Thursday, February 19, 2004

Adieu L.A.

This weekend I take my leave of the City of Angels and strike out for the City of...Franciscos. I'm coming out of retirement and going back into Visual Effects. No longer will every night be a Friday night, and everyday a Saturday; no longer will I be able to drive downtown for my Chano's fix; no longer will I be retireded. I have 2 days to pack everything I'll need for the next two months and then I'm off. It's a rather sudden decision, I know, but some of life's best adventures often result from spur-of-the-moment choices such as this. I wish I had time for a Coming-Out-Of-Retirement Party. Perhaps I'll just wait the two months until I retire once more, returning triumphantly to Hollywood in my grand chariot ('92 Honda Accord) and have an even bigger bacchanal then. It will be a true occasion for rejoicing, and rejoicings call for drunken orgies, do they not?

Why am I coming out of retirement? Because the circle is not yet complete. When I was a senior in the Film program at Berkeley I applied for an internship at Industrial Light + Magic, George Lucas' effects company in San Rafael. I didn't get it, and I ended up interning as a storyboard artist for an independent film studio in SF. At the time I had no idea that a career in the VFX industry awaited me post-graduation. Now, almost ten years later, I'm going back up north to work for the first studio to which I ever applied. This cycle of my life will have reached its denouement. The epilogue will echo the prologue, and I will be finished with visual effects, poetically speaking. Then I can cast off the shackles of digital artistry forever and the real retirement shall begin. Let freedom ring.

Tuesday, February 17, 2004

Why I'm not working

"They deem me mad because I will not
sell my days for gold;
And I deem them mad because they
think my days have a price."

"How narrow is the vision that exalts
the busyness of the ant above the singing
of the grasshopper."

"When my cup is empty I resign myself
to its emptiness; but when it is half full
I resent its half-fulness."

"How can you sing if your mouth be
filled with food?
"How shall your hand be raised in bless-
ing if it is filled with gold?"

~Kahlil Gibran

Monday, February 09, 2004

Press the Meet

I'm in a very good mood due to transcripts of Bush's appearance on Meet the Press yesterday. It's good to know that Junior's command of the English language is as scandalously weak as ever. This exchange (cut and pasted from The Washington Post) is my favorite:

Russert: "You said ‘the Iraqi regime is a threat of unique urgency, Saddam Hussein is a threat that we must deal with as quickly as possible.' You gave the clear sense that this was an immediate threat that must be dealt with."

Bush: "I think […] I called it a grave and gathering threat. I don't want to get into a word contest, but what I do want to share with you is my sentiment at the time. There was no doubt in my mind that Saddam Hussein was a danger to America."

Russert: "In what way?"

Bush: "Well, because he had the capacity to have a weapon, make a weapon. We thought he had weapons. The international community thought he had weapons, that he had the capacity to make a weapon, and then let that weapon fall into the hands of a shadowy terrorist network."

What is he SAYING? I need a English translation, please. As far as I can tell, he seems to be recalling that he THOUGHT Saddam had weapons, therefore his sentiment at that time was that Iraq was an immediate threat to the United States. Well, he was wrong. And not only is he unrepentant about that misconception that's led to over 500 American deaths, thousands of casualties, a $500-billion-plus U.S.D. deficit, and for the first time, a palpable Al Qaeda presence in Iraq, but he's STILL trying to make it appear that he was right. And is he actually calling Tim Russert a liar? Just because the administration's new favorite phrase is "gathering threat" doesn't make it retroactive. Obviously he doesn't want to get into a word contest because he would lose. His spin doctors are in the O.R. and are working overtime, but according to polls, the public has been waking up in the past week. Dick Cheney and my mother appear to be the only two Americans left who believe Saddam played a part in the 9/11 attacks, since Bush and Rumsfeld have both been forced to retract statements promoting this mad hypothesis. The fact is quickly becoming apparent, however, that Al Qaeda was never in Iraq...until the U.S. recently allowed them in.

I can't WAIT for Kerry (or ANYBODY!) to debate this illiterate fool. I might actually re-subscribe to cable for a chance to be ringside at that event: the war hero vs. the only president in U.S. history to enter office with a criminal record.

Wednesday, January 28, 2004

Doggy Daycare

I babysat Jessy's Maltepoo puppy yesterday. Marley was a little more "poo" than "malte": really fucking cute but really fucking incontinent. I would take him outside and stand there as he sniffed and looked around for two hours (magnetically attracting all females within a 2-block radius), and then as soon as we come back into my apartment kid immediately squats, trembles, and decorates my rug. I built a penitentiary for him in my kitchen but he cries when he's left alone so I had to hang out in the pen with him. I got them cute-cellmate-who-pisses-on-the-floor jailhouse blues. I was actually going to custom tailor a diaper for him out of a small plastic bag but as I was looking at it trying to figure out where to cut the holes he pissed again; I was forced to abandon my preventative efforts for corrective measures and haz mat cleanup. Also, what's up with cute puppy stinkypoo? I had no idea that a baby animal the size of a football was capable of emitting such foul odors. Hell hath no fury like the aroma of Marley's ass. I involuntarily gagged several times, and cleaning up poo is a difficult endeavor when one is dry-retching uncontrollably. It wasn't all misery, though. When I figured out puppy industry rule number four thousand and eighty -- that you can't take your eyes off of them even for ONE SECOND -- I was able to make a dive for his ass wielding a Ziplock bag and catch his carpet art like a touchdown pass. I did dance an endzone jig after that victory, but I didn't spike the ball. I was so pooped myself last night by the time Jessy picked Marley up I was thinking about cancelling dinner plans on the west side with my friend Jon. My ravenous hunger outweighed my exhaustion, however, and I hit the road. We had planned on soul food at Aunt Kizzy's Back Porch in the Marina, but arrived too late and were banished to a forgettable NY Pizza joint. (Wrong guess, Julie! By that time we were both too hungry to drive back to Venice for a few slices of Abbott's superior pie.) As we sat down I sensed a disturbance in the force and squinted: "Do you smell ass?" I asked Jon. "I swear I can smell dog shit." It was very faint, and he didn't know whether he smelled it for real or because I suggested it. I couldn't see any brown stains on the bottoms of my shoes, inside my zippered hoodie or on my lap (the latter two being known Marley haunts), but I was still suspicious. I never located the source of my unease and as the night wore on, it evaporated...either that or my olfactory sense became inured to it. In either case, all yesterday's linen is in the washing machine right now, and my kicks are in the sink.

Conclusion: while I'm undoubtedly a Marley fan, my love for puppies in general -- at least for the time being -- is reserved for those who have been properly house-trained.

Monday, January 26, 2004

What Bush doesn't want you to know

The Oreo Cookie idea for ending world hunger, improving the education of our country's children, and covering the cost of our healthcare. Who can argue with logic, reason, and common sense?

Click here -- it's more important than ice cream

Saturday, January 24, 2004

New York Stories

My first day in the city I walked from Times Square to the Met through Central Park. I'm lucky I didn't bust any bones slipping on all that ice. I ruminated on the Modern art, the Greek sculpture hall and the Micronesian/Melanesian exhibits. On my way back, I collected some karma by helping two old ladies across some streets. Much later on, just for kicks, Julie and I decided to peep a strip club off Times Square. Dirty, stupid, and nasty: as it turns out there were no kicks to be had and we returned to the W for drinks at the bar.

My second day I walked south to Union Square. Want to hear something foolish? Even though it was below freezing there was a farmer's market right there on the north side of the square. Who are they fooling? That shit ain't fresh. But I bought an organic chocolate chip cookie, a ginger snap, and a brownie. Then I went to that Coffee Shop and ate some of that pao de queijo and meatloaf while I did a crossword. Then that night I got the blue cheek (see "Blue Man Shoes" journal entry) and the red face from getting all liquored up at the W bar. Again.

The next day was Chinese New Year. Gung Hei Fat Choi, everybody. I took the N R train to Chinatown, where I asked two separate street vendors in my broken Cantonese where I could get some legit won ton mien, and they both pointed me to the same joint: Sun Say Kai on the corner of Baxter and Walker. It's one of those tiny honey-colored restaurants with ducks and pork legs hanging in the window, and where you have to share your table with strangers. I had the siu ahp won ton mien with the chow mien noodles thrown in for good measure, and it was no joke. While I sucked my duck bones a few lion dancers showed up at the door, along with their coterie of benevolent society members. There was much banging of cymbals, drums and gongs while the proprietor of Sun Say Kai brought out the symbolic cabbage head and oranges. After paying my $4.00 bill I bundled back up and headed back out into the streaming sunlight. I followed the mythical dancing beasts to Grand Harmony restaurant on Mott Street, between Canal and Hester. While the revelers shot off countless firecrackers and confetti cannons and the elder parade organizers snapped at the younger uniformed ones for smoking while they held back the spectators with broom handles, I snapped off a roll of B&W 120mm film with my Holga.

Afterwards I walked back up Broadway to the W, stopping again at Coffee Shop for a hot toddy (the drink, not the bartender). The wind was so strong that the snow was falling horizontally, north to south down the canyon of Broadway. Appropriately enough, everyone was getting Chinese eyes, squinting through the biting flakes. When I emerged again into the cold with a belly full of whiskey, the snow had stopped and the setting sun had turned the sky a smoky shade of pink. It's amazing what a little whiskey can do for your day.

That night I returned to Mott Street to dine with Julie, Steve, Mack, and Jin Ah at Joe's Ginger. I can't recommend this place enough. I've had better Shanghainese rice cakes, but the crab and pork stuffed dumplings simply cannot be beat. Yeah, they're even better than Din Tai Fung. That's right, I said it: as far as I'm concerned, these are the best Taiwanese-style dumplings in the Western Hemisphere. You think you got a contender? Bring it on. We'll have a dumpling kumite showdown, and my money's on Joe. And then after that, we hit up the bar at the W again, like the boozers you know we are.

Don't Step On My Blue Man Shoes

On January 21, I walked to Coffee Shop on Union Square for lunch. I love that joint. The waitresses and bartenders are hot, and the food and atmosphere remind me of my local gourmet diners in L.A. -- the 101 Coffee Shop and Fred 62.

That night, after dining on tapas at Azafran in south Tribeca, Julie took me to see the Blue Man Group at the Astor Place Theater on Lafayette Street. We shuffled around between parked cars in the cold outside the theater for a few minutes before the show to get our heads right. Our seats were the first row in the mezzanine, and as I took my place a kid in a black t-shirt approached me and asked how tall I was. When I replied, he asked me to follow him to the rear of the upper level. As other guests (including Julie) moved past us, he delivered what sounded like a well-rehearsed speech.

He told me that he needed to find someone for a job, and depending on how I answered a few questions I may be the one to fill it. Question number one regarded the size of my shoe (10) and number two was whether or not I was claustrophobic (no). He informed me that in about an hour and a half, the Blue Men would enter the audience for the second time, looking for someone. I would be chosen. He quickly ran through the entire routine, dictating exactly what would happen to me while I was on and off stage, assuring me that contrary to appearances, I would never be in any danger. I was growing nervous and more than a bit paranoid, but how could one resist an opportunity such as this? I accepted. After changing into some shapeless black sneakers and assuring my man that I wouldn't cover up the blue T-shirt I was wearing with a jacket, I returned to my seat and told Julie what was going down. And then I waited. And was entertained. No, I was more than entertained -- I was enthralled. I laughed out loud and gasped and yelled and interacted.

The first time I met Julie was at The Blue Man Complex Rock tour last summer at the Shrine in downtown L.A. It featured the Blue Man Group jamming with rock musicians, and though it was good, it was nothing compared to this show in Lower Manhattan. After approximately an hour and a half, I felt a presence next to me. Sure enough, while the audience was distracted by something onstage, one of the Blue Men had silently wandered up to my seat like a curious insect. With his inquisitive alien head cock, he stared down at me and offered his hand. I took it. I think he may have raised my arms as the spotlight operator and a cameraman focused on me, to give the audience a chance to give me a cheer. I was then whisked up the steps to the back of the mezzanine and then down the stairs at the back of the theater. We bounded up the center aisle and his two indigo cohorts helped me up onto the stage. From then on, the experience was an adrenaline-pumped blur. The blue-skinned entertainers helped me into a white jumpsuit and, looking into my face with that adult-baby gaze, one of them marked my cheek with a blue dot. I was then fitted with a spray-painted motorcycle helmet ("with the blast shield down I can't see a thing") and my world went dark. They then guided me backstage where events got even wackier, but nothing was ever out of control. I think I'll skip what happens next. I don't want to ruin the show for those who haven't seen it, nor do I want to spoil the magic for those who have. But within five minutes I was back onstage, my head emerging from a solid block of orange Jell-O (I was now holding the dark helmet) while my body unfolded from a small black box. My white jumpsuit was now covered with blue paint and I stood in triumph next to a large white canvas splashed with blue prints of a familiar-looking body. I never really had time to be nervous -- the bright lights kept me from seeing the audience. But I could hear their reaction and was thrilled.

After the show I was so elated by the experience that Julie and I walked halfway to the subway line before I realized I was still wearing those atrocious black trainers. On the way back to the Astor Place several people who'd seen the show smiled at me or patted me on the back. "Good job!" one of them said as I walked through the doors. "I didn't do anything," I thought, "I was merely the tool of the artist: a prop. I was a paintbrush". I approached one of the Blue Men in the lobby and said, "I have Blue Man Shoes". He verbally directed me (they CAN speak!) to the girl with whom I needed to make the footwear exchange. Eventually Julie and I made it back to the W on Times Square. As we walked into our room I glanced at myself in the mirror. I'd brushed most of the remaining flecks of orange Jell-O from my face and hair, but I still bore the mark of a blue smear of paint across my left cheek. Like a child home after a night of trick-or-treating, I had the urge to leave it there. But realizing that out of context it looked like a sloppy mascara job, I washed my face before going downstairs to the bar. My brush with destiny as a blue paintbrush was over.

Tuesday, January 20, 2004

Yesterday I flew into Jamaica...

...Queens, that is. After arguing with my mini-cab drivers about the cost of a trip to the JFK Comfort Inn I was dropped off at my ghetto-ass destination at 03:00 in the morning. Last night, however, I spent at the W off Times Square. That joint is butter. I don't think I've ever stayed in a nicer hotel. While I did bring my laptop, the cost for utilizing the broadband in my room is $15/24hrs, so I'm now at an internet cafe where I can take care of all my spam deletion and bill paying needs in a half hour for $1. I won't be on much this week, but I hope I'll have some stories to share when I return to the wesside on Friday. Until then, MyFriends, I bid you adieu and I hope that you're warmer and cozier than I am.

Yours,

XopherInNYC

Friday, January 09, 2004

Big Fish

I felt like I wanted to cry but I didn't. As with many of Tim Burton's films, I found his latest offering lacking in emotional resonance. It was a bit too predictable, and a bit too simple for my palate. I wished for more of an arc in the main character, more depth of character in general, and just some good old fashioned melodramatic punch. Every once in while I like to get punched in the belly by a film: I want my heartstrings to get yanked, and I want to leave the theater a quivering mess. Tim Burton just can't do that for me. His films are visually driven, which I can definitely dig...but why not make stunning eye-candy that also touches the heart. On the Burton scale, I would say this film rated better than Planet of the Apes and Sleepy Hollow, but not quite as magically touching as Edward Scissorhands or as funny as Pee Wee's Big Adventure. Ouch, I can't finish this review because I'm too hungry.

Sunday, January 04, 2004

The Da Vinci Code

I just finished reading this book last night. While I found it predictable and formulaic at times, for the most part it was really difficult to put down. It was the closest thing to a modern Sherlock Holmes story that I think I've read. As a matter of fact, I can think of a few parallels to A Study In Scarlet: a murder; an overarching mystery framing many smaller puzzles; and most notably, a fascinating disclosure of secret societies and religions. A few years ago I started doing a lot of research on the origins of Christianity -- I still have a lot of unread books on the topic. I also started retyping and cataloging all my old art history notes -- I think I made it into the high Middle Ages before my ardor for that undertaking wilted. After reading this book I feel like kick-starting both of those projects. Anybody have any ideas on how much of the religious and historical theories behind Dan Brown's novel were fiction, if any?