Friday, November 30, 2007

Love is blind and you're far too kind

Dear Megan,

I just read this line in some liner notes for The Best of Faces: Good Boys When They're Asleep and I wanted to put it here for posterity's sake (because these words will live on forever on the interweb!). It's written by a guy named Dave Marsh, who, according to his byline, "has written about rock music in every major publication for over 30 years." What a job!

Anywhos, he's just gone through the story of the Faces, and about how the band just sort of disintegrated over a period time. He writes about what the various members did (Ronnie Wood joined the Rolling Stones, Rod Stewart became "the Bod", etc.), and finally ends with a discussion of Ronnie Lane, the bassist and one of the band's founding members (as the Small Faces).

Here's the build-up:

"Lane kept going until June 1997, when he died after a long battle with MS, but the story was not entirely over, even then. The following year, Rod Stewart released a new album, on which, after 25 years he finally got round to singing perhaps Lane's best song ever, 'Ooh La La.' [On the original recording, Ron Wood sang it.]"

He ends with: "All such tales of friendship found and lost should have endings so bittersweet."

How great is that?

I miss you, Megs!

love, molly

previous post title source: "Male Model," Sleater-Kinney

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

It's that je ne sais quoi, uh huh

Dear Megs,

I know you don't watch Project Runway (Megan's motto: "If it's not Law & Order, I'm not interested." Chung-chung!), but tonight's episode included the greatest criticism, ever. Courtesy of Michael Kors:

"The crotch is insane."

photo via breadandbutter.com


Yes. Yes it is.

love, molly

ps--I bet you would have enjoyed tonight's episode. They had to create an outfit for Tiki Barber. I know he's no Osi Umenyiora, but ... he does have really white teeth. Seriously, they're crazy white.

previous post title source: "Beautiful," Christina Aguilera

We are beautiful no matter what they say

Dear Megan,

As someone who is still trying to lose the weight I gained during my last pregnancy (yes, Luke is 18-months old), I found this to be particularly hilarious (from "The Hater" on The Onion's A.V. Club):

You know those old anti-smoking PSAs that said whatever you do while pregnant, your baby also does? Well, apparently Christina Aguliera's (sic) unborn baby is already covered in self-tanner.

the pregnant orange

If you put make-up, a wig, and a cropped leather jacket on a tangerine, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.

(emphasis mine)

That is all.

love, molly

previous post title source: "911 is a Joke," Public Enemy

Get up, get get get down

Megs,

Here's a picture of Kevin getting carded outside the gates of the Vandy game. One of his finer moments, I assure you. He was so happy! The group got totally busted by this officer because we were passing around a bottle of Captain Morgan. The ladies at the gate gave it to one of the guys and then told us to go across the street and drink it. And then the cops came!



Frankly, I think they were profiling people with beards. Check out this motley crew:




It totally looks like the picture we took when we got back from Mardi Gras freshman year!


Good times.

love, molly

previous post title source: "Deacon Blues," Steely Dan

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

They got a name for the winners in the world

Dearest Megan,

That name is not "Commodores".

Oh . . . oh . . . Ohhh!!!

photo via Tennessean.com


Another Vanderbilt football season came to a close on Saturday afternoon, as yet another promising season ended with five wins and LOTS of turnovers. For those keeping track, the streak extends to 15 years without bowl eligibility. And yet so close!! We were at five wins with four games left!! Granted, it's doubtful that we would have made it to a bowl this year with only six wins (since all of the SEC--minus Ole Miss [Go Rebs!]--is eligible this year and Vandy doesn't have a very large traveling fan base). But still! Plus, we probably could even have made it to seven. We were only a touchdown back from Kentucky. We had a 16-point lead in the fourth quarter against UT. And I'm sure the team could have put something together against Wake Forest if maybe they had showed up at all.

I'm serious. I cannot recall a more heinous performance in my years of watching the 'Dores. It was awful. Everything about it was just depressing. I can't even explain it, really. It was just ... gray.

Anywhos, I am sorry to note that my purchasing of season tickets had no bearing upon the team's success. I am also sorry that I so readily drowned my sorrows on Saturday night with cheap beer and whiskey that was confiscated at the gates of the stadium (I no longer have a little Captain in me, I assure you). As I considered the state of things on Sunday morning, it was probably a good thing that this was the last game of the season.

Hope y'all had a Happy Thanksgiving. Ours was fine--a quick trip to Starkville and back, all on Thursday. No fried turkey this year, but I'd been missing the baked kind anyway. Plus, I'll forgive a lot of things if there's green bean casserole on the table.

Have a good one!

love, molly

previous post title source: "You'll Never Walk Alone," Rodgers and Hammerstein (anthem of Liverpool Football Club, it's what the crowd is singing in the background of Pink Floyd's "Fearless")

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Though your dreams be tossed and blown . . . walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart

Hey, Megs.

A little outside reading for this post, with commentary after the column. This is from a column called "Suburban Turmoil", featured each week in the Nashville Scene. This week, the author (Lindsay Ferrier) talks about her daughter's soccer team, which is coached by her husband, a newscaster for our local NBC affiliate.

How Soccer Parents Get Their Kicks
by Lindsay Ferrier

“I’m sick of watching this!” a man is yelling from the sidelines at my husband, who’s coaching a game out on the field. “Win at any cost, eh? That girl shouldn’t be playing!”

I look over at the heckler in disbelief as he continues his rant, waving a go-cup of coffee for emphasis. All around him, parents are staring. “Shut up!” one father yells. The girl the heckler’s referring to is all of 5 years old, playing soccer for the second time in her life. She looks at the man uncertainly and then over at her mom, frowning. I can feel my head beginning to explode.

Welcome to the world of preschool soccer.

When we signed up my 3-year-old daughter for the under-6 soccer league, I imagined I was giving her a chance to get some exercise and learn about teamwork while I got in some gossip time with my friends on the sidelines. I was wrong.

“Get your head in the game!” a father shouts at his little girl during one match-up as she wanders aimlessly around the field. “Focus on the ball!” a mother screams repeatedly at another game, in what seems like a total waste of a strain on her vocal chords. I mean, how many 3-year-olds even understand what “focus” means?

“We are here to play!” I overhear a mom hiss more than once through gritted teeth, jerking up a preschooler who (yet again) has collapsed in tears on the sidelines behind me. Several times, I’ve tried smiling at parents on the other team, only to be met with scowls in return. Fraternizing with the enemy—even in a league where the only criterion to play is that your kid has to be out of diapers—is apparently not allowed.

We receive an email forwarded to us from a friend. Sent by The Heckler to the league officials and all of the other parents on his team, he accuses my husband of recruiting our assigned 5-year-old team member as a “ringer.” He has included my husband’s online work bio, which mentions that Hubs has coached girls’ soccer for seven seasons. From that, The Heckler has concluded that Hubs “has obviously been around the block a few times” and “knows every trick in the book.” We laugh, imagining Hubs casing preschool playgrounds for a mini-Mia, but honestly, the email is unsettling. When I guest-coach a game a few weeks later, our 5-year-old player eyes the sidelines warily. “I’m glad that man isn’t here to make me feel bad again,” she confides to me. I feel the tiniest crack begin to inch its way across my heart.

What is it about soccer for the small set that makes parents lose their minds? For answers, I check in with Dr. Gregg Steinberg, a professor of sport psychology at Austin Peay, who recently wrote a book called Flying Lessons (myflyinglessons.com), about teaching children to respond like champions in every aspect of their lives. What he has to say about my experiences on the preschool soccer field makes sense. “Parents live vicariously through their children, regardless of age,” he explains. “Their children are a reflection of themselves, and parents are protecting their ego. That makes everyone act crazy.”

I think about the mom I saw at the last game. A former soccer player herself, she clearly had been working with her 3-year-old, who scored one goal after another. I looked over at her as she watched her daughter, expecting to see her face aglow with pride. Instead, her brow was knitted, her mouth turned into a frown as she whispered fiercely to herself, completely oblivious to anyone or anything except for her child out on the field.

It’s not like I’m some kind of soccer mom saint, either. I spent the first few games humiliated after my own daughter refused to go out on the field for more than five minutes, opting instead to play ring-around-the-rosie on the sidelines or sit in my lap. I tried bribes and threats and even made excuses for my daughter to the other parents. It became clear to me after a couple of games that I needed a figurative slap across the face. All I was doing was giving my daughter a chance to experience soccer for herself. What she decided to do with that opportunity had to be entirely up to her. We both enjoyed ourselves a whole lot more after my little epiphany. By the end of the season, without my “help,” she was playing most of every game, occasionally even taking a break from socializing on the field to actually kick the ball. Victory!

Some of my friends have had little sympathy for my predicament, saying 3-year-olds are too young to be playing competitive soccer, anyway. Dr. Steinberg agrees. “Children need to focus on mastery until they understand morals, ethics, how to handle winning and losing,” he says. “This usually occurs around age 10 to 12.” Ten to 12? In recreational soccer, that’s the time when kids start leaving the sport—in droves.

I think I just figured out why.


Here begins Molly's commentary . . .

Okay, first off, I have no doubts that the guy described in the beginning of the column was a serious asshole. (One of Ella's classmates plays on Ferrier's team, and her mother mentioned what a jerk they had on the sideline during one game.) I would even be unsurprised if the other parents mentioned were as bad as she states, though having watched Ella for seven weeks I never saw displayed any such behavior--or anything close, for that matter. Most parents are too busy trying to slap themselves awake (9 am games) or shed the blanket of heat and humidity that has been cast upon them by the weather gods (10:30 am games, until about November).

Do these look like bitter parents who yell at their kids and live vicariously through 3- and 4-year olds?

Now, for the meat of the matter. That "5-year old" was HUGE!!!! She was a total ringer, and she totally dominated the games. I feel really sorry for her that she had to be subjected to the heckling, and the hecklers should be ashamed of themselves. But her parents need a good talking to.

Every time we went to the fields, Ella hoped that we weren't playing the Blue Goo. The second time we played them, Ella was on the verge of tears after the eighth time that the girl took the ball away from her (of course, this was when Ella was actually playing soccer and not playing ring-aound-the-rosies with her classmate on the other team [oh my God, do you think it was me yelling "focus on the ball"?!?]). And she wasn't alone. You could see the same look of defeatism on the faces of all of Ella's teammates--not to mention the girl's own teammates. Plus, the first time we played them, she was playing goalie! There are no goalies in this age group!!! And she took up a good two-thirds of the goal. I'm not exaggerating.

Yes, this was an under-6 league. But the teams were broken out into 3- and 4-year olds, and 5-year olds. The ringer had a little sister on the team and their parents just didn't want to deal with having them on separate teams. We had a girl on our team with a 5-year old sister and she played on a different team. As you do. I'm sure it was all well and good for the Ferriers to have a ringer on the team, because it wasn't their kids getting pushed around by a ginormo.
I understand that there are asshole parents out there and that there are miserable parents out there and that there are asshole, miserable parents out there trying to re-live their youth through their children. I didn't see any of it during Ella's season, but maybe I was just too busy yelling at her to focus on the ball or something. I just cannot stand the self-satisfied tone of this column.
It's just another attack on good, old-fashioned American values by the liberal media. (Did you like that? That was for you.)

I'd think about writing a letter to the editor, but they'd just print it with a title that made me look stupid. Something like, "Bitter much?" Rargh.

And that is that. I've decided that I probably won't go to the Bare Jr. concert, as much as I want to. I don't feel like hanging out at Exit/In by myself, and Evan can't come because his parents will be in town. Oh, well. I'll just have to rock out to Boo-Tay on my computer. Pisser.

Alrighty, then. Peace out. And Happy Thanksgiving! Hugs and kisses to the dogs and the 'Roni. (That's Todd-eronious.)

love, molly

previous post title source: "You Blew Me Off," Bare Jr.

You assault me ruthlessly, oh you're the best

Megan.

I just read in this week's Nashville Scene that Bare Jr. is reuniting for a show at Exit/In Friday night. And they're playing the entirety of Boo-Tay. Why am I just now finding out about this?? I went from writing a master's thesis that featured a good bit of writing on one of their members to not finding out about their reunion show until it's probably too late for me to get a babysitter? What is going on here?

Alack.

Maybe I can find a sitter on short notice. Can I miss this show? I doubt it.

Cross your fingers for me . . .

love, molly

previous post title source: "I Love L.A.," Randy Newman

Santa Monica Boulevard (We love it!)

Hey, Megs!

Long time, no blog, I know. I went out to LA and then came back to a jackload of work and then Ella got an ear infection and then I got sick and then and then and then. So, I'll have to catch you up on the haps.

LA was AWESOME!!! I love that place! It was so much fun. The last time I was out there, it was the summer after our freshman year in college. I drove cross-country with my friend, Jen, and her brother. They're both from California, so they were very down on the Angeles. We stayed out at Laguna Beach (not that that wasn't spectacular in its own right, even though the beaches have nothing on the Redneck Riviera) and only went in to LA one lame night. There was to be no lameness this time! Dan is a total Los Angeleno. He loves it and that makes me love it.

First things first, how awesome is The Price is Right? SO AWESOME!! Sure, there was no Bob Barker, but Drew Carey is a good host (and so happy!), so you don't really miss the Bob too terribly. You do miss Rod Roddy, however. The new announcer just doesn't compare. (And "new" is probably not the most appropriate term, since Mr. Roddy passed away four years ago. Maybe "relatively new"?)


Rod Roddy photo via cnn.com ; Rich Fields photo via cbs.com

I know Rod Roddy. I watched Rod Roddy for many years. And you, sir, are no Rod Roddy.

Anyway, our seats were awesome--right behind Contestant's Row. If you can't get up on stage (which we wouldn't have been able to, since we are family of a CBS employee), then sitting right behind Contestant's Row is about as good as it's gonna get. It was that good. We got escorted to our seats about ten minutes before taping started, and they had cordoned them off for us. The people behind us were amazed. "How did you get those seats?" they exclaimed. We know people, that's how. Important people.

The contestants were not too swift on our episode (airs December 6--set your TiVos!); I think maybe only one of them won a prize and one girl was on Contestant's Row the whole game. (How do I know this for sure? BECAUSE I WAS SITTING RIGHT BEHIND CONTESTANT'S ROW!!) She was from New Jersey, so she's obviously pretty dim. (Just jokes--you know I love the Garden State and all who hail from it.) If she had listened to me, she would have been up on stage like five times. But she didn't. She listened to her stupid Rutgers friends. Stupid Rutgers. I think she got a year's supply of coffee or something for her troubles. The lady that won the Showcase Showdown was within a hundred dollars of winning both showcases. Dan was very upset because he had designed the new graphics for the double-showcase win.

And yes, I was yelling the prices out. When we went backstage after the show, all of the producers were very pleased with our participation: "You guys were shouting out prices and everything!" I've only been preparing for this my whole life, people! We met the Producer, Roger, who's been with the show for thirty years or so. He told us all about the studio (it's a lot smaller than it looks like on TV--it's crazy). Did you know that that is the same stage where they filmed Match Game and The Carol Burnett Show? Me neither, until I met the producer of the Price is Right!

It was a great time. I highly recommend it. I think that we should all go out there together, because they guarantee your tickets if you have a group of ten or more. Plus, if you're from a big group that's dressed all alike (say, in black and gold), there's a good chance that someone from your group is getting on stage. Drew Carey called it the happiest place on earth, because it's the only place where you actively root for good things to happen to some stranger. It is! It was really great.

(Quick side note: I am listening to WRVU this morning because the best show ever is on. It's called "The Best of Bread" and it plays 9-11 am on Wednesdays. I highly recommend that you give it a listen if you get a chance. I'm serious when I tell you that it is the best. We just finished listening to Thin Lizzy and now we get some "Bonnie Prince" Billy Joel, and the hosts are the embodiment of hilarity. You can listen to it on your computer through the magic of the internets.)

We also got to cross the picket lines to get in to Television City. It was awesome. The picket lines were rather small. Also, I'm sure it's been said elsewhere, but for writers these guys have some lame picket signs. "WGA On Strike" does not have a ring to it.

Got to tour around Television City for a while before the show. It made sense that friends and family can't be contestants on the shows after I visited Dan's shop, where the prices were just hanging out there being made into their various colors and shapes. We saw Christian Jules LeBlanc (aka Michael Baldwin from The Young and the Restless) in the hallway outside the Y&R sets. I got to tour the Y&R sets and Dan took a surreptitious photo of me at the bar of the Genoa City Athletic Club. You can see pictures of everything below.

Thursday night we went out for delicious sushi. Friday we had delicious fish and shrimp tacos (so delicious) before we took an extended driving tour of LA that featured a pit-stop at the Getty Museum and ended with dinner on Hermosa Beach with Carol and her big little boy, James. Unfortunately, Dan's mad driving skills left Kevin car-sick in bed while Dan and I went out with all of his friends to the Big Foot Lodge. That bar was awesome, and it was so much fun there with Dan and his friends. We spent much of the evening awash in the glow of all of their iPhones, which was hilarious. Whenever anyone had a question about anything, it was like quick draw to see who could find it first on their phone's web browser. Dan's friends are great. They're his group of friends from SCAD, mostly, along with various friends and cousins that moved out there after they graduated. They're very artistic and hilarious and I pretty much love them. Ah, to be young, single, and not poor in LA!

Saturday was the epic day to end all vacation days. We drove down to Santa Monica, rented some low-rider bicycles, and rode 'em to Venice Beach. It was too fun. Saturday night we went to El Campadre, Dan's favorite Mexican restaurant, and had delicious margaritas with flaming lemons! Yummy. Anywhos, it was an awesome trip and so much fun. You know it's a good trip when you get off the plane at 10:15 am and are drinking Fat Tire at brunch by 11 am on a Thursday!

Finally, what you've been waiting for--PICTURES!!

Days 1 and 2 (before I ran out of batteries at the Getty. And by the way, the sandwich at the beginning there? It features the following: scrambled eggs, hash browns, avocado, tomatoes, and goat cheese. Like breakfasty heaven on a bun.):



Day 3 (Santa Monica ["I just wanna see some PALM TREES"] to Venice Beach via low-rider bicycles). For this one, you have to go to Dan's website: http://picasaweb.google.com/danzigner/MollyKevinInLASaturday

Alright, that's all I've got for this post. I hope you have a great Thanksgiving!

love, molly

previous post title source: "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Whatever happened to my Transylvania twist?

Happy All Saints Day, Megs! (It's a Holy Day of Obligation. Did you know that? I didn't know it until graduate school, and today I heard that the Catholic schools were out of school today! I'm quite sure that never happened when I was a child. Who is making up these crazy rules??)

Some pictures from Halloween. Ella dressed up as a pretty princess (is this really my child?!) and Luke dressed up as his father.