Monthly Archives: October 2007

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Princesses on Ice–or, Why Charlottesville Is Not Like Las Vegas

Has anyone else in Charlottesville seen the billboard truck that has been driving up and down the 250 bypass advertising Disney Classics: Princesses on Ice? I suppose the show needs an ad-mobile when someone on the Disney team is writing copy this seductive:

For the first time ever, Disney On Ice combines exceptional moments from Disney’s Cinderella, Aladdin, The Little Mermaid, Sleeping Beauty, Beauty and the Beast, Mulan and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in one captivating production filled with amazement and wonder. Dreamers of all ages will take flight on a heart-warming tale filled with sizzling special effects, dazzling set designs and elegant artistry on ice. Families will share moments of laughter, romance, struggle and triumph as each Disney princess has her dreams come true.

I wonder if the ad-mobile fills its gas tank with amazement and wonder and that’s why it never gets tired of driving down my road, annoying the hell out of me. When I went to Vegas this summer, there were two of these billboard-mobiles to every car on the Strip, and they were all embellished with giant Russian prostitutes and their personal phone numbers. These women invariably had bad teeth that were blown up to the size of sheet cakes in their photos. Walking down the Strip, hating life and sunshine, the billboards actually cheered me up. No matter how miserable I was in Vegas, those Russian whores were uglier and more miserable, plus they had to talk to jerks on the phone all the time whereas I can screen my calls. These giant ladies did wonders for my self esteem. Meanwhile Charlottesville has larger-than-life, cartoon princesses populating its city streets, making me feel inadequate. I suck at ice skating, I have no poofy dresses, and my boyfriend isn’t royalty. I drive a tiny car that would probably be incinerated in a head-on collision with those virgin princesses, and only the cartoons would get out alive.

Ode to my baby sister Margaret

It seems like only yesterday

you taught your stuffed animals to read.

Now they are in college.

Your hair is so long

like a mermaid’s.

I borrowed your running shorts.

I’ll wash them before I give them back.

I’m glad your bed is high

with a net around it

so the boys can’t get in.

Since when do you play the banjo?

Rose Petal Cottage

Am I the only one who would kill to live in a house like this? Think of all the pretend chores you could get done. I would probably be a creative genius today if I had grown up with a little fake washing machine to stimulate my imagination.

I want to put a Rose Petal Cottage in the living room so I can teach a certain someone how to do the dishes properly.

These pictures remind me of high school

Giant girl crushes small village and everyone in it.

The photos capture my obsession with dollhouses and being depressive.

Halloween is coming up

Time to dress your dogs and cats in funny costumes.

Dark Horse and the Carousels

This is Duane’s song “Crazy.” He is my friend who plays guitar and sings back-up vocals in Dark Horse and the Carousels. I love the song, but I think we should all send the band some money to reshoot the video so it isn’t set in a bedroom under purple lighting and no one is smoking or showing off his chest hair on camera. I could also get behind a boy meets girl sort of back story. Perhaps less graffiti. Shorter haircuts. Some tube tops. I feel like Martin Scorcese here.

You guys sound great though.

Duane, don’t kill me for posting this.

Cathy

Irving is taking me to the Poconos next week and I need to go bathing suit shopping! But I ate all that chocolate last night! My thighs are ginormous! What’s wrong with these dressing room mirrors? Mommy!

Big day for diabetes

I had to eat so much chocolate! Since I haven’t been drinking lately, the calories have to come from somewhere. Tonight I started with See’s. Then I moved onto Gearheart’s. Then my dad went out to the trunk of his car and came back to the kitchen table with a dish of chocolate bars arranged like flowers, a Boss’s Day gift from the nurses at his office.

I’ve seen a lot of bouquets in my life. I’ve seen them made from fruit. I’ve seen them made from flowers, both paper and plastic. I have eaten lollipop roses. But I had never seen a candy bouquet before tonight. These craft-store-happy entrepreneurs took a glue gun and attached dozens of fun-sized Snickers and Baby Ruth bars to sharpened sticks. Then they used the sticks to impale a crusty piece of green styrofoam lodged in a cat’s water bowl.  The resulting bouquet is like peering deep into a bottomless bag of Halloween candy from the rich peoples’ neighborhood, i.e. peering deep into heaven. It looks like you’ll never make it to the bottom of the chocolate, but then the thing topples and almost stabs you in the neck while you’re battling the styrofoam for the last KitKat. And you discover that the middle of the bouquet is stuffed with tissue paper colored like plastic wrappers for camouflage. And when the candy is gone you are left with a bunch of sharp sticks with trash stuck to them. What then? Toss them on the grill like garbage kebabs?

I am going to get a raging case of diabetes.

Gentlemen, please take note.  Send me expensive chocolates and flowers separately. Unless you can figure out how to make live daisies taste like ice cream (Lynsie, I am putting you on the case here), I’d like my bouquets sans plastic wrap and high fructose corn syrup.

Favorite DVDs du jour

30 Rock

Tom Goes to the Mayor

Planet Earth: Pole to Pole

Plastic in our oceans, plastic in our bodies

When will American industrialists realize that they have created a chemical Molotov cocktail? If people don’t care about the environment, they can at least care about their gay babies and their back fat.

“Except for the small amount that’s been incinerated—and it’s a very small amount—every bit of plastic ever made still exists,” [Captain Charles] Moore says, describing how the material’s molecular structure resists biodegradation. Instead, plastic crumbles into ever-tinier fragments as it’s exposed to sunlight and the elements. And none of these untold gazillions of fragments is disappearing anytime soon: Even when plastic is broken down to a single molecule, it remains too tough for biodegradation.