Thursday, July 1, 2010
Sunday, May 16, 2010
kind of put a damper on that news
phone conversation i just had with my mother
me: oh i have exciting news
mom: you're engaged.
me: no... i think i'm not allergic to sesame seeds anymore
me: oh i have exciting news
mom: you're engaged.
me: no... i think i'm not allergic to sesame seeds anymore
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
facebook vindictive
i thought i got around this new "pages" thing by just never updating my profile, but finally i tried to look at it and found out it had automatically been linked to a bunch of random crap that made it look even worse. i think they did it on purpose. i'll keep facebook for now because i'm not sure how else to find out when people i know are getting drunk or having babies, but i'm not forgetting this.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
to the back of the newspaper with you, gay people
washington post readers say they would be able to stomach a picture of gay people kissing if it had been in the metro section, or something
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
this progress
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/01/arts/design/01tino.html?pagewanted=1
I went to this on Friday. I think the best part is the moment right after a strange child asks you "What is progress?" when you're not sure you want to plunge into a semi-scripted philosophical conversation with a seven-year old but you do anyway, and then you get nervous about your answer, as if being in this project has made him or her your intellectual superior ...
Also "Memory" by Anish Kapoor looks like a fun time travel device of the 19th century from one side and a terrifying black hole on the other
I went to this on Friday. I think the best part is the moment right after a strange child asks you "What is progress?" when you're not sure you want to plunge into a semi-scripted philosophical conversation with a seven-year old but you do anyway, and then you get nervous about your answer, as if being in this project has made him or her your intellectual superior ...
Also "Memory" by Anish Kapoor looks like a fun time travel device of the 19th century from one side and a terrifying black hole on the other
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