautiful bow ties. He has a wonderful collection of them and is always eager to add more. That's my little clothes horse...

Sunday, August 30, 2009

It's Official
I'm a freak. I'm a crazy cat lady. I don't have 11 cats at home. I don't have cutesy cat towels or wall hangings. But I am a freak.

Today Husband and I went to the pet store to pick up food for Cipher (The World's Most Amazing Cat, Screw You if You Don't Agree tm) and I also bought three containers of cat treats and two large jars of catnip.

Cipher doesn't like either.

Yeah, they're for the shelter cats. I spent nearly an hour stuffing catnip into baby socks (which I also bought) to make little catnip toys for the kitties. I just love being able to give the kitties treats when I'm there. So even though I don't have enough time to socialize all the cats I'd like to, I'm still able to brighten their day with a bit of a snack or some kitty-drugs. You wouldn't believe how happy it makes them. How they perk up. And for cats that don't get out enough or get nearly enough attention, doing anything to break the monotony is a great thing.
Photo of the day: Bluzzzy

Some blue fuzzy stuff of unknown origin but delightful colorage. I like it. No clue what it is/was.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Photo of the day: Vigilance

She never gets tired of keeping watch. She stands firm in the rain and withers not in with the baking sun. She carries your name, announcing your identity when you can no longer announce for yourself. And through it all, she pays no attention to the flowers growing around her lifeless feet and over your sightless eyes.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Updates from the Shelter
It's been another busy week in the world of cat caretaking. 29 kittens in the nursery. Countless cats in the adoption area. I worked with many new faces this week, plus some old favorites. It's weirdly hot and humid today, so many of the cats were grumpy....especially the ones outside. I worked with two red cats today and had my most successful session ever with one of the guys who gives me trouble.

"Joe" tends to get hissy, swatty, and bitey and I haven't been able to figure out his triggers. Today I was extra watchful of his body language and noticed this tiny ear twitch that he gives before he turns. Because of that I was able to stop petting him before he got over stimulated. Everything was fine until I picked him up to bring him back and he became hissing, yowling cat from hell. Luckily one of the other volunteers was nearby so she opened doors for me, which made the return much easier.

One of the other red cats is a shy girl. Having learned my lesson from "Joe" I put her carrier down right in front of her cage. To my surprise, she jumped right in when I opened the door. Nice trick. Once in the socializing room she explored a bit, would come by for a pet and then wander away once more. After about 10 minutes of this she curled up in my lap and began to purr like a Ferrari. I think she eventually dozed off, having curled herself into a perfect ball. I had her out for 30 minutes because I just couldn't bring myself to disturb her. Once I did move again she jumped down and, to my surprise, hopped into her box again. She's so sweet and such a lovely girl.

Words cannot express how much I love volunteering there. And days like this, when your patience is rewarded with a shy girl making herself welcome in your lap, are the kind of days when this is the best paying job in the world.
Photo of the day: Corinthian Dawn

I know, you were expecting another cute kitten. Sorry to disappoint but a girl's gotta branch out.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Photo of the day: Scarves

As soon as fall comes I'll pull them out and show them off. I love my scarves, many of them come on the advice of my beautiful Husband. He in his bow tie, me in my scarf, we're styling those jazz shows.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Things I Believed When I Was a Kid...
- I thought the word "signed" was actually written on all those notes and letters people read in movies. "See you in two weeks. Signed, John."

- I thought alligator was pronounced "all-a-ga-tor-ay." Must have thought they were Italian.

- I thought there was one really, really long street in California called "Frontage Road."

- I thought that stars hummed and the really twinkly ones were humming the loudest.

- I had a hard time with the concept of the past and aging. So I'd see a handsome photo of Robert Taylor from the 40's and think he was gorgeous had to do be convinced that at that point he was either dead or 80.

- I didn't hear whatever good stuff my parents said about me but I heard loud and clear all the bad.

-I couldn't handle the "L part of my fist name and said my name was"wisa" My siblings would correct me "no it's LLLL-isa! So then I'd say "ULLLLL Weesa" I still get teased about this.
Photo of the Day: Little Cat With Little Pink Tongue

Because I'm a sucker for those little pink tongues. This guy was non-stop adorable in the nursery, and quite a bit of trouble as well.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Photo of the day: Whatever Happened to Missing Kids?

This is the ad on my gallon of 2% milk. Really? If I'm drinking 2% milk I will also probably be denying myself brownies. So taunting me with them is just plain mean.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Scenes from Silver Creek: The Art Show

The Silver Creek Arts Guild was, unfortunately, one of the most popular and certainly the most prolific club in town. They met once a week to gossip and, ostensibly, to work. I could never understand how everyone worked at once because they all seemed to have different mediums. At any one time you’d walk into the rec center and see Mrs. Hodges turning lumps of clay into differently-shaped lumps of clay or Mrs. Morgenstern painting yet another pastel seascape that would look exactly like the last pastel seascape.

Each season they had a “showing” which typically featured paintings with no perspective, slightly boring and out-of-focus photographs, and the occasional still life with unappetizing fruit. To see these still lifes you would assume that no one in Silver Creek had ever seen real fruit. They bore no resemblance in either shape or color to any fruit known to man.

Sadly for us, dreadful Aunt Camille was a member of the Guild and expected us to attend every show Her artistic oeuvre seemed limited to malformed ballet dancers or anemic poodles who always seemed to have either not enough or too many limbs. She would only branch out when the Guild would do themes. I remember for the “Childhood Dreams” theme she contributed a nightmarish series of scenes from Mother Goose that, quite frankly, scared the crap out of me when I was 6. I recall actually shrieking the following Christmas when I unwrapped her watercolor of The Old Man and the Shoe and, subsequently, I had to coaxed out from under the dining room table by my father before the rest of the gifts could be unwrapped.

The spring flowers show was a much-detested annual event and produced some exemplary pieces of horticultural horrors. I think I attribute my dislike of flowers to early exposure to oddly colored blobs of paint thrown on top of dead-fingers of stalk. They were universally awful and I was comforted to know that I was not alone in my hatred of the spring show above all others. I would typically try to get the flu that week. Once, when I was 14, I actually kissed 8-year old Benny Martin on the lips because he had strep throat I wanted to get sick enough to had an excuse to miss the show.

The amusing thing about these shows is that everybody won a ribbon. We had blue ribbons for first place of course, and red and white for second and third. But we had so many shows in town for so many various things (ranging from growing the largest watermelon to the best costume in the Halloween parade) that the city never could afford to have the name of the event put on the ribbon. Silver Creek bought them in bulk so all they said was “First Prize”. Not “First Prize, Spring Art Show.” Eventually everyone in town had a ribbon for doing, growing, or making something, even if it were just for showing up to the event.

Aunt Camille always won at least one blue ribbon per competition because everyone was afraid not to. I remember looking at one of her malformed ballerinas, and the combination of elongated body and disregard for perspective made me feel as if I were standing down a steep hill and looking up at a fun house mirror. I was vaguely seasick form the battling viewpoints and lines and kept finding myself leaning slightly back and forth to orient myself. I pointed this out to my friend Gina and we noticed that other people did the same thing. Eventually we stood in a corner and giggled as we watched everyone in town pause, look, and weave.

The landscape show was notorious for several unique and decidedly phallic geographic formations and bleak winter landscapes so depressing that the suicide hotline had an upswing in calls. Aunt Camille’s contribution that year was entitled “The Mighty Mississippi,” which she had never seen, depicted in an unlikely turquoise blue more suitable for the Caribbean. This wound through an idyllic, Mark Twain-esque dreamscape of weeping willows, rounded hills, and blue sky. Unfortunately her trees looked like green cigars, the hills looked like two breasts, and the sky was filled with clouds shaped like barnyard animals.

The only really good artist in town was Dr. Foster. But he only painted trout. That’s it. Not even other fish, just trout. And always dead. No mater what the theme Dr. Foster would contribute a trout painting. They were exquisite in detail and execution, but they were, after all, only dead trout.
Photo of the day: Black and White And Sleepy

Her Majesty Cipher, the World's Most Amazing Cat, Screw You if You Don't Agree tm.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Photo of the day: Flame

Pretty self explanatory, I should think.

Disclaimer: No houses were burned down while attempting this stunt. Do not attempt.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Pondering
After ten years on the air I'm considering giving up my radio show. I just don't look forward to doing my show every week the way that I should. And I'm beginning to feel guilty about taking up a primo spot for so long when so many people want it. But another part of me can't imagine not being on the air, learning about world music, and hanging out with all the wonderful, crazy people at KZSU.

Perhaps I'm just in a rut. Maybe I need to take a quarter off from world music and play blues. Or do a funk show. I'm not sure. And I haven't made any decisions yet....just thinking.
Photo of the day: The White Rose

Today is Bosworth Field Day. On this day in 1485, Richard III, the last Plantagenet King of England, was slain at the Battle of Bosworth Field by Henry Tudor, later Henry VII. Don't believe Shakespeare. Old Will was wrong about Richard. He was neither a hunchback nor a murderer. Don't believe me? Find out for yourself. The white rose was the symbol for the House of York, of which Richard was a member.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Photo of the day: The Escape Artist

She's figured out how to slide open the cage door and she's determined to get out. Hilarious to watch in action. It takes all four feet plus her mouth but she's getting better, and faster, at it. We now have to keep the door clipped shut so she can't go all Houdini on us.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Photo of the day: Openings

I think I managed to concuss myself in the middle of last night. It's a bit fuzzy but I think I was trying to avoid stepping on the cat and ended up going head-first into the fridge. I have a heck of a bump and it's nicely red and ugly. In a few days it will probably look like Husband has been knocking me around. I say the "concussed" part rather than just "whacked the hell out of my head" because I was really groggy this morning and, in fact, have no recollection of Husband kissing me goodbye. However, dear friends, I am fine (this is just one of the hazards of being a klutz) and this statement has nothing to do with today's photo. Just thought I'd mention it.

Wishing you all a bump-free day.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Photo of the day: Looking Up

Never underestimate the photograph possibilities of an airport. I could have shot several hundreds of shots were I not on the lookout for my soon-to-be-returning husband.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Catching Up
If zombies attack, we are all hosed according to science

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$10 million dollars because Hondas aren't tornado proof? Lady, you can't sue people because you're a fucking idiot.

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Who says teenagers aren't brainy? How about classes in riding the bus.
Photo of the day: Welcome to San Francisco

Please grab a cart.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Photo of the day: Crouching Tiger...Hidden Pipe Cleaner

This little guy is in the classic "I'm gonna pounce" position, just waiting for some unexpected prey to appear. I think he attacked one of his littermates about 10 seconds after this shot.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Photo of the day: Sartre Was Wrong

Just follow the arrows.