Sunday, February 26, 2006

click here for the riot coverage of ms. una m.

It was a bit close to home, literally a stones throw from our apartment..
(bad joke? too soon?)
Thankfully it's the first bit of violence of the like I've seen since I've been here, and hopefully the last!

Friday, February 24, 2006

in a fantastic stroke of bad luck.....

I smashed a half full jar of honey on the kitchen floor this morn....
close your eyes and picture the mess.
sticky
sugary shards of glass?
oozing honey?
and imagine the emotional loss?!
oh the humanity.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Riget II


and it just gets better and better. (the kingdom) enter Udo Kier, the new baddie - even spookier than the last. It's great stuff for sure!!

Saturday, February 18, 2006

the king has left the building...



what a fun night, Adrian Crowley (feat. yours truly on the ole 4 string) supporting King Creosote. It was a night of such beautiful music and some fine chat and fine laughs. Proper belly laughs. Please believe all of the hype. The king certainly has a voice.

harp gig!!



I CAN'T WAIT TO PLAY THE PLANETS AGAIN!

Riget (the kingdom)





I love Lars Von Trier. I'm in the middle of the series The Kingdom and I must confess, I'm obsessed. It's eerie and clever. I love the monocrome, it's almost sickening. And the lead role, played by the Swede Ernst-Hugo Jaregard, is so brilliantly cast.

DCFC







We went to see Death Cab in Denmark. Brilliant. It was one of those gigs that was stressful in the anticipation and somehow managed to exceed expectations. I wondered if they had perhaps created something in the albums that could not be recreated live, but I was wrong. It was magic. Plus, the trip to Sweden and Denmark was great. I was delighted with the snow, and the cheese and the lovely Agrens. It was a perfect weekend.

Monday, February 13, 2006

please. click.

RIP Mr. Benchley

Today one of my favorite writers, Peter Benchley, passed away. This is from the associated press....


NEW YORK - Peter Benchley, whose novel "Jaws" made millions think twice about stepping into the water even as the author himself became an advocate for the conservation of sharks, has died at age 65, his widow said Sunday.

Wendy Benchley, married to the author for 41 years, said he died Saturday night at their home in Princeton, N.J. The cause of death, she said, was idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a progressive and fatal scarring of the lungs.

Thanks to Benchley's 1974 novel, and Steven Spielberg's blockbuster movie of the same name, the simple pastime of ocean swimming became synonymous with fatal horror, of still water followed by ominous, pumping music, then teeth and blood and panic.

"Spielberg certainly made the most superb movie; Peter was very pleased," Wendy Benchley told The Associated Press.

"But Peter kept telling people the book was fiction, it was a novel, and that he no more took responsibility for the fear of sharks than Mario Puzo took responsibility for the Mafia."

Benchley, the grandson of humorist Robert Benchley and son of author Nathaniel Benchley, was born in New York City in 1940. He attended the elite Philips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, then graduated from Harvard University in 1961. He worked at The Washington Post and Newsweek and spent two years as a speechwriter for President Johnson, writing some "difficult" speeches about the Vietnam War, Wendy Benchley said.

A 1974 article in People magazine described Benchley as "Tall, slender and movie-star handsome, with eyes like the deep blue sea." The author's interest in sharks was lifelong, beginning with childhood visits to Nantucket Island in Massachusetts and heightening in the mid-1960s when he read about a fisherman catching a 4,550-pound great white shark off Long Island, the setting for his novel.

"I thought to myself, `What would happen if one of those came around and wouldn't go away?"' he recalled. Benchley didn't start the novel, for which he received a $7,500 advance, until 1971 because he was too busy with his day jobs.



Well I'm glad he got around to it in the end!
I highly recommend giving Jaws a read, but also The Deep and Shark. They're all great.

"If you've ever seen a Great White Shark," Benchley said, "it's something you never forget."

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

am i the only person who doesn't like new york?

I'd love to go to China...





Dad sent me these last night, so beautiful.