Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New Year's Eve Plans

New Year’s Eve, aka Amateur Night, can be celebrated in a variety of ways. When you’re young and again when you’re old, you generally celebrate by trying to stay awake until the stroke of midnight. For all the years in between, there are endless choices.

A few of the choices I’ve made over the years stand out. In the Virginia Avenue days, one of the neighbors always threw a party. I alternated between incoherent revelry, moderation, and abstinence at those parties. The memorable ones were the abstinence parties. Watching your friends advance into personal chaos is far more entertaining than accompanying them on the trip. The mornings after you've abstained, when you go visiting your friends to witness the aftereffects, are highly entertaining, too.

Staying off the roads, at least after, say, nine o’clock, is an absolute must. One year, I visited a family party on the west side of Chicago and departed early enough to make it home before midnight but late enough to share the roads with well oiled revelers. After numerous harrowing, breathtaking experiences, I made it home in one piece and resolved to never again tempt fate on New Year’s Eve.
Another unique New Year’s found my wife and I in the party mecca of the Midwest, Winneconne, Wisconsin. It was a viciously cold day, not unlike what we’ve experienced here lately, and on this night a blizzard had seized control of the proceedings. Our friend Doug Nelson had acquired the Talk of the Town Tavern that year, adding it to the resorts he already owned in Winneconne. For the night’s entertainment, Doug had hired the music teacher from the grade school to play piano. Strike the mental image you just got of a gray haired spinster, she was a party girl who could really play—a decision that would prove fortuitous, for as the night progressed, the entire town was plunged into blackness. We learned later that one of the local drunks had failed to recognize a curve and launched his pickup into a rather important electrical transformer. Doug found candles, dozens of candles from who knows where, and the piano required no electricity. The rest of the joints in town needed electricity for their juke boxes and the amps for their bands, i.e. "party over" for them. The Talk of the Town, on the other hand, turned into a candle lit oasis, and the piano player’s tip jar was brimming. The other places in town emptied out and The Talk of the Town filled up, packed ‘till closing time.

We stayed that night in one of Doug’s motel units, one that was customarily a summer place, and jammed towels under the door to keep the blizzard out, and held each other close to maximize warmth. It was a singularly spectacular night, unique and fun.

For a few years, we made a habit of dinner with friends, revisiting The Old Barn in Burbank one time, experiencing the now demised Greek offering from Lettuce Entertain You one time (gaining an understanding of why it’s life was short) and hitting White Fence Farm for Manhattans and fried chicken a couple of times, always early enough to avoid the lunatics.

Lately, friends join us for cocktails and hors d’oeuvres and we turn on the Channel 7 New Year’s show to see what kind of bad dress Janet Davies will have this year. We keep the night really low key.

It’s hard to get excited about anything else after you’ve spent New Year’s Eve in Winneconne, you know.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Four Christmases

The Mrs and I saw Four Christmases last week. It stars Vince Vaughn and Reese Witherspoon as a pair of yuppies who are committed to each other and their very "me" lifestyle. Their annual Christmas vacation gets sidetracked by the weather, and instead of heading off to an exotic locale as is their custom, they spend time with each of their parents.

Short version review: I rate this as a sugar cookie, something that you'll enjoy but wouldn't miss if you skipped it. We like both the stars, Vince Vaughn and Reese Witherspoon, but they're not quite the right pair for this movie. They seem to me just a bit older than their characters ought to be. You can overlook that, and it's not too hard to overlook it if you like them. The situations give up some pretty good giggles for three fourths of the Christmases, but one of them is a misfire.


Vince Vaughn has been getting slammed a bit lately for his limitations, but I find him pretty funny. Reese Witherspoon, whom I have thoroughly enjoyed in most of the stuff she's done, seems to be fading on the charisma scale, at least in this movie. She's skinnied up a bit too much, too.


There's a terrific portrayal in the movie by Robert Duval and a couple of actors whose names escape me; they are Vaughn's dad and brothers. In another of the vignettes, Mary Steenburgen is the parent character, and she's looking pretty worn. Jon Voight has a significant role but doesn't get a lot to work with, character wise.


Bottom line, if you have a couple of hours to kill and these actors are on your like 'em list, see Four Christmases. If you miss it, it should be on DVD by spring.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Do Twinkies Last Forever?

This guy, Todd Wilbur, clones famous recipes, and for this one he's figured out how to make Twinkies. He's also testing the "Twinkies last forever" urban legend.

http://video.yahoo.com/network/100000089?v=2704765&l=100022574
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Alamo Bowl Tonight

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTPKnvAiH5o

>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<

Finally:
Top Ten Things Overheard At The Bush Family Christmas

10. "Condi's gooned on egg nog -- mission accomplished"
9. "It was nice of the White House to hire Sarah Palin to work the coat check"
8. "When all is said and done, history will show that this get-together sucked"
7. "Cheney's stopping by -- charge the defibrillator"
6. "Please don't spoil this occasion by talking about the economy, climate change, Iraq, Afghanistan, collapse of the Republican party, or approval ratings"
5. "He's spent three-and-a-half hours trying to pronounce 'Chanukah'"
4. "The Ghost of Christmas Past is here to remind us how great things were under Clinton"
3. "Why is Barack Obama moving his stuff into the Oval Office?"
2. "The red cheeks. The huge belly -- Al Gore's here!"
1. "What do you get for the guy who's wrecked everything?"

Friday, December 26, 2008

Today is Boxing Day

In many countries, today, December 26, is Boxing Day, celebrated by the giving of gifts by the more priveleged to the less well off. In the USA, today is the day that gift wrap gets marked down to half price and people begin exchanging yesterday's unwanted gifts. I was going to search for a more polite phraseology than "unwanted gifts", but that's what they are, and that's why gift cards and cash, while impersonal, are such easy choices.

Other events that occurred on this day over the years...

1620: Elizabeth Bathory’s crimes were discovered. Lizzie, a Transylvanian countess and the niece of the Polish king Stefan Bathory, was the most prolific female mass murderer in history, with around 600 horrific deaths attributed to her. There was no trial, politics then being like politics always, Liz was simply taken out of circulation. She was eventually bricked into a small room in her castle where she existed for the final four years of her life.

1919: the contract of pitcher/outfielder Babe Ruth is sold by the Boston Red Sox to the New York Yankees. Speaking of foreshadowing executive brilliance, did you know that George Bush was an owner of the Texas Rangers when that team traded Sammie Sosa to the White Sox?

1933: Nissan Motor company wass founded in Tokyo. That is a 1935 model at the right.

1943: the Siege of Bastogne, which was a part of the Battle of the Bulge. Bastongne is in Belgium, by the way.

1966: the first Kwanzaa celebration. We are all so very grateful to Ron Karenga, the guy credited as having invented Kwanzaa. Yes, it is an invented holiday, and you can't blame Hallmark.

1982: Time Magazine names the personal computer its Machine of the Year. Flush with their newfound celebrity, personal computers around the world begin to conspire, plotting the Millenium problem.

1986:
the population of the world reaches 5 billion. China alone was 1 billion something, having exceeded a billion in 1982 and continuing to screw its corrective brains out.

1991:
the Soviet Union is formally dissolved. Politicians praise the victory of democracy. Practically speaking, it was simply a function of economics. The USSR went broke.


Thursday, December 25, 2008

O Little Town of Bethlehem

Bethlehem, today.


From Wiki Travel
Nearly all travellers arrive via Jerusalem.. Since Bethlehem is administered by the Palestinian Authority, an Israeli military checkpoint stands on the road connecting the two locations. All travelers are subject to rigorous questioning and searches. If checkpoint security is stepped up (usually owing to local disturbances or tension), buses and service taxis may be delayed or cancelled entirely. However to get into Bethlehem there is no checkpoint, but no Israelis can get in. On the way out it is not a very rigorous checkpoint, just like any other border crossing.

Merry Christmas!