Yes!

Now that my books are newly-organized, I have one shelf entirely for what used to be referred to as my “reading pile”. Only now, they sit on a shelf, separated out from the others, each book purchased with the intent to read it, and yet, because of a lack of focus or the intervention of other shiny things, like running or booze or strippers or iPhones, the books remain unread, alas.

That reminds me, I have another category of books that I forgot to mention: Unread.

So tonight, with my apartment completely clean and my laundry done and very little money remaining in my bank account until payday, I decided to pull out one of the unread books and read it.

I had many books from which to choose: a history of Portland, a couple of books on philosophy and consciousness, some light fiction, and many others.

The one I pulled out was recommended to me by Kevin, and is by Danny Wallce and it’s entitled “Yes Man”.

And now I’m logging off for a bit, to sit in my library, listen to some background music, and read.

G’night.

Not able to tape the meeting?

The Mercury is reporting that Mayor Potter’s staff refused to allow the homeless protesters to record the meeting today.

I thought I had the right, in Oregon, to record any conversation I was a party to? Of course, I’m not a lawyer, so…

…I guess I’ll stop there.

Any actual lawyers want to chime in on the topic, though? Comment or let me know privately.

Independent Film Review series

Found this list via the Portland Mercury, and haven’t found it anywhere else. There’s more than a few films on this list that I’d like to see again on the big screen, and more than a few favorites.

  • May 12: The Virgin Suicidesmissed this one!
  • May 19: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
  • May 26: Rushmore
  • June 2: Annie Hall
  • June 9: The Squid and the Whale
  • June 16: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
  • June 23: Punch Drunk Love
  • June 30: Secretary
  • July 7: Foxy Brown
  • July 14: In the Company of Men
  • July 21: Storytelling

Every Monday night, 7:30 PM, at the Broadway Theater in downtown Portland. $5.

If anyone wants to join me next week for a little Hunter S. Thompson as told by Terry Gilliam via Johnny Depp and the less-geek-y del Toro (Benicio), just let me know. I’ll probably show up drunk, y’know, to honor Thompson’s memory.

It might be a very interesting experience to view “Secretary” with an audience, especially for someone mildly repressed like myself…

Straighten

My apartment has never been cleaner.

Bathroom: ready for a surprise guest.

Living room: vacuumed and everything in its place.

Kitchen: dishes done, recycling put away. I even mopped the floor.

Bedroom: clean sheets, clothes folded and put away.

I even cleaned the windows!

Last room to do was my library. I had books in piles everywhere. Sunday I built one more bookshelf, then last night I sorted and alphabetized all my books into categories.

I have the following categories (from memory so I might miss one or two):

      First bookcase

    • Reference: dictionaries (yes, I have more than one), thesauruses, style guides, maps, etc.
    • Computers
    • Humor and Sports: This is just a few books but an important category.
    • Textbooks: Just had a few and wanted to keep them separated out.
    • Self-Help and Relationships: An area of special study over the course of my life.

      Second bookcase

    • Science and Philosophy: I tried to separate these out but had a hard time distinguishing in some edge cases. F’rinstance, Daniel Dennett’s books on consciousness and evolution: philosphy? Or science? A bit of both, I think.
    • History: General non-fiction books on various topics, including my recent purchases of specifically political works, like Jerome Armstrong and Markos Moulitsas Zúniga’s “Crashing the Gate” or Thomas Frank’s “What’s the Matter with Kansas?”.
    • Memoir and Biographies I’ve got four biographies of Philip K. Dick, and a few other memoirs and biographies. It’s about a half-shelf worth.
    • Religious Texts: The Koran, Bhagavad Gita, Bible, etc., and various books critiquing same.

      Third bookcase

    • Fiction: Everything else.

Now I want to find a program, like Delicious Library, and catalog them all. And my CDs and DVDs and other movies, too.

Yeah, I’m an organizing buzzsaw lately. Heh.

Showing up

The bride looked very happy.

The groom looked at me cautiously.

I felt awkward and out of place.

And then I left my ex-girlfriend’s wedding reception.

Futurama becomes bizarre

This black-and-white, unfinished preview of the next Futurama DVD, the follow-up to “Bender’s Big Score”, looks… um… bizarre.

Spoilers ahoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6jhJhmw2u4&hl=en]

The tentacles reaching out of the anomaly and attaching to people, including Fry, creep me out.

Self-aware

A recurring theme last night, while hanging out with Kevin, was the question of how to behave in public. Specifically, how different would we behave if we were filthy rich.

The evening began with a viewing (my second, Kevin’s first) of “Iron Man”, in which ultra-rich corporate executive and weapons dealer Tony Stark gets the awesomest toy ever, a red-and-gold suit of flying armor. He’s also got a self-aware computerized butler called Jarvis, and holographic and touch-screen controls for said computer. Even his off-the-shelf toys are envy-producing: an Audi R8, a Bentley limo, various personal jets (I think I counted two different types but am not an aeronautics buff enough to identify them) complete with on board stripper-stewardesses and requisite pole, a Malibu mansion. And backed by the confidence that billions in assets can provide, his cocky manner becomes charm.

After the movie, Kevin and I went to dinner at Montage. The crowd there, even early, is largely made up of young and beautiful people, and I had serious eye contact with a breath-taking brunette who reminded me a bit of Alyssa Milano. But I could not get up and approach her, strike up a conversation. As I related a story from last week to my friend, which was about a similar situation of brief contact with an attractive and possibly interested Asian woman, Kevin berated me and (jokingly) threatened to strike me about the head and face for failing to follow-up.

His theory, which he himself is unable to put into practice without jeopardizing his marriage to the lovely M, is that one should discard all care and worry, and just act. He suggested that such an attitude was a perk of being über-rich. Merely pretending to be a billionaire would produce the same results. I digested his ideas as I devoured my green pesto mac and cheese and cornbread. This idea was not new to me, but still I seem unable to manage the leap that would let me attempt it on a regular basis. Is there some trick I could use to put myself in the right mental state?

It is perhaps a measure of my depressed mental state that when I think “act like you don’t care” my first thought is not of the freedom that having an unlimited bucket of money, but instead the sense of looming inevitability that comes with knowing you’ll be dead in six months. That’s just the first place my mind takes me, lately.

We continued talking about this idea for the rest of the night, and when we reached Papa Haydn’s for dessert, Kevin became a bit more show-y and assertive, and I followed his lead. A little bit. I still felt self-conscious and inwardly was a bit shocked at some of the things he said or did, but, honestly, afterward, what was the harm done? He said, out loud and where she could hear it, that the hostess was cute. He asked to be seated in the section where the cute waitress was serving. He joked about not tipping the waitress when she needed her pen back. All harmless and fun. Although perhaps socially transgressive and perhaps the staff and other customers were uncomfortable. Who knows? Maybe they were secretly enjoying it, maybe they were offended.

Either way they are not likely to forget it soon.

When I joked, “Would I look like this if I were rich?” Kevin stated, flatly, “No.” I laughed and said, “Yeah, probably. I really like this t-shirt.”

He said, “But you’d probably wear clothes that fit you better.” Yes, probably so.

The most taboo thing I did was pick my fork up by its tines and tried to eat with the handle. And even then, I felt awkward and had to stop after just a few seconds.

But I laughed and had fun all evening. I think Kevin did, too.

At the end of the night, when Kevin drove home, and I sat and reflected on the night, I remembered having a lottery ticket in my pocket. A ticket I had not checked to see if it was a winner or not. Likely, not.

But wouldn’t it make a great story if, all throughout the evening, I had had on my person, stuck away in my wallet, a piece of paper worth millions? It would be like the story of a callow farm boy who is, secretly, a prince, heir to a royal throne.

I still haven’t checked the ticket. I might not for a while. Maybe it is the trick that will allow me to act with more freedom and less crippling forethought.

Drawing a comparison in order to show a similarity in some respect

A collection of amusing analogies from around the interwebz to describe Sen. Hillary Clinton and her campaign:

There’s bound to be more out there but when I tried to search I got all the Clinton-hating wingnut sites.