Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Feast



Last night, the pastors/elders/intercessors/deaconizors from church had our Christmas dinner. It was extremely delicious - and probably the fancy-pantsiest food I have ever eaten in all my life.

(other fancy-pants/notable meals in my life, off the top of my head, include:

Real-deal Hawaiian luau party for a one-year old. This is traditionally a big deal in Hawaiian culture, 'cause you didn't die as a baby. Among other things, I ate salad with raw fish liver in it.

Leah and I ate at a sort-of fancy place once - I think it was for valentine's day. I think I ordered goose, or was it duck..?

My one time ever in New York, some friends and I ate at this place designed by young famous architects, in a building designed by an old famous architect... I ordered mussels, and I managed to fill THREE large dinner plates with heaps of empty shells, before I finally gave up on finishing my meal.

Once Joe and Becky Kirby cooked the craziest steaks ever at their house. EVER.

Our friend Katherine's birthday party... we went with a largish group to an Indian restaurant, and her mom ordered enough food for roughly 3-4 times the number of people that were there. Eventually there was literally no room on the table for the dishes that kept arriving. It was like a feast from Homer/the Bible...

Eats, Atlanta. 1/2 chicken plate, with beans, rice, cornbread, and tea. OK, so it's not that fancy, but it still kicks booty, and served as the back-drop for some of my finest college eating.)



Tomorrow we leave for Texas... I am looking forward to the break.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

late 90's



I was just wondering if anybody remembers Suck.com...

or, for that matter, Scribble.nu ???

Monday, December 18, 2006

The weekend...

...was busy.

On Friday we went to Jen and David's place - supposedly to help prepare food for a church feast. What actually happened is that Jen made all of it, with little or no help from the rest of us. We did, however, help to eat pizza and watch a movie.

Choosing the movie was kinda funny, 'cause everyone went through the McGhee library and picked something. We piled all the movies on the coffee table and then picked names from a hat. Apparantly under these circumstances, Harry Potter can beat both the Taxi Driving De Niro and the Road Warrior. I'm pretty sure he would have lost had we decided to settle things by arm-wrestling.

Saturday - we ran around town buying and mailing cards and things. That night the Loitering Heroes played a show at the Backpackers Hostel. Yes, the hostel at King and Spadina. Yes, weird.

The crowd consisted of bandmembers of the various bands that played, a couple of friends/spouses (such as myself), a rather animated hostel employee/'sound' guy, and a few backpacking/partying type folks who were more interested in drinking at the bar. There was also a slightly crazed DJ/bartender, who was as animated as the 'sound' guy, but in a slightly less psychologically stable way. I sometimes wonder what sort of twisted version of Toronto these people leave with. It was also the first time that the Heroes have played a show with Tupac and Snoop watching over them from a giant oversized poster on the wall.

On Sunday we went to Manfred and Amanda's for a Crokinole tournament. This is a strange Canadian game, sort of like curling, but with little plastic/wood pieces that you flick across a board. Of course if you don't know what Crokinole is, it's quite likely you're not familiar with curling. It is this even weirder thing, sort of like lawn bowls, but on ice, and with brooms. You have to remember that the winters are long and cold here. This is pretty much the first step in understanding anything indigenous to Canada.

Sunday night was a crazy church feast. We visited with another Toronto church (Grace Toronto), in their newly acquired but not yet renovated building. Everybody filled the basement, sitting on rugs on the concrete floor. The place was beautifully (if a little hazardously) decorated with hanging light bulbs, fabric, and projectors. We feasted on a multi-course meal prepared by the many small groups which make up our church. The food was great, especially the course masterminded by the guy at our church who happens to work in one of the top resturants in the city. After feasting, we trekked through the various empty rooms of the building for courses of carol singing, mini-homilies, and communion. It was great.

I met Leah afterwards (she had to work playing the flute at a much less glorious Christmas service... a lot of churches in the city seem like they are still waiting for Jesus to show up on earth, or worse yet, like they might not even care if He ever did) at a small cafe at Ossington and Bloor. Mike and Don where playing some crazy heavy music. I stayed for one song and then we went home due to tiredness/hunger.

And that is it.
If you made it this far, I reward you with the following. Click on this link, scroll down to the Bootsy Collins song, and let Santa's mothership touch down. Sufjan ain't got nothing on this...

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Thursday

I have 4.5 days of work left until we head out to Texas...

We are still trying to find people to look after the Mabel and the Petrie while we are away. Right now the offer stands at $200 + two December metropasses... to feed them twice a day and scoop their litter when necessary... Pretty decent deal, if you ask me...

Check out the Loitering Heroes at Global Backpackers this Saturday night.

Yes, the hostel at King and Spadina... I didn't know there were shows there either

LOITERING HEROES, John Tielli & improv band, Slowking @ Departure Lounge (Global Backpackers), No Cover, 19+

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

USA

Zellyn posted an article on his website, about how the USA is all about doing some bullshit. This is more lame than all the accusations I've heard about fighting a war on terror, or how President Bush is masterminding the end of the world so that he can ensure that he has enough oil to drive an SUV. That's arguably a lot of people believing a lot of hype (and I get tired of it, frankly).

This is straight up human-rights violations.



It is sad given that the USA started like this:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

Monday, December 11, 2006

Weekend

I seem to have a hard time relaxing and enjoying the weekend. I don't know why.
Here's what we did.

Friday night, we went to the office Christmas party. It was the usual deal... and we ended up leaving pretty early 'cause Leah's eyes were feeling dried out from the windy cold weather.

Saturday was mostly about groceries and other chores at home.

Sunday, we did laundry, and then went to the market for more groceries. Then we went to church. Then we went home.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Pimp My Ride

On the subject of nerdcore-yet-cool things...
This is pretty sweet - LEDs attached to your bike wheel, that flash at the right speed to read as images.

Invaders

Coolest wrapping paper ever???

Friday

So, yesterday Leah had her eyes shot with lasers. It is pretty amazing. They slice a flap off the front of your eyeball with a laser. Then they zap your eye with another laser, changing the shape of your eyeball's lens. Then they put the flap back in place. Then they do your other eye. The whole thing takes about 15 minutes (including all the prep time). And then you can see.

Things are apparantly a bit hazy (like Monet, according to Leah), for a day or so, and then as your eyes heal, your vision becomes sharper. Crazy.

Last night I went to the library to see if I could find any books on CD for Leah to rock. I managed to track down The Great Divorce, and a copy of Angela's Ashes, as read by the author...

In other news, it is the yearly office Christmas party tonight. Good times. They have done away with the whole sit-down dinner affair (ever since joining the ever-profit-conscious ranks of the mega-corporate world), which is a good thing, 'cause you can show up, hang around for a while, and then leave fairly early if you want to (which I usually do).

This Saturday evening there will be a singing Christmas carols in Christie Pitts event. It will feature a bunch of local churches (including FT)... and hopefully there will be a bunch of snow by then somehow (doubtful).

Julie Doiron

While we're blogging Paul Simon cover's...
Here is Julie Doiron, reigning queen of Canadian post-grunge art folk, singing about Me and Julio.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Fashionably Late

If we ever need to make more money for the studio, I guess we can just run a booze-can out of the basement...

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Casiotone for the Painfully Alone

Check out CFtPA covering Paul Simon's Graceland... fairly sweet.

If you are into the Casiotone, you can here some more lively recorded jams here.

Merry Christmas.

Monday, December 04, 2006

Weekend

Friday night we went and watched Factotum at the Bloor. It was pretty good... if a little seedy. Since the movie is about a drunk down-and-out-yet-ever-hopeful writer, and takes place in bars, my-hotel-year style hotels, and depressing blue-collar work-environments around LA, this was to be expected.
On Saturday we didn't do much... went out and bought some things that we needed.
Sunday - Leah played at church. I finished reading The Chosen, which is a pretty sweet book...
After church we stopped by Anne and Joel's place for tea. They are for sure the punk-rock-a-billiest folks at church, and they played a couple of their country songs for us. We definitely need to go out and see them play a show when we can.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Friday...

So... I've heard of having a 'case of the Mondays'... but sometimes its Friday when I just cannot buckle down and concentrate. This makes for a long day...

But it also makes for more links on this here blog, so let's see:

Here's an article on the phenomenon of burnout... somewhat interesting, although it did serve as a reminder that most industrialized nations give workers at least 5 weeks of vacation time a year. One groundbreaking US company is helping its employees avoid burnout by granting them an 8 week leave, every 7 years or so...

And here is one I am about to listen to... Ever since I learned about the phenomenon in Japan of kids dropping out of society, I have been kinda fascinated. I don't know much about Japanese culture, outside the odd article or two that I have read on the noise scene, or one that I read on archetypal heroes in Japanese stories... but everything that I do read is really foreign and bizarre...

Also, everything I read by Chaim Potok (which is about 2 books, one of which I am rereading right now), is seriously good.

Also, I obviously have nothing much to say... so have a good weekend!