Archive for December, 2009

The Resolve, 2010

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

Things to do in 2010, some now, some later, some ongoing:

1) Drink more water, less wine (half a bottle a night shared with Sara should suffice).

2) Eat more cereal, less eggs for breakfast (or on burgers).

3) Eat more fruit, less salty snacks at night just to avoid hearing my doctor nag me at next check-up.

4) Finish book manuscript by the end of April (was supposed to be finished by tonight — oops!).

5) Develop solid foundation for next book by August.

6) Ditch Vonage and go entirely cell phone and Gizmo+Google Voice (thus saving $34/month).

7) Rationalize my media (in progress).

8) More back rubs (giving and receiving).

9) Finish, finally, reading The Baroque Cycle to Sara.

10) Read more novels in general (ones I bought are piling up)

11) Take, process, and post more photos; I’ve been slacking on Flickr over the past several months.

12) Repair stuff.

13) Get rid of irreparable stuff.

14) Be more patient and cheerful with people, unless they really piss me off.

15) Call/email Mom more.

16) And, as usual, post to Goyablog more regularly….

Happy New Year to all Gentle Goyareaders!

Rumba

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

I don’t think that I’ve ever been to the same restaurant two nights in a row, except perhaps McDonald’s while driving cross country. Well, Sara and I went to Rumba Monday night and had the BEST small plates from their revised menu: portobello satay, goat cheese stuffed peppadews, something the name of which escapes me, tempura haricots verts, pork confit tacos, and charred tomato flatbread. All fabulous, but the tacos and haricots stood out in particular. We browsed the rest of the menu and saw the burgers and were intrigued so decided then and there to come back the next day to try the kim chee burger and the Brazilian burger (white cheese and fried egg). Again, fabulous, albeit entirely different (and we got to substitute the exquisite tempura haricots verts for the fries). I don’t think another restaurant in Nashville could boast such deliciousness in diversity. And all at very reasonable prices for innovative and satisfying dishes. We liked Rumba before, but like it even more now. We’ll probably go back for Sara’s b-day next week, this time with kids in tow. Our neo-new favorite restaurant.

Chrome is becoming Home

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

I’ve started using Google’s Chrome browser for Mac (beta) to see if it’s worth defaulting to yet. Almost — there are a few little things (like certain extensions) that it can’t accomodate yet or else require clunky workarounds. But, for now, I’ve set it as my default browser just to pretend. Oh yeah, and you must watch this series of quirky and cool commercials Google released on YouTube for it:

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Sara wants her office to be like the last scene — full of yarn and magnets and a harp.

Shoes of Shibuya

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

While in Japan in November I shot a lot of shoes. Many of you have already seen those photos as I posted them. One evening I stood at one corner of the crossing in front of Shibuya Station and shot video of feet when the light turned green. I call the series “Shoes of Shibuya.” I’m partial to number 2:

Video 1:

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Video 2:

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Video 3:

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Pickled and Fried

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

Just a shout out for Allison and Ben’s month-old Nashville food blog, Pickled and Fried. If you live in or are visiting Nashville, check it out for insider food tips. I am anticipating a trip to Lopez Taqueria sometime soon!

Avatar (2009, USA, Theater-3D)

Friday, December 25th, 2009

First, let’s get the good things about this film out of the way:

1) the imagined world of Pandora is pretty
2) the aerial choreography of the climatic battle scene is spectacular
3) you probably won’t get bored watching it even though it’s 2-1/2 hours long

And now, the bad:

1) story is formulaic, predictable, unchallenging in it’s form and content. We saw this in Dancing With Wolves, a movie that made me gag. Do read the plot outline for that movie — the similarity, even down to the lost legs and use of a native language — is uncanny.
2) derivative to the point of no shame (or attribution), just beginning with DWW. Besides a story ripped straight from DWW (and The Emerald Forest, except this time it’s Sapphire) all of its key concepts and designs are mere tweaks — at best — of what others have already done. Some reviewers have mentioned DWW and The Matrix, but could have added any number of the following (list not exhaustive):
William Gibson’s classic cyberpunk novel, Neuromancer (1984), wherein via a “simstim” a person can experience virtually the bodily sensations of another.
Neal Stephanson’s Snow Crash (1992), which also makes use of virtual experience via an avatar in an advanced computer model (not live world). In fact, this novel popularized this use of the term “avatar.”
Oshii Mamoru’s mecha designs for gunships and armor suits (such as those in Patlabor)
Several Miyazaki Hayao films: Princess Mononoke and Nausicaa being the most obvious for the human rapaciousness versus the spirit of the forest/nature as well as for particular visuals such as glowing plant life, glowing footprints, repair/resurrection via Mother Nature’s life-energy-giving tendrils, and particular types of fantastic creatures like those in the forest in Nausicaa — heck, the whole look of that forest is mimicked. But add to those, Castle in the Sky (floating island with roots hanging out; big spirit tree) and My Neighbor Totoro (big spirit tree).
Minority Report for all its cool media interfaces.
Jurassic Park (the whole scenario of humans venturing into deep forest jungle full of threatening creatures from another world)
Anno Hideaki’s Neon Genesis Evangelion, for the notion of syncing on a genetic level with another body/machine.
Etc. And etc. ad nauseum. If I read another review citing Cameron’s “extraordinary imagination” I will puke ad nauseum.

There’s nothing intrinsically wrong with being inspired or influenced by preceding works, but when EVERY MAJOR IDEA of a film is shamelessly “borrowed” and you spend $500 million on the visuals and technical details and gimmicky 3D spectacle rather than investing in storytelling and dialogue and an honest filmic vision, I can’t call that a great film, or even a very good film. It’s a good film (stretching the term “film” to mean digital artistry and computer wizardry), worthy of three and a half stars out of five.

Go see it and enjoy it; go see it in 3D even just for the “experience,” for that is really all this “film” is about — hyper-spectacle sensorial (sans cerebral) experience. Great films are not reduced simply to “the experience.” I agree 99% with Blunty’s review on YouTube; the 1% difference is when he says the performances were terrific. They were nothing special:

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Merry Goya Christmas!

Friday, December 25th, 2009

Yes, it’s been three weeks since the last post, but between manuscript revisions, holiday prep, the new iMac, and (especially) the epic Civilization III game I’ve been playing on the new iMac for the last two weeks, I simply haven’t had the time and focus for Goyablog. But that will change as I make the annual New Year Resolution to post more frequently. We are going to see “Avatar” in 3D in about an hour from now, so I will report back later about how derivative and lacking in storyline that spectacle of a movie is. In the meantime, I hope Gentle Goyareaders have been enjoying the holidays.

Prepare to be assimilated

Monday, December 7th, 2009

A while back I boasted about dropping iTunes for Lala’s music streaming service. How wrong I was. Apple just bought Lala and it is speculated that they might put Lala’s streaming function into iTunes. Whatever Apple does with Lala, I hope Lala can still exist as a separate entity rather than being sucked up entirely into the Borg that Apple is becoming. I’m just wondering if Apple will buy Google or Google buy Apple some day. That would create the ultimate assimilation.


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