Showing posts with label pun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pun. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

vicarious living thru aunt T - make it legendary!

Here I am, at the first hole of the Professional Course - the supposedly easier one of the two.
Yep, that's my purple-handled club!
My pink ball is already in position for teeing off.
The more striking thing - you like that little pun? - about these holes are the quotations at each one.
The vast majority are Bible verses, as in this case, but not all, as some from other sources were sprinkled in.
And just where was I mini-golfing today?
At Legendary Golf, situated in Wexford Plantation, just off William Hilton Parkway.
I'd spotted it Tuesday on my way to Sea Pines -
not to "see" pine trees, of course, but to watch films at Park Plaza.
Wah ca, wah ca, as Fozzie Bear would say!

The grounds were beautifully landscaped.
Hole 4 of the Professional Course even had a lovely waterfall splashing in view of the tee!
The placard for my reading pleasure, though not from the Bible, was religious.
"Unless we have in us He who is above us, we will soon be consumed by that which is around us. Without a doubt the highest thought the mind can entertain is the thought of God."
It was written by Aiden Wilson Tozer, a pastor who was so gifted with words that he was granted honorary degrees from two colleges.
Nice, right?
I certainly made sure to read these quotes, made even more meaningful in this nature setting, under a clear blue sky.
Right place, right time!
Here's another beautiful view!
This was part of the Championship Course and that's my pretty little pink ball, one stroke away from the hole.
As I was lining it up, I was stopped by the sheer beauty - a tiny rivulet running down into a still lake, with a waterspout springing forth, under shade trees and surrounded by a grassy verge...
so much prettier than it had needed to be, but surely a welcomed reminder of this sanctuary from the hustle and bustle of William Hilton Parkway, just past the edges of the meadow.
The rushing noise of the constant stream of cars was almost inaudible, thanks to the splashing of the fountain.
I loved having the leisure of taking a moment to enjoy this gift of nature.
This heart-shaped miniature lake deserved a moment of my time as well.
I have to wonder how many passersby may have noticed its form?
Positioned near a gazebo, it would be easy to overlook its message of love...
ah, but not by me, as accustomed as I am to the need for a change in perspective to better communicate with the spiritual world.
A nearby quote from J. C. Ryle certainly seemed to cinch that concept.
"Happiness does not depend on outward circumstances, but on the state of the heart."
And, sometimes, the need to squint your eyes and hold your mouth just-so to see what gift is hidden in plain sight!
(smile!)
Sometimes, that gift is a perfect shot when least expected.
For me, it was on Hole 16.
Look closely.
Let your gaze follow the length of the straightaway, through the neat brick walls.
Then, go up to and enter the opening formed by the two ends of the crescent-shaped lake.
Now, continue peering into that circular expanse, heading straight toward the large rock positioned at the center of that curving body of water...
and there's my pink ball, resting just in front of the boulder, inches from the the hole.
Wow, right?
That gave me a birdie on that one!
(smile!)
And, to highlight that this place was designed by someone not only with a religious core, but with a grand sense of humor toward mankind's place in the world, this is the message awaiting those who visit the loo!
"Please...Do Not Flush the Following Items Down This Toilet: Paper Towels, Sanitary Napkins, Old Phone Bills, Goldfish, Bandaids, Cherry Bombs, Leftover Salad, & Your Hopes & Dreams.
- Thanks!"
Nice joke, y'all!

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

lmao, noaa!

"Peter battling increasingly hostile wind shear" -

I admit, that certainly tickled my funny bone!

Then again, I did spend 8 years in the Navy, so my humor can be a bit 'blue', right?

Remember all that fuss a few years back?

"Rose might not bloom into much" -

oh, yeah, someone was definitely writing these headlines as teasers with a twist!

That was yesterday...

and this was on the NOAA site today!

"Peter weakening as it passes by" -

oh, poor lil' thing!

Maybe Viagra would help!

"Rose going through a rough patch..." -

quick, somebody!

Get a weed whacker for her!

Hahahaha! Hahaha!

Of course I ran to fb to post the pun-filled quips!
 

Why keep all the merriment to myself, n'est-ce pas?

Then I spotted this meme on Lynita's page:

"Don't run with bagpipes - 
you could put an aye out,
or worse yet, get kilt."

This one hails from Jacksonville, from the Patrick that once ran JavaFlicks and now does not.

"If you were nine when 'Rock Lobster' came out,
you'd B-52 now."
 
Now, here's the math test: what year was that song released?
 
I'll have the answer in the comments section!
While the diligent ones work on that puzzle, here's another song-based meme, this one from my outlaw Bunny.

One dog says to the other, "I don't get the lyrics to 'Bohemian Rhapsody.' Well, except 'thunderbolt and lightning, very, very frightening'."

The other dog replies, "Yeah, that part speaks to me."

Hahahaha! Hahaha!

As for Jay Sinclair, I know he travels around a good bit, going to concerts hither and yon, but ...

just what are they putting in the water to warrant this sign?

"For Your Safety & Due To The Carnivorous
We Will Not Be Able To Open The Pool This Season"

Hey, that's okay - no swimming with piranha for me!

Mary Prokop posted this joke!

A horse walks into a bar and orders a pint. The barkeep says, "You're in here pretty often. Do you think you might be an alcoholic?" The horse replies, "I don't think I am," and vanishes from existence.

See, the joke is about Descartes' famous philosophy of "I think; therefore, I am," but to explain that part before the rest of the joke would be putting Descartes before the horse.

Bah DUMMM bum!

Okay, okay, I won't bow out on that groaner!

How about this cutie from my BFF, Sandra Lynn?

"EXPOSE YOURSELF TO ART" reads the caption, while a winsome lass holds her blouse open in front of a painting.

Which piece of art might that be?

"The Scream", naturally!

Hahahaha! Hahaha!

Monday, September 20, 2021

not a rain dance... or that, either

It's been raining in Savannah since September 16th.

Let me let that soak in.

Hahahaha! A little pun fun!

Today, it has rained every hour, or so it seems.

So, I checked Pat Prokop's page.

Nope, no news of hurricanes offshore.

What about at that other page I use for such?

Well, they have resorted to having a bit of click bait fun, it would seem!

Very amusing!

Wanting to share, off I sent the photo, sharing it with mi tres amigas, mi dos hermanos, my first niece and her brother, my stepmom, the ex, the bfe, the 'Sweet Caroline' girls, the squirrel mistress, and my cousin Penny.

me: "Weather humor on nhc.noaa.gov"

Carolyn: "I think Tina was accidentally seeing if she could do the "Itchy Kitty" like Channing Tatum did in Free Guy and someone mistook it for the rain dance."

me: "No, I don't use two hands, just one."

Carolyn: "Wow, an old-fashioned girl like me. Right on, sista."

Barbara: "Wasn't that the worst dance move you've ever seen him do?"

me: "Um... what dance move?"

Barbara: "Channing Tatum's in Free Guy."

me: "He was great! Loved all the masturbation references! What a hoot!"

Barbara: " They probably had to pay him extra to ruin his reputation as a dancer!"

me: "His rep is solid. Maybe you did not get the point. With 3 brothers [and having worked most of my life in male-dominant fields], I totally got it!"

Barbara: "I was just hoping for a dance that appealed to me. That obviously wasn't in the plot."

me: "LOL! He was the avatar for a [22 yo] nerd that still lived in his mom's basement!"

Barbara: "That definitely took some acting on his part."

me: "He's a G.U.Y. It probably took some control to not bust out laughing during his scenes. Seriously."

Carolyn: "I think she just didn't get it."

Yeah, that may be right, for several reasons.

Neither Barbara nor Sandy have any appreciation for 'guy' movies nor 'guy' humor.

In addition, Boo has an issue with language, unable to understand the lyrics in songs and most likely missing parts of dialogues in movies.

She's told me that she uses screen captions when she watches at home.

Maybe she'll like "Free Guy" more when she can 'see' the funny bits in the script when she's able to watch it on her own television.

I do hope so.

As for me, I intend to see it on the silver screen again this week!

Oh, yeah!

(smile!)

Friday, June 25, 2021

a day with paul at a museum!

That's him, having just admired one of the roadsters on display in the giant showroom of the Blackhawk Museum.
He's never been there before, but knew it had old cars and knows how much I love those, and knows I love to get culture on my birthday...
so, there we were, good on all counts!
He was trying to make sure I had fun and got to see what I wanted while out on the West Coast...
you know, being the most excellent host he is...
but I kept assuring him I was there to see him and Cathy, and maybe do some things they liked to do...
So, back to the museum, shall we?
(smile!
Speaking of things I love, I think I've found a new car!
Sure, it's trapped in a display, out there in Danville, California, but I've laid claim to it with my butterfly tote bag!
Should they ever decide to vacate its space on the floor, this will serve of proof that I've called dibs.
Of course, I don't know how I'll get it over to this coast, but I'll work on a solution when that problem arises.
Hopefully my invention for teaching chemistry to blind students will be bringing in money by then!
(smile!
Speaking of students, this was one of my favorite displays in the exhibit on the top floor of the museum.
Inside this time capsule are four models, constructed by fourth-graders from recyclable materials from their homes, of the Spanish missions in the state.
Very awesome, right?
Even more so, to me as a retired teacher, were the two teen girls who were so delighted to see that the project they'd worked on when younger was on display so prominently!
I was truly thrilled to witness that realization!
(smile!)
I also was thrilled with the depiction of famous women in the "Spirit Of The Old West" exhibit, using cardboard dolls clad in the garb of the day - magnificent!
But, after a little more than two hours, Paul and I had saturated senses and needed a break, and sustenance.
This was the perfect spot for both!
A babbling brook alongside while I scarfed down Brussels sprouts with pancetta and he had mac'n'cheese set us right as rain!
(smile!)
Energy recharged, back to the museum we ventured, our tickets still good for the day!
I started with "Art Of Africa", which, though small, had a nice range of wood carvings and musical instruments.
Take this guitar - I am absolutely sure my ex's best friend, who has about a hundred of that type of axe - most assuredly lacks one like this... and would love to add it to his collection.
As for me, I prefer the assortment of metal works above it.
More cowbell, please!
(smile!)
Then I was off to the doubledecker display for the "World Of Nature", drawn in by the aquarium wall... 
where I proceeded to be lost for probably two hours.
I couldn't swear to that, but I know I was there long enough that Paul came in search of me, to let me know he was done with his exploration and was going to take a nap at the car-viewing area on the second floor.
"Take you r time," he'd said...
and so I did.
(smile!)
How could I not love this left wing of the museum?
In addition to the array of marine life mounted to the upper walls, ceiling, and the walls leading down to the lower floor, the under-the-sea mood lighting utterly captivated me.
The enormous lover level display, though, went on and on and on, with so many animals and so many interactive panels...
it was like some cross between a Rainforest Cafe and a zoo!
One wall was full of these goats and sheep, with the most incredible assortment of horn shapes and styles - wow!
(smile!)
I eventually realized that I'd been down there a while - or so my bladder claimed, lol - and resurfaced, admiring the schools of fish as I did so, of course.
"Into China" I headed, planning to do a quick perusal.
Fortunately, it was not a crowded display.
Not with people, I mean, but with art.
I was able to enjoy clay soldiers and carved, cavorting horses, as well as the city built of delightful marble that had been delicately flourished with swirls.
My last stop was the music room, with so many bells and a video of them being played, alongside this quote.
"To educate somebody, you should start with poems, emphasize ceremonies and finish with music."
Confucius, I so agree!
What an excellent note for ending my adventure - and, yes, that pun was intended! 
(smile!)
I'm so glad that Paul took the day off to share this place with me!
Back we go to his city by the bay, gratefully avoiding the rush hour traffic as we enjoy these views of nature in our magnificent world!
Yes, that was a play on the name of the display I spent the most time in - a little joke!
Here's hoping Cathy has had a successful day of work - after all, she's taking Monday off to be with me!
Bye for now, y'all!
I have different landscapes to enjoy and different air to inhale on this sunny afternoon!
(smile!)
i thank You, God!

Monday, June 7, 2021

paper doll painter and old rocks

I'm calling it a "continuation of their birthday celebrations" - something I'm starting to get a reputation for, I'm sure.
If not for my trip yesterday to the Jepson, I might yet be putting off their gifts a little longer...
but I had wandered into the gift shop and found a few items that were perfect for them, as well as for others with upcoming other birthdays, so...
right place, right time.
This paper doll, for example, with some rather interesting stickers, is just the thing for my great-niece in Louisville.

"Dearest Ally,
Happy 12th birthday!
I remembered that you dressed as Bob Ross for Halloween and thought you would enjoy this paper doll of him.
I've also enclosed a post I wrote about him last year!
with much love,
G'Aunt Tina
"

I even had an envelope with a window in it, so Bob's face could look out at her!
I think she and her folks - and her Grandma, my outlaw Bunny - will get a kick out of it!
Plus, my gift is sure to stand out - get the pun?! - when it arrives!

Now, for my niece in Alabama, the one and only niece that shares my birthday, I'm starting her off with two pairs of socks from the museum, in bright colors and with fun designs - oooh la la!
Maybe she has a sock drawer like I do, right?
I also sent her a copy of the fun post about "Bobby's Socks", the many, many, lone ones with mates lost in the laundry.
I think she'll find it very funny... and she may even do her own experiment this summer!
 
She's also getting something near and dear to my heart, something Mama had kept as an inside joke between us.
I had developed a habit of collecting shells from beaches I visited - Cocoa Beach, Daytona, New Smyrna - while I was stationed in Orlando for CTM school.
Naturally, when I was up in Illinois, I wanted to do the same... but that beach had no shells.
That didn't stop me!
In the lid, Mama had written:
"From Lake Michigan
Summer 1977
Tina picked up
on shore when she
was stationed at
Great Lakes
"
 
I had stumbled upon the box when I'd moved into the Ocean Room and set them aside for the little girl who wanted to be a scientist.
The time had arrived to share these beauties with her!
 
"Dearest Aubree,
I hope you continue to Have a doggone great birthday!!!
Happy 9th, my dear, future, petrologist!
These rocks were collected by me while I was stationed in Great Lakes, IL, for training in electronics.
I had my 19th birthday while there.
I don't know what types of rocks these are, or even how old they may be...
but I know they are at least 43 years old!
with much love,
Aunt Tina
"
 
Now, off to get these into the mail before another day passes!
(smile!)

Friday, April 30, 2021

26 films in 4 days, continued!

You didn't really think I was done, did you?

"Well, no, because you'd only given me a dozen movies."

Correcto mundo, mi amiga! That segues nicely to my third grouping: Buddy-film Film Festival. Note, these are not traditional such things. It isn't like Nolte and Murphy. Well, maybe one of them... no, not really. That was a cop and a convict. So, just forget about me saying that.

"Ummmm.... you could have just not written about it. Right?"

Yeah, I guess so. But it's late on the last day of April and I'm trying to get this done.

"Then just get on with it! Silly rabbit!"

I will! Okay, buddy films it is! "Compadres" paired a Mexican narcotics detective with a 17-year-old American computer hacker. Hey, that's akin to "48 Hrs." after all! The kid should have been put in jail, so that means Vic was a convict in the making, and Garza was most definitely a cop.

"Yes, dear."

That's right. Together, they were out to locate the money stolen by the bad guy that had kidnapped the cop's girlfriend. Pretty good and it even had a bit of subtitling thrown in!

"Oooohhh, almost a foreign film!"

Oooohhh, you think you're funny... wait, I know this one. You're...

"... a hoot! Hoot, hoot! Hahahaha!"

Yes, dear. Okay, let's move along. The kidnapping theme ran through the next movie, too. Here's a photo of the very surfer-buff Chris Evans with his buddy in this one.

"You mean, that blonde woman is Kim Basinger?"

No, I'm talking about the title character! "Cellular" is all about the guy running around, making things right, for the voice on the other end! Good for some laughs and some real drama!

"So you're claiming that 'cellular' has the last name 'phone'? Is that what you're saying?"

You got it, toots! Good call!

"That pun is for me? Thanks."

You're most welcome. Perhaps you'll like the next movie better. "The Brothers Grimm" is one I'd seen before, by the way, but it was nice to go back to the 'old days'. It was also nice to see Heath Ledger again, this time as Jacob, the smarter and more scientific brother, recording their adventures along the way. Not that I don't like Matt Damon, of course, because I regard him as the boy that I wish lived next door. (smile)

"I hear you! Yeah, he would be a fine neighbor!"

Exactly. So then I decided to change genders for the fourth, and final, film of this series. Time for some women to take the scene!

"I hear ya loud and clear! How about Susan Sarandon and Goldie Hawn?"

So, I thought, how about... wait! You guessed it! Peeker! Yes, it was time for "The Banger Sisters" to trot out and strut their stuff! Oddly, I had not seen this 2002 gem. I really liked this part, where they've just returned from a night of partying and are looking at the stars and reminiscing about Jim Morrison, again, for maybe the third time in the film.

"You should probably recommend this one to Melaness. She's always been such a fan of The Doors."

Good idea!

"You're up to 16 now. Ten more?"

You got it! Time for the Alliterative Titles Film Festival! Now, then, I admit this first one isn't strictly so, but it was listed without "The" on the HBO schedule, so there ya go. I debated whether to keep it or not, but I was really looking forward to this Jim Carrey flick... so I kept it. I'm glad I did! Such a preponderance of p's in "Mr. Popper's Penguins", predominantly pronounced by his protege, Pippi, about the packaged present from his papa!

"Hahahaha! Nicely done, dearie! I see why you kept the film!"

Precisely!

"The others were more in keeping with this film fest pretext?"

Positively! "Hollywood Homicide" had Harrison Ford and Josh Hartnett paired together in their day job as cops, but with one working on the side as a realtor and the other as a yoga teacher.

"That sounds like a good flick. Lots of laughs?"

You know it! But this may be my favorite part: dancing to Smokey Robinson with Harrison Ford after a long day of work. Yes!

"I bet you played that part twice!"

Of course I did! I danced with him to "Tracks Of My Tears" both times, too! Really, the entire movie had a great soundtrack. I'm glad I decided to watch it, even though I'd already seen it before. Same thing with the first movie in this quartet, too, as well as the third one. That was "Brighton Beach", featuring baseball and boys and the whole 1937 vibe. Very nice to step back into that for a while.

"Plus, there was the beach scene, too."

That's right. But the last of the alliteration gambit was "Ella Enchanted", with the ever delightful Anne Hathaway as a princess given "perfect obedience" as a baby and having to grow up with that onus upon her. 

"And I guess someone had yelled for her to stop..."

To "freeze!", actually! And she had frozen there in mid-air, in mid-leap above that trough, until the person, flabbergasted, had told her to put her hands together in the air. That's when she'd collapsed into the water! Very funny movie, with a good number of singing bits, though all may as well have been at a karaoke bar. Still it put me into the mood to see a musical...

"...so you sought some out..."

... which was actually harder than it sounds. There really aren't that many genuine musicals out there these days. Still, for my HBO Kids Musicals Film Festival, I watched six of the seven proffered.

"I'm surprised they actually had that many."

Me, too. "Lyle, Lyle Crocodile: The Musical - The House on 88th Street" had a couple of numbers in it and was pretty cute. "Earthday Birthday", with baby dinosaurs born to save this planet, was tiresome, though I'm sure I'm not the intended audience. The third one, though, really tickled me! Narrated by Carol Burnett, "The Tale Of Peter Rabbit" was absolutely adorable and had me laughing! Such a bad little, hard-headed, bunny!

"Oh, that's wonderful! With his little jacket and shoes made into a scarecrow - funny!"

It truly was! Then "Ira Sleeps Over" was so charming, with the characters looking like they could have been extras in a Charlie Brown special!

"Major coolness!"

Yes, indeed! "Mike Mulligan And His Steam Shovel" presented a sweet tale of a machine that had become outdated by bigger and newer technology. But that didn't stop Mike from moving out to the smaller towns with Mary Ann, seeking to hire her out to do "the work of 100 men in one week" in just a single day. And she does, too! Then she gets repurposed to be the furnace in the last new building for which she dug the foundation. Hooray!

"Nice message of reduce-reuse-repurpose in that one!"

And it was a thirty-year-old movie! I was quite pleased.

"You still have one more, right?"

That's right, I do, and that was "Alexander And The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day". It was made in 1990, too. What a time he had! Waking to gum in his hair, having no dessert in his lunch bag, going to the dentist and finding a cavity, losing his favorite yoyo - wow. Animated like all the others, this one also had a dearth of songs, but - it made up for that. When his two brothers picked on him, that led into a song and dance number - about each fantasizing about how good they would have had it as an only child - that was truly inspired! I just wish it would have had more of those during its short run!

"Yeah, that was a really great song! I'm so glad you ended on that high note!"

A little joke for me? Thanks! Now, time to say goodnight, dear! I have a trip to Tybee tomorrow and need to make sure I'll be up for it!

"Good night, dear!"

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

26 films in 4 days!

"Let me guess: comcast has graced you with premium channels for free!"

Bing, bing, bing! That's right! Streampix, HBO, and Starz, to light my nights and my days with the highlights of Hollywood! Well, and other locales, too, of course.

"Of course! So many places making movies - Dire Straits must love it!"

I know I do.

"So... what movies have you seen?"

Well, you know me. I've turned this into a series of film festivals, rather than a smorgasbord with no particular order to it. The first block was "guy movies about love", inspired by a conversation of fb with Jay Sinclair. He has a bunch of old VHS movies and was asking where to donate them. Someone suggested the women's crisis center and he countered with "they probably wouldn't go for these guy movies." I told him I loved those flicks, having grown up with three brothers (and worked in male-dominated jobs all my life).

"So, what did he decide to do with the tapes?"

Beats me! I haven't kept up with future developments on that story. I've been pretty busy watching movies to be discussin' them!

"Hey, no skin off my nose! So, whatcha watched?"

Well, I started with "40 Days And 40 Nights", which sounds like it's about the rainstorm that floated Noah's Ark, but you have to think Christian, not Jewish.

"So, that would be Lent. Hey, is that a laundromat?"

It is!!! And the sign says "Clean Laundry is a Fresh Start"! Certainly assured me that I was at the right place, right time, on Tuesday!

"Magnificent! And the movie was good?"

It was fabulous! From that one, I went straight into "(500) Days Of Summer", which was also fabulous and had my boy, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, trying to work his way over to Autumn.

"Hahaha! Not the season, but a girl's name, right? How punny!"

Indeed, it really was, and I loved the five-minute dance number! And I liked the dates bouncing around, not sequential. 

"Me, too. Really makes you pay attention."

So it did, making me ready for maybe a little something I already had seen before... and had espied in the listings. "Risky Business" was the ideal chaser!

"Oh, major coolness! Hard to believe Tom Cruise is 38 years older now than he was in that 1983 movie! Such good music, too!"

You know it! And that scene on the train... and the one with him catching the crystal egg like a football... very nice!

"Oh, yes, yes, yes! So many good moments!"

There certainly were! But I had noticed that the guys had gotten younger in those three films, so I needed a "guy in love" who was a bit older, right?

"Sure, I'll play along! Where's a guy our age, g'friend?"

Exactly. Enter Richard E. Grant as a middling singer with a major crush on a conductor with curves in her hair and her body. What's a man to do but stage AN OPERA, at his country house, with up and coming young stars? And so we have "1st Night"!

"Woohoo!!!"

But wait, it gets better! The opera was a Mozart comedy, "Cosi fan tutte", perhaps to not so subtly nudge his lady love in his direction.

"How delicious! A little inside joke for them!"

Precisely!

"And was there a fifth film?"

There was not, at least not in that vein. Plus, it was already after 2 AM, so I thought something shorter might be better. And so began the HBO Kid Shorts Film Festival! Appropriately, it started with "The Music In Me", which segued quite nicely from the opera movie. Right place, right time!

"Apparently so! How wonderful! I know you love the shorts!"

I do! That first one - of eight total - consisted of a mixture of home-made clips of kids playing their favorite instruments, interspersed with more professional segments with the kids talking about how they started playing. This boy, Tony, was very impressive, with a version of "Stormy Weather" that was incredibly upbeat! Loved it!

"He really was good! So were the other children, on their violins and guitars and pianos."

So very much talent out there! That was showcased in some other films, too, in this particular personal film festival. But I had followed up that one with "Flight", about a boy with dreams of being an astronaut and going to the moon... to be close to his "mom in heaven". I really felt for the dad when the son said that.

"I hear you."

Thanks. I thought I could use a little perkier topic before I turned in, so I cued up "The Leopards Take Manhattan: The Little Band That Roared". Excellent choice! This woman who wanted to get music into the middle-school classroom started a percussion class in 1993 that was not only still going strong, but led the group to a jazz education invitational to New York City in 2006, the year this movie was finished.

"Good for them! Not bad for a bunch of kids from Louisville, Kentucky!"

Not bad by a long shot! I have to wonder where they are now, fourteen years after that movie. Right? How many stayed with playing music? How many are in bands now?

"So many questions! I know just what you mean."

The next morning, I was tuned in to a bunch of kids overcoming personal hurdles by finding something to focus on. "I Can't Do This, I CAN Do That" showed how those with non-physical issues (dyslexia, attention deficit disorder, audio processing disorder, sensory processing disorder) were able to use playing a musical instrument or dancing or some other favorite activity to bypass the problem, at least for a while. One kid put it best: "I don't like the term 'disability', I prefer the term 'different', because that is how I see myself."

"Yeah, I get that. Labels may help statisticians, but they sure do box people in."

Exactly. "I Have Tourette's, but... Tourette's Doesn't Have Me" followed that same motif, with real kids, talking on film to other kids, about their symptoms and their work to overcome them. Again, playing instruments or finding a hobby they enjoyed, including dance, allowed them some control over their bodies' tics and spasms and utterances. It was definitely made clear that they were not their disease.

"Those both sound pretty serious for a group of shorts targeted to a young audience."

Well, wait until you hear about two others. The first I saw would have been right at home in the SJFF, it really would have been. "The Number On Great-Grandpa's Arm" was beautifully done, with a middle-school aged boy having a conversation with his G'Gpa about his time in Auschwitz. Bear in mind that the man would have been about the boy's age at the time.

"Wow."

The one I watched right after that was another history lesson for the young. "What happened on September 11?" was certainly kinder and gentler than the news had been during that time. In this scene, a survivor is explaining to the class what it was like to have an acre of offices, per floor, crashing down as you struggle to get out of the building.

"Wow."

My favorite part was near the end, when they were talking about The Survivor Tree, once a charred stump buried in the rubble for 30 days, now a 30-foot tall beauty with hundreds of white blossoms. It's a flowering pear, much like the one in my front yard.

"That's pretty cool. Nice to feel a personal connection with that area."

It is. I remember going up in the World Trade Center - I don't recall which Tower - up to the observation area and feeling the building sway. That was before I went to Okinawa, you know.

"Yes, I recall you going on about that a few years back, when you saw "The Walk". What a lovely movie that was, when the building was freshly built!"

Yes, and that was with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, too.

"Indeed. It sounds like you're winding down, but I only count seven shorts here. Had you misspoken earlier?"

I had not. The eighth one, "Family Is Family Is Family", explored different types of family groups. You know, much like that commercial that has "love has no color, love has no religion, love has no gender". This included love of adopted children and foster children, too, so it was a nice glimpse back ten years. I wonder how all those families are doing?

"Good question. I have to wonder how the pandemic has affected all those folks."

Yes, well that will have to wait another day. Time for me to slunch! I have chirashi!

"Later, chica!"

Saturday, April 24, 2021

and the hubcaps all gleam

 

I have been waiting for weeks to do this: to wash my car in the rain.

The weather kept bringing night showers.

Those would not do.

Finally, daytime precipitation came!

First, early morning rain to loosen all the baked-on oak sperm for my soft-scrub sponge, then a solid, cleansing rinse of sure 'nuf rain to bring out my car's natural blue highlights!

I was pretty solidly rinsed, too! LOL!

That's okay, I'd dressed for the occasion in shorts and a shirt that needed to go into the laundry - they're draped over the shower rod, draining still.

As for me, I took a shower and even washed my hair, so I'm squeaky clean from my head to-ma-toes!

Hahahaha! Hahaha!

That pun is on a Food Lion reusable tote that my first niece has now! She liked it so much that I just had to give it to her!

Let's see, what else has touched water today?

Oh, yes, the dishes!

They certainly had been begging to be washed, but I just hadn't quite gotten a round tuit.

Hahahaha! Hahaha!

Now, "Earth Girls Are Easy" is streaking along on Comet, so...

later, y'all!

(smile!)

Thursday, January 21, 2021

celebrating america with music and bonefish!

What a wonderful way to start this new day in American history!
ABC On Demand had last night's special, "Celebrating America", listed and I jumped at the chance to see it!
A spoken Spanish interpretation had horribly marred the presentation on all three channels, so I had hoped to catch it... success!
How good to have it begin with The Boss, Bruce Springsteen, at the Lincoln Memorial, singing of this being the "Land Of Hope And Dreams"!
That was followed by several people who read portions of the inaugural addresses given by Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan.
What inspirational, patriotic, and unifying messages those are!
I really liked having Tom Hanks as the Master of Ceremonies for the event; he has such a reassuring presence and is so calm and uplifting.
That was exactly what was needed for the segments that celebrated those who keep America going, those who feed us, those who take care of us, those who light us up with inspiration, those who teach, and those who break barriers.
Each of those segments highlighted one person as a representative, with that person then called upon to introduce the musicians who followed.
Very nice!
For example, Anthony Gaskin of Virginia, a delivery driver, was selected as one that "keeps America going" and he then introduced Bon Jovi, playing on a pier in Miami.
And the song?
One of my favorites: The Beatles' "Here Comes The Sun"!
Best of all, as they played the ever-hopeful tune, the sun rose behind them, illuminating a blue-sky day!
Wow!!!
What other songs were part of this?
Well, in Memphis, TN, Justin Timberlake and Ant Clemons sang "Better Days", a song new to me.
Next, from Seattle, WA, the Foo Fighters gave such a stirring version of "Times Like These" that I wanted to go sing it at karaoke somewhere!
Tom Hanks was the one who introduced Demi Lovato, who performed a beautiful rendition of "Lovely Day" - yes!
And the final performance was from Katy Perry, at the Lincoln Memorial, singing the song I've heard so often at the baseball stadium... but this time, "Fireworks" was sung live, as a constant barrage of lights of many colors lit up the night behind the Washington Monument.
Wow!!!
Yes, there were stirring words from President Biden and Vice President Harris, as well as a trio of former Presidents (Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama)... but the draw for me, as always, was the music.
I look forward to watching it again in a few minutes, with the remainder of the celebratory dinner I had at Bonefish Grill.
And what was I celebrating?
That was the query of the waiter.
"The first woman elected as Vice President of the United States of America", was my joyful reply to him.
He made sure I had all I needed to make the evening perfect, including this ever-delightful house salad with its perfect complement of kalamata olives to grape tomatoes - such a flavor explosion!
I ate every bite, of course!
But before I was done, the true reason for my dining there came forth: the Ahi Tuna Sashimi!
I'd opted for the large, wanting to be sure to have some for later tonight -
then I had to be careful to not eat every bite of it!
Actually, I ended up with five lovely pieces to carry home, as well as most of the loaf of bread, so that will make a fine meal to accompany a second viewing of "Celebrating America"!
Perfect!
Now, to get that cued up on the Element tv!
Ciao!
(Yes, pun intended!)

Thursday, January 14, 2021

musicians = food puns

Jay Sinclair, former deejay at various radio stations in town, posted this meme of Fleetwood Mac & Cheese on fb. 
It all got pretty well heated between him and his friend, Keith, and I was just glad to be in the audience!

Keith Deal
Opening act- Hot Tuna

Jay Sinclair
Keith: You’re making me hungry.

Keith Deal
Jay Sinclair, with Meat Loaf and Bread and ya got yourself a sammich.

Jay Sinclair
Keith: Now I’m literally starving!!

Keith Deal
Jay Sinclair, I want Cake!

Keith Deal
May go Bowling for Soup later. Ok I'm done (mic drop)

Jay Sinclair
Keith: Please stop interrupting me while I am literally gnawing my own toes off in famished hunger.

Keith Deal
Jay Sinclair, have a nice slice of Humble Pie.

Jay Sinclair
Keith: I’m spent.

Keith Deal
Jay Sinclair, have a piece of Phish in a light Creem sauce made in a Skillet.

Keith Deal
I'm through!

Faustina Smith
Hahahahaha!!!!

***   ***   ***
Here's another meme Jay posted.
I truly loved Raul Julia - he was one of the sexiest men ever.
Period.
So, here it is: Important life lessons that I learned from Raul Julia's Portrayal Of Gomez Adams.
 
1. Show the same affection to your spouse upon each meeting that you would had you been separated for years.
 
2. Boundless enthusiasm for life is best expressed through sincere mustache growing.
 
3. Treat every encounter as an adventure.
 
4. Assume the best in everyone, even when proven wrong (especially when proven wrong).
 
5. Hobbies give you a measure of control when you find it slipping away in real life.
 
6. Nurture the passions of your loved ones, even when those passions are weird.
 
7. The books you keep on your shelves have the meaning to which you ascribe them.
 
8. History is horrible, and easier to love for it.
 
9. Your home is a reflection of your personality.
 
10. Every social interaction can be made more memorable through the introduction of swordplay.
 
***   ***   ***
Yes, yes, yes!
(smile!)