Saturday, June 28, 2008

King Corn

Well, last night David and I watched King Corn which arrived a few days ago from Netflix, but I hadn't felt like watching movies for a while. It's good, it's really good and I think everyone who buys and eats American food should watch it.It is a documentary that starts out with two friends who just graduated college and are on a quest to grow one acre of corn in Iowa, the place where pretty much all the corn that America consumes comes from. No, this is not a boring movie, I promise. They explain the reason they are on this journey to learn about corn is to look into why people in our generation are the first with a shorter life expectancy than our parents, due to the way we eat.

The film explains, from an amazingly objective, non-judgemental tone, how in our great grandparents time, farms were paid by the government to not overproduce crops – they were rewarded for growing less. Then, at a great turning point, this reversed, and the goverment began to reward the farmers for overproduction of corn. As a result, lots of small farms went under to the big corporations, who now produce only yellow corn intead of the hundreds of other more nutritional varieties that used to be grown, and the vast surplus of product created an industry for corn syrup, which now is in just about every packaged food product that exists across the country. Plus, the corn they are growing is a very low grade quality which the farmers themselves can't even eat because it tastes so bad before it's treated.

What I didn't realize either, is that another huge portion of this overproduced corn has replaced grass as food for the cattle that gets slaughtered for us to eat. So whenever you buy meat at the grocery store, or a hamburger just about anywhere, you're eating corn-fed beef. Cows aren't supposed to eat only grain, thus they get sick and have to be slaughtered quickly because they simply couldn't live that long on a grain diet. THUS we are eating this incredibly low quality of beef, more fat than ever before, becasue the cattle aren't walking around to graze.

So basically, we've traded in quality, nutritional food for cheaper food filled with empty calories that does not nourish the body. When we spend less of our time and income on our food we have more time and money for other things which sounds good, but when you look at the real price you're paying (your health and lifespan) it's scary. Diabetes is at an all time high, as well as obesity, and I don't ever think I made the connection to corn syrup before. It's a facinating history, one that I didn't know about America's farms. The whole movie deals with this heavy subject, but they do it with a lot of love and humor, which makes it easier to absorb.

Anyway, I had corn nightmares last night about the poor cows with stomachs full of chopped corn stalks and chaff, and I feel guilty about how much I like to eat meat. It's really bad for the environment because of how wasteful it is of resources to feed and water cattle; to ship them all over the country takes a lot of fuel and creates tons of pollution, plus the waste created by the slaughter houses is equal to that of entire cities of people. It's hard to justify it all for a yummy hamburger, so why is it so unbearable to think of giving that up?

Friday, June 27, 2008

I finished reading Bee Season last night even though I had a monster headache that had persisted all day long. It was really good, I didn't think I'd enjoy it as much as I did for whatever reason, I didn't think I'd care that much about a story about spelling bees. It was so much more than that though, it was about a girl and her father using Jewish mysticism practices of chanting and permutating letters to try to see the face of god. All the family members are sad and facinating, and it's about closness, meditation, longing, acceptance.

My sister Laurel is arriving in LA this Sunday to spend a week with me - she's on a cruise to Mexico this week, and the boat drops her off in Long Beach. It should be really fun, but I can't belive this summer is flying by so quickly. I feel like August is rushing up on me.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Bookish

I love to spend my free time reading, and lately I've been diving into too many books at once. I seem to find myself switching of between them unable to make it through just one at a time.

Books I am halfway through reading:




They're all great, but bee season is most interesting to m me I think - it's about spelling bees, families, and Jewish mysticism. It's not at all what I expected and I love it.

Books on my nightstand to read next:





I have lots of reading time hopefully coming in August once we're on vacation so I can finally dig into some of these.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Nudi-branchie



One of my little nudibranch books was bought on Etsy & is shipping out to Las Vegas today! It's nice that they're getting ordered lately, it's good to know nudibranch lovers are out there. I will write a nudibranch poem now.

Oh tiny slug of the sea
you are fat and ruffled and wee
all colors all shapes but one size are ye,
and that size is bitty, delightful to me.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Antique Market + Fittings



Today Christine tooke me to the Long Beach antique flea market. I forgot to pull out my camera, so I borrowed some pics from flickr that that remind me of our day. Bangles by Lorimarsha and Summer Purses by Graygoosie. I touched and ooed and ahhed and considered many adorable finds to take home, but was proud of my restraint at only two purchases. One, a couple of antique hankies and a secret wedding present for David Michael, to be given at our rehersal dinner :)

My parents visit on Friday-Saturday was really nice. We took them out for dinner at Tandoor-a-India in Playa del Rey, and they loved it. I know Indian food can be intimidating if you've never had it before, and it's flavor really differs each place it's prepaired, but once you taste some really good dishes, you're hooked forever. On Saturday we all went to Men's Wearhouse so the guys could get fitted for their tuxes, and that was also a good time. I got the bee ties back out and we found vests that went ok with them. It made me excited to be with everyone, and look forward even more to celebrating with them!



Thursday, June 12, 2008


My folks are coming to LA this weekend cause we are all going to the tux store. I'm excited to see them, and just in time for father's day! Which means I have to kick into high gear tonight and tidy this apartment. Look what I want that I found on Etsy, I put it on our registry and it's one of my favorite etsy finds! Pufferfish toilet decal from Vital's shop! He kind of looks like ET...

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Funkdified

I'm in a funk.
Not a funky good time disco funk, I just feel so tired and lazy. I want to clean the house, I want to go to the gym, I want to go to the grociery store and buy grocieries and make good fresh food, but instead I come home and sit. What's the deal, I just feel like I need to pause. Maybe this just means i am so ready for a vacation, a change of pace, and it's in the future, I just have to funk through 2 more months. I wish a magic genie would swoop through my apartment and clean and tidy all this mess I've let slwoly creep up, I guess that genie will have to be me. I need to stay off the internet, I think it's sucking my will to live with it's endless web pages of interest to look at and swallow up the hours.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Black Orpheus


Oh Man, get on your netflix and rent Black Orpheus! This movie is amazing. It's the greek tradgedy of Orpheus and Eurydice but set in modern Brazil during Carnival! There is tons o music and dancing like you've never seen and the colors and landscapes are gorgeous. I love the ending too, and man, those Brazilian kids can dance like crazy, I'll never be as good as that. Plus you get to see a Eurydice's cousin hit her boyfriend in the face with a giant slice of watermelon. It is a tragedy in the end, but the movie is full of love and laughter and color and some crazy drum beats.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

David left for Arizona on Thursday night for a golfing trip, and he's coming back sometime today or tonight. While he's been gone, I remember what it's like to live on my own. Of course I miss him, but it is sort of nice to have some alone time and some emptiness in the place. Hazel came over Friday night and we ate cous cous squash and artichokes (non-David food) and watched Gangs of New York. She's reading the book it was based on and she filled me in with all this extra information about the history of those times, and it was a fun night. Yesterday I made another skirt, out of the same pink flowery print I made my apron with, and I love it. Tiny came over and we went to go see Sex and the City movie, and we were so happy. It was like a big piece of delicious cake. We hung out and got some Del Taco like old times, and stayed up til around midnight, we never got tired. I stayed up even later, reading Phoeobe Gloekner's Diary of a Teenage Girl. Today I'm planning on watching Barry Lyndon and cleaning up the house, maybe doing some more sewing. The sun is out and it's gorgeous outside, so maybe I'll venture out around lunchtime to enjoy it. It's been a long, calm weekend, and I am looking forward to next weekend, when we are going to the Tux store so Run DMC can pick out his wedding outfit.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Love to Love You, Post Cards


I made this completely disco aswesome Donna Summer book/album a while back and had it listed in my Etsy shop. Then the other night, David brought me home some cool new artsy postcards for my postcard collection, and I decided the time had come. I dug the giant stack of them out of a drawer and began to sort and organize them, and double stick taped them into the Donna album. I love it! They look even lovlier on the white pages. I've been saving them for a while, from art shows and the mail and from friends who bring them from vacations, and i want to collect more to keep arranging in my book.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

bumble bumble

BEE PINATA! Hoo-rae!

Peony


Yesterday afternoon as I walked into Trader Joes to pick up a few groceries, I spotted this cart of huge, bountiful pink peonies. I bought two bunches and took them home and put them on my coffee table and they brighten up the whole living room. I forget how worth it it can be to splurge a little money on fresh flowers and how much I enjoy them. On the trip home, one of the blooms broke off and I cut it and put it in my creamer in the kitchen window to cheer that room up while I cook and do dishes. It really makes me happy :)

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Beruit

Friday night after work, I got to go with Lindsay to see Beirut at the Wiltern. Oh man, I had such a great time. I love Beruit, I've got 2 of their albums on my itunes and I listen all the time on repeat at work and home. Their music makes you feel so incredibly alive and cinematic. It's very lush and celebratory, I've been thinking about using a couple songs in the wedding and it made me want to do so even more seeing them live. Tamborines, accordions, trumpets, french horns, mandolins, violins, tubas all singing together painting some scene that takes you to old world italy for some gypsy wedding parade. My heart swelled up at the big gorgeous sound, in that lovely art deco theater, and was reminded yet again why I love living in this city, because I get to see bands like this, art and culture and variety. I posted a couple videos below, the first one is so beautiful, I love it when he's playing his trumpet to the sea, and the second is cool because they are just playing in a pool hall live. Plus, Zach Condon is simply amazing because he's a musical genius. He started performing at 15 and he's only 22 now. How amazing to be so young and to have so much beauty pouring out of you.