Oh My Goodness

This site claims that sandals with socks are taking over the world. Based on their abundant photographic evidence, I was prepared to agree. Then I realized the photos might have been sent in by people for whom wearing sandals and socks is a point of pride or a marker of individuality and thus a sure indication of mental health issues.

Let us not ostracize our sick brethren but embrace them and nurture their souls that they may heal and see the error of their ways. Next sandalsoxer I see gets a hug and a referral to a certified shoe counsellor.

Omigod I think I just found my career path.

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Ted Leo’s Drummer Is Having my Baby!

I made sweet love to him with my eyes at Friday night’s show at Richard’s on Richards and through the fakesmoke haze and beer fumes, he looked right at me, past the spotlights and bopping hipsters who knew all the words to all the songs, he grinned a little and his eyes went wide, just before his drumsticks blurred and so did my eyes and then my heart. His beard seemed soft as a freshly cleaned carpet and his polo shirt was dotted with sweat and I swear he nodded slightly when I smiled from the balcony and I just know that in a few months – I don’t know the exact gestation for sweet drummer + long-distance laser impregnation – he’ll come calling and wanting more but I won’t be able to give it to him because 1. I’m taken and 2. he’s probably on the road a lot and 3. sometimes moments that take place across a crowded bar are best left there to become part of the furniture and the moment for the next time.

Seriously though, Ted Leo and the Pharmacists are super duper talented and I haven’t had so much fun at a show in a long time. Also, he has done a cover of “Since U Been Gone,” which was not played on Friday but which has been on repeat in my head for about a billion days now. You can find it here if you’re interested. Trust me. You are.

Some people embrace January as a time for new beginnings; others choose their birthdays; I choose September. 18 years of school has set a precedent for starting anew after Labour Day. New Year’s Day is often a let-down; a rainy, chip-sodden sleep inducing day. My birthday is usually a day like any other – sometimes with cake. But Labour Day, it has a whole movement around it. People stop doing one thing and start doing another. Even though I will just go to work on Tuesday, it’ll be different because the world has all started doing different things around me. The flipflops get packed away and I grow my leg hair. Fall! Blessed fall!

To do – Fall:

1. Brown corduroy pants. I jumped the gun on this one and found the Perfect Brown Corduroy Pants yesterday. Check.
2. School. I’ve been involved for two months, somewhat passively, in an introductory editing class through SFU’s distance education program. I say passively because it’s distance education which means it’s self-led which means I’m behind. Plus, sometime this month I start French classes! Vive les deux langues officiales du Canada!
3. Wine. Check.
4. Second draft of novel. It’s almost one year since I finished the first draft and I really hoped I would be further along in the revisions by now. But I’m not. All hope is not lost. I very nearly participated in the 3-day novel writing contest this weekend but I’m glad I didn’t because my head is very muzzy with snot.
5. Fun stuff. I need to do more fun stuff. Does anyone have any fun stuff?
6. Flannel sheets. I might not have bought these if I wasn’t so muzzy with snot and all I wanted the minute I walked into Costco was to be in bed. But there they were, tucked between the Halloween candy and the Christmas wrap. So I bought them. Early this afternoon when the clouds were dark and mean and it was cold and I was trying to read the globe and mail in bed but it was just so fucking twee (why does that man keep writing rhyming couplets about current events? why is Leah McLaren telling me to wear black? isn’t that like a snake eating its tail? shouldn’t someone fire her?) my eyes kept closing, then I was glad about the flannel sheets.
7. Th’Apprentice and Th’Martha Stewart Apprentice. Even just one episode each.
8. I am going to be nice to my co-workers and respectful of authority while I compose gritty tell-all bestsellers in my head.
9. And eat more spinach.

Posted in music, people | 4 Comments

Distractions

A few minutes ago, I found the perfect distraction from news and tragedy: Puppy Boutique!

It is the home of all dogs small and portable. (and! Expensive! $2K! though financing is available for Floridians.) They also sell clothing:

“Some dogs actually like putting on clothing. They realize that it is theirs, it keeps them warm and they protect it just like their little toys. If a dog does not enjoy wearing their dog clothes, the best thing is to keep encouriging them to wear it. They will eventually like them specially if you start when they are puppies.
When the temperature begins to drop, it is a good idea to have a dog sweater. This can keep them warm and they will love it because dogs can catch a cold just like people do. That is why it is smart to put at least a shirt on them when they are outside in the winter.”

Despite wearing a sweater three times this week (and a shirt every day), I am getting a cold. I don’t blame September, even though I first felt the sore throat on September 1st. I blame Stephen Harper. Indeed, this is an old photo that you all probably saw back in July. But it lifts my spirits ever so slightly.

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The ‘Ber’ Months

In the last week, I’ve heard a lot of people comment on how it smells like fall, summer is over, bye-bye sun, boo hoo, etc. But this woman has actually fast-forwarded to Christmas! Yowsa!

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Scratch That + Soulsucking PNE!

While I wrote that last entry, the Mighty Mouse underpant owner switched her laundry and someone else with better timing than me waltzed in, ignored my overflowing bag of dirty clothing set pointedly in front of the washing machines and put his own load in.

Yes, I have decided it was a ‘he’. I have further decided to do my loads of laundry tomorrow so’s to avoid the escalating irritability stemming from periodic trips downstairs and back up again.

Yesterday on our way to the Soulsucking PNE, we encountered a large group of zombies on Hornby Street. My favourite was the one banging on a computer keyboard, moaning, “Download brains… Download brains.” Today it occurred to me to check the internet for why we encountered a large group of zombies on Hornby Street at 4 pm on a saturday. Vancouver Zombiewalk 2005, of course.

We managed one shot of the last moments of this ill-fated Robson Shopper:

I had the best smokie in recent history not, as you might expect, from the Soulsucking PNE but from the vendor at Robson and Burrard (southeast corner). While it cooked, the vendor chopped away at the smokie so that it was essentially pre-masticated. This is not as gross as it sounds. The juices flowed and the dog rested on a soft bed of fried onions. When I added various sauces, they nestled in the crevices and when I took a bite, not one morsel was lost to the ground or my clothes or my hair. A minor miracle.

At the Soulsucking PNE, the crowds were tight. We arrived by the west gate (near the Looney Tunes Hollywood House of Fun!) to ambulances and people on stretchers. We noticed a 10-15 square foot sign announcing the Looney Tunes Hollywood House of Fun! lying on the ground where it had apparently fallen from a significant height. We averted our eyes and kept walking.

The Jack Russell won the competition but the sheepdog won my heart as he leapt over barrels and through tubes to “Pump up the Jam.”

SA ate a $3.00 taco that was practically ornamental.

The Miracle Shammy Man was at his post when we arrived, when we passed by a few hours later and still there when we left at 11 pm. He did not break a sweat.

I observed the following t-shirts:
(on a very well-endowed teenage girl) Who needs brains when you’ve got these?
(on a hunched male senior) I quit the band. Now I play with myself.
(on two separate 20-something men) I’m a Keeper.
…and a guy wearing the shirt me & SA own one each of:
Ah Munna Eat Choo!

…as well as a gentleman who was inexplicably shirtless (it was not a hot afternoon) and who had a hairless back, save for the patch which, when described by SA as a “treasure trail” prompted an alternative comparison by me to a well-constructed map. I believe my exact words were, “that’s not a trail. There’s no fucking mystery there, man.”

We went to the Safeway Farm Country barn, where the highlight is the really big bull (overheard: “Now that is a ball sack!”) and the store that sells country market type things. Last year we bought amazing garlic honey hot sauce. Yesterday we bought more. Oddball Organics makes it. We also fell prey to an espresso-bean infused chocolate sauce and some Lemongrass soap. I love soap. And chocolate.

Then a quick ice cream for me from Casa del Gelato – lemon sorbetto and chocolate grand marnier – and some pulled pork for SA:

I was lulled into complacency by my ice cream and he tricked me into watching the live entertainment entitled “City Rhythms.” I saw this last year and nearly had a stroke; I swore I would not watch it again. Trickery!

The set is a cardboard Vancouver complete with Harbour Centre spinny tower, a “Granville Island” sign and some mountains as a backdrop, plus frequent blowing of the noon “o canada” horn, which just served to make me salivate because that means LUNCH.

It starts with three dudes in patterned shirts drumming on a platform up top and then two guys come out and do fancy BMX bike tricks (is this cool? I think not.) Then all these kids come prancing out to the most deplorable music, this nasty, cult-like, rah-rah crap about “the rain might fall…but that’s not all…we’ll do it all…just wait and see…it’s up to me…VancOUVER!!!” But they’re not singing, they’re lip-syncing. Most of them. The little ones aren’t doing anything except smiling for mummy and daddy and the digital camcorder.

First there are friendly bike couriers (what? the? hell?) and and life guards dancing with pretty young things in sundresses. Then they play that sound clip of Red Robinson announcing The Beatles are in town. Then they play the sound clip of the Queen announcing Expo ’86 is open … then closed. Women in suits with coffee cups and cell phones strut around and a high-pitched chattering noise fills the air; signifying the fabulous ’80s and shoulder pads, I guess. And then there’s a sports montage with the BC Lions song and the Vancouver Canucks song and then, and you knew this was coming, that fucking IOC guy announcing that Vancouver will host the 2010 Olympics. There was a sudden spurt of silly string into the cheering crowd. And more insipidity to cap it off:

“We’ve got it here! The best around! so sing it loud! and sing it proud! VancOUVER!!!!” (not verbatim)

It’s like Jesus Christ Superstar mixed with Fame mixed with Star Search with a solid sprinkling of the very worst of the unpublished musicals of Satan.

It makes SA laugh but it makes me angry enough to…

…drink $6 plastic cups of Pale Ale! The band playing in the beer garden (“Masque: a New Orleans Adventure”) was actually a pretty good blues band. There were some very drunk young men (more drunk and less young than they thought) with broad shoulders carrying plastic inflatable hammers who did their version of a mating dance for the many preening girls who wanted prizes won for them. Later we saw the same group of young men attempting to kill each other with said inflatable hammers while riding the Wave Swinger (you know, the one that has chairs and you swing and it’s pleasant for kids and their parents?). They got kicked off the ride.

We did a bit of beerbuzzed wandering through Playland while SA tried to pick a place to put down his money and try to win a fuzzy hat. Eventually we settled on a game where you point your gun at a target and shoot while a balloon inflates. The first balloon to pop is the winner and the person who shot that target gets a little stuffed unicorn or Care Bear. We didn’t realize until we’d given our money over that we had picked the game with The LAMEST prizes at the whole damn PNE. Luckily, we didn’t win.

Then it was time for FIRE IN THE NIGHT: A Pyrotechnic Rock Spectacular! Rumoured to be in its final year, (please?) the only difference between last and this year’s show was a distinct absence of volume this year. Also, I swear to Jebus that last year there was ‘Bat out of Hell’ but it didn’t show up last night. Ah well. Trooper, Bryan Adams, Queen and Bill Idol were all well-represented, as were random fireworks, balls of fire that rose above the treetops and terrible, terrible air guitar and repetitive pseudo-rock choreography which didn’t bother me as much as the “City Rhythms” probably because at least the music was real and also I was on my 4th $6 plastic cup of Pale Ale by then.

Eventually you just stop caring and give over your taste. The Soulsucking PNE does that to you.

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