Saturday, December 19, 2015

Its Over!

Good Evening, Don,

So sorry it has been almost three weeks since I last wrote. We came up to the end of the quarter, had finals, a major report was due that ended up over 15 pages long, a curriculum re-write that had to be done, changes to the syllabi and getting the first week photocopied and electronically transferred  before the quarter was over took precedence over absolutely everything. Today, the quarter is over, we have graduated well over 120 students this morning – I am now officially on vacation. Okay, as much as I can vacation – I'm sure I'll be doing something along the line to get ready for the next quarter that starts in January.  

I find graduation to be rather bitter sweet – I remember the names, but the people going across the stage to get their diplomas are not the same people I had in class way back in the day. It is good that they are moving on. I enjoyed the speaker – she didn't come off as a know it all. Her advice to the graduates was to take risks, be nice, work hard – just because you have a degree doesn't mean you get the job- you have to earn it. I especially liked the "be nice".  Fitting words for this day and age.

My world has suddenly expanded from concentrated focused effort to WOW! There's a world beyond the end of my desk! OH NO! One week to Christmas! Shopping?! Cards?! Family!? Where will everyone be for Christmas and what do I need to do?! Semi-panic... we did the Christmas shopping yesterday before the weekend before Christmas. In many ways I'm very lucky. My better half knows what he wants and just orders it from Amazon. All I have to do is meet the delivery person at the door, take it and wrap it. Sure does cut down on wondering what to get him that he won't return. The rest of the family is pretty easy – they send a list, I pick 2 off of it and away I go! Now I need to concentrate on wrapping.

Our son and daughter-in-law decided to treat their son (just over 2 years old) to Santa Claus and snow so they flew back from tropical China (where they teach) last week and arrived just in time for the blizzard. I'd found real boots for our grandson along with snow pants and mittens so he was ready for the snow. Getting the boots on became a main event – little kids sure can curl their toes so their feet don't fit in the boots! Once they were on, he had to figure out how to walk again! Big heavy clumpy things hanging off his legs made walking a new experience. But once he got it, he and I walked everywhere, through every drift he could find. And then he discovered he could eat the snow. Instant cold trickling down the throat seemed to delight him to no end! Every time I turned around he had a new bunch of snow that he was licking off his mittens. And the smile on his face was the image of pure satisfaction.  There is a sense of 'living in the present" that little kids have that I sometimes envy.

My latest interests have been hydroponics. Actually acquaponics. I read an article about 9 companies in Iowa raising salt water shrimp. They are supplying up to 250,000 shrimp a month from landlocked Iowa. There is even a company here in Denver that is now raising shrimp! I'm hoping that after the hoopla of the holidays settles down I can go visit. As a vegetarian who eats fish, I'm really excited about acquafarming – and I'm really hopeful that the acqua farmers treat their fish more responsibly than the factory farms treat their cows, chickens and pigs. That is one reason I became a vegetarian.

Much to my surprise, the natural health food store was selling acquaponic units today at half price so I picked one up. Not sure where we'll put it because it has to have sun for the plants but not shining into the fish tank, and the temperature has to be 70 – 80 degrees for the fish. But it is an adventure! I have lots to learn – but hey! That's what vacations are for!

I was fortunate enough to have sometime between everything else to edit a story written by a lady in New York for a contest about addictions. Powerful story! The conflict between treating an addict with tough love and the realization they are on the path that will destroy their lives and there is nothing you can do to stop it is heart wrenching – do you enable so you know when the addict literally dies? Or do you send them out and spend the rest of your life wondering which gutter they died in? This is the subject of a parent's (s') nightmare.

I've seen the movies on your list – can't say that I understand why Animal House and Annie Hall are even in the top 50 – and why Ferris Bueller's Day Off  isn't. It is, like you said, "What are you thinking?"  I had to laugh when you talked about VHS and VCRs - we pulled out an old VHS tape last night and watched Die Hard 2. We were amazed that our VHS machine still worked and that the tape didn't break in the middle!

Your Twainism hit the spot: "Action speaks louder than words but not nearly as often."
I'm not sure about the "not nearly as often" part. In the classroom, I see the actions long before I hear the words.  I have become very aware that I can almost always tell what a student is like based on their actions – rarely do their words and actions have the same meaning.

By the next writing I'll have returned to the land of the real and happening! Hope you all have a great Christmas, a magnificent holiday, a peaceful time ... however you honor this time of year – I wish you all well and joy.


Carolyn 

Images from google images:
Christmas tree retrieved from Hue Christmas - Apps for Hueapps4hue.com

Santa retrieved from Grand theft auto vice city gta #70171577-themes.com


Thursday, December 3, 2015

Bueller.........Bueller?... plus Bill and Ted and Beetlejuice MIA


Hi Carolyn,




For starters, I forgot, last time around, to wish y'all a happy Thanksgiving. A good  friend of mine, and fellow Canadian  found himself  in NYC for the Macy's parade this year and said it was a spectacle quite unlike anything he had seen before. Alas, he also noted that security was beyond molasses thick and he was less than comfy with all of that visible weaponry.




The quirky climate stuff you mentioned certainly seems to be making its presence felt. That little slop of snowfall I referred to last time around is history and we are back to temps around plus five to 8 (Celsius ) during the day and just a tad below freezing at night. I haven't put the bike to bed yet simply because I have a feeling that there is one or two more rides left this year. It's December and I'm in snow country and I'm trash talking like this !! Canst thou dig it ??   Never-the-less, I had a most therapeutic  hour on the bike just a couple of weeks ago, so let it be known that  I'm keeping the two-wheeled  faith here, brothers and sisters!









Your mention of " Bosom Buddies " and it's trading on the " Some Like It Hot " vibe struck me as quite interesting on two levels. Firstly, I had just seen Messrs. Lemon and Curtis in that flick a short while ago on Turner Classic Movies and enjoyed it supremely once again. When that first miraculous VCR player/recorder appeared in gadget land so many decades ago, a VHS tape of this flick was among my first purchases. It was pretty cool to realize, at the time,  that we could watch it any time we wanted to!


On a second and more detailed level it reminded me of a list my daughter had recently  sent me.  It's from The Writers Guild Of America itemizing what they feel is/are the.....











See the complete list at  www.wga.org/content/default.aspx?=5949





I gotta admit, I have a bone or three to pick with this particular list.

 For startsies here's the Writer's Guild top ten:


1- Annie Hall


2- Some Like It Hot


3 - Groundhog Day


4 - Airplane


5 - Tootsie


6 - Young Frankenstein


7 - Dr. Strangelove


8 - Blazing Saddles


9 - Monty Python and the Holy Grail


10 - Animal House







For the record, I have seen all of these. In fact the only ones I have not seen more than once are the ones that I would personally kick out of the top ten. I figure if you see a flick and then want to see it again that's a pretty straightforward gut reaction type  barometer. The two flicks in this list that I didn't see again, by choice, are Annie Hall and Groundhog Day.




I hereby remove them from this top ten list and substitute two of my gut list total faves.  They would be The Princess Bride ,which was # 22 on their list and Ferris Bueller's Day Off, which was # 33.




Now let's look at egregious omissions from this list - stuff that didn't appear at all. The most glaring no-show  has to be Beetlejuice.  Not too far behind is Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure.  These two absolute  oversights made me do the " what were they thinking ?"  dance big time.










Some other placings that I'd like to, as the jewish folks say , " kvetch" about are:

The Marx Brothers Duck Soup at #17 , The Odd Couple ( the movie ) at #41, MASH ( the movie ) at 48, Stripes at # 88 and The Life of Brian at # 26.

Once again " what were they thinking ? ". Okay, 'tis true that a screenplay is a different animal than a script but in each of these cases the " if it ain't on the page it won't play on the stage " dictum was strictly observed from the git-go.




Anyhow, that's all I have to say about that ( to paraphrase Mr. F. Gump )



And while we're passing on other people's words here's this weeks Twainism. It fits the subject matter, if you think about in a certain way.


Action speaks louder than words but not nearly as often.





Glad to hear that your Thanksgiving was a wonderful family fricassee, Carolyn.


Catch  ya later.




Don








All images sourced from Google Images:


Fig. 1 - hostelsclubblog.com
Fig. 2 - filmplicity.com
Fig. 3 - wga.org
Fig. 4 - filmsack.com
Fig. 5 - movieposter.com
















Sunday, November 29, 2015

Colorado Lows and Climate IS changing

Good morning, Don! This is Thanks Giving weekend for me so I'm still trying to catch up with everything! I spent two glorious days with my daughter and her family! The joyous chaos that 5 more people and 4 more dogs bring into our house is energizing! But, we all have to settle down and get back to real life sometime.

So we have officially started the Christmas Season! The intense 4 weeks of shopping before we celebrate Christmas. It is interesting that I don't seem to have any great demanding needs this year which has messed up my husband's "What do you want for Christmas?" list. Of course, his list is already being bought – he buys and I wrap. The news reports that buying locally is down by 10% - more people are shopping online. I have to admit, the sales on online were better announced! The local stores really pulled back on their sales this year... hard to buy locally when you can get it cheaper, including shipping, online.

Have you ever wondered where we get our Colorado Lows from? It's not like we have a secret weather controlling station here – our lows have to come from somewhere! Who can we blame? It would nice to be able to point a finger at some other state and blame them for the 15 degree weather we've had for the last 4 days. We actually saw the sun on Friday and Saturday for a bit ... otherwise it is just 4 inches of snow and lots of cold. This particular system, which I'm sure you'll get part of, slid down the east side of the mountains. The ski areas got snow – but the west side was sunny and bright.

The "slop snow" (as you call it) left us ¼ inch of ice on the cars – we had to chip our way into the car, let it warm up for about 20 minutes to de-ice the windows – good exercise before a big Thanks Giving dinner! But ice? In Colorado? Unheard of in the past.

I've been reading about the new Climate Accords meeting in Paris this coming week – there will be 150 + countries attending and it appears there is no longer debate as to whether or not climate will change like there was in 1978 with the Kyoto Accords. Now there is agree that climate is changing more quickly than anticipated. To put it bluntly, earth has become a dangerous place to live. Technology has helped, but more people are still dying due to weather related disasters.

 Hopefully there will be some sound changes that countries are willing to make – the US as one of them. I figure if China can cut their industrial sector (China right now is the world's leader in carbon emissions) and in the meantime become one of the leading solar power countries in the world, maybe we can too. Sadly, we don't have a government with enough backbone to get it done... Next year is the Presidential Election – and I have to say that things are heating up already. So far, no one looks very responsible. 

 I loved your book report! We don't need roads: the making of Back to the Future Trilogy sounds like a great read! Speilberg has pull! And so does Hanks! My son often reports about product placement in movies and in TV shows. I remember Wilson, and I remember how devastated I was when he floated away.
So while I was perusing the internet for news this morning, I ran across an article on Tom Hanks in the 1980- 82  TV sitcom Bosom Buddies with Peter Scolari. This is where Hanks got his start. It was a takeoff on Some Like It Hot with Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe. Even though it only lasted 2 seasons, that was enough to slingshot Hanks into more dynamic leading man roles.

One of the questions that came up over Thanks Giving was when was I going to retire? I'm seriously thinking about it. I'm getting envious of your trips to Mexico for the winter – and your sense of freedom to go explore when you feel like it. But my husband and my kids have all pointed out that whenever we had a Christmas Break that lasted more than 2 weeks and during the summer, they all decided it was time for me to go back to work after 2 weeks – I drove them crazy! I was free! I had things to do and places to go, adventures to have... they didn't and apparently still don't – see life that way. Ah well. For now, I have reports and a new curriculum to create by January.

Have a great week!
Carolyn


All images downloaded from Google Images
Fig 2 – retrieved from snow/icewww.kevinkarn.com






Saturday, November 21, 2015

Trilogy, Tom and the Spielberg clout





Hi Carolyn,


Okay, some "of the moment " stuff to start.


 I  hereby  pledge that I will do my best, in this and the next  entry, not to pull out the old pulpit and whine thereupon about being inundated with crass, commercial Christmas stuff  ( read " crap" )  way back here in Mid to late November. It will be a most vexing thing to do, though, since it is every-freakin'-where.





Also, I hate to say it but the name of your home state is being taken in vain by the weather prognosticators hereabouts. We're getting our first sizable  slop of snow and it's being blamed on that nefarious " Colorado Low " . Curses, curses !




I mentioned a wee bit back, that I was making my way through a nice little volume that my  daughter Amazoned to me ( cool, a new verb ! ) in time for my b-day.  Time and events conspired, as they invariably do, to make it a longer period before I finished. But I am now " finito " .




 So,  good morning Mrs. Varvel, and class, here is my book report!













I found this a most enjoyable read. The whole feel is that here's an account that comes from someone who looks at the movie-making business from the inside out. Thankfully there's little of the hyperbole and hackneyed phraseology of a thinly-disguised press release item. It was also cool to learn that Caseen Gaines is a high school English teacher, to boot.


  • A few points and impressions to pass along.
I was surprised to learn that the  first movie was more than a few weeks into shooting when it was decided to change the lead. Michael J. Fox had been among the top prospects but couldn't be freed up  from his immensely popular Family Ties TV series .  A major source of leverage in the whole casting for the eventual lead process was the gentleman you referred to last time around and whom I'll get to in a bit as well. It made me realize just how much would be involved in stopping a major movie-making process once it was in motion when I read about how involved it was to start again once the original lead had been let go because the whole thing " just wasn't working " 


 Fox had been secured for the title role, after some months shooting with another actor.  That unnamed actor did receive his whole agreed upon fee for the movie even though he was only shot in scenes that took place in the first few minutes.














That major source of leverage I was referring to is, of course, Mr. Spielberg. Wow, I sure get the feeling that if you are part of the current movie-making culture and you have Steven S. on speed dial or your first tier text list you have arrived.  Spielberg supported this venture from the first moment and was to play a pivotal role more than once in the production of the complete trilogy.



Another aspect of the movie making process that this account made me think more about was product placement. When I was doing my grade 12 media studies course we got to mention this phenomenon but mostly in passing. None of my students chose to do an extended look at it so we never got further than that.


I looked further into it recently and was quite fascinated by just how long it had been around and how ubiquitous it is. I get the feeling that it works fundamentally because of the " human see, human do " aspect of our behaviour as mammals. From a strictly advertising standpoint it's a win-win thing, as well. This " branded entertainment " eliminates the need for commercials, since the product is out there front and centre during the program itself. Brilliant, and diabolical, all at once.













Actually, one of the smoothest and most diabolical product placement items, to my mind at least, leads me to the third thing I wanted to touch upon and which you had mentioned last time around. We all remember Wilson, Tom Hanks best ( and only ) buddy while he was the " Castaway "   BTW, I'm betting Tom has got Steve S on his speed dial, and vice-versa.  

I agree with you that Mr. Hanks can be counted among the most memorable actors in our lifetimes. He's always been  a definite screen presence. Our video cupboard, ( now rendered obsolete by online storage ) includes some of his biggies including  " Big " and " A League of Their Own" and one that really tugs at the strings of my LSBH's heart, as a big dog person, " Turner and Hooch " In fact, if you check his movie list there are so many.


If I had to do the castaway thing with just one Hanks flick, it would be a tough choice. Although I'd probably pick " Castaway " just so I'd be confident about getting off that same island too.




Mark Twain's observation for tonight sorta fits in.




Advertisements contain the only truths to be relied on in a newspaper.








See ya later.




Don






All images sourced from Google images.


Fig 1 - www.amazon.ca


Fig. 2 - dreamworksstudios.com


Fig. 3 - indigop0427.wordpress.com














 

















Saturday, November 14, 2015

Bright Shiny Art work of Science fiction and Tom Hanks

Don, so sorry to hear about your afflictions with shiny objects that whiz, burr and beep!
Reading you, you sound about as bad as most of my students! I think that at one time I might have had a tendency toward bright shining gadgets - but I lost it along with an assignment and my calendar. I decided not to ever chance it again.

Living in the mountains as a child, we didn't have satellites  that enabled us to communicate with the rest of the world. Telephone service was often regulated to the town, with long distance available at the hotel. My dad had a slightly newer version of your grandfather's shortwave AM /  FM radio which we listened to. We finally got a black and white TV in 1960 which didn't work if there was a storm. I learned how to hike, fish, what to do if lost in the mountains (which I seems bound to do on a regular basis). I also learned how to pack mule, pan for gold, dig for gold, and sell crystals and rocks to the tourists that came in on the train.  We didn't have central heat - we stayed warm on winter nights with our feet close to the chimney for warmth.  I wonder if these are the "good old days" so many people refer to.

I had an interesting discussion this week with a younger instructor at school. She was complaining about her students not knowing how to do an internet research. She said that at their age, she was doing card catalog searches.  At their age I was learning how to use a slide rule so I could do fractions. Now I feel really really old.

Recently I had the opportunity to go to an art exhibit showcasing the work of Kristi Backman. I've been following Kristi and her work for the last couple of years but I have to admit that this recent show was, for me, phenomenal! Using the science fiction phrase xenoarcheologist - an archaeologist of current culture, (a contradiction) Kristi put together a showing of strange face masks, light weight standards and garish shields of a culture from the future; a made up culture. Using a new fiberglass technique she has developed, Kristi is able to create large and medium sized sculptures that hang comfortably on the wall.

The fiberglass technique enables her to maintain a light weight structure that is surprisingly strong and durable. It also takes paint well and allows her to use a combination of different materials ranging from metal, to fabric, to wood, fiberglass... Check it out! Her pieces are for sale if you're interested.

We saw the movie Bridge of Spies last week with Tom Hanks. The movie was about the events leading up to the exchange of a Soviet spy for U2 spy plane pilot, Gary Powers.  As that was one of the things that we listened to the radio, it was interesting to get more back story. Several of the instructors I work with felt the movie was slow and cumbersome. Both my significant other and I felt it had the same intriguing story-building that Hitchcock was well known for. Bridge was not as masterful in the story department as a Hitchcock movie, but the intrigue was there and definitely the building of the tension to the climax. If nothing else, it proved to both of us that Tom Hanks is still watchable - even at his age.

Recent events have led me to "seek relief  furnished by profanity" as prayer wasn't fast enough. Twain got that one right! And recent conversations with our children have led me to believe that they were living a totally different life than the one they experienced with us at the same time as they grew up. I'm not sure where they got their stories from or if the stories were even theirs!

Hope you had a nice Thanks Giving, Don. Ours is in a couple of weeks. We finally have measurable snow - slush actually. I have what is left of my garden covered - not sure how much will survive the cold. I'm hoping the onions will be okay - we'll have them at Thanks Giving. I'll dig the potatoes up this weekend before the dirt in the containers freezes.

Actually it looks like you're getting better at adding pictures, Don! Yes, the formatting is a bit off, but the pictures are were they are suppose to be. New gadgets provide new learning which keeps the "little grays cells" busy growing new connections. I think you're putting off dementia until you're at least 90. Sad to say, for younger generations, new gadgets often keep the little gray cells from growing new connections. I wonder why.

I had an interesting conversation about Wikipedia - think I'll investigate it.

Time to get back to the grading and report writing.





Carolyn



Tuesday, November 3, 2015

You can have my Gadgets .... when you pry them from my cold, dead hands.



Hi Carolyn,










Thanks for getting me up to speed, a couple of blogs back, on the the perils of being Matt Damon.  Actually, it sounds like Mr. Damon is a genuine trouble magnet. If I saw him coming I'd be going the other way. Heck, he even gets into trouble off planet! 


 He does  have  that " Aw shucks.." disarming innocence about him, though.


 I  admit that I can’t think of a movie I’ve seen with Matt Damon that has left a mark on my cinematic consciousness. The closest I’ve come is the one  with Robin Williams where he was a janitor or something like that. In fact, I’m going to go check IMDB right now, to see which movie it is.


Be back in a flash…..







Okay … it was “ Good Will Hunting”. I guess the fact that I had to go back and look it up pretty well says everything about how it affected me, eh? I keep getting him mixed up with Ben Stiller or Ben Affleck. This is not to say that they are cookie cutter actors - it’s more indicative of my not being in tune with the current A-list big screen young bucks.





 Your minimalist take on cell phones got me to thinking, though.



I am anything but a minimalist when it comes to gadgets. If it’s small, shiny and has blinking lights, I’m on board. Oddly enough, that iphone I have is seldom used as a bona fide phone - unless you include texting with friends and family as phonecalls. In fact, I couldn't even tell you my cellphone number, offhand. Yet,  anytime I'm about to go out the door  into the big, crazy world I instinctively slap my pockets checking  for three things - my wallet, my keys, and my iphone.









 What I really use it for more than anything else ( and I didn’t  realize this, until your noting how you are happy as a clam with your clamshell model, made me look at my usage habits ) is as a radio. Three of my most frequented places on a regular basis are the SiriusXM, Stingray Music and CBC Radio apps - even in Mexico.  Sure, it gets used as a camera,  a photo album, an organizer, a shopping list maker and such - but I spend a lot of time on my newest of mass media devices accessing stuff on the first and oldest mass medium.





 



My gadgetlove is no surprise, though since I was in a gadget friendly environment from the start. We grew up in a three generation house which had been my paternal grandfather's home initially. He had always been a radio nut and had a big old Heathkit shortwave and AM radio that he had built from a kit and used constantly long before his grandkids came along. For him it truly was magical to hear voices coming out of a box and ultimately out of the air. 




 By the time my older  brother and I encountered it it was relegated to the attic. It still worked, though, and when we attached a wire to the aerial and then stretched it across the roof we were able to enter a wondrous land, especially after the sun went down and reception dramatically improved.



At night, it could pick up AM station WLS in Chicago and disc jockey Dick Biondi. It was my first door into Beatlemania. Even before the Fab Four appeared everywhere over here they were being played by WLS. The first airing of a Beatles record in the U.S. ( and by association, Canada ) was in February of 1963 when Biondi played Love Me Do. Alas, I wasn't there that night, but the rest, as they say,  is history.





















 



While we're on the topic of radio history - as in the history of the very first mass medium - there's a documentary by Ken Burns that covers part of it in his unique style. It's titled " Empire of the Air " and it's quite interesting for any of us who did/do struggle to educate the minds of tomorrow whilst they endure a constant and highly sophisticated multi-media barrage on a daily basis. I believe it's now part of a PBS series of Burns docs known as " American Stories "
 
Sometimes, I think that one could get a pretty thorough, multi-faceted and rich introduction to American culture, and it's seminal influences, just by watching the collected video works of Mr. Ken Burns.
 

 



































Anyhow, lets's  get to the two  Twains I want  to include here, since I missed one last time around.


 The first one came ( and is still coming ) from my fun dealing with the new Windows whilst attempting to move pics about. I'm still finding that there is a bit of the " it ain't broke so why fix it " about this method of importing pics ( and the final result may have some clumsy spacing and formatting because of that )








In certain trying circumstances, urgent circumstances, desperate circumstances, profanity furnishes a relief denied even to prayer.







 

The second one fits this entry better since a fair bit of time and space was spent in the past, therein.

 

 

When I was younger I could remember anything, whether it happened or not.







Okay, that's my two cents worth.....


(although, at the current Canadian/American exchange rate that would be about 1.45 cents )




Don. 





All images sourced from Google Images.

Fig. 1 - cinemablend.com
Fig.  2 - cultofmac.com
Fig. 3 - siriusXM.com
Fig. 4 - music.stingray.com
Fig. 5 -  CBCRadio.com
Fig. 6 - Wikipedia.org
Fig. 7 - pbs.org














Saturday, October 24, 2015

Saving Matt Damon so far far away

Yes, I remember you, Don! And I understand how things just keep piling in. Happy Birthday by the way! I remember folks saying life slowed down when you hit 65.... I'm not sure that applies to you! Do you remember buying your first house? I do – and I'm real thankful my father was there to help us through the hoops.



I so enjoyed your little tidbit about fire ants. It makes me think of politicians and political parties. They surround their "king" (in this case), and wherever they land (the different stands they take), they sting. (I found pictures of fire ant rafts - but the pictures made me itch) and Even though we are still months away from the drama of electing a new president, Face Book has had a plethora of damning evidence for both the Republicans and the Democrats.  I feel like this last political season never really ended – that we are stuck in an endless cycle of politics and finger pointing.

And yes, the news about the heavens has been fascinating! I agree, the pictures from Pluto were astonishing! But I still thrill to the news about running water on Mars! Which brings me to the subject of my post today: Saving Matt Damon. This was on Face Book around the time The Martian opened. So we have done the movies to save Matt Damon: Saving Private Ryan, Interstellar, and The Martian. Even though Damon's parts in Saving ... Ryan and Interstellar were small, his character was still one of the central themes to both movies.

Saving Private Ryan was a good war movie! Tom Hanks was excellent! The writing, the filming, the directing, the acting – all spectacular. The themes and subplots all lent to the movie and the believability of the characters and what they had been tasked to do. Matt Damon did an admirable job as the poor kid thrust into events that he didn't ask for, support he didn't want... a very believable character.

Interstellar – Astronaut Farmer meets 2001 A Space Odyssey.  Matthew McConaughey was too slick, the movie at least 60 minutes too long, the writing scrambled (but they were dealing with the conflict of time and gravity) so it showed up in the script, the shots were too long. This is where Christopher Nolan should have taken direction from Caseen Gaines and Robert Zemeck.  It was an unproductive 3 hours, I did not care about the characters by the time the movie was over. Whatever feelings I had for them was long gone in the long shots, the delayed action, the confusion of the script.
Matt Damon actually played a crazy / bad guy in the film. It was interesting to see him do something different. He did it well. But actually, it was a good set up and practice for The Martian.


The MartianRobinson Crusoe on Mars meets Apollo 13. Outstanding in every way.  The movie is based on story of Robinson Crusoe – the hero on his own, survival is up to him. But throughout the movie, the heroic attempts by others to save him become an integral part of the story. The weaving back and forth between Damon trapped on Mars, the Earth teams trying to figure out how to save him and his ship mates desperate to go back for him made for a dynamic movie. The acting by all was spectacular, the CGI effects (very believable) enhanced the movie instead of distracted from it.  I think the Academy will have a hard time choosing between The Martian and Bridge of Spies with Tom Hanks.

Phones – you have an older, more mature iPhone – that doesn't do what the new ones do... the new phones I've seen are bigger, more difficult to carry around - easier to read, watch movies on - but hard to hold. Are you sure you need the "new and better funky features"? My better half bought his first android phone this year – so did our son. My sister's family finally chucked her out of the family net because she refuses to "upgrade". I carry a clamshell that is about 6 years old – still going strong, still able to make and receive calls. And it costs me $112 a year – not a month – a year. I'm good!

We got a new story for Wormhole from Tammy! It is a great Halloween story! I'm putting it together with several of her other stories and will have it on Amazon by the end of the week. I think you all will really enjoy it! Until then check out the website and what we still have available! 

Yahoo is changing their server / service for websites within the next couple of months. Looks like we are going to migrate Wormhole to Weebly. Have to figure that out before the end of the year. I'll keep you informed.

Have a great Birthday! And a wonderful Canadian Thanks Giving!

I've included a link to far away galaxies that Hubble has found in the last years. Amazing that we can see that far. Maybe this is what inspired  Interstellar. And in case anyone missed it, I've included a link to water on Mars


Carolyn 

All images downloaded from Google Images
The Astronaut Farmer retrieved from Poster the Astronaut Farmer - Pics about space
2001 A Space Odyssey retrieved from 2001: A Space Odyssey poster | Signalnoise.com
Robinson Crusoe on Mars retrieved from Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964) - Öteki Sinema