Thursday, November 19, 2009

Latent Photo Essay


This is a parking garage or some similar spiral structure for driving upwards. I saw this from an El stop in Chicago and thought it was about the coolest thing I'd ever seen.

Below are three views from the top of a San Francisco hill. There are so many beautiful views everywhere you look in that city: it wins my Buena Vista Award.


And uh-oh! Here's a big silly thing! Wat's wong wif dis pitsure!


And finally, a few sculptures and installations from the Portland Art Museum.

Structure meets painterly! Roy Lichtenstein!


It's been fun, I'll be home soon.

It's Nice to Go Travelin' - Frank Sinatra

Rock over Chicago, rock on Detroit
Gillette, the best a man can get

Monday, November 9, 2009

The Bennies!

Last night, I saw No Exit at the Imago Theater here in Portland, and realized that it would be the last show (the last of 18) that I would see on my trip. So here today, for you all, I will recount them all and pick favorites in arbitrary fields.

DC
  • Picture of Dorian Gray
  • Black Pearl Sings
  • Ferdinand the Bull
  • Measure for Measure
New York
  • Next to Normal
  • The 39 Steps
  • Eye of God
Boston
  • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
  • The Long and Winding Road
  • 2.5 Minute Ride
Chicago
  • Heroes
  • Death of a Salesman
  • The Man who was Thursday
San Francisco
  • Tommy
  • November
Portland
  • Orphee
  • Fiction
  • No Exit
Best Actor: George in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Best Actress: Linda in Fiction
Best Supporting Actor: The valet in No Exit
Best Supporting Actress: The little person in Measure for Measure
Best Production: Heroes (chalk this one up to Stoppard's script and two great performers)
Worst Everything Else: Measure for Measure was unpolished, Eye of God was a mess, The Long and Winding Road was meandering (relish the pun), Death of a Salesman was a devastating disappointment, Tommy was lifeless, November was two-dimensional, and Orphee was in French

Trend of mortality in theater

Plays in which a major character dies: 5/18 (Picture of Dorian Gray, Eye of God, Death of a Salesman, Orphee, Fiction)
Plays in which a major character kills someone: 5/18 (Picture of Dorian Gray, The 39 Steps, Eye of God, Tommy, Orphee)
Plays in which a major character struggles with mortality: 14/18 (Picture of Dorian Gray, Ferdinand the Bull, Measure for Measure, Next to Normal, The 39 Steps, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Long and Winding Road, 2.5 Minute Ride, Heroes, Death of a Salesman, The Man who was Thursday, Orphee, Fiction, No Exit)
Plays in which a minor character dies: 6/18 (Picture of Dorian Gray, Measure for Measure, The 39 Steps, Eye of God, Tommy, Orphee)
Plays in which an unseen character dies: 5/18 (Picture of Dorian Gray, Black Pearl Sings, Measure for Measure, The Long and Winding Road, Heroes)
Plays featuring suicide: 6/18 (Picture of Dorian Gray, Next to Normal, Eye of God, Death of a Salesman, Orphee, No Exit)

The number of plays not appearing in any of the previous categories: 1. November by David Mamet, which does feature two dead turkeys, a stereotype of an American Indian threatening to kill the president, and a woman with a very bad cold.


Some shows with unique takes on mortality
  • Ferdinand the Bull: Yes, even in children's theatre we see bull fighters who just want to dance and bulls who just want to plant flowers struggle with death and murder.
  • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: George and Martha's imaginary boy-child gets "killed" coming home from school at the age of twenty. Apparently a stand-in for the real child they could never have.
  • Next to Normal: Manic-depressive mother cannot accept that her (now 18-year-old) son has been dead since he was an infant. Not totally unlike George and Martha's case, in fact...
  • The Long and Winding Road: 60-year-old Maureen McGovern struggles with being 60, including detailing the deaths of her father, and various friends who contracted AIDS.
  • Orphee: Features movement back and forth through life and the afterlife. All one needs are special gloves and a mirror.
  • No Exit: Everyone's already dead.

Listen to: Bishop Allen. You can visit their website, here, and download a handful of their songs for free. Yesterday, as I left the Imago theater where I saw No Exit, I stumbled across a venue where they were performing so I saw them on a whim. Fun fun band.

Click Click Click Click - Bishop Allen
Corazon - Bishop Allen
Like Castanets - Bishop Allen

Rock over Portland, rock on Seattle
MasterCard - There are some things money can't buy: for everything else, there's MasterCard

Friday, November 6, 2009

Merry Christmas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXW9b9O9S6A

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yUCPC63zSdk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yon2YuXssvo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dV8P9u-EV8&feature=fvsr

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQQnpTwaPyQ&feature=fvsr

http://www.hulu.com/watch/4267/saturday-night-live-its-a-wonderful-life-lost-ending

http://www.veoh.com/search/videos/q/christmas#watch%3Dv500970hjFaKBGn

http://www.uprightcitizens.org/19/index.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QnO3s7xJCc

http://www.joost.com/180000a/t/Santa-Claus-Conquers-The-Martians#id=180000a

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3423420646593881609#

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVNHX9QZlYs&feature=related

http://www.guba.com/watch/3000024620/Rudolph-the-Red-Nosed-Reindeer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OD7BeutpkS4

Monday, November 2, 2009

I'm in Portland, but this is unrelated

On Monday, October 26th, the Writer's Almanac (a daily e-newsletter from Garrison Keillor) reported the following:

Today is the 50th birthday of medical doctor and anthropologist Paul Farmer — born in North Adams, Massachusetts (1959) — the subject of Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Tracy Kidder's (books by this author) recent book: Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, A Man Who Would Cure the World (2003). He specializes in infectious diseases, and sets up hospitals and community health centers to provide free health care to the world's poor.

He got started 26 years ago by treating patients in Haiti when still a student. There, he gave HIV-positive pregnant women antiretroviral drugs so that HIV would not be transmitted to their unborn babies. He also set up community-based treatment programs in Peru for virulent tuberculosis; the TB strain was once considered a death sentence, but his treatment method cured 80 percent of infected patients. He set up a program for treating the sick in Russian prisons, and other programs in Lesotho and Malawi. Paul Farmer now resides much of the year in Rwanda, where he and the organization he co-founded, Partners in Health, are working with the Rwandan government and the Clinton Foundation to set up an ambitious national health program.

Paul Farmer has written more than 100 scholarly publications; among his books are AIDS and Accusation (1992), Infections and Inequalities: The Modern Plagues (1998), and Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor (2003), in which he wrote, "In an age of explosive development in the realm of medical technology, it is unnerving to find that the discoveries of Salk, Sabin, and even Pasteur remain irrelevant to much of humanity."


On November 1 -- six days later -- I found a copy of the book on the sidewalk in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco, amidst a pile of garbage. If you know me well enough, you know I picked up that book. The synchronicity was too much to bypass, and I am eager to start reading it, as soon as I find some way to disinfect it.

Subscribe to the Writer's Almanac here.

On the Bus Mall - the Decemberists

Rock over Portland, rock on Port-au-Prince
Maxwell House - good to the last drop