Thursday, January 29, 2009

25 things.

1. I hate this kinds of things.
2. I hate when people start these kinds of things the way I just did.
3. But I wanted to waste a few of these facts since I'm not really that interesting.
4. I have no idea what I'm doing with my life. That's upsetting.
5. My parents separated a few years ago. That's also upsetting.
6. I miss living in Philly pretty often.
7. There is a strange disconnection between girls I'm interested in, and girls that are interested in me. Sometimes these two variables cross paths, but only for a little while. That's the best way I can explain it.
8. I wish I had the balls to talk to pretty girls in public places. Like they do in the movies.
9. I'm pretty introverted.
10. I normally say really awkward things to strangers...mostly because I'm caught off guard that they are talking to me.
11. I am working on writing a screenplay. I have about ten pages/minutes done.
12. I often wish I majored in something other than music.
13. I don't want college to end.
14. I love movies but I'm very selective: I wouldn't say I've seen every movie ever, and at times I'm annoyingly snobbish and even prejudice about movies I think are bad.
15. I love playing drums, but I'm probably more interested in songwriting, but I can't sing or play guitar very well.
16. I'm not very impressed with music in the past year, but I hate when people only like classic rock.
17. I'm pretty unmotivated. Especially when it comes to homework.
18. I'm one of those crazy third party kind of guys. Socially liberal and fiscally conservative, hence Libertarian, but there are some ani war, socially liberal Republicans that I like: Ron Paul.
19. I care more about my ideals than I do my neighbor. I need to fix this.
20. I want to get involved in helping people in need...but I do nothing about it.
21. I'm a Christian. I'm sometimes embarrassed by some mainstream "Christian" ideals...especially the judgmental, hypocritical kinds.
22. I care too much about what people think about me. I wish I didnt. I look up to people like freegans.
23. I'd like to play drums in a band and make money doing it, but it's unlikely to happen.
24. If my parents hadn't separated I probably would have moved to Nashville by now.
25. I don't understand why ice hockey is so unpopular in America.
25.5. I'll probably come up with a whole bunch more when I'm in the shower or walking to class, since that is when I do most of my pondering.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Time for a new phone...

and what better than a phone from the genius electronic makers of canada?
Check this guy out!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Ramblings

Go 'way from my window,
Leave at your own chosen speed.
I'm not the one you want, babe,
I'm not the one you need.
You say you're lookin' for someone
Never weak but always strong,
To protect you an' defend you
Whether you are right or wrong,
Someone to open each and every door,
But it ain't me, babe,
No, no, no, it ain't me, babe,
It ain't me you're lookin' for, babe.

I've been listening to a lot of Bob Dylan lately. He's great. It's amazing how many musicians from so long ago are still so relevant today. I wonder how long pop music will last. Will people in the year 3000 still be talking about Bob Dylan or Elvis or the Beatles?

I watched I'm not there, a movie based on Bob Dylan's life. I didnt really get it. I can appreciate "film for the sake of film" type movies, but this just didn't really do it for me, which is ashame since there are so many great actors in it. Maybe another viewing will be better.
.
Last semester I was working on a screenplay, just for fun. It was based on Murphy by Samuel Beckett. I don't know what happened, but I stopped writing. I finished about ten pages, which is about ten minutes.

I was actually writing the screenplay while I was reading the book, because I thought maybe it would give a fresh perspective to the script. I think it ended up more like a line by line copy, and I didn't want that. I wasn't really sure how to get out of that trap. Maybe I'll revisit it. I want to.
.
I couldn't think of a title for this blog post.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

"You can really suck it"



hahaha. Tina Fey is great. Apparently they were actual user names of people who were bashing her on the nytimes message boards.
.
So, Illinois was good. Long trip. Lots of snow and ice. Some dude spun out and hit the guard rail right in front of us, and I managed to avoid him...Earnhardt style. No I don't watch NASCAR.

I got cut. No surprise. I played like crap, but there were a lot of good players there, so even if I played my best I would've gotten cut. So it was a good experience, no complaints.
.
Two shows in MD this weekend. should be a good time. I'm taking full advantage of my newish sampler at live shows, so my band is going slightly more electronic every day. slightly. like a p.h. more.
.
I'm playing at the inauguration on tuesday. CNN tells me I should be scared of a terrorist attack. I'm not. Mom always said if you don't believe in them, they'll leave you alone. Of course that was about the monsters in my closet. And it didnt even work too well with them. But who knows.

"Why can't a heterosexual guy tell a heterosexual guy that he thinks his booty is fly?" hahah

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Synecdoche, Illinois

I fell in love again
all things go, all things go
drove to Chicago
all things know, all things know
we sold our clothes to the state
I don't mind, I don't mind
I made a lot of mistakes
in my mind, in my mind

Listening to some Sufjan Stevens in preparation to my trip to Illinois(e) tomorrow. Trying out for a drum corps called the Cavaliers. They're pretty serious. It will be a good experience at the very least.
.
The new Killers album isn't as good as everyone says. Maybe I should listen again.
.
I got news from a high-ranking person that Synecdoche, New York is playing at UD in the spring. So get pumped if you haven't seen it yet! A facebook e-vite is soon to follow. By me of course.
.
Ok, I'm gonna hit the hay soon for a good 5 hours of sleep. My alarm is set for 1:30. (!)

(edit) Thanks to "Chelsea 514" for the insider info!

Faith like a trampoline or a brickwall?

"Somebody recently gave me a videotape of a lecture given by a man who travels
around speaking about the creation of the world. At one point in his lecture, he
said if you deny that God created the world in six literal twenty-four-hour
days, then you are denying that Jesus ever died on the cross. It's a bizarre
leap of logic to make, I would say.

But he was serious.

It hit me while I was watching that for him faith isn't a trampoline; it's a
wall of bricks. Each of the core doctrines for him is like an idividual brick
that stacks on top of the others. If you pull one out, the whole wall starts to
crumble. It appears quite strong and rigid, but if you begin to rethink or
descuss even one brick, the whole thing is in danger. Like he said, no six-day
creation equals no cross. Remove one, and the whole wall wobbles
....
What if [one] spring [or doctrine] was seriously questioned? Could a person
keep jumping? Could a person still love God? Could you still be a
Christian?...if the whole faith falls apart when we reexamine and rethink one
spring, then it wasn't that strong in the first place, was
it?
...
Somebody showed me a letter from the president of a large seminary
who is raising money to help him train leaders who will defend Christianity. The
letter went on about the desperate need for defense of the true faith. What
disturbed me was the defensive posture of the letter, which reflects one of the
things that happens in brickworld: you spend a lot of time talking about how
right you are. Which of course leads to how wrong everybody else is. Which then
leads to defending the wall. It struck me reading the letter that you rarely
defend a trampoline. You invite people to jump on it with you.

I am far more interested in jumping than I am in arguing about whose
trampoline is better.
"

-Rob Bell in Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith

This is from an older book by Rob Bell, which is pretty amazing. His analogies make sense of a lot of things. I just got his new book entitled Jesus wants to save Christians: A Manifesto for the Church in Exile. Definitely check this guy out if you're into this kind of stuff...or even if you aren't. haha.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Top 5 Movies of 2008

Seems like an appropriate way to start a new year and a new blog. These are in alphabetical order.

  • Be Kind Rewind - While the reality of the plot, and Mos Def's acting both leave much to be desired, I was overcome with the charming home-town feel of the film. Michel Gondry is great at this kind of stripped-down filmmaking, and the fact that he used actual residents of the town with no acting background to act along-side Jack Black and Danny Glover was great.
  • Burn After Reading - The Coen brothers never let me down. I actually just watched this last night, and it was just amazing. Brad Pitt's character is just plain hilarious. A lot of their movies have that mood the whole time like SOMETHING is going to happen and you just can't wait to find out what...this one is no exception.
  • The Dark Knight - You've seen it, I'm sure. There isn't much I have to say about this one. Bravo, Heath.
  • Horton Hears a Who - Ok, I'm biased. You might not like this at all. Horton was my favorite Dr. Seuss book as a kid. It amazed me to think a whole world of living things could exist on a small speck. So I loved the film adaptation.
  • Synecdoche, New York - (#2 on TIME's list!) The latest from my personal favorite screenwriter, Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich, Adaptation, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), and also his directing debut. It stars Philip Seymour Hoffman as a struggling theatre director who starts a large scale theatre project in a life-size replica of New York City, within a warehouse in New York City. It was originally announced that Kaufman was writing a horror movie, but Kaufman soon corrected the announcement, saying the film is about everything that people are actually afraid of in life: sickness, death, despair, regret, failure. It is a beautiful mess of a movie; don't expect your typical Hollywood Blockbuster, and don't plan on catching all the essence of the movie on the first view.
Honorable Mention:
  • Forgetting Sarah Marshall - Just hilarious, and super quotable. Almost replaced Horton on my list.
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - This was just a great story, and well acted too. It was almost three hours long, but didn't even seem like it.
Worst Movies:
  • The Strangers - not that I expected much, but this was two hours of nothing happening. And then the "surprise" ending was cliche and pointless.
  • The Happening - Also the biggest disappointment. I love M. Night and Marky Mark, but they both failed me. The laughable dialogue, equally laughable deaths, and Wahlberg's annoying, whiney character all made me want to join in the festivities and cut my throat with my ticket stub.

Movies I still haven't seen!! - Frost/Nixon, The Fighter, My Winnipeg, Milk

AND Movies I Want to See In 2009:

  • Where the Wild Things Are - directed by Spike Jonze, featuring acters in giant wild-things costumes with CGI faces. The early stills look awesome. It was originally postponed because the studio said the the shooting they did was too dark for kids, but I think its scheduled for an October release
  • Watchmen - definitely worth an IMAX trip.
  • Funny People - I'm not a big Adam Sandler fan as of late, but hopefully Judd Apatow and Seth Rogen will make up for that.
  • Inglourious Basterds - Tarantino directing Brad Pitt, Mike Myers, B.J. Novak, and Sam Jackson in a movie about Jews fighting back against the Nazis. Oh my, if this is good, it will be GOOD.
  • Nine - I've been looking forward to something else with Daniel Day Lewis ever since "There Will be Blood," so I don't even care what this is about! (fun fact. this is set to release on 9/9/09, along with another movie entitled "9." Don't get them confused.