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In which there is ballet joy joy JOY... [Jul. 24th, 2008|06:52 pm]

pim2005
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Cet aprem I skived work (it was legitimate A/L really) and went to the Coliseum avec [info]xanantha to see the Mikhailovsky Ballet doing Spartacus. It was fabulous. Visually very incredibly stunning, although occasionally a bit too so and there was a wee bit too much to focus on. Which is hard because I want to look at it All At Once Now Right Now. I was a little thwarted by continually getting the characters muddled up and wanting to call them all Cactus (these things happen when you are me). But there was a good lot of mullets going on, well done those Russians. And a particularly hilarious point when Spartacus was being tied to his cross to be crucified and he had to take a moment to sort out (a) his skirt and (b) his mullet: any chance of poignancy ruined there as I giggled my head off. Also Spartacus in his 'leading the people' costume was clearly channeling Tarzan, no really. But there were some spectacular bits of pas de deux: Spartacus and Valeria at the end was amazing, that piece of Khachaturian music is one of my favouritest in the entire world and it was just amazing. And the Crassus-Sabina pas de deux was also beyond incredible. At the end of that scene actually there was a moment where they threw Sabina ACROSS THE STAGE. I half took in the beginning and then it was a case of 'no, no they actually are throwing a ballerina across the stage'. And the Khachaturian score is just beautiful, really so, although I'm not entirely convinced that they had very Russian mazurkas in Ancient Rome. Although, as X pointed out, we weren't in Ancient Rome and thus who were we to comment on that?

Anyway, it was all glorious and I think we made a good choice of the three they're doing. Giselle was seriously tempting, but the Royal Ballet are doing it at some point in the next year and people are more likely to put on Giselle than Spartacus let us face it. But I'm now ballet bereft once more until the new season starts at the ROH. Boo indeed.
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In which Vati is defeated by a two year old... [Jul. 24th, 2008|08:51 am]

pim2005
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Mutti & Vati went to see mon petit frère, la s-i-l and le nephewit at le weekend. Over lunch in the garden, mon petit frère asked Vati a question, Vati responded at which point a wee voice piped up next to him:

"Don't talk with your mouth full, Grandpa."

Genius. I love the fact that the very small people in our family can boss my parentals round in such fashion.
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[Jul. 23rd, 2008|09:46 pm]

looneyluna
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
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In which I seek your opinions... [Jul. 23rd, 2008|06:52 pm]

pim2005
[Tags|, , ]

Righty-o, amigos. I have finished The Accursed Dahlia. Opinions, bitte. A poll! A poll! Well, okay, photos first.

The Accursed Garment Of Doom )

So now on to the poll: clicky boxes!

Poll #1228406 Reviewing The Accursed Dahlia
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All

Do you like it?

View Answers

Yes, I heart it totally and will red heart it this sec on Rav
5 (16.7%)

Yes, totally and won't red heart it this sec on Rav cos I'm not on it
19 (63.3%)

Erm... sitting on the fence. Mm, splinters.
6 (20.0%)

No. It's a load of rubbish. Frog it this instant, it burns my eyes.
0 (0.0%)

What should I do with it then?

View Answers

Keep it and wear it with pride
26 (89.7%)

Frog it and use the yarn for something better and more useful
3 (10.3%)

If I frog it, what should I do with the yarn instead?

View Answers

Eat it
5 (25.0%)

Tie it round all the furniture in Maria's room
6 (30.0%)

Make a sculpture
0 (0.0%)

Create a modern and iconic dance using it
6 (30.0%)

Use it for something creative in the office
3 (15.0%)

If I keep it and wear it with pride:

View Answers

Ribbon
20 (71.4%)

No ribbon
8 (28.6%)

Are you now relieved that I have finished the thing and may shut up about it?

View Answers

Yes, you have made my day, nay my existence, by doing so
3 (10.3%)

I wasn't listeing to you in the first instance
4 (13.8%)

Shut up already
2 (6.9%)

No, my left will be empty and bereft without this saga
20 (69.0%)

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In which I take on the weather (and lose probably)... [Jul. 23rd, 2008|08:48 am]

pim2005
[Tags|, , , , ]

1. Mon Dieu but it is hijously close out. Really disgustingly so. To the point that my lungs are being objectionable and we all know that is not a game I like to play. So I'm ignoring them, putting my foot down with a firm hand and all that.

2. We have the auditers in at work today. Bleh and all that malarkey.

3. I have finished the accursed Dahlia. Pictures to follow. Decisions to be made.

4. Happy birthday [info]helenprev! Hope you have a splendid day.
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Meep! [Jul. 22nd, 2008|08:13 pm]

ethelfleda
Note to self: do not skip breakfast, even if for good reason, or not that hungry. Stomach goes "But why is the food gone? WHY IS THE FOOD GONE?" and I end up spending the entire day hungry whatever I eat.

There is also very little in the world that cannot be improved by the addition of muppets:



There are four overall (links are the favourites from Beaker's page). They look like the genuine article rather than fan creations, but I have no clue about them ("Meep" and "bork bork" do not give much helpful info).
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In which I vow to take on the Dahlia... [Jul. 22nd, 2008|08:55 am]

pim2005
[Tags|, , , ]

It is in my bag as lunchtime knitting. I am determined to finish the second sleeve/neckline and recast off the bottom. Yes. Yes, I am. *looks solemn* Because when I have finished it I can forget about it. Possibly forever.

Jo has brought a load of ye olde shorte breade from Och-aye-land. I cannot help but feel this is a Bad Thing.

Our 'property manager' is coming round Friday before work because the flat is falling apart around my ears again. The fun never stops, I tell you.
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[Jul. 21st, 2008|11:45 pm]

looneyluna
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( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
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[Jul. 21st, 2008|10:07 pm]

pim2005
[Tags|, , , , , ]

Acquired another ballet teacher ce soir: the M(ental)BT. On arrival at Markova House we were told we could go straight up to the dressing rooms as 'the company's not here', presumably they have taken the H(ardcore)BT with them along with all the tutus and pointe shoes and pretty things from the dressing room which felt weird and empty. The MBT is splendid fun though and explains things properly, which does not mean that I can do them but it does mean I can understand how i should be doing them. Pirouettes were out in force, ugh, although I managed a couple of semi-respectable ones including one that was praised (Gott in Himmel). The floor was covered in something sticky and ming which meant a lot of things were quite tricky - glisses in particular which are mean to be snappy and really are not when your feet are stuck to the floor *g* Lots of jumps including the first exercise of 'just give me 16 changements'. Genius. Then we did a thing with coupes for which I earned bonus points by coupe-ing away merrily at the back whilst everyone else looked lost and blank. Heh. Also we knew what petit battements were and no one else did. Merci beaucoup SBT. Ahh, and there was a moment of genius when it seemed as though the MBT was signalling 'help, help my flags are on fire'. Boot-full ;)
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A History of Cats [Jul. 21st, 2008|02:54 pm]

davidn
Parents phoned. Cat's dead. Balls.

Apparently he hadn't been eating very well for a few days and had to be kept at the vet overnight while they tried to understand what was wrong with him, but he died overnight after they discovered he was anaemic with potential other problems. (Such as dying, as it turns out.)

In truth I feel like I'm being awfully unsympathetic because this hasn't really affected me as much as you would reasonably expect. I've been far away enough for the last two years, only coming back for a week or so at the time, and I think of him as so much a part of the house that the concept is honestly quite difficult to grasp. Chekhov secured his position as the second longest living of our cats a number of years ago, and made it to nearly sixteen years - this is apparently about 80 according to a batty-looking woman on the Internet, and it would seem that males don't have the stamina to keep going much longer. The only one of our cats who got further than that was Pushkin, a female cat with a gender-inappropriate name that must have been slightly older than that when I was born and seemed to give up on any sort of activity shortly afterwards, being indistinguishable from a lightly breathing pillow that occasionally changed which radiator it sat under.

Apart from the Russians, I don't think any of our cats made it to anywhere near that age. Near the end of Pushkin's life we introduced a black and white spotted cat called Toby to the house, and they instantly developed a complete resentment of each other and had to be kept in separate parts of the house. Toby had the house to himself a couple of years afterwards, but after a while he kept on disappearing for several days at a time and eventually decided not to come back for reasons best known to himself.

It was after him that we got Chekhov and Cleo together, and I'm certain that a third cat by the name of Jaguar was around for a while but I can't remember what happened to him. I think we might have just been taking care of him before someone adopted him properly. So I'm not sure where he is now, and Cleo, despite surviving jumping off the neighbours' roof while chasing birds, eventually had to be put to sleep after getting in a fight with a large lemonade truck.

Max and Smokey came next, who both developed a form of leukemia a few years later - I'm not sure if there's anything that could have prevented that. Their successors were Gandalf and Cassie (who was notable for quickly growing an absolutely enormous fluffy tail that made her look like a squirrel in disguise and regularly dragging entire trees back into the house with it). Chekhov never seemed to get on with the younger male cats, but was always very... cuddly with the female ones, making him seem like a sort of feline Hugh Hefner figure. I have absolutely no idea what happened to Cassie, but she hasn't been around for at least the last few years.

So that just leaves Gandalf now, who is an entirely black cat with none of the wisdom that his name suggests ([info]quadralien explains this by saying that Gandalf the White was slightly wiser than Gandalf the Grey, so Gandalf the Black should logically be a bit thick). He normally greets people by staring up at them with his eyes just about popping out of his head and then gradually falling over, and I'm not sure if he'll even really notice the change.

Does this mean it's time to introduce another successor to our house's long line of Russian cat overlords? If so, my vote's on calling him "Tchaikovsky".

All right, it's just hit me. This icon from [info]pami_zee has now taken on an entirely new and tragic meaning. I might have to go and do something unmasculine for a while.
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Shallower than a shallow thing [Jul. 21st, 2008|02:44 pm]

ethelfleda
[Tags|]
[mood | silly]

I have mostly been watching this:

Photobucket

While going 'nomnomnomnomnomnomnom'.


Torchwood: nomnomnomnom

(Equally applicable to them being eaten by aliens because they were too busy shagging to defend Cardiff)
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The One Where Helen Goes Back To Work [Jul. 21st, 2008|09:50 am]

pim2005
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Boo. Essentially. And whingey-whiney-woe. Although no one stole my mug in my absence so it's not all doom and gloom. I have 38 e-mails to follow up on, which out of 114 isn't too dusty. Small pile of post to go through, most of which I suspect I've got an electronic copy of. And I need to do some exam venue hunting. All go here, I tell you.

On the mystery of the no2 drill bit, mind... I have NO clue where the bugger is. I'm half wondering if Maria's Vati borrowed the drill whilst he was passing through at the weekend and fixing the TV aerial. I know I was missing either the no1 or the no3 one in the first instance but whichever one of those two I had is also AWOL. Suspicious indeedio...
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A moment of madness from Helloween (lasting three years) [Jul. 20th, 2008|08:51 pm]

davidn
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There's a strange sort of pattern in that the songs with the most unlikely titles somehow turn out to be my favourite ones on an album. Kamelot has "A Feast for the Vain". Sonata Arctica does it all the time with things like "Weballergy" and "The Boy Who Wanted to Be A Real Puppet". And I'm sure Iron Maiden was deliberately attempting to invoke this effect when they decided to name their latest single "The Reincarnation Of Benjamin Breeg". However, this particular song's title is so awful that I'm hesitant to even mention it so early on because I'm sure it would instantly put anyone off even giving it a second glance.

The other thing that will put anyone remotely familiar with the band off this song is that it was written in 1991 when the band had run out of 80s and Michael Kiske had decided they were going to try to become a pop group. Shortly after this slight change in musical direction they released two albums that were probably most politely described as 'misguided'. After this led to... a small amount of unrest in the band, they eventually booted him out and called Andreas Deris in as an emergency rescue vocalist instead, and a large number of fans were left trying to forget that the band that produced the classic "Keeper of the Seven Keys" albums had gone on to release something that resembled a Beatles best-of compilation.

But I promise it's one of my favourite songs from the Kiske era, which makes it a complete mystery why it never made it on to any albums. Not enjoyed in the same way as any of their other material, exactly, because it's unmistakably rock-pop - but it's unfathomably catchy (like barbed wire). And the guitar part underneath it is wonderfully complex if you listen. Though the chorus is a bit dodgy, the lyrics probably make a good point, but they're slightly obfuscated by imaginative English and I'm certain that some of the accompanying written words aren't what's being sung unless Kiske discovered a way of pronouncing "wars" with an M at the beginning. And that single cover that's used as the background... well, there's no comment I can make. You'll just have to see for yourself.


Artist: Helloween
Album: None!
It was only ever a single B-side
Song:
Well... it's called Shit and Lobster
Visuals: ??!!
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I have to ask... [Jul. 20th, 2008|06:09 pm]

pim2005
[Tags|]

Where the sod is my number 2 drill bit?
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Jeeves, among other things [Jul. 20th, 2008|01:29 pm]

ethelfleda
It starts good but gets better - keep watching :D



I should also like to postulate the 'Law of Forbidden Planet' - that should one enter in search of a particular trade paperback, they will not have it. They will, however, have every single other issue in the series, and indeed every other piece of work published by the authors up to and possibly including their last shopping list.

My plants are flourishing at the moment; peppers will be ready for harvesting very soon. I've put in some late tomatoes and sweetcorn which have germinated but may not crop well because of being so late in the season (or, like previous tomato, just simply and straightforwardly die). Strawberry is growing slowly but surely - I don't think I'll see any crop off that one this year, but if I'm nice to it over the winter I might get strawberries next summer.
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Proof of Pizza [Jul. 19th, 2008|05:21 pm]

davidn
A Trillian log, several months ago...

Session Start (David Newton:Don): Sat May 19 19:21:16 2007
[19:21] Don: burnt the flat down yet then?
[19:21] David Newton: http://wired.st-and.ac.uk/~wong/images/disasterpizza.jpg
[19:21] Don: wtf?
[19:22] Don: that is one ugly bastard of a pizza
[19:22] David Newton: I was taking it out of the oven after a painstaking hour preparing it, and that was when I realized that I'd used piecrust instead of pizza dough.
[19:22] David Newton: So it's not gone that well.
[19:22] Don: I am really laughing out loud at the moment
[19:24] Don: anything else you have done which tops that?
[19:25] David Newton: No, I think that this is a record.

In an attempt to make up for the above incident and prove that I can be trusted to cook for myself, tonight I produced this... white pizza. I think it went rather better.


But, yes. White pizza. I forgot to put any tomato base on it.

Just shut up, will you?
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The Ordercast #1 [Jul. 19th, 2008|10:05 am]

stubbleupdate
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I've left it for ages, but it's time to make a start on finishing off the Ordercasts. A few weeks ago I reread Next Right Thing and I have to say that it's flat out amazing. The level of character development in such a short time, the attention to detail that brings out character development, the themes, the ideas, the art, WHY THE FUCK DIDN'T MORE PEOPLE BUY IT?

The Twang - Drinking in LA

Getting drunk, and what comes with it, is a theme in this issue. Henry Hellrung, aka Anthem, the team leader of the Order is a reformed alcoholic. He used to be the actor who played Tony Stark in the Iron Man TV series and the two of them would go out on the lash in LA. Now, Stark is cleaned up and Hellrung is the poster boy for sobriety and they're in charge of LA's super hero team. I'll come back to the rest of this theme for song #3.

This is a pretty literal song choice, rather than having any deep thematic relevance.

Franz Ferdinand - This fire

This fire is out of control
I'm going to burn this city
Burn this city
If this fire is out of control


Again, this is pretty literal. The Inferno Infernal Man is destroying LA with some serious fire. The fight with him and The Order sets up some stuff really well; Calamity is a class act, Corona is impulsive, Avona's a bitch, Anthem doesn't really have a hold on his team but he's bound to do the right thing. It's ace.

Ben Lee - Float on

It's a song about the bad days that you have and how you put them behind you to be a better person. As CM Punk says "If it doesn't kill you, take it, use it, and kill somebody else with it"
Four members of the Order (Corona, Pierce, Avone and Maul) go out on a bender after saving California even though they've signed contracts that forbid them from doing so.
As Hera says You blew it. And you knew you were blowing it as you blew it.

I love this section as these guys thought that they were untouchable because they'd done something good. It's also a scene that wound up a few people on Scans_Daily. I just like the line ...I'm English. I consider getting wasted a basic human right, and regard anyone who doesn't do so semi-regularly with a degree of suspicion. Riiiight.

So... 4 of the Order get fired after their first day at work, new recruits get called up. The first thing that they do? Fight some Soviet Super Soldiers. But that's a story for another Ordercast.
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[Jul. 18th, 2008|11:27 pm]

diarytypething
I'm all packed and ready to leave for France in the morning. However, my brain can't quite get used to the idea that everything is packed and I'll probably be up three times in the night to check. It's all packed neatly for ease of repeated checking, and involves the use of many ziplock bags for separating and compartmentalising things*. The alarm is set for 6.30 so that I don't miss my 9am train, even though I live less than two miles from the station. Everything is very, very organised.

Anyway, I'll be back next week with some more stories, maybe a few pictures, and probably about as much wine as I can comfortably carry.


*If you think this sounds mental, you should have seen me when I went to Croatia three years ago. I had a notebook with every single relevant bit of information - flight confirmation codes, bus timetables, addresses for where we were staying, photocopied bits out of phrase books, a list of people to send postcards to - that was never more than arm's length away, except for maybe when I was in the shower, because you can't let something that important get wet.
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Plans for the Fortnight [Jul. 18th, 2008|10:47 am]

davidn
Whitney's gone to visit her parents in California for a week and a half - I saw her into a taxi at half past four in the morning, the exact time when your brain refuses to process anything and all you want to do is go back to sleep. So this leaves me alone in the flat again for a while.

In the past, events have somehow conspired to make it seem like I'm slightly incompetent at taking care of myself, and am likely to lose a leg while making breakfast or accidentally cut my head off while washing my hair. Culinary mishaps, suicidal ovens and visitations from other worlds are not uncommon at times like these. And though I promise people I can survive perfectly well myself (perhaps with the aid of a few take-away phone numbers), everyone always gets the impression that I'm only still alive because Whitney keeps coming back just in time.

With so much time completely to myself I have a couple of options. What I'd really like to do is use the week to really push ahead with Crystal Towers 2, which has now been in existence for sixteen months and is still in a tatty "maybe I can just go ahead and build out loads of levels now" state. There's a plan for how to allow progress through the game on my whiteboard, as well as a general layout for the hub, and if I can just stick to that I'll at least have some sort of aim. My feelings about it switch to thinking it's hopeless to really seeing it coming together in the space of hours, so if I can keep positive about it I might be able to get some serious work done to it over the coming few days.

There are other things I have that want to be finished as well, but none of them are hammering at the back of my head quite so urgently as that one. Alternatively I could just give up and spend the week with retro games and British TV on Youtube.
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In which I offer advice... [Jul. 18th, 2008|02:02 pm]

pim2005
[Tags|]

...to never leave a banana in your rucksack.

I actually have no clue when I used my proper rucksack last and suspect that it may have been last time I invaded [info]allygatorkin's abode. Which was AT THE END OF APRIL. Needless to say, there was minging liquified banana EVERYWHERE: all over my matress, my fleece, my duvet (fortunately I stripped my bed when I got up and haven't bothered to remake it), the bin (which is now soaking in dettol in the bath). Niiiiiiice.

Luckily, I guess, it was in the net pocket on the side of my rucksack rather than actually in it. But even so.

Ming. Not to put too fine a point on it. And now my hands stink of Dettol.
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