Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Lil' 24, lil' torture, lil' Jack.


I don't even know if this is real. My God, how hilarious.



Okay, what? No. No way, Fox. No freakin' way.

In the pilot episode, the young Jack and Chloe communicate with each other using two cans and a long string. Chloe informs him that her intelligence shows that several other Arabs are planning to put Xlarieastchaline (itching powder) into the Scouts’ sleeping bags. A teenaged David Palmer, who was the President of the United States in the primetime series, turns up in the series as the leader of the Boy Scouts, a higher level in the scouts order.

According to sources, Palmer’s character will survive as assassination attempt at the hands of an evil little Charles “Charlie” Logan, who also was the U.S. President in the nightime series. The attempted murder involves putting peanut butter in a sandwich that David Palmer eats when Charlie knows full well he’s allergic to peanuts.

“Any proud American parent will be thrilled to have their child watch this show,” said Surnow.


Sure, if Ann Coulter's your mommy.

Vegan.Drool.Cupcakes.

Holy God, this web site makes me want to bake. (It's 3am, and I can't sleep. I might just do it.) It also makes me want to renounce my dairy sins and return to a vegan lifestyle. Let the hippy-bashing begin...

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
(Cupcake dress? via Vegan Cupcakes Take Over The World) I'll take one in a size 4, please!

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
(Vegan jelly donut cupcakes, mmm!)

Take It Outside

Geesh, I remember thinking California was crazy for the statewide smoking ban. Now we're up to nearly 19 states, including Illinois. (6 months earlier than we thought!)

He said, "What the fuck have you been smoking, eh? Certainly you haven't been smoking in a bar in California, that's for certain!" ‘Cause you can't! No, no smoking in bars now, and soon, no drinking and no talking! Be careful, California! You're supposed to be the crazy state, the out there, the wild ones, you know? In the future, everyone's going to say, "Come down to the library, we'll have a wild time, shall we? “ ( mimes dragging on a joint ) “Don't know where that fucking book is, mate, it could be anywhere! There's a lot of 'em about!"

-Eddie Izzard, Dressed to Kill (1999)

Tuesday, May 01, 2007










My city view is disappearing, and so am I. I'm always wondering if I'll be in one place long enough to have memories. Real memories: the kind that feel more like history. Remembering what blouse I wore last Friday night v. remembering your child's first recital dress. I look around State St. and absorb the history, but besides the Forever 21 addition and a horde of Starbucks, I've really seen no change. (Okay, Marshall Fields and Carson's ARE gone.)

*More and more, I'm realizing how much I want a family some day. Not that I can't appreciate my own personal growth, but who wants to discover it all alone?

Click here for some of the physical changes this city has seen.




*My fever just topped 101 degrees. I am a sick, sick woman. Anything stated in this post may not be used against me at a later date when I am well and fully aware I lack maternal skills.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Free Event

Creating a Caring Economics: the Future of a Humanitarian Economy

Monday, April 23, 7:00 pm
2040 N. Milwaukee Ave.
Are current economic systems working? What is missing from
finance-based systems?

Social scientist and author Riane Eisler will read from her latest book, The Real Wealth of Nations: Creating a Caring Economics at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 23rd. The event will take place at In These Times' offices at 2040 N. Milwaukee Ave. Copies of The Real Wealth of the Nations: Creating a Caring Economics will be available for purchase at this free event. Donations are encouraged.

In The Real Wealth of Nations: Creating a Caring Economics, Eisler exposes a fundamental problem in modern economics – the lack of visibility and value of the most essential human work of all: the work of caring and caregiving. As a solution, Eisler develops a new full-spectrum model that encompasses the life-sustaining activities in both households and the natural environment. Through her proposed measures, policies, and practices, Eisler seeks to achieve the ultimate goal: the realization of our enormous human potential.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Soldiers Shortchanged...again?

The Army might be shortchanging injured soldiers by rating the severity of their disabilities with a system that is both unwieldy and inconsistent, the head of a special commission said Thursday.


Walter Reed, Building 18, now this.

Happy Friday!

This one's for Janie...

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Author Kurt Vonnegut Dies




"Human beings will be happier - not when they cure cancer or get to Mars or eliminate racial prejudice or flush Lake Erie - but when they find ways to inhabit primitive communities again. That's my utopia."
-Kurt Vonnegut
(1922-2007)

Wednesday, April 11, 2007



Members of the Rutgers women's basketball team are shown during a news conference held on campus in Piscataway, N.J., Tuesday, April 10, 2007, to react to derogatory remarks directed at their team made on air by radio personality Don Imus. The team said they would meet privately with Imus. (AP Photo/Mike Derer)


In case you're behind.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Wisconsin Seniors Left Behind

I hate when stories like this one are so easily swept under the rug on a national level.

Wisconsin's SeniorCare Program Dropped by Federal Government

With drug costs rising steadily, it's no surprise that more than 105 thousand seniors in Wisconsin depend on the state's SeniorCare prescription drug program.

But, that program has reached an end, as the federal government announced Wednesday Wisconsin can't continue the popular plan.

The Doyle administration received a letter from the federal government saying by June 30th SeniorCare will no longer be federally funded. Those seniors on the program will soon need to switch to Medicare Part D, the federal program, Doyle and several other Wisconsin lawmakers say will mean additional cost and confusion for Wisconsinites.


From the message boards:

Apparently the entire Congressional delegation from Wisconsin asked for an extension on the waiver to this program, which is the only one of its kind still left in the country- but it was denied. There are 104,000 seniors using it-about half will be able to switch to Medicare Part D without too much trouble but there are an estimated 45,000 who are very poor and will have trouble meeting the deductible, not to mention filling out the paperwork.

I think this was the last state program of its kind to be cut, so maybe it was inevitable-the Feds are just not going to pay for anything related to health care. Fortunately, a lot of State legislators who care about this issue, but without any Federal backing, its pretty expensive.



It appears several town hall meetings are scheduled re: the issue.
Stay tuned to www.WisPolitics.com for further developments.

In other news, we have snow flurries and 32 degree weather in Chicago this morning.
Ha! Try playing in that Cubbies!

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Monday, March 26, 2007

Couric's Cancer Grilling

I'm not sure if Katie Couric is looking out for her dwindling ratings or for her own political gain here, but this just plain sickened me. I've always been asked what my problem with Couric was, here's a prime example: They give her the first sole anchor woman position at the CBS news desk and she goes on to ask questions like these. (During exclusive 60 mins. interview.) Beyond the obvious insensitivity, this is just BAD journalism.

Just a small dose of the transcript:

Katie Couric: ...And I think some people wondered if you were in denial, if you were being realistic about what you were going to be facing here.

Elizabeth Edwards: I... I... I... I think that it is our intention to deny cancer any control over us....

--

Katie Couric: Here you're staring at possible death...

Elizabeth Edwards: Aren't we all though.

Katie Couric: And you're thinking, "I don't want to deprive the country of having my husband lead us."

Elizabeth Edwards: That would be my legacy wouldn't it, Katie. That I'd... that I'd... that I'd... that I'd taken out this fine man from the possibility of giving a great service. I mean, I don't want that to be my legacy.

Katie Couric: Politics, as you know, can be a cynical business.

--

Katie Couric: Some people watching this would say, "I would put my family first always, and my job second." And you're doing the exact opposite. You're putting your work first, and your family second.

John Edwards: But this is not work. Work is what I did as a lawyer. This is service. This is... this is a country that I love – both of us love, as much as we love our lives.

Katie Couric: I guess some people would say that there's some middle ground. You don't have to necessarily stay at home and feel sorry for yourself, and do nothing. But, if given a finite – a possibly finite period of time on the planet – being on the campaign trail, away from my children, a lot of time, and sort of pursuing this goal, is not, necessarily, what I'd do.


*Edited portion of the interview:

Does anyone have full lengeth yet?

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

"The history of a people is found in its songs"

A few albums I'm digging, lately:


Costello Music
- The Fratellis
(Rock / Indie / Alternative)
You may have heard their hit "Flathead" on that iTunes commercial.
Check out their MySpace page for some tunes.


Separate Ways
- Teddy Thompson
(Rock / Folk / Pop)
I discovered him performing a beautiful rendition of "Tonight Will Be Fine" on the Leonard Cohen documentary. "Everybody Move It!" and check out his MySpace page.



Neon Bible - Arcade Fire (Indie / Alternative / Pop)
Most of you have heard "Funeral"; their new album "Neon Bible" will be out March 6th. Check out their MySpace page for some old and new tunes.



Bring It Back
-McAlmont and Butler
(Surf / Soul / Indie)
English rock/soul duo comprised of David McAlmont and Bernard Butler (Suede). Thanks for the recommendation, Arturo!
Some newer tunes here.

Chicago Votes


Don't worry, I'm not going to go all P. Diddy on you; I just want to make sure everyone has the correct information.

Okay, Chicagoans...it's that's time, again! Get off your arse, wipe that drool off your chin, abandon your work for an hour, and vote.

Not sure who/what you're voting on?
Mayor, City Clerk, and Alderman
Look on your voter registration card, check which ward you're in, pick accordingly.

Not sure where to go? (Geesh, do I have to do everything for you?)
Go here.

Sharpton 'shocked' by link to Thurmond's family

Story Highlights

• Thurmond promised to preserve racial segregation in 1948 presidential bid
• Sharpton's great-grandfather, Coleman Sharpton, owned by Julia Thurmond
• Thurmond fathered bi-racial child; he died at 100 in 2003

NEW YORK (AP) -- The Rev. Al Sharpton is a descendant of a slave owned by relatives of the late Sen. Strom Thurmond -- a discovery the civil rights activist called "shocking" on Sunday.

Sharpton learned of his connection to Thurmond, once a prominent defender of segregation, last week through the Daily News, which asked genealogists to trace his roots.

"It was probably the most shocking thing in my life," Sharpton said at a news conference Sunday, the same day the tabloid revealed the story. (Watch Sharpton react to the news Video)

Some of Thurmond's relatives said the nexus also came as a surprise to them. Doris Strom Costner, a distant cousin who said she knew the late senator all her life, said Sunday she "never heard of such a thing."

"My momma never would talk to me about nothing like that," Costner said of ancestors who owned slaves. "She only talked to me about good things."

The revelations surfaced after Ancestry.com contacted a Daily News reporter who agreed to have his own family tree done. The intrigued reporter then turned around and asked Sharpton if he wanted to participate. Sharpton said he told the paper, "Go for it."

The genealogists, who were not paid by the newspaper, uncovered the ancestral ties using a variety of documents that included census, marriage and death records.

They found that Sharpton's great-grandfather, Coleman Sharpton, was a slave owned by Julia Thurmond, whose grandfather was Strom Thurmond's great-great-grandfather. Coleman Sharpton was later freed.

Thurmond, of South Carolina, was once considered an icon of racial segregation. During his 1948 bid for president, he promised to preserve segregation and, in 1957, he filibustered for more than 24 hours against a civil rights bill.

Sharpton, who ran for president in 2004 on a ticket of racial justice, said he met Thurmond only once in 1991 when he visited Washington, D.C., with the late soul singer James Brown, who knew Thurmond. Sharpton said the meeting was "awkward."

"I was not happy to meet him because what he had done all his life," Sharpton said.

Thurmond was seen as softening his segregation stance later in his life. He died in 2003, at 100. The long-serving senator was originally a Democrat but became a Republican in 1964.

Thurmond's children have acknowledged that Thurmond fathered a biracial daughter -- Essie Mae Washington-Williams' -- whose mother was a housekeeper in the home of Thurmond's parents.

Telephone message left by The Associated Press on Sunday for Strom Thurmond Jr. and an attorney who once represented Washington-Williams, were not returned.

(via CNN.com)

Monday, February 19, 2007

2.18.07 Photo Blog

Some days it's great to be a tourist in your own city.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
Morris, Washington, Solomon statue on Wacker Drive - 2:30pm


3 more photos can be seen here.


But wait, who is that psycho in my kitchen?! Ahh!!!







(Nate sporting his new Shun knife)

Sunday, May 07, 2006

All the "real" stories have been covered, so...

Scientology and baby placenta eating aside...

Just another reason to loathe Tom Cruise:

Badonkadonk

I have no readers, so I'm entitled to a fluff post.




As a factual claim, it's true. A little lipstick isn't going to make my butt skinny. What it doesn't tell me is why I should want a skinny butt. Shouldn't the correct marketing term for a gym be "firm", "fit", or I don't know... "healthy" ?
I was actually considering joining Bally's to get rid of some winter weight...maybe I'll check out Women's Workout World, instead.

Ah, lovely day out. Carry on.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

On Holiday






You know, for a writer, I sure haven't been blogging much. Well, mainly because I write on my laptop and Tim's computer is always hooked up to our internet. So one of these days I'll upload them all. You'll be impressed, really.

Any-hoo...Nate and I just got back from Denver. Weather there is more unpredictable than in Chicago. We managed to get a sunburn on Sunday and snow on Monday.

I took a little video of the Rockies/Giants game on my digicam from our upper deck seats. Barry Bonds was up to bat. Booing naturally ensued. Shocker.


Here's photos from the trip.