The sparrow flies at midnight...

Sunday, April 30, 2006

A delightful Sunday

Today was about as perfect as some Sundays get. I woke up early, for me at least, and got all dolled-up for brunch. I even wore the new heels that cut up my feet last week after wearing them to work for the first time, but I love them. While making brunch plans last night, I had an idea that we should go to a fancy brunch at Blue Water Grill and it was one the best decisions I've made in a long time. The brunch was absolutely scrumptious and the best I've ever had. Not only was it the perfect dish of eggs benedict, but steak and eggs benedict (they also have lobster) and they have live jazz in, where else?, the jazz room.
Afterwards, I'd been wanting to go to DSW Warehouse, and after browsing row after row, I found a great pair of brown Chinese Laundry sandals that I'll be planning my outfit around tomorrow. Then it was time for Starbucks and people-watching in Union Square. It occurred to me then that picking up guys should be like shoe shopping...you spot them, go over, check them out from every angle, and try them on for fit. If they don't quite make the cut, you go on your merry way (guilt-free) and then every so often, you get to feel like Cinderella.

Friday, April 28, 2006

What football means to me...



Thanks to Sour & Sweet for this!

Like anyone's watching this for the acting...

First, they need to learn to act standing up... NEW YORK (Reuters) - A new television reality show invites porn stars to test their serious acting abilities in London's theater district, raising the question: Debbie can do Dallas, but can she take on Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard?"

"My Bare Lady" will cast four leading ladies from U.S. porn studios in a classic piece of drama to be performed in London's West End. Their experiences undergoing a crash course in acting and appearing before a discerning British audience will air in three episodes on the Fox Reality cable and satellite channels this fall.


First of all, what a shock that this on Fox. Second of all, I'm sure it'll be like watching a train wreck (as is most "reality" tv) but I might just have to catch an episode just out of curiousity.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

B&J Follow-up

So, have you gone to get your free cone yet? What flavor did you get? If you haven't gone, do you plan on it? Just curiosity getting the better of me...

Monday, April 24, 2006

Free Cone Day!!!


Just wanted to help spread the word that tomorrow is FREE Cone Day at Ben & Jerry's. Enjoy!

The cross-over?

It just seems to be getting more and more difficult to keep up with blogging. Before I realize it, days and days have gone by and I feel like I have to post just something...to keep what little readership I have alive. I've wrestled back and forth with how personal I should make this blog. Maybe it'll just depend on what's going on or what day it is. Not sure yet, but here are some tidbits.
I know I've mentioned that work has been insane. I'm basically now doing 2 jobs for the price of one which will hopefully change when I have a meeting with my boss in the next couple of weeks. A nice raise is way overdue.
Also, after having a lot of drama a couple of months back, I've slowly been getting my life not only back on track, but better than it was (to a certain extent). I put a plan into effect to lose some unwanted weight and I've lost 8lbs in the last month, plus about 5 before that when I was too upset to really eat much of anything. Buying clothes is starting to be fun again! Look out summer, here I come.
The dating thing seems to going better, too but I don't want to jinx anything just yet. So, all in all not too shabby...now if I could just win the lotto and travel the world, life would be that much closer to perfect.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Zunafish Update

Zunafish is a great website. It's like craigslist and eBay combined. You list for free, pay only media mail shipping and $1 to the site for facilitating the trade. A great way to get new stuff and get rid of your old crap for next to nothing. My only gripe is that there aren't descriptions for books, movies and the like so if a title comes up that you've never heard of, you basically have to go look it up on Amazon. Oh well, nothing's perfect.

Monday, April 17, 2006

The Future of Sex

Future sex: gizmos, robots

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - When America's top sex researchers gathered recently to discuss the next decade in their field, some envisioned a future in which artificial sex partners could cater to every fantasy.

"What is very likely to be present before 2016 would be a multi-sensual experience of virtual sex," said Julia Heiman, director of the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction at Indiana University, Bloomington.

"There is a possibility of developing erotic materials for yourself that would allow you to create a partner of certain dimensions and qualities, the partner saying certain things in that interaction, certain things happening in that interaction."

A field dubbed "teledildonics" already allows people at two remote computers to manipulate electronic devices such as a vibrator at the other end for sexual purposes.

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Sorry I'm late

A belated Happy Passover and Happy Easter to all.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Read It? Watched It? Swap It

Read It? Watched It? Swap It By Michel Marriot
For Heather Perlmutter, a 41-year-old investment portfolio manager in Manhattan, the Web site with the whimsical name made perfect sense. Like many Americans, she found herself awash in CD's, DVD's and VHS tapes that were seldom if ever played anymore. They just took up valuable space in the Upper West Side apartment where she lives with her husband and two young children.

Then a friend of a friend told her about Zunafish, a new Web site that matches people with discs and tapes to trade — and video games and paperback books, too.

I signed up today and posted a book just to test it out. I think it's an amazing idea and I'm a little upset I didn't think of it first.

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Poetry 30 - release party

It's not a release party for the next hottest thing in music or the next "DaVinci Code" but it seems like it'll be cool, nonetheless. And a good excuse to see my step-brother. Check it out.

Saturday, April 15, 1:00-3:30
Poetry 30 Release Party
Bowery Poetry Cafe
New York, NY

Monday, April 10, 2006

Age gauge

Put your birth date in the pop- up window after you click here. What happens is pretty interesting. It's also amazing how quickly it computes!! Very cool. For those of you out there who like a bit of trivia!

This day in history

1741 - Frederick II of Prussia defeated Maria Theresa's forces at Mollwitz and conquered Silesia.

1790 - The U.S. patent system was established.

1809 - Austria declared war on France and its forces entered Bavaria.

1814 - Napoleon was defeated at the Battle of Toulouse by the British and the Spanish. The defeat led to his abdication and exile to Elba.

1825 - The first hotel opened in Hawaii.

1849 - Walter Hunt patented the safety pin. He sold the rights for $100.

1854 - The constitution of the Orange Free State in south Africa was proclaimed.

1862 - Union forces began the bombardment of Fort Pulaski in Georgia along the Tybee River.

1865 - During the American Civil War, at Appomattox, General Robert E. Lee issued his last order.

1866 - The American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) was incorporated.

1902 - South African Boers accepted British terms of surrender.

1912 - The Titanic set sail from Southampton, England.

1916 - The Professional Golfers Association (PGA) held its first championship tournament.

1919 - In Mexico, revolutionary leader Emiliano Zapata was killed by government troops.

1922 - The Genoa Conference opened. The meeting was used to discuss the reconstruction of Europe after World War I.

1925 - F. Scott Fitzgerald published "The Great Gatsby" for the first time.

1930 - The first synthetic rubber was produced.

1932 - Paul von Hindenburg was elected president of Germany with 19 million votes. Adolf Hitler came in second with 13 million votes.

1938 - Germany annexed Austria. 99.75 percent of Austrians had voted in a referundum to merge with Germany.

1941 - In World War II, U.S. troops occupied Greenland to prevent Nazi infiltration.

1941 - Ford Motor Co. became the last major automaker to recognize the United Auto Workers as the representative for its workers.

1944 - Russian troops recaptured Odessa from the Germans.

1945 - German Me 262 jet fighters shot down ten U.S. bombers near Berlin.

1953 - Warner Bros. released "House of Wax." It was the first 3-D movie to be released by a major Hollywood studio.

1953 - Actress Hedy Lamarr became a U.S. citizen.

1959 - Japan's Crown Prince Akihito married commoner Michiko Shoda.

1960 - The U.S. Senate passed the Civil Rights Bill.

1961 - Gary Player of South Africa became the first foreign golfer to win the Masters Golf Tournament in Augusta, Georgia.

1963 - 129 people died when the nuclear-powered submarine USS Thresher failed to surface off Cape Cod, MA.

1967 - The 13-day strike by the American Federation of Radio-TV Artists (AFTRA) came to an end less than two hours before the 39th Academy Awards presentation went on the air.

1968 - U.S. President Johnson replaced General Westmoreland with General Creighton Abrams in Vietnam.

1971 - The American table tennis team arrived in China. They were the first group of Americans officially allowed into China since the founding of the People Republic in 1949. The team had recieved the surprise invitation while in Japan for the 31st World Table Tennis Championship.

1972 - An earthquake in southern Iran killed more than 5,000 people.

1972 - The U.S. and the Soviet Union joined with 70 other nations in signing an agreement banning biological warfare.

1973 - In Switzerland, 108 people died when a plane crashed while attempting to land at Basel.

1974 - Yitzhak Rabin replaced resigning Israeli Prime Minister, Golda Meir. Meir resigned over differences within her Labor Party.

1980 - Spain and Britain agreed to reopen the border between Gibraltar and Spain. It had been closed since 1969.

1981 - Imprisoned IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands was elected to the British Parliament.

1988 - On Wall Street, 48 million shares of Navistar International stock changed hands in a single-block trade. It was the largest transaction ever executed on the New York Stock Exchange.

1990 - Three European hostages kidnapped at sea in 1987 by Palestinian extremists were released in Beirut.

1992 - A bomb exploded in London's financial district. The bomb, set off by the Irish Republican Army, killed three people and injured 91.

1992 - Outside Needles, CA, comedian Sam Kinison was killed when a pickup truck slammed into his car on a desert road between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

1992 - In Los Angeles, financier Charles Keating Jr. was sentenced to nine years in prison for swindling investors when his Lincoln Savings and Loan collapsed. The convictions were later overturned.

1993 - South African Communist Party leader Chris Hani was assassinated.

1994 - NATO warplanes launched air strikes for the first time on Serb forces that were advancing on the Bosnian Muslim town of Gordazde. The area had been declared a U.N. safe area.

1996 - U.S. President Clinton vetoed a bill that would have outlawed a technique used to end pregnancies in their late stages.

1997 - Rod Steiger received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

1998 - Negotiators reached a peace accord on governing British ruled Northern Ireland. Britain's direct rule was ended.

1999 - The www.June4.org web site was launched by Chinese dissidents and human rights activists to promote their campaign for democracy in China.

2000 - Monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) reported irregularities in the voting in Georgia's presidential election on April 9. President Eduard Shevardnadze was reelected to a new five-year term.

2000 - Ken Griffey Jr. became the youngest player in baseball history to reach 400 home runs. He was 30 years, 141 days old.

2001 - Jane Swift took office as the first female governor of Massachusetts. She succeeded Paul Cellucci, who had resigned to become the U.S. ambassador to Canada.

2001 - The Netherlands legalized mercy killings and assisted suicide for patients with unbearable, terminal illness.

So there are some good things and some bad things that have occurred on various April 10ths, as with any day in history. Since today is also my birthday, I guess I'll put it in the good category. Thanks to all of you who've already sent your birthday wishes :)

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Keep your kisses short in Tangerang

Keep your kisses short in Tangerang JAKARTA (Reuters) - Unrelated people who kiss each other on the lips for more than five minutes at public places in the Indonesian city of Tangerang will face arrest, local media said Friday.

The government in Tangerang, a suburb west of Jakarta, defended the regulation as a practical guideline for its officers to follow up on tough and heavily criticized anti-prostitution laws passed by the city council last year.

"Please do not dramatize this. We will not arrest people at will as we are not oppressors," Ahmad Lutfi, head of the city's public order department, told the Koran Tempo newspaper.

Lutfi declined to comment on whether officers would be armed with stopwatches, Tempo reported.

Looks like I won't be traveling to Tangerang anytime soon. I like kissing way too much and when the mood strikes, laws be damned!

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Love and Health

Don't ever take either for granted for they are the 2 most precious things you'll ever have, and you may not realize it until they're threatened or gone.

Jesus may have walked on ice?

Jesus may have walked on ice? MIAMI (Reuters) - The New Testament says that Jesus walked on water, but a Florida university professor believes there could be a less miraculous explanation -- he walked on a floating piece of ice.

Professor Doron Nof
also theorized in the early 1990s that Moses's parting of the Red Sea had solid science behind it.

Nof, a professor of oceanography at Florida State University, said on Tuesday that his study found an unusual combination of water and atmospheric conditions in what is now northern Israel could have led to ice formation on the Sea of Galilee.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Sesame Street...bad for kids?

Sesame Street Videos Spark Controversy

NEW YORK (AP) - The creators of "Sesame Street" are releasing a new line of videos Tuesday targeted for children as young as six months, outraging some child-development experts who feel no form of TV or video is suitable for kids under 2.

The DVDs - part of a series called "Sesame Beginnings" - are intended to be watched by parents along with their small children. Sesame Workshop developed the shows with help of experts from Zero to Three, a well-regarded nonprofit advocacy group.

I would love more time to research why it is that the American Academy of Pediatric
believes that television for children under the age of 2 is harmful but alas, my new job responsibilities are taking over my life (and precious blogging time). Hopefully, I'll be able to delve into this more later.

Sunday, April 02, 2006

D'oh!

It's official. After years of rumors, it looks like a big-screen version of "The Simpsons" is slotted to be released on July 27, 2007. Fox's Sunday night staple has also been renewed for a mind-bloggling 18th and 19th seasons. I'm not sure how I feel about the movie yet and it begs the questions "Can they really do a feature length episode and if so, what on Earth will the plot be?" Those of us who have been long-time fans know that the show itself was much more interesting, risk-taking and funny in earlier seasons so I guess we'll just have to wait and see what Matt Groening and his team can come up with.