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Wednesday, August 10th 2005

6:07 PM

My New Blog Home FINAL POST HERE!!!

  • mood: happy but tired
  • level of aggravaton: currently none
  • currently reading: swamped by the Wordpress Codex

Since my web-hosting has finally decided to offer blogging options, I've moved my blog. It's new permanent home is on my site.

I will still be blogging as randomly and sporadically as always, hopefully working into a semi-regular blogging schedule.

At the moment, I have not figured out how to install a "subscribe" option on my new blog, so just bookmark it for now. I'll work on the getting some sort of subscribing plugin in the next few days.

Now I'm all in one place!

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Tuesday, August 9th 2005

10:31 AM

a beautiful love story

  • mood: awake but eyesore
  • currently reading: online Wordpress documentation

I’ve finally gotten to watch The Road Home.

It’s not very long but it covers a lifetime. Although a Chinese movie, it has a very French feel to it. The heart of the movie is probably the most beautiful love story I’ve seen on film. The story is both incredibly simple and the most extraordinary romance. There isn’t much more to the movie and yet it awed me. The movie is flawless; like a tiny, perfect gem.

Beautiful and simple.

PS: Not to distract from my post, but I am in the process of moving my blog onto my site. Finally!


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Tuesday, August 2nd 2005

6:03 PM

my new crush

  • mood: good!
  • currently reading: newsmagazine backlog

I’ve had a subscription to Newsweek for the last two or three years. While I don’t agree with a lot of the articles, it gives me the news without having to watch TV (which I don't do) or click through CNN (I’m terribly lazy).

I enjoy some of their regular columnists and don’t bother to read the rest. One columnist that I have always enjoyed reading is Fareed Zakaria. He is obviously well-educated, well-traveled and seems to be a very sensible man, which is so appealing to me.

His August 1 column is the best thing I’ve seen in Newsweek yet. Read the column. It’s the most logical discussion of the issues surrounding Islamic terrorism that I’ve seen. I've had these thoughts before, but since they were in my own little vacuum they had no merit. I read this column and was floored. Here is the brilliantly simple truth, stated in such a way that everyone can understand it (and much better than my musings). I love the absolute sense he makes. If this man were running for office, I might even be compelled to vote.

I like honesty, truth and simplicity. I fall short of these ideals all the time but I know them when I see them. Fareed combines all these qualities, and more, in his column. I feel it describes the truth of the situation from the eyes of a normal civilian, not a politician or anyone else with a vested interest in the matter.

So now I’ve got a new celebrity crush. I guess it replaces the guttering flames of my Trent Reznor obsession.


PS: For the record, I also have a standing subscription to The Week too. Sort of balances everything out.

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Wednesday, July 20th 2005

7:57 PM

Disneyworld: Food and Lodging

  • mood: very good
  • currently reading: Javascript, other web books

I visited Disneyworld for the first time in early June. I’ve never been to Florida. I expected it to be hot and humid, and it was. I didn’t expect the amount of rain we got but I guess that goes along with the humidity.

Disneyworld isn’t one big amusement park, it’s lots of smaller amusement parks connected by a series of semi-public roads. It’s all very confusing and generally best to take their shuttles to and from the parks if you stay on-site. Other than some lengthy delays waiting for our bus, this system works.

I’ve never been a Mickey Mouse fan and I’m still not. But there are many Disney movies that I’ve loved, particularly The Little Mermaid and The Fox and the Hound. I knew the park wasn’t completely for kids, so why not? The overall experience was great and I’d go back again, just not in June.

FOOD AND LODGING
We stayed at the Beach Club resort (our first two choices were booked). We ordered an over-priced standard room, which looked uninspiring on the Internet. The room was very comfortable and better maintained than some other equally-priced rooms in large cities. They even offered an Internet connection although I had no energy to surf while there. We were lucky enough to land a corner room, which was roomy, breezy and had its own tiny little patio with a table and chair. The hotel service was terrific. In fact, it was far better than what I expected. They didn’t run things like an amusement park but like a resort. The room-service food was decent enough, like most hotels. They offered a small, empty fridge in the room. You could stock it with your own supplies, or they offered a relatively reasonable program where you made your selection off a list of items and they stocked it for you. I wish every hotel would implement this idea.

I love steam rooms but never did get to visit the one in the hotel. After spending all day in the June Florida weather the last thing I wanted was to sit in a steam room. I assume the amenities were good, but I’m taking that on faith. They had an ice-cream parlor in the hotel, which always had a long line snaking down the outside walkway. In fact, there was always a huge line anywhere Disneyworld served ice-cream. I didn’t get to have ice-cream the entire week I was there. They had a number of pools but since it rained every afternoon, we only visited the pool nearest the laundry room once when we washed our clothes.

We stayed near Epcott since we assumed that was where we’d spend most of our time. We did, if for no other reason than to eat there every night. The World Showcase has a wider variety of food than most cities. Disney’s selection of countries is a little odd, but the mix is fun. The food was great in every restaurant, even if over-priced and a little less than perfectly authentic (based on my other dining experiences). Our two best meals were in China and France.

The best meal, bar none, was at Bistro de Paris. It had an unassuming dress code, which we had prepared for. (We hadn’t prepared for truly fine dining, which is why we didn’t get to try Victoria and Albert’s. Must do more preparatory research next time.) The restaurant was above the other Parisian restaurant (Chefs de Paris) and quiet, with low lighting. The windows were narrow, so it wasn’t obvious you were in a theme park for children. The food was wonderful. I chose the prix fixe menu option including an appropriate wine paired with each course. I even liked the red paired with one of my courses, which is a rarity for me. The atmosphere, since it was not crowded, was very seductive. Combined with my lover and all the wine I drank, it was a very romantic dinner. Our waiter was good but still learning the art of timing and grace. The worst part of the meal was leaving, walking down the stairs and rediscovering I was still in Florida in June instead of Paris. 

We ate at Nine Dragons in China on our last night. It is the best Chinese food I’ve ever had, far better than P.F. Chang’s or any other Chinese restaurant I’ve had. There is no grease, no odd flavors. This is clean, pure food. If we had eaten there our first night we would’ve gone back a couple more times to sample the menu more. The only problem is that my appetite only stretches so far in one meal. There were so many delicious options, so many great smells, such great service. Even my tea tasted like tea. There was no taint from some other beverage having ever been in the teapot or my cup (like coffee). A meal that I remember, especially since the Chinese food where I live is lacking.

I did have one eye-opening experience. One evening, we dined at the Japanese restaurant. Both of us were craving sushi. Again, because we hadn’t done our research, we didn’t realize they had a sushi section and we ended up in the hibachi section. No worries, we ordered some sushi as appetizers with our hibachi meal.

I don’t consider myself a sophisticated person by any stretch. I’ve been to a number of hibachi restaurants, most of them in the Dallas area. While not everyone eats everything (nobody ever seems to like hot green tea), most people seem familiar with what’s on their plate and know what sushi looks like. The point of the World Showcase was driven home to me as the other people at the table looked in horror at our sushi. They suspiciously sniffed at their hibachi dipping sauces and looked askance at the pickled vegetables served as a small appetizer. I guess if you don’t make a point of exploring even as simple a thing as food, going to the World Showcase at Disneyworld is a chance to feel like you’ve touched another culture. Apparently, for a lot of these people, visiting the World Showcase was their first encounter with something other than McDonald’s. To that end, I think that Disneyworld has done a great job with the restaurants. It is a shame the average American visitor isn’t a little more adventurous.

The only bad meal we had in the park was in the MGM section. It was raining quite a bit and we ran into a restaurant that seemed decent. It was part of a chain and not one of Disney’s own places. The food wasn’t bad, but it was certainly a big step down from what we’d gotten used to at the Epcott. Well, the fast food over at Typhoon Lagoon was not all that great either, but it’s a water-park. I sort of expected that.

We usually didn’t eat lunch, but would snack our way through the day to an early dinner. I recommend eating at Disney eateries. They offer better food and better service. You end up paying for it no matter where you eat, so stick with the Disney places.

A note about Disney service
I expected lots of fake smiles and intrusive good cheer. Not at all. What we got instead was friendly, prompt, expert service in all areas of the park. I don’t know how Disney has done it, but they’ve hired people who enjoy their jobs, or at least do a great job of pretending. This is a place where genuine hospitality is as important as not scaring the little ones.

Disney’s attention to detail is amazing. I watched as one of the hordes maintenance workers emptied out a public trash can, replaced the plastic bag and then wiped down the entire trashcan, including the lid where you put your hand. He didn’t just smear dirt around, he actually cleaned it! I’ve never seen this anywhere before and it impressed me. There are a lot of little things like this that Disney offers which I’ve never seen anyplace else. You are indeed their guest, as taken care of as you would expect from a close friend. Usually in only the nicest hotels is the service this good, yet they manage to do this throughout the entire park. (Yes, I checked every trash can I saw and I didn’t find a dirty one.)

Rides and attractions is coming soon....


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Tuesday, July 19th 2005

10:09 AM

bits and pieces

  • mood: good!
  • level of aggravaton: slight, thanks to someone else
  • currently reading: javascript still

I sincerely wonder why people going to the gym will fight to get the parking spot closest to the door. Once in the gym, they will studiously avoid breaking a sweat. I don’t pretend to understand.

I think the snails and slugs out here are very cute. I know they’re death for plants, but they’re novel to me. We don’t have them in Texas, or at least, I’ve never seen one. Expect some snail pictures at some point. (I finally have a macro lens!)

My newest issue of Playboy has pictures from Hef’s 79th birthday party. He still has three interchangeable, early-20s, blonde girlfriends. For those gentlemen who sometimes get a little freaked out when seeing young escorts who make them feel like a father….don’t worry. You’re not a pervert.

When asked by students at Harvard Business School if she would’ve married Donald Trump if he weren’t rich, Melania Knauss-Trump sensibly replied, “If I weren’t beautiful, do you think he’d be with me?” I like honesty.

We’ve heard that a million monkeys at a million keyboards could produce the works of Shakespeare; now, thanks to the Internet, we know that is not true--Robert Wilensky, at a 1996 conference. He saw the future folks; and it was blogs.

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