Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Snowy DC

I woke up yesterday to a pretty blanket of snow outside and took this picture of the view from my front door. My neighborhood looked particularly quaint with the snow obscuring the shabbiness that inevitably characterizes a college neighborhood. Today, the scene is less picturesque. Snow is now "freezing rain," and there's a hard shell on the fallen powder that reminds me of the burnt sugar of crème brulée.

A brief recap of Inauguration Day: It was an incredibly cold day, and my feet were blocks of ice from standing but as many have said before me, it was moving to see so many Americans (and even foreigners) bearing the cold to witness history. Everyone was friendly and supportive of one another, joking about the weather and shaking strangers' hands after Obama was sworn in. People were silent during Pastor Rick Warren's speech, a respectful gesture considering the controversy surrounding his participation in inauguration. There were a lot of boos for Joe Lieberman and some jeers here and there for President Bush, but even the liberal crowd discouraged it. I've now been to two consecutive inaugurations, which is strange to think about. I certainly didn't plan this out.

Well, this was an exercise in procrastination for studying for a test on Baroque music tomorrow. More to come later this week. I'm seeing Lykke Li at Sixth & I Synagogue on Saturday night!

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Tired


The inauguration has thrown off my game. Or rather, the ensuing fatigue has. I skipped a class today to do homework for tomorrow's class in order to go to the West Virginia game tonight where Hoyas lost terribly to the Mountaineers and I lost my cell phone. Blurgh.

Things could be worse, but I couldn't be more excited for the weekend to arrive.

On a random note, I've been watching St. Elmo's Fire in bits and pieces, and I've become obsessed with the Love Theme. I seem to be 22 years too late for this sensation.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Pre-Inauguration Recap


I am absolutely exhausted from the Inauguration events of this past weekend, but I was thrilled that I was in DC to witness all of it happening. Still, it took a little effort to participate in everything. I think everyone kind of had to nudge themselves along at 5 o'clock in the morning, reminding themselves that Obama's inauguration was worth hours of standing in freezing temperatures.

Inauguration festivities began on Sunday with the "We Are One" pre-Inauguration Concert at the Lincoln Memorial. The Washington Post reported that Bruce Springsteen, Beyonce, and James Taylor were performing. They were... as well as Stevie Wonder, U2, John Mellencamp, Pete Seger, Shakira, Usher, Sheryl Crow, John Legend, Patti LaBelle, John Bon Jovi, Josh Groban, Garth Brooks, Mary J. Blige, will.i.am, Herbie Hancock, and Renée Fleming. I named them all for dramatic effect. How could I not go to this thing? I left the house with my housemates around 7AM to walk to the Mall armed with 3 layers of pants, 5 layers of shirts and jackets, a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, and a deck of cards. The concert started at 2PM and we arrived a little after 8AM.

The hours went by slowly, but the good company provided plenty of conversation and warm bodies to cuddle with. There was minimal pushing and medium levels of hostility in the crowd. Making your way to a port-a-potty was treacherous and nerve-racking, but once there, you'd have a friendly stranger to chat with. Good luck finding your way back though; after a certain point, leaving the group to pee meant certain abandonment.

The concert was not without flubs. The sound system echoed horribly once it actually began working. We couldn't hear the opening blessing by Bishop Gene Robinson and chanted "Turn it up!" with thousands of frustrated onlookers. Bruce Springsteen opened the concert with an acoustic version of "The Rising" with a choir. Luckily, sound was restored shortly after he began, and we all settled down to sing along and listen.

On the whole, the concert was a major success. Performers sang relevant favorites: John Mellencamp sang "Pink Houses"; Mary J. Blige did "Lean on Me"; Stevie Wonder performed "Higher Ground; James Taylor performed "Shower the People"; U2 played "Pride (In the Name of Love)." Bizarrely, Garth Brooks was a favorite with his renditions of "American Pie" and "Twist and Shout"; we just needed to sing and dance the chills out, I guess.

If the list of performers isn't overwhelming enough, let me list the celebrities who spoke briefly between sets: Tom Hanks, Samuel L. Jackson, Ashley Judd, Forrest Whitacre, Steve Carrell, Jamie Foxx, Laura Linney, Martin Luther King III, Jack Black, Rosario Dawson, George Lopez, Tiger Woods, Queen Latifah, and Marissa Tomei. Whew. Not to mention, Joe Biden and Obama gave brief speeches too!

I was skeptical about cramming so many diverse performers into one concert. Shakira's inclusion was slightly confusing, but otherwise, the diversity was an asset: patriotism wove through each and every performance.

Still, the concert was not without controversy. Opera singer Renée Fleming was not introduced, although the US Naval Academy's Glee Club, who backed her, was. Similarly, singer Josh Groban was introduced while the the DC Men's Gay Chorus who backed him was mysteriously left out. In another strike against the gays, HBO edited out the Inauguration Committee told HBO that concert events started at 2:30, resulting in the exclusion of the opening prayer by gay Bishop Gene Robinson from New Hampshire from their tv broadcast. Perhaps it was more than a poor sound system that muted Robinson's prayer from an audience of 750,000 at the Mall? Ok, probably not. I exaggerate. Still, that's a double whammy against the gays in a highly orchestrated event; surely, the exclusion was not merely a misstep.

Alright. I'll recap my thoughts on MLK festivities and Inauguration Day for another time. I've got to get to the homework that I've been neglecting.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Early

I haven't been updating, because second semester senior year has been crazier than I expected. Right now, I'm heading out the door to the inauguration concert. Wish me warm!

Monday, January 5, 2009

Expelled from Facebook?

I was just brainstorming a bit to come up with an idea for a post. I thought about winter break and the upcoming semester. I considered the job hunt that lay ahead. And then I decided to check facebook. I was met with this!
Comedian Michael Ian Black recently posted a rant, "Hey Facebook, What the Fuck?," about the shutdown of his account. He writes:

"How am I supposed to receive invitations to events to which I have no interest in attending? How am I supposed to keep up with what various high school students I have never met are doing? How am I supposed to install and then uninstall various applications because they are annoying?"

He pokes fun at the excessiveness of facebook, and there's definitely some truth in it. I, however, am not the pillar of strength of Michael Ian Black. I need my event invitations; they're good reminders. I need birthday notifications; I don't have that stuff written down on paper. I immediately emailed facebook to politely yet firmly demand the enabling of my account. I demanded justice! After some googling, I discovered that there's been a wave of disabled facebook accounts. So perhaps... I will have to live without facebook for a while.

My expulsion from facebook has prompted a deep and philosophical reflection: What does facebook mean to me? It means having a photographic record of my entire college career, albeit of poor pixel quality. It means photo-stalking people from high school whom I've lost touch with. It means publicizing my radio podcasts. It can even mean finding out if that girl on the rugby team is gay (she probably is).

I hope that my facebook account is restored, but if not, I bid farewell to facebook and my 390-something facebook friends. It's a shame too, because at least a hundred of them were real...

Alternate theory: my facebook got hacked, prompting the closing of my account. Did anyone receive bogus messages or wall posts from my account? Please let me know!

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Top 25 Mashup

I will post a more substantial post about... something in the near future. But until then, Happy New Year! Here's a cool mash-up of the Top 25 Billboard singles of 2008 by DJ Earworm. They seem to blend together effortlessly, which begs the question: Were we, the listeners, boring in 2008?



Billboards' Top 25
*denotes songs that mashed up especially well
Flo Rida Featuring T-Pain - Low
Leona Lewis - Bleeding Love
Alicia Keys - No One
*Lil Wayne Featuring Static Major - Lollipop
*Timbaland Featuring OneRepublic - Apologize
Jordin Sparks Duet With Chris Brown - No Air
Sara Bareilles - Love Song
*Usher Featuring Young Jeezy - Love in This Club
Chris Brown - With You
*Chris Brown - Forever
Ray J & Yung Berg - Sexy Can I
Rihanna - Take a Bow
*Coldplay - Viva La Vida
Katy Perry - I Kissed a Girl
*T.I. - Whatever You Like
*Rihanna - Disturbia
Rihanna - Don't Stop the Music
Natasha Bedingfield - Pocketful of Sunshine
Chris Brown Featuring T-Pain - Kiss Kiss
*Ne-Yo - Closer
Colbie Caillat - Bubbly
Mariah Carey - Touch My Body
Madonna Featuring Justin Timberlake - 4 Minutes
Pink - So What
Finger Eleven - Paralyzer