Sometimes I just don’t know what the hell I’m doing.
Month: May 2002 (Page 1 of 5)
This story reminds me of when I was a reporter, and sources had all kinds of ways of not answering your questions. It was maddening. Of course, none of them had the skill and audacity of Ari Fleischer, Bush’s press secretary. But I guess that’s why he’s the press secretary, right?
Inspired by Mike, I’ve decided to write down a few of the things I’ve learned after applying and interviewing for countless jobs. The result is my concise but perhaps helpful job-hunting guide. Let me know what you think.
My Internet Explorer is acting weird. When I spawn a new window, the status bar (which I like having) always disappears. When I do a “View Source,” nothing happens – this is bad for a web designer wanting to steal stuff. And when I try to download images, it wants to save JPEGs as giant bitmap files.
Reinstalling doesn’t help. And you can’t uninstall, since as we all know by now, IE is an intrinsic part of Windows. Ugh.
Any ideas?
I can’t believe this story isn’t being carried by the mainstream media in the U.S. Just when you think you’re heard everything from Dubya…
Embarrassing pop culture confession: I own two copies of “Basic Instinct” on DVD.
I bought the first one a while back, probably for a sale price. It’s the movie and nothing else. Then over the weekend at Best Buy I saw the “special edition,” with commentaries, a making-of documentary, and lots of other stuff. Amusingly, it comes with an icepick-shaped pen that writes with red ink. I had to get it.
My favorite feature of the DVD is a compilation called “Cleaning Up Basic Instinct,” where they show you scenes with naughty words which had to be dubbed over to show the movie on TV – first the original, then the TV version. Showing this sex- and violence-drenched movie on TV seems quite counterproductive, and it’s fun to see how voices clearly not of the original actors were used to cover over the words that network executives think we’re too delicate to hear.
They’ll expect us to watch “Baby Bob,” but we can’t hear “fuck” on TV. And which of those is likely to cause the most long-lasting psychological effects?
Random thoughts on Episode II:
-Those Jedi robes look really comfy. I bet it would be like wearing your pajamas all day.
-Who among us really wants to live on a planet (Naboo) governed by teenage girls?
-Jimmy Smits? What the?
Went to see Star Wars Episode II last week with my friend Wendy. As predicted, my intense dislike for the movie cooled, mostly because Wendy enjoyed herself so much. My favorite moment was when we watched Anakin writhing around in bed having a nightmare, and Wendy whispered to me, “He’s not jackin’ off, is he?”
I love Wendy.
Season/series finales in a nutshell
Felicity
While I was irritated by the time-travel capper, feeling it was tacked on to the “real” ending, there’s no doubt it was well written and acted. The show had a good run, and wisely ended before we could get all that tired of it. Now someone just has to write a show where the girl goes for the nice guy, not the tortured hunk.
Enterprise
I have high hopes for this series, and we all know that it took at least a season or two for TNG to hit its stride. There’s a strong and interesting cast and a good premise. Nest season could be quite good.
X-Files
Haven’t watched this show in years, since before Mulder left. The “Mulder on trial” thing was a transparent and ham-handed way to do a ton of series-ending exposition, but it also allowed Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny to recapture a little of the chemistry that made the early seasons of the show so wonderful.
West Wing
Martin Sheen knows how to kick ass, and the standoff against Gov. Ritchie in the finale showed it. And next season, we get a presidential campaign, which should be fun. I think Lily Tomlin is the wrong choice to play the new secretary, but I’ll give her the chance to prove me wrong.
24, Buffy
Don’t watch them. Sorry.
Mental health tip of the day
Stop answering the phone. Let the answering machine or voice mail answer it. If it’s a telemarketer, they’ll hang up. If someone has something to say, they’ll say it and you can call them back at your convenience. There’s no reason you have to jump to when someone calls. You control your time.