Monday, October 19, 2009

Five Things I Am Loving Right Now

1) These pants. After weeks of trying to find a pair that fit me, Gap finally came through. I am wearing them now and they are pretty much the most comfortable things I've ever put on. I'm serious, it's like wearing pajama pants to work except these have nice detailing and no drawstring. I am probably going back this weekend to get another pair in navy. They are to die for.

2) Northern Lite Turtle Lattes. I'm not even sure what flavor "turtle" is, but I know it is delicious and sugar-free. Not sugar-free (but also worthy of love) is Swiss Miss' new Pick-Me-Up hot cocoa, which has all the caffeine of a cup of coffee. Somebody has a direct link to my brain, it seems.

3) Yankees Playoff Baseball. OMFG, are you watching this team?!?! Three- THREE- come from behind wins to clinch the ALDS in three and now up 2-0 in the ALCS. A-Rod is having a clutch post season, pitching has been stellar, the games have been close (Saturday's game: 2-2 from the fifth on and tying it back up 3-3 in the ELEVENTH? Scoring on an error in the THIRTEENTH?! Are you kidding me with this?)...my god, I love this team.

4) October. It is cold! And almost Halloween! And all of this is just tip-toeing us ever closer to my favorite red-cupped holiday...

5) Anyone I have seen in the past month. For serious, I am having the BEST time with the old crowd. I am being completely and utterly spoiled by my wonderful, amazing friends.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Lost Art of the Movie Poster

One of the many, many things I like to whinge about is the art of the movie poster. I think teaser posters tend to be vastly more interesting because they're more psychological and subtle. For example...is a great poster. Simple, deliciously creepy, gets a lot of the movie in a single eerie image. Whereas, in my mind, this...

leaves me kind of cold. There's too much going, it's somewhat in elegant and...I don't know. I'm a snob, I guess, but I have kind of a problem with posters using photographs of people...even photography in general, sometimes. I'm a fan of bold, clean, simple graphics for movies that can double as art.

Which is why I highly enjoyed this posting featuring 25 re-imagined movie posters that are entirely graphic. No photos! All art! I would hang any of these on my wall. Here is my favorite of the bunch...

So. Cool. And yes, I did use a 'Dark Knight' poster at the beginning of this post to illustrate a 'good' poster, I still think that this is a really awesome alternative. They both achieve different things, I just wish we saw more of the second!

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Step Away from the Computer

A sure sign I spend too much time on the computer? Last night's dream, which centered around the tragic car crash that (in my dream) Chris Lehman and David Rosenthal.

Who are these people?

Chris Lehman used to write for Congressional Quarterly (I think) and is married to Ana Marie Cox. I follow them both on Twitter.

David Rosental is the husband of a girl who was two years above me in high school and who I haven't talked to in years. The reason I know who her husband is? Facebook.

Yeah. Maybe I need to cut back a bit.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Why Charlie Fink Needs a Girlfriend

I am a big, big Noah and the Whale fan, so I was super stoked to get their new album The First Days of Spring. I had high hopes considering how utterly awesome Peaceful, the World Lays Me Down was and I have to say, though not disappointed, it's not what I was expecting. The main reason I like them is that, if you listen to Peaceful, it's not really a happy album. Even '5 Years Time' acknowledges the possibility of today's happiness disappearing, and '2 Atoms in a Molecule' is really just a meditation on the inability to be with someone else. But the key is that these songs sound happy. They reflect my own personal cynicism without making me want to kill myself. FTW.

But Spring doesn't really do that. Spring is just straight up sad. The girl is gone, the boy is alone, if things ever do get better...it will be a long time from now.

And it's for this reason that having Spring be my main soundtrack for this past weekend's endless road tripping would have been a horrible idea WERE IT NOT for one key track. 'Love of an Orchestra' still contains the pessimistic lyrics I tend to love ("if you gotta run, run from hope") and is based on the idea that one doesn't need people, really, because music is just as good, but it lays all of this out over a totally infectious string-driven base that makes me grin and lunge for the repeat button.

Here, check it out:



On the actual album, the track before it is actually an extended instrumental intro which I recommend incorporating into your daily listening. Really, just go get the album. Sad or not, it's still pretty great.