Tuesday, August 9
Happy Birthday to My Big Sis, Kathleen
Monday, August 8
New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #298
Sunday, August 7
Seeing Silence! The Musical-NYC Wrap-Up
and ate at The Smith restaurant and saw the late show of Silence! The
Musical.
The Smith is a very crowded and very noisy trendy restaurant filled
with young urban professionals. I am sure I was the oldest person in
the place. It also has very good food. We started with local
tomatoes with pesto salad. I had grilled shrimp and Shane had a NY
Strip steak. Of course we also split a bottle of wine. Everything
was delicious. I would highly recommend the place.
After dinner, we went to the 10:30 show is Silence!, which is a
musical parody of the film, Silence of the Lambs. It was hilarious.
It was a fraction of the price of seeing the Book of Mormon and we
laughed much more at this. The songs weren't great, but the show was
funny. And we somehow ended up with front row seats. We had a great
evening.
Seeing the Book of Mormon Musical
tickets weeks ago, before it won 9 Tony Awards, including Best
Musical. It was the show we were most looking forward to seeing.
There was high hopes that it was going to be funny and hugely
entertaining. There was a lot of hype around this show.
As often happens when there is a lot of hype, the actual show does not
live up to the hoopla. Both Shane and I were very disappointed. It
wasn't terrible, but it also wasn't great. It was just OK. The humor
was very juvenile. Very. (I would have loved this when I was 14.)
The music was pretty bad too. The only memorable song was "I
Believe," which was featured on the Tony Awards broadcast.
That being said, the rest of the audience seemed to love this show.
Maybe it was just us being tired or our expectations being too high,
but we both remember Spamalot as being much funnier with better music.
Saturday, August 6
Happy 100th Birthday Lucy!
Lucille Ball was born August 6, 1911 in Jamestown, New York. The clip above is just one example of her genius. It is an edited down version of the classic Vitameatavegamin Commercial episode. Though Lucy died in 1989, she will live forever. Sorry for the poor video quality.
Day 2 In New York City--Anything Goes!
Last night, we went to see Sutton Foster and Joel Grey in Anything Goes. While Shane loved Jersey Boys and me not so much, this show had us reversing our roles. I loved this show and Shane found it old-fashioned and corny. Of course, it was very old-fashioned and very corny--the jokes were as hokey as anything you'll see anywhere--but I sat through the whole thing with a smile on my face. It reminded me of the old Carol Burnett Show--I was entertained. This was a Broadway musical.
Sutton Foster is amazing. She lights up the stage. Even Shane admitted that though he didn't like the show, she was by far the best thing about it. She deserved her Tony award for it. You just can't take your eyes off of her. Joel Grey on the other hand was a bit over-the-top. We were very disappointed that Jessica Walters (Arrested Development) was not in the show last night. We were looking forward to seeing her. The male lead was also played by an understudy, but he was very good.
Before the show, we went to dinner to a very good Italian restaurant on the Upper East Side near where we are staying, Bella Blu. We split a bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon, 2004 Vita Luce Cellars, which was very good. I had the salmon and Shane had the Lobster spaghetti. The only bad thing was that they sit you on top of each other, and we were between an older couple and a younger couple with two small children. The food was very good though.
After the Anything Goes, we went to a piano bar called Don't Tell Mama. They have a main room (for straight tourists from Ohio) and a much smaller back room where they do only show tunes and make fun of the other room. Guess where we went. We had a great time. The highlight was when the whole audience (about 15 people), including us, joined in on the first act finale of Les Miserables--"One Day More."
Today, we're going to see the hottest show on Broadway, The Book of Mormon, and we also have tickets to Silence, the Musical, which is off-Broadway, but highly recommended parody of the film, Silence of the Lambs. It should be a fun day.
Friday, August 5
Now In New York City, Saw Jersey Boys
After we got settled, we took a subway downtown and got tickets to Jersey Boys at TKTS, the half-price ticket booth in Times Square. We grabbed a slice of pizza before the show, ate it, and went to our next-to-last row balcony seat.
Shane loved the show, but it was not my favorite. It wasn't really a musical as much as monologues of the band members telling the story of the Four Seasons as they re-enacted the songs. It was fun to hear the songs, but the story wasn't that interesting to me. I did buy a piece of cheesecake on the way home last night, which was awesome.
This morning I had to move the car. We found an amazing parking spot on the street we are staying when we got here yesterday, but the street sweeper was coming between 9 and 10:30. So I moved the car to a garage and then I went for a run in Central Park. On the way back from my run, I saw the sweeper come and how everyone else waited in their cars and pulled out and rotated around so they wouldn't lose their space. Live and learn.
Thursday, August 4
Selling Our Land In Maine-Anyone Interested?
Wednesday, August 3
Tuesday, August 2
Monday, August 1
Maine Day 3-Fog and Lasagna Again
The fog rolled in today, so the islands off of the Maine coast disappeared into the mist. We didn't let that stop us from having a great day. We had a lazy morning, but finally got up and going and went out for lunch to the Bagaduce Lunch. It is a roadside grill on the Bagaduce River. We split a very greasy order of fried shrimp, french fries, and onion rings. So much for lowering my cholesterol. We then went into Blue Hill and went to some galleries (see below).
Afterward, we came back to the house and relaxed. I made a batch of chocolate chip cookies and then heated up the lasagna I made Saturday night for a third night in a row. We are loving eating out on the back deck, drinking our wine, and enjoying the view. Even tonight, though there is no sunset visible, it is cool and comfortable--so much better than the oppressive heat in DC. Yes! It is August and we are wearing sweatshirts. How cool is that?
Maine Day 3--Galleries In Blue Hill
"Black Dog" by Michele Connolly at the Leighton Gallery |
A painting by William Irvine, also at the Leighton |
"Purple Iris" by Don Bishop at the Blue Hill Bay Gallery. I admired this one for several years, but they were packing it up while we were there, as it had just sold. |
"Churning Cove" by Mark Haltof at the Blue Hill Bay Gallery |
"Thayendanagea" is a bronze sculpture by Joseph Brant at the Jud Hartmann Gallery |
Sunday, July 31
Day 2 In Maine--Boating to Castine
Wine at sunset looking at the view from our rental on Saturday night. |
After sunset on Saturday. After dark, the stars were amazing. |
Our friend, Christina, and her husband took us out on their boat today. |
Pumpkin Island Lighthouse |
Christina is served some champagne on our cruise to Castine. |
Christina and Shane share a moment. |
We arrive at Castine on the Hum Diddy for lunch. |
Saturday, July 30
Finally Arrived in Maine! Hiking the Shore
The bridge to Bucksport, ME. |
The house we're renting was HOT when we got to it. It was all closed up, and though the temperature was only about 82 degrees outside, inside it had to be in the 90s. There is no AC, so we turned on the fans and opened the windows.
After we unpacked, we decided it would be cooler to hike down by the rocky shore. The views from the back of the house and down by the water are amazing. Below are some shots we took, including one of a starfish along the shore.
We're going to have a lasagna and some wine for dinner and enjoy the evening cool off. It is supposed to get down in the 50s tonight.
Friday, July 29
Our Maine/NYC Vacation Begins!
Isle, Maine, tomorrow.
While the temperature in DC today hit 104 (actual--not the heat index), we are expecting it to be in the high 70s in Maine. We can't wait.
We will be going to New York City on Thursday until Sunday. We have tickets to see the Broadway show, The Book of Mormon, on Satuday. We will be seeing other shows too. Keep posted.
Thursday, July 28
Thursday Night Cocktails with My Now Legal Niece
Shane and I took my niece, Nikki, out to Wisdom for a few cocktails. She just turned 21 this month and she likes the fancy mixed drinks. I used to change her diapers!
Wednesday, July 27
Music to Run By: Let the River Run
I am still on track with my training for the Philadelphia Marathon. I ran 5 miles on the treadmill at the gym today in 42:30. My knee is feeling a bit better. I think the roller exercise I posted about earlier is helping. This song came on my iPod Shuffle today and help me get through to mile 5.
Tuesday, July 26
Disgusted by GOP Debt Ceiling Political A-Holes
Monday, July 25
New Yorker Caption Contest #296
Sunday, July 24
Enough with the Heat Already
Like much of the country, it is hot as hell in DC. With actual temperatures in the triple digits and heat indexes just plain outrageous, I've had enough of the hot.
Our poor air conditioner is running constantly. Earlier in the summer, I had someone come check out the AC unit and he added freon. But since then, the air is actually warmer than when the freon was low. He said that the too cold air would have caused the unit to freeze up eventually. Though the proper amount of freon makes the air the proper temperature, the colder air made the house colder. However, I want the unit to continue to work too.
We have a blanket duct taped over the windows of our back door to prevent the sun from making the house too hot. I'm strongly thinking about putting canvas over the skylight to also block the sun from beaming in. We have ceiling fans going in the bedrooms and a oscillating fan going downstairs. I don't know how people ever lived before electricity or AC. I remember not having AC as a kid. As I recall, I think we spent most of our time outside under a shade tree.
I've heard that more people die from extreme heat than die from tornadoes, hurricanes, the cold, and other such natural disasters combined. With climate change, it seems things are just going to get worse in the future. Lucky for us we're going to Maine next week where the average highs for the days are projected to be in the high 70s. Sounds like heaven! Except, if it does get hot up there (and it was in the 90s recently), there is no AC in the house we're renting.
Saturday, July 23
Cake Decorating Boo Boo from Fail Blog
This one made me laugh. Visit failblog.org by clicking the link here or going to the link on my Blog List in the sidebar.
Friday, July 22
Goodbye Old Kitchen, Hello Stainless Steel
Here's the old stuff. |
Here's the new appliances. |
Thursday, July 21
Started Training to Run the Philadelphia Marathon
I've already fallen short of the schedule, but I'm blaming that on my knee problems and going to New York yesterday. I was supposed to run 5 miles yesterday, but did do 4 miles today.
Also, I bought a foam roller and have been doing my knee exercises (see Monday's posting). I think it is helping; that along with the new shoes.
Anyway, I'm going to try to keep on schedule better. Hopefully, the result will be a sub-4 hour marathon. My ultimate goal is to qualify for Boston, but since they have now made the requirements more stringent, I have to run a qualifying race in under 3 hours, 30 minutes. That seems hard to imagine. I can only try. Look for me with my blue sponge.
Wednesday, July 20
Went to New York City and Saw Hair
My Hair Playbill and flower handed out during the show. |
While watching this show, never have I felt more like an old fuddy duddy. I have to say I'm not a big fan of musicals that insist on trying to get you to clap along. I don't want to participate. I want to watch.
Yea... There was nudity. I was told you really didn't see anything because of how it was lit, but that is not true. The lighting was dim, but I was 10th row center and I could see plenty. I didn't really understand why they all got naked. There didn't seem any reason for it as part of the story. I guess it was just one of those hippy things they do. Another interesting side note, the theater was full of very old people and lots of little kids--I saw some under 10. Why wasn't my mom that cool?
Overall, I would say the show was so so. Some of the songs were good, but it was too much of a lot of so so songs. The end was very affective, but there is not much of a story. It definately would have been better if I had a few drinks in me.
Tuesday, July 19
New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #295
Monday, July 18
Trying to Fix My Runner's Knee
I was hoping to start training for a marathon in the fall, but this has put a big crimp in those plans. I went to a local running store today at lunch and the sales guy is a running coach at a local university. I admitted it has been a couple years since I've bought new running shoes. He said you should replace them ever 400-500 miles. I know I ran more than 1,000 miles just last year. I did buy a new pair of shoes--Asics GT-2160s ($100), which he said will help with my stability. He had me run on a treadmill so he could evaluate what I needed.
He also explained the importance of strengthening my core and loosening my hips to improve my knee problem. I found the video below to be very helpful and it echos a lot of what the sales guy said. Humping the foam noodle may look a little strange at the gym though. The sales guy also suggested icing the knee a couple times a day. I'm going to give it a shot and hope I can keep on running.
Sunday, July 17
An HDL Miracle or Medical Mistake?
Back in March, I had my cholesterol checked and found out my "good cholesterol," the HDL, had dropped from a low average of 43 to only 29, which is below the safe range. My ratio of good cholesterol to bad went from a barely good 5.1 to a not so good 7. As a result, I made a change in my diet to include salmon at least three times a week, oatmeal for breakfast with flaxseed added, and lots more nuts.
Recently, I purchased private life insurance that required a medical exam, and today I received the results of that exam. It has been only a little more than 4 months since my last test and according to the new results my HDL is up--way up. It is now 52 (normal range is 35-59) and the ratio is down to 3.9 (the lower the better). How can that be? Can that be right? While my total cholesterol is 205, I can't tell you how good I feel about the surge in my HDL. I hope it's not a mistake.
Saturday, July 16
Blue Sponge Movie Review: Midnight in Paris
I was a little wary about this film when I read in the review it involved time travel. I've never been a big fan of time travel as a plot element. I thought it might be interesting to see how Woody would do such a thing.
The story is of a young American couple traveling to Paris--Gil (Owen Wilson) and his fiance, Inez (Rachel McAdams). He is a screenwriter that loves Paris and wants to move there to work on his novel. Inez doesn't see the allure of Paris, and wants Gil to go back to Hollywood and make lots of money. She meets up with an old boyfriend and Gil wonders the streets until an old car drives by at midnight each night and takes him back to the 1920s where he meets up with F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Cole Porter, and a host of other geniuses. Gertrude Stein (Kathy Bates) offers to read Gil's book and he falls for Pablo Picasso's girlfriend.
I have to say that I was not as taken with this film as the critics. I thought it was kind of boring. The best part of the film was seeing the scenes of Paris. It is quite a love letter to the city. It made me want to be there, but I wished I didn't have to watch the dull characters populating the film. The movie had very little humor. Like many Allen films, it was quite talky, but this one was talky in an irritating way. I guess you can tell it was not one of my favorites.