Saturday, April 23, 2011
JUDGMENTAL? or M Y O B
Friday, April 22, 2011
YUMMY without the TUMMY
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
What Would Bob Marley Do ?
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
P U R P O S E
ANT and the GRASSHOPPER
The story is used to teach the virtues of hard work and saving, and the perils of improvidence. Some versions of the fable state a moral at the end, along the lines of "Idleness brings want", "To work today is to eat tomorrow", "Beware of winter before it comes". The point of view is supportive of the ant and is also that expressed in the Book of Proverbs, a book of the Hebrew Bible (the Christian Old Testament), which admonishes, "Go to the ant, you sluggard! Consider her ways and be wise, which having no captain, overseer or ruler, provides her supplies in the summer, and gathers her food in the harvest"
Every day I read articles in the newspaper about people who can't afford gas, or food, or whatever. Sure, there are some very unfortunate people out there who through no fault of their own have been dealt a really bad hand. Who among us does not want to help and provide what we can? I am not talking about these folks.
Drive by a high school in your community and look at the kids standing outside or coming home from school. Some are carrying books and computers and others are not doing a damn thing for themselves. They spend their lives in idleness driving around, partying, and just plain goofing off. One day they grow up, and have a really crappy life and somehow it is everyone's fault but theirs. They can't afford gas. The newspaper, as ours did today, fails to look at what they did in the summer of their lives that makes this a reality now in their winter. MAYBE the proverb of the Ant and the Grasshopper should be mandatory in school every year until graduation. It could replace the BANNED Ten Commandments and sandwiched in between "Heather Has Two Mommies" and whatever other drivel the educational system feels is important.
Monday, April 18, 2011
College Birth Control
SOMETIMES YOU GOTTA STAND BACK AND LOOK
TORNADO DENIAL
Sunday, April 17, 2011
CALL IT LIKE I SEE IT
This Blog has been about REALITY in the sense that unlike the New York Times who claims to be all about "All the news that's fit to print" while having the most obvious agenda possible, I don't claim to be fair and balanced at all. I see things the way I see them and report to you. Sometimes I get feedback that I was "too harsh" or "unfair"in my post about, for example, certain pompous windbag politicians. Sorry about that, but I calls 'em the way I sees 'em. A house-arrest ankle bracelet is NOT a fashion accessory, Linsey, it means you are a criminal, despite what VARIETY says.
TIPPING THE SCALES of JUSTICE
IT AINT OVER 'TIL THE TALL LADY SINGS
Saturday, April 16, 2011
FILM FEST FANTASY
Thursday, April 14, 2011
CHOICES and CONSEQUENCES
Sunday, April 10, 2011
WHO AM I
WHO AM I?
Mirror shows me
The mask that I've been wearing
Whose echo echo speaks after I speak?
And all this time
Whose lines have I been saying?
Whose footprints are these that
follow me ?
All I was ...Forgot.
Who I was...I'm not.
Try to be like idle idols I know I know
We are made of two
Which one is really you?
What should I say, or do,I don't know
Pretend to be, pretending not be
Whose shadow is this that is under me? Whose burden is this
The one that I'm carrying?
By Whose name do they call?
Are they calling me?
Who I was...Forgot.
All I am...I'm not
Try to be like idle idols I know I know
I am made of three
Which one is really me?
What should I see, or hear, or speak,
I don't know
THEN THERE IS THE LINE FROM OUR MOST RECENT MOVIE WATCHING EXPERIENCE "THE NEXT THREE DAYS";
John Brennan: So, the life in times of Don Quixote, what is it about?
Female College Student: Someone's belief in virtue is more important than virtue itself?
John Brennan: Yes, that's the name, but what is it about? Could it be how rational thought destroys your soul. Could it be about the triumph of rationality and the power that is in that. Now we spend alot of time trying to organize the world, we build clocks and calendars and we try to predict the weather but what part of our life is truly under our control. What if we choose to exist purely in our reality of our own making, does that render us insane. If that does, isn't that better than a life of despair?
The BEETLE is BACK
When I was a kid, my friend had a Volkswagen Beetle in red with a stick shift and enough engine to power a can opener. Nonetheless it was a wonderful soulful car. In those days, getting into the back seat was a possibility. Today I would have to use a large shoehorn. They released another version of the classic and called it the New Beetle. Last year was the end of its run. Beetles are made in Mexico and imported legally to the US. So if you want something Mexican in your driveway, other than your landscaper, consider this modern version of a piece of history.
THELMA and LOUISE
Saturday, April 9, 2011
ABOVE THE LAW
QUALITY v QUANTITY
Gastronomically speaking, I prefer a spicy perhaps “hot” morsel in lower volume, THE "PERFECT BITE" with more adventurous taste. I guess “quality time” can be that. The very busy father who comes home from work late and sits on the floor and plays with his kids and lets them jump on him is as good or better as the one who just sits there like a bowl of Amish white potatoes in the room for hours and does not interact. Worst of all is the “pretense” of quality time, which is both “very little time” and “no active involvement.” Ideally lots of involvement many hours per day is a good thing too but that kind of blows my Amish metaphor out of the water so I will just ignore that. Anyway, if you are employed full time, mom or dad, that option is off the table, or off the floor as the case may be.
The same goes for cars and houses. People in America are finally coming to their senses and have halved their average home size expectations. No more football field sized master bathrooms and kitchens, gyms, and 5 extra bedrooms in case the Lakers come to visit. Sure, we still love our SUVs but in the day of 5 dollar per gallon gas looming just over the next (capitol) hill we are looking more for “crossovers” that carry almost as much as an SUV but ride and get miles per gallon closer to cars. Is seems that Ms. soccer mom does not really need a 5,000 square foot house and a 6,000 pound truck as much as she thought.
We may never get down to the MINI-everything they have in England and Japan but if the economy does not turn around, it is more likely than not that everything but our rear-ends will get smaller in the next decade. The Amish family style buffet and a smaller car are a mismatch. Then there is air travel where sooner or later you may have to buy your ticket based on your body weight. You think checked baggage is expensive? We may be forced to eat less so we can fit into the things we can afford like smaller houses and cars, and airplane seats. Or, alternatively, maybe our cars and buildings will be Quantity and not Quality because it is hard to have both at an affordable price. Perhaps we can aspire to be like Eskimos except for our Igloos will be made of the plentiful and ubiquitous mashed white potatoes instead of snow. Two birds with one stone…now we’re talking.
SOME THINGS NEVER CHANGE
More STYLE reviews from the Sarasota Film Festival....Crocket and Tubbs were fashion icons in the 80s on Miami Vice. The Unconstructed Blazer which cost twice as much as a fully lined one despite involving half as much labor and material to make still is ALIVE and WELL at film festivals like ours. They are perfect in our Hot Florida weather as they can cover your shoulder holster if you are Don Johnson, or allow you to have pockets to carry your wife's sunglasses, compact, cell phone, if you are The Oracle.