Friday, June 24, 2005

Raindrops on Roses....

A Random List of Favorite Things:

1) Roy Jones Jr. Our 12 year old black cat. We call her Roy Jones because she has a lot of attitude and a vicious right hook.
2) The Weekly Dig. The only reason to get out of bed on Wednesdays.
3) Ming's Grocery Store on Washington St. This place is bigger than a Super Stop & Shop and their prices are unbelievable. There's even parking!
4) Lu's Sandwich Shop. Right near the corner of Knapp St. and Beach St. in Chinatown. $2.50 buys you an amazing Vietnamese sub on french bread.
5) The way the Boston Public Garden looks after a rainfall.
6) Crab Rangoon
7) The Zombie cocktail at the Kowloon.
8) Pointless Busywork. Just what you need for those days when you have to justify your paycheck but you are too hungover to do anything else.
9) Six Feet Under. Every week we camp out for an hour in front of the TV and watch the Fisher family implode in slow motion. I can't wait until the trading cards come out.
10) Red Bull. Good with cranberry juice and vodka, good at the end of a long day over ice, good any time you really want to end up grinding your teeth in front of your computer at 3am.
11) Pikmin. I first got to play this when I got a job playing Nintendo Gamecube games at a demo for $20 bucks an hour. You play the role of a spaceman who's crashed onto a planet that looks like a big garden. Little creatures called Pikmin grow in the ground under your ship and every morning you harvest them and lead them on a search for big bugs that you tell the pikmin to attack. The pikmin go after the bugs and if they kill it, it becomes little pellets that will grow more pikmin to help build a new ship. They look like skinnier Teletubbies with little daisies growing out of their heads. When the bugs attack them and kill them, little pikmin ghosts go floating up and you feel guilty. Donald Rumsfeld should be locked up in a room for a week with nothing to do except play Pikmin.
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Wednesday, June 22, 2005

I Am Not Alone

You can add Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes to the list of people that really don't matter.
Here's some news that does, however, affect the rest of us.
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Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Celebrities

Every Sunday afternoon I do my mom's grocery shopping and after finding every little thing on the list I end up at the check out and there they are: acres of magazine covers with names emblazoned across the front in candy pink and blue letters. Names like "Lindsay Lohan", "Britney Spears", "Paris Hilton" and "Jessica Simpson". It's always the same article though. Are they getting fat? Too thin? Are they dating? Engaged? Married Secretly? Pregnant? Divorcing?
It always surprises me how little I care. When has anyone ever lain awake at night wondering if Jessica and Nick Are Really Calling It Quits? Maybe Jessica, maybe Nick, nobody else. Think of all the trees and time we could save if all of these magazines just printed what people really want to see, Badly Dressed Celebrities or Celebrities Behaving Badly. Britney Spears could have been engaged, married, pregnant and divorced before I would really want to read anything about her, but there's something about Laura Linney in a really poorly thought-out ensemble that, for me, is compulsive viewing. Yes, there are two wars going on in Afghanistan and Iraq, the world is starting to feel bad for people in the Sudan, maybe Iran is getting a little Irate at all the drones we keep sending over, but look! Christian Slater just grabbed some woman's ass in a grocery store! It's SO INTERESTING! DETAILS AT ELEVEN!!
I have a secret fantasy. I am walking by the corner of Beacon and Park Streets one afternoon and I see a Fox News Team broadcasting on the sidewalk out in front of their studio there. I happen to have a bullhorn with me and just as they go live on the air, I raise the bullhorn and scream "Show some real F**KING news!" and they can't edit it out in time. It's not as cinematic as the guy in "Network" but you get the idea.
It's getting to the point where I really wonder if anyone cares anymore about watching the news since they just assume they can always find the "real news" on the internet. But people forget that there are a lot of people out there who don't log on and check out the BBC or Raw Story.com to get an alternative idea as to what "news" should consist of. I will never forget what a woman from Czechoslovakia told me about their news broadcasts during the late '80s and '90s. Everyone in her neighborhood refused to watch them. They would leave their houses and take a walk around the neighborhood. People I met in Vietnam had pretty much the same attitude. The relationship between big companies and politicians and the news media was a lovely little love-in every night and best just to ignore it.
So basically my point is, don't watch the nightly news. Go for a walk. Or, you can watch the new David Spade Celebrity Show instead.
Consider yourselves warned and informed.
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The Resume Dance, Part 2

I seem to remember at some point swearing to myself (and most likely, to other people out loud, possibly after a few beers)that I would never work in an office. Ever ever ever. Of course this was after a short (10 hour) day working outside on the Marblehead waterfront in June. The idea of sitting in the same place for 7 hours a day, every day seemed alien to me. This was also before I got tired of fighting production companies tooth and nail over issues like overtime and turnaround. Basically the whole rift between Production and Crew boils down to this: do you really want to be around a condor rigged and operated by some over-eager kid who is working for practically nothing and has been operating on less than 5 hours of sleep a night for the past two weeks?
I guess a lot of people don't mind things like that, but I do, so I don't miss that aspect of the business. In other ways, it wasn't that much different than working in an office anyway. Drive to work, drink coffee, do some stuff, eat lunch, find ways to stay out of trouble.
A few months after I officially turned in my Union card, I went to a Christmas party thrown by the main crew booking agent for the area. People kept asking me if I minded dropping out of the business and I said no. It's true. I like having to show up to work at a reasonable hour and at the same time every day. I like knowing that I can expect to go home at the same time every day. My desk is always in the same place. I never have to drive around in circles at 5am, cursing Mapquest, half-assed production generated directions or the Massachusetts roads.
But then again,
I grew up with a mother who worked at the same place as a secretary for 20 years. It made her miserable and stressed out. She worked alone in her office a lot of nights and weekends to get everything done. And recently, when I was talking to her about my current job, I let my salary slip out and she told me she was earning that when she retired. In one way it made me feel a little better, she managed to raise two kids alone on what I make now as a married adult. On the other hand, I know for a cold hard fact that in addition to death and taxes, inflation is the other constant in life. So what I make now is OK to live on, but we need to save serious $$$ if we are going to buy a house. We always rented.
So I'm always looking to earn more money. Which brings me to a Catch-22 that I'm sure a lot of people are living with: Your current job is OK. You can pay your bills, buy groceries and have enough left over to go to the movies. But it's not what you went to school for, it seems like everyone you know is making tons of money doing something else and you really don't like having to commute almost three hours every day. But you've heard about people getting fired because someone looked at their internet activity at work and saw they were looking for a job online. You clicked onto one of those MSN.com job advice articles and found out you were doing everything wrong. You might get a job interview eventually, but how will you handle being offered a new job without pissing off your old one? And here's one for the ladies, what do you do when you know that at your current job, you could never afford daycare, but you are trying to have children and job search at the same time? Who will hire you if they think you might drop out for maternity leave (assuming they cover it) nine months after you're hired?
Stay tuned!
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Wednesday, June 15, 2005

The Resume Dance Part 1

In the not to distant past, I found myself working as a temp at a local technical college. Needless to say, I was not making enough money so I started looking around for a second job. Somehow I ended up a restaurant in a local art museum, trying to convince the manager that I had what it takes to be a waitress in a high-end bistro. He asked what I had done recently that could be taken as restaurant experience and on the spot I concocted some BS about how working on a set is similar, remembering what the gaffer or DP wanted and getting it set up, rushing around on your feet for 12 hours straight, blah blah blah. I knew I was sunk when he drew a place setting on a napkin and asked me where the wine glass goes, the salad fork, etc...
Growing up, I used to wish that we ate with chopsticks so I would never have to worry about using the desert spoon when I should be using the soup spoon and so on. Then I met a Korean guy who told me that the higher up your fingers go on the chopsticks, the more well-bred people think you are. So no matter where you're from, table manners will trip you up in the end.
Basically the dilemma is this; What do you do when you have worked in an industry for more than five years and all of a sudden it disappears almost overnight?

In my late twenties, I got a job in a lighting equipment rental house. It was the only way I knew of to work in the industry and get paid while I learned the ropes. One thing led to another and before I knew it, I was working on a feature film being shot in Boston that had been written by a gay playwright about all the trials and tribulations of being handsome and successful and gay and falling in love with a nerdy guy who's really sweet. It paid $100 a week and most of my days on set were spent rigging lights around bored young male extras in their underwear. In retrospect, I probably got hired because most of the grips in town didn't want to work on "some fag movie". I learned a lot about filmmaking. I learned how to stay up for two days straight, I learned how to build out a grip truck. I learned that the South End is mainly inhabited by fiercely territorial well dressed men who love to decorate their condos by putting up mirrors EVERYWHERE. In case you have never worked in the film lighting business, just let me say that the mirror is your natural enemy.

Eventually I moved on to bigger and better things, such as BU student movies and the occasional Hollywood production that dared test the chilly New England waters. Over the course of a couple of years, I began to work with a consistent group of crew people who were all amazing at their jobs, fun to hang out with, and really good at banding together to fight production for things like overtime pay, and 10 hour turn around time.

The local Teamsters began to play nice again with Hollywood and the Mass Film Office was starting to pick up a lot more productions. Things were starting to pick up and several crew people I knew started to buy homes and have children. California and New York crews started to say that they liked working in New England, since we bent over backwards to be accommodating.

On September 11, 2001, at 8:30, I was on my way to pick up my friend Ian at his apartment. We were going to start working on a local short movie with some of our friends and we were headed to a cable tv studio in Roxbury. I called Ian when I was approaching his street and he sounded panicked. He told me to turn on my radio to a news station. A plane had just flown into one of the World Trade towers. I double parked and raced up to his apartment just in time to see the breaking story on CNN. Ian was freaking out because his girlfriend's brother worked in one of the buildings. Not knowing what else to do, we headed towards set. All around us, cars were driving erratically, at half pace, the drivers distracted by what they were hearing on the radio. When we got to the parking lot, people from the crew were frantically calling everyone they knew in New York to check on them, but couldn't get through. Then I remembered that our friend Dave, who had shot a music video in Waltham over the weekend with us, had mentioned that he was trying to get an earlier flight out of Boston to LA for that day. I called the director of the video, who Dave was staying with and she said he was OK, but severely shaken up. We managed to get through the day's shoot. It was very surreal. I remember rigging a 300w fresnel to the studio's grid and turning my head in time to catch the second tower's collapse. The TV studio was in a little strip mall that was populated by Jehovah's Witnesses, and kids skipping school. Every time I went to the grip truck for equipment I had to walk a gauntlet of old women asking me if I was ready for the rapture, and teenagers saying that it was about time someone told the government where to stick it. I felt somewhat in the middle; I felt like my life would never be the same again and I also felt angry that we had been so easily attacked. I had been through Logan many times and put my luggage on those same conveyor belts and watched as the screeners glanced up, maybe, and then went back to gossiping with their friends at the next station. I also knew, and the rest of the crew seemed to be thinking the same thing, it was one more nail in the coffin for the local film industry. If people didn't feel safe flying, then they would stay in Hollywood to make movies and not come anymore.

One of the area's best known producers was on one of the planes that hit the Trade Center. His death seemed to crush everyone's spirit for a while. No one knew what was going on, if any of the films that had scouted here would actually come. The Mass Film Office was dissolved over petty political grievances and still hasn't officially been reinstated. In the aftermath of the attacks a lot of industries that fed into the local film production scene were thrown into chaos and as a result, the jobs began to dry up.

I found myself walking through Boston with a cooked-up resume, trying to find work that I never pictured myself doing. At one point, I got a weekend temp job converting files for Harvard's Student Mental Health Center from "alpha" to "numeric". Everyone else on the job was in the same boat; their company had either collapsed or downsized and here they were on a Saturday afternoon, working for a high-strung sweaty man who barked orders like General Patton and gave long lectures on things like "self-initative" and "what things were like when I was your age"

Most temp jobs were like this; a few people I could talk to while we both toiled away at something no "permanent" employee in their right mind would agree to doing, a lot of dot.com refugees who complained about how now that they were laid-off they could only afford one ski weekend at Stowe last month, and people who obviously could not find permant positions anywhere because they were, to put it nicely, complete fuck-ups. After a while I started to freak out wondering which type of temp I was.

To top it all off, I was getting older and less interested in doing things like staying up until 4am on a weekend. My husband continued to work on films and several times we sat through a movie with him squinting and scratching his head and saying things like: "Damn! They cut that shot that we spent a week rigging!" or "I think that little white dot in the background is that condor I spent the night in last winter" Finally I had to admit to myself that I didn't want to run around set with muddy cables in my hands for the rest of my days. There would always be someone around to do that, but the thrill was gone for me. I realized that I liked my movie stars bigger than life, on the screen, not scowling at me for taking the last danish as craft services.
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Monday, June 13, 2005

Pride 05

There are a LOT of gay christians out there. (No pun intended)
The first year I saw Boston's annual Gay Pride Parade, it was all tan muscular men with perfect hair dressed up as either sailors or Uncle Sam. That was in 2002. The next year everyone was wearing rainbow colored signs that said things like "F**K Bush". Last year was all happily married couples. By this year, all the different issues seemed to cancel each other out until all that was left was a swarming, sweating mass of WASP people with nice smiles and rainbow tie-dyed shirts happily pushing rainbow-flag festooned strollers of adopted children who appeared to be either bewildered by all the attention or suffering from the onset of sunstroke.

There's always a photo-op everywhere you look and most people are really great about getting their picture taken. However,I wish I had brought a video camera to record priceless moments like the yuppie mom complaining to her friends; "Where are all the fun gays?" She screeched over the sound of the Ramrod's thudding bass-heavy mix. "This is so boring! It's all political stuff now!"

Therein lies the rub. At what point does one say "These people do not exist for my sole entertainment. They are here and queer and have just as much right to wear tan Dockers as anyone else."

Of course, if you really must dress up as an eight foot tall rainbow colored dildo to express yourself, then that is just fine by me too. And even though the Surgeon General has begun to express mild reservations about the health consequences of being so big that you might require your own zip code, I am glad to live in a part of the country where so many women feel that they are entitled to display such an achievement by wearing nothing but a pair of army shorts.

Anyway, if you want to check out some pictures, click here.
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Saturday, June 11, 2005

Trolling, Trolling, Trolling

Link list for June 10, 2005

Boohbah!

Help Organization for new immigrants

My Favorite Musician site

The Simpson's Official Site
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Thursday, June 09, 2005

A Converted New-Englander's Promise

I, Jennifer A. Mears do solemnly swear to never bitch about how cold it is in New England again. I fully understand that by doing so, I will almost certainly be punished with an extended heat wave punctuated by sudden severe thundershowers. Furthermore, I am in full cognizance of the permanent existence of an inverse ratio of functioning air conditioning on all forms of public transportation to the relative heat/humidity index.
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Monday, June 06, 2005

Very Early Monday Morning

Red Sox 6 Angels 3!

I should have stayed in today and worked on a bunch of stuff, but had a chance to check out the game from the Green Monster. It's a little late to be writing very coherently, but I just wanted to check in. I did get one thing done and you can check it out on my photography site once it's de-bugged.
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Friday, June 03, 2005

The Nesting Instinct

I wish I was one of those people that you read about in Good Housekeeping that writes in their housekeeping tips: "I clean the kitchen on Monday night while the kids are watching the Biography Channel. It's a great time to sort my recyclables!" After almost three years of "typical" 9-5 life, I now know that these kinds of hints are dreamed up by an assistant editor who lives in a luxurious Manhattan broom closet on a trust fund. Personally, just between you and me, I clean when things are dirty. Luckily I am not one of those people who needs heavy medication to stop hallucinating dirt in the corners, but I try my best to keep the Board of Health off my doorstep.

At any rate, here is my housekeeping advice; which is based on several factors.
  • I was raised in a home where no one threw ANYTHING away.
  • My husband saves every lottery ticket and concert stub and lovingly cherishes them by keeping them in a special place, namely EVERYWHERE I LOOK.
  • My mother had at some point picked up Peg Bracken's "I Hate To Housekeep" book and it was a welcome break from Readers' Digest.
  • I'm not Snow White, but I have had the dubious pleasure of having a lot of male roommates.
  • One of my favorite things to read when I'm depressed is "The Tingle" from "The Philosophy of Andy Warhol". (highly recommended!)

How To Keep The Kitchen Clean:

Keep whatever you are going to use in a particular area at arm's reach. Knives next to the cutting board, cooking utensils next to the stove. Most important, keep potholders in a very obvious and reachable place for those times when you remember that you put a pot of sauce on medium heat about 2 hours ago.

If you use it, clean it! Rinse out pots as soon as you are done cooking, plates as soon as you are done eating and glasses as soon as you are done drinking.

When you are cooking, fix yourself a drink and it won't feel like a chore.

Keep a radio in the kitchen, or the tv. That way you don't feel like you are being punished when you are in there.

If you have a lot of friends over and they like to drink beer, or if you like to drink a lot of beer by yourself, put a small trash bin next to the sink and keep it lined with a grocery bag. That way people know where empties go. It doesn't guarantee they will actually put them there, but if they are as anal as you are, they will be comforted knowing that that's where they go.

Mail and Papers:

Put an in-box next to whatever door you bring in the mail. Put a letter-opener next to it, and a trash can. When you bring the mail in, either go through it right there and dump whatever you don't want, or keep the mail in one place so when you have a chance you can go through it.

The way I go through my stuff that accumulates is this. I put it in a big pile and go through it. If it's something that I need to pay, it goes in one pile. If it's something I should read, another pile. If it's neither, then I consider if it would be important if I was to apply for a loan. If it isn't relevant, then I toss it.

The Bathroom:

I get a plastic crate for my girl stuff. The husband gets one for his guy stuff.

Somewhere I bought this little suction cup that attaches to the bathroom mirror and holds a razor. I recommend suction cups for mirrors and tubs because you can take them when you move.

Always keep a magazine rack next to the toilet. But that's it. If I go to someone's house and they have "Finnegan's Wake" in the john, then I start to wonder about their diet. Although a friend of mine used to have an old typewriter set up in his bathroom and I thought that was a pretty cool idea.

The Bedroom:

Keep laundry out of sight. Of course for me, out of sight means out of mind, but I try. Also, the bedroom is for the bed, which is for sleeping. I used to keep a lot of stuff around the bed, like bills I had to go through and books I was trying to read, but doing stuff like that sitting in bed makes me feel like the older Edie Beale in "Grey Gardens"

Put your laundry away as soon as you bring it upstairs. This is why it's good to have a radio in the bedroom too.

In General:

2 things that instantly make your place seem more welcoming: 1) Always have music on, unless there is something on television actually worth watching. 2) Buy a lot of plants.

If you feel the urge to clean coming on and there's no stopping it, always put any clutter generated by your S. O. in a safe place and then tell them where it is. Do not attempt to sort it yourself. One person's clutter is another's carefully filed pile.


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Wednesday, June 01, 2005

Strangecreek 2005

June 1, 2005

I spent the weekend with my husband Chris and our friends TJ & Christine and their 2 kids at the Strange Creek Festival. If anyone out there has ever been to Bread & Puppet or Gathering of the Vibes, it's basically the same thing but much, much smaller.

After two & 1/2 hours of driving to western ma and watching cars, concrete and highways turn into cows, grassy hills and dirt roads, we arrived at the gate. Unloaded some stuff and went across a couple of rows of cars to the sounds of a reggae band. There was a small crowd of tie dyed hippies and little kids bouncing in front of the stage. A couple of college kids were throwing frisbees around. We set up our chairs, broke out some snacks for the kids and some beers for us, and laid back for two solid days of music.

After watching the band for about half an hour, I asked Christine where the main stage was. "This is the main stage"

Heaven.
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