Didn't I just finish talking about what a walking LA cliche I am? Well, now we've upped the ante.
Having been raised on the ski slopes as a small child and spending the rest of my youth on the back of a horse, I feel confident in saying that I like extreme-type sports. And having grown up in the family pool and snorkeling in the Caribbean since I was six, I also feel confident in claiming myself as a competent swimmer.
But the number of times I have sunk my delicate Swiss feet into the gaping maw of the Pacific? Once before yesterday. So it's safe to say that I was grossly underestimating what awaited me. But when my friend Phil called me up to say he and his roommate Dan were surfing and they'd have a board for me at Venice, I thought, "Hey, why not?"And off I went on my jaunty little way.
So when I got there, we started off without the boards, just getting a little wet, swimming around, etc. Except the waves were so fierce, each minute in the water felt less like an afternoon splash and more like an animal instinct to survive. Let me be clear; I understand how waves work. I understand that as it churns over your head there's another part that sucks you back under. This motion is in itself terrifying to think about, like the ocean's natural defense against soft flabby little humans.
What's even more difficult for me to grasp is the natural rhythm in which these waves move. Every time a wave would break directly onto my head and the boys would yell out for me to duck under, I got too scared to let myself be sucked under the ocean and decided I would rather the wave knock me on my pristine, land-lubbing ass. They got a kick out of it but I would not go out farther than waist level and stood there, letting wave after wave slam against me. I thought to myself, This is not fun.
So after what seemed like eternity we came back to our towels and they grabbed their boards. I said, "I'm gonna take a break and watch you guys for a little bit." They walked off, shaking their heads at my cowardice, and I watched them vault themselves into the great abyss where their boards could crack open their skulls, where sharks lurked, where any number of things in the great big sea were lying in wait to murder them. No thanks.
But... you give me enough time to mull it over, and I generally work myself up to something. If I get it in my head that I'm going to do it, I'll do it. I mean, I live in LA. For a person to not have at least tried surfing once is just...well, it's sad. I figured if I tried it and hated it, I would never have to do it again, but I would also never forgive myself for letting fear keep me in my comfort zone. Ever since I've been out here I've done nothing but go out of my comfort zone, and it has worked out amazingly every single time.
So I screwed up my courage and picked up the last board. The guys noticed me coming out and came onshore to help get me started. I strapped on my leash and started walking into the water, which I believe I referred to at the time as "Motherf@!*ing cold!" Later Phil and Dan would say I turned purple in the water, but I really didn't notice anything until my toes went numb.
So I hopped on the board and found my balance, and instantly everything was better. I was no longer getting slammed by waves but riding them into the air, paddling with my arms on every downstroke. They turned me around a few times and tried to launch me off a wave, wherein I would get slammed by the force behind me, slip from my board, and be thrust into a swirling vortex that would momentarily suck me under. But I would come up for air smiling each time. What can I say? Every time you go out of your comfort zone, it just gets that much wider.
I did not make it to standing that day, try though I might. But I see it as a major first step in conquering the ocean-- or at least, my fear of it. The times where I was able to ride the waves was such a complete rush- I totally get now how surfers are addicted to their sport. And I want to be one of them. In due time, with a few lessons, and maybe one of those anti-shark electronic bracelets, I think surfing will be an excellent replacement for the slopes and the hooves. Plus, I'ma look so damn cool.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Viva Las Vegas!
It’s official- I have become a walking LA clichĂ© (and yes, that rhymed). Last weekend I took a trip to Vegas with a few new friends and a large group of Ball State alumn/friends who were on a sort of Rumpspringer, if you will.
I’d like to stop here and backtrack a day. So last Thursday I volunteered to be an extra on a Hollywood film (not at liberty to say which one) set wherein I was to sit around a Jacuzzi in the background of a college-type party, drinking beer and chillin’. Oh, and the house was in Malibu. In short, I was one pair of shutter shades away from a rap music video. But I went, and had a blast. A few friends from work were there and we tapped out our drinking supplies, relaxing and having fun.
Then the (I want to say 2nd AD, but I’m not sure) pulled myself and my friend Chelsea aside for an opening shot in which the main characters run into us on our way into the house and step aside for us to enter. So like, screen time and stuff! When we thought we were finished and settled back in with our tricked out solo cups like the cool college students we were, he came back up to us and said for one of us to come with him to do a scene. Chelsea was like, “I’m too tall,” thus graciously stepping aside for me to do some on-screen flirting with one of the actors. Which I did, gratuitously. Like it was my job. Like I was up for a SAG award. It was a challenge, believe me, to stand around and be interested in cute guys. My Oscar’s coming soon.
Reverting back to my main story of adventure. Because of the events that transpired that evening (me leaving my phone at that “party”), I was completely off the grid for 48 hours. No technology save for my eyelash curler. So Vegas really felt like a mini-vacation- a cutting off from reality that only heightened the Adult-Disney theme they got going on there. Everywhere you turned there were bright colors and flashing lights, beckoning you like sirens to every type of sin imaginable, from gambling to sex to liquor and beyond.
It was awesome.
Because of the size of our party we were able to snag some ludicrous discounts- Splitting a hotel room in the Cosmo cost me about $30 a night. For a hotel room overlooking the Bellagio Fountain, I’d say it was a pretty good deal!
Arriving in late on Friday, we had a little drinking to do to to catch up to everyone else, and then proceeded to the gambling halls for a night of bad decisions and expensive beers. At some point I realized my feet were in agony from the high heels I’d chosen to wear and dragged my bleeding leg stumps back to our hotel sometime around dawn. For the record, they stayed on my feet the whole night; I refused to take them off. I mean, I knew what I was getting myself into. I had it coming the way I was dressed (that one’s for you, Mike).
Dragging my stupid butt out of bed the next morning took some real grit, along with the promise of a relaxing afternoon by the pool. Heh. Our pool was definitely not an elevator music, quiet outdoor retreat, but rather a giant chlorine mosh pit of hormones, alcohol, and party music. I left my relaxing afternoon at the poolside feeling sweaty and out of breath like I’d run ten miles. Okay, like I’d run three miles. Okay, like I’d run a half mile. Man, I’m out of shape.
For dinner we went to the most expensive buffet I can say that I’ve ever had, which incidentally turned out to be the best buffet I’d ever had, all apologies to Golden Corral. From sushi to crab legs to chicken marsala and ribs, I could have Liz Lemon’ed my way through that place for hours but unfortunately, we only had time for me to have two helpings that night plus dessert. It’s safe to say that I have developed a master plan of attack for next year, which may or may not include a purse lined with ziplock bags.
That night further involved ordering bottle service at the hotel bar completely decorated in crystal, followed by a limo ride, followed by some shameless but nevertheless enjoyable dancing at the club in Hard Rock Café, whose name escapes me at the moment. I would like to take this time to say that again I wore high heels out to party, but was not as noble in my attempt to keep them on my feet the rest of the night.
Sunday’s trip home included a stop in Baker, Nevada. You might know it as the “Gateway to Death Valley” (what a cheery little name that is), but it is also famed its Alien Beef Jerky, “The Best Jerky in the Universe.” It was delicious and the Area 51 paraphernalia was remarkable if a little ridiculous. The taste of Alien jerky has opened a floodgate in my mouth and ever since then I have been involved in a torrid affair with mister Jack Link and his premium cut meat (please tell me we’re picking up on the double entendre here). But we’re talking about a girl who counts frozen cookie dough as its own food group. Does this qualify me as a foodie? I damn well hope so!
In summation, regardless of the traffic both ways, Vegas was a fabulous weekend getaway that I get to do every once in a while because I live in LA. Though I still feel a very strong connection to and longing for New York City, I am absolutely loving my time here in LA and can’t wait to see what surprises pop up next!
I’d like to stop here and backtrack a day. So last Thursday I volunteered to be an extra on a Hollywood film (not at liberty to say which one) set wherein I was to sit around a Jacuzzi in the background of a college-type party, drinking beer and chillin’. Oh, and the house was in Malibu. In short, I was one pair of shutter shades away from a rap music video. But I went, and had a blast. A few friends from work were there and we tapped out our drinking supplies, relaxing and having fun.
Then the (I want to say 2nd AD, but I’m not sure) pulled myself and my friend Chelsea aside for an opening shot in which the main characters run into us on our way into the house and step aside for us to enter. So like, screen time and stuff! When we thought we were finished and settled back in with our tricked out solo cups like the cool college students we were, he came back up to us and said for one of us to come with him to do a scene. Chelsea was like, “I’m too tall,” thus graciously stepping aside for me to do some on-screen flirting with one of the actors. Which I did, gratuitously. Like it was my job. Like I was up for a SAG award. It was a challenge, believe me, to stand around and be interested in cute guys. My Oscar’s coming soon.
Reverting back to my main story of adventure. Because of the events that transpired that evening (me leaving my phone at that “party”), I was completely off the grid for 48 hours. No technology save for my eyelash curler. So Vegas really felt like a mini-vacation- a cutting off from reality that only heightened the Adult-Disney theme they got going on there. Everywhere you turned there were bright colors and flashing lights, beckoning you like sirens to every type of sin imaginable, from gambling to sex to liquor and beyond.
It was awesome.
Because of the size of our party we were able to snag some ludicrous discounts- Splitting a hotel room in the Cosmo cost me about $30 a night. For a hotel room overlooking the Bellagio Fountain, I’d say it was a pretty good deal!
Arriving in late on Friday, we had a little drinking to do to to catch up to everyone else, and then proceeded to the gambling halls for a night of bad decisions and expensive beers. At some point I realized my feet were in agony from the high heels I’d chosen to wear and dragged my bleeding leg stumps back to our hotel sometime around dawn. For the record, they stayed on my feet the whole night; I refused to take them off. I mean, I knew what I was getting myself into. I had it coming the way I was dressed (that one’s for you, Mike).
Dragging my stupid butt out of bed the next morning took some real grit, along with the promise of a relaxing afternoon by the pool. Heh. Our pool was definitely not an elevator music, quiet outdoor retreat, but rather a giant chlorine mosh pit of hormones, alcohol, and party music. I left my relaxing afternoon at the poolside feeling sweaty and out of breath like I’d run ten miles. Okay, like I’d run three miles. Okay, like I’d run a half mile. Man, I’m out of shape.
For dinner we went to the most expensive buffet I can say that I’ve ever had, which incidentally turned out to be the best buffet I’d ever had, all apologies to Golden Corral. From sushi to crab legs to chicken marsala and ribs, I could have Liz Lemon’ed my way through that place for hours but unfortunately, we only had time for me to have two helpings that night plus dessert. It’s safe to say that I have developed a master plan of attack for next year, which may or may not include a purse lined with ziplock bags.
That night further involved ordering bottle service at the hotel bar completely decorated in crystal, followed by a limo ride, followed by some shameless but nevertheless enjoyable dancing at the club in Hard Rock Café, whose name escapes me at the moment. I would like to take this time to say that again I wore high heels out to party, but was not as noble in my attempt to keep them on my feet the rest of the night.
Sunday’s trip home included a stop in Baker, Nevada. You might know it as the “Gateway to Death Valley” (what a cheery little name that is), but it is also famed its Alien Beef Jerky, “The Best Jerky in the Universe.” It was delicious and the Area 51 paraphernalia was remarkable if a little ridiculous. The taste of Alien jerky has opened a floodgate in my mouth and ever since then I have been involved in a torrid affair with mister Jack Link and his premium cut meat (please tell me we’re picking up on the double entendre here). But we’re talking about a girl who counts frozen cookie dough as its own food group. Does this qualify me as a foodie? I damn well hope so!
In summation, regardless of the traffic both ways, Vegas was a fabulous weekend getaway that I get to do every once in a while because I live in LA. Though I still feel a very strong connection to and longing for New York City, I am absolutely loving my time here in LA and can’t wait to see what surprises pop up next!
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Tim Burton at LACMA



If, ever, my love of Tim Burton and all things Burtonesque had faded in the slightest, it came back in raging waves as I wandered through the halls of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on Saturday.
For an exhibit that opened over a month ago, crowds still overwhelm the hallways and presentation rooms, proof that traffic in LA is not limited to mere automobiles.
Although Burton has gained public fame and appreciation primarily as a film director, this exhibit publicizes his work as an artist- everything from cartoons to books and even school papers that he has written.
His animation, it seems to me, lies somewhere between Quentin Blake and the illustrator of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. Some of it made me laugh, some made me think, and some of his stuff is downright... disturbing. No wonder he and Disney didn't make a good fit.
In addition to the advertisement poster flying all over the city, I purchased a book written and illustrated by the great Mr. Burton. It's a short book; a book of poems like something Shell Silverstein would write. Only in Timmy's case, his work is entitled, "The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy and Other Stories." One particular poem stands out to me:
The Boy with Nails in his Eyes
put up his aluminum tree.
It looked pretty strange
because he couldn't really see. (illustration on the side)
One of Burton's first short films, "Frankenweenie," was envisioned to be a feature length animation. Disney, his employer at the time, commissioned a twenty-seven minute live-action short, deemed unsuitable for children and never released in theaters. Burton has been revisiting this vision and "Frankenweenie" will be released sometime in October 2012. Based on the stop motion dolls at the exhibit, it looks to be another classic.
What struck me most about this exhibit, though, (aside from the seamless integration of art and film), were the early film pieces put on display. Excerpts and even whole screenings of Burton's work were available to the masses, and while they hinted at the potential being developed, a lot of them... well, sucked. To put it bluntly. One short film he did in college even featured an amateur, hesitating zoom in/out of a character's face at dinner.
I mention this not to pick at a beloved and talented director but to suggest that though we media students consider ourselves well versed in the area of video and film, we must not forget that we are, now and ever, students. Always learning, always making mistakes, but getting better. And to make amateur mistakes does not mean that we are incapable of great things. But we must also not forget our humility, in case one day an art museum decides to dedicate a wing to exposing our life's work for the public to scrutinize.
The exhibit will continue, fittingly, until Halloween, so if you're in LA before then, don't miss it.
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