Monday, January 29

good for a quick laugh

yes, of course i have to have a follow-up post, after my long, academic article on food, with something frivilous and silly. i hate kevin federline, & this video/commercial is hilarious.

>> kfed's insurance commercial (posted on the superficial)

unhappy meals

robotnik sent me a great article to read today, while i was at home, fighting off a nasty cold. i know i post a lot of random crap on this blog (much of which is really just that - crap)... but, you will have to trust me when i say this: if you never click on another link that i post here, ever again, click on this one.

it's an article from the nytimes' sunday magazine. i would apologize that it's long (12 pages) but every page is worth reading and goes over another new and interesting point. the article is just spot-on about a lot of food/eating related concepts i've been thinking about, over the last 3 and a half years since moving away from the east coast and being exposed to the delightful world of california cuisine.

in a slight nutshell, he's talking about how the united states has fostered a collective thinking around food that is detrimental to our health/bodies and culture. but that's glossing it over - and not really what it's about. you just need to read it yourself.

>> unhappy meals by michael pollan

something i love about california is how so many people are obsessed with eating organic, locally grown, and seasonal foods. it makes so much sense to me that we as humans should only be eating things grown near where we live, in the seasons they're meant to be harvested. our bodies and our food would thus go through similar environmental and seasonal changes, adapting to our environment in ways that can help us stay healthier, stronger, and better suited to the season/location at hand.

but, more importantly, it makes sense to me that we should be eating food which hasn't spent intangible amounts of time in factories, machines, boxes, or trucks. it scares me that i don't know where some of the foods i eat are from - where were they a week ago? who/what have they touched? what is in them?

and, i tend to be the worst culprit when it comes to eating out - especially since up until recently, i spent most of my evenings alone. after a long and late day at work, i would arrive to an empty apartment at 8 pm, starving and tired. thus take-out meals become my savior in the immediate. but they are terrible for me in the long term. no wonder i drop weight when i go home during the holidays - my mom cooks healthy food, and well-balanced meals for dinner every night. the holiday cookies have no chance around my waistline, compared to the arrays of veggies, lean meats, and other delights that she throws at us.

i can only justify it (which i shouldn't try to be doing, but i will) by saying that at least i get take-out from restaurants that cook real food from local farms. i don't eat fast food. i'd rather just not eat than eat fast food. thank goodness i am blessed to be in a town with an over-abundance of socially and environmentally conscious restaurants...

but, fast food brings me back to this article... the brief yet crystal clear image the author paints about fast food being "pre-digested" is enough to make me never want to touch it again. why do we put that crap in our bodies?

anyways, the article is hardly about fast food - so don't think it's just another voice bemoaning that industry. instead, it's this guy's take on how we've over-scienced the food we eat. and the article is chock full of poignant and interesting tidbits about how complex and interconnected our body-food relationship is.

i think it's super important to think about this kind of stuff. so, i hope you do too.

Friday, January 19

banana over texas

how can you not love a project titled "geostationary banana over texas" ???

man i can't wait for this to launch. might be worth a trip to austin to see it.

>> geostationary banana over texas

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Thursday, January 18

venu's instant love

konda, thank you. you have enlightened my blog-reading days after just a mere 12 hours since sharing mine with you...

readers: i have a new blog for you, courtesy of venu the movie. this one is called the "N Judah Chronicles" and is all about the MUNI subway line that i love to hate and hate to love.

the n-judah is my san fran backbone that definitely has its share of spasms and spinal issues... slipped disks... herniated disks... general paralysis. but when it runs, it purrs. oh the n-judah.

looks like there aren't a ton of posts on here yet, but i'm sure that this will shape up to be a true and colorfully accurate testament to the n-j.

>> n judah chronicles

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splintered

in the past few weeks i have gotten FOUR yes FOUR microscopic splinters in my hand. all at different times, from different (mysterious) objects. and damn. they hurt.

they are just big enough that i can see them against the light, but small enough that as soon as i put some tweezers to my hand to yank it out, it breaks off. then it's pain for a few days, before finally going away.

why the splinter-magneticism? what shifted in the cosmos to make me splinter queen?

and can someone please get the one from this morning out of my freakin' palm?

thanks.
appreciated.

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Thursday, January 11

lickity stamp

sweet & sour flavor? scratch & sniff? stamps? cool!

>> chinese new year stamps

hiddy-ho good neighbors

gruss dich!

man it's been a long time since i blogged. i blame the holidays and the coma that it seems to put me in for the few weeks following... but it's a new year and time to start fresh! i was so over 2006 when it finally walked out the door. i have a good feeling about 2007. so good, in fact, that i might change the colors of this blog to reflect that...

(though it still needs to look "corporate" enough that my bro won't get in trouble for reading it at work. hmm. maybe i won't change it. we'll see.)

conor and i went to boston for the holidays to spend time with his family. it's really interesting doing the "holiday thing" with a family other than your own... it's kind of like changing channels on a TV and going from the cosby show christmas special to the seinfeld christmas special.

no... that's not a good analogy - his family really isn't seinfeld. maybe one of the more modern family-shows where there are step parents and lots of people in and out all the time? and my family definitely isn't the cosby show -- we're much too crazy. but you get what i'm trying to say, right? the basics were all the same, but the place, and the characters were not. and thus the experience was not. but that's not necessarily a bad thing. it's just a different thing. and it will take some time before it feels like a natural thing, for either of us.

at any rate, it was a very good trip! his parents are both extremely generous people and they were clearly happy to have their son home again. and, i got to see my sisters at the start and end of the trip, and my cousin in the middle -- which lended just enough familiarity to my christmas experience so as not to totally overwhelm me.

plus it finally snowed on us the last day in town (yay!).

we also got to see a lot of our old friends from college... including my good pal nicky who i haven't seen in like 3 years. in fact, all "my girls" were together again (save for one), if only briefly.

here we are, dining on lunch:

da girls

i think that for conor and i both, being in boston together made our past and current lives feel more intertwined, which will only help the strength of our life together, as a pair, moving forward.

we clearly both have very different memories and experiences from boston though, and i don't know if it's the best place for us in the long run to settle down anymore... the more we think about it, the less sure we are. i think we need to explore some new towns. we've both changed a lot, and it might be unfortunate to pigeonhole ourselves by returning to a place (physically and mentally) that neither of us are in, anymore.

not to mention that we love trying new places. new foods. new terrains.

so, time to start doing some serious brainstorming, because we don't want to stay in SF for too much longer! oregon, perhaps? seattle? colorado? chicago? hmm. well, i guess that's a question i'll leave for 2008...

time to go pick out some colors for this blog.

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Thursday, January 4

see it to believe it

this is a great little mash-up of craigslist - go visual! (it shows you all the posts by images, which can help eliminate the need to click on stuff):

>> http://sfbay.listpic.com/

(works for other cities, too)