Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Off to New Orleans


Should you go?

Oh, yes.

Go, because everything in life is fragile and precarious, and we can take nothing for granted, and some day, it really will be all gone. Go, because it's not gone, not at all. Go, because the things you wanted-the beautiful architecture, the majestic oaks, the river wind, the quality of the light that gives even the most mundane just a little big of magic-all remain. Go because people are there, and as long as they are, there will be music, and food, and it will be some of the best of your life. Go, because perhaps you've wanted to help in any way you can, and now the best way you can is to help a historic city regain its economic feet. Go, because every brick in the French Quarter has a story to tell, and so does the damaged ground of the 9th Ward, and you should bear witness. Go because there is so much to celebrate, and this is still the best place there is to do so.


-- Frommer's Portable New Orleans, 7th Edition (Post-Katrina Update)

Monday, August 28, 2006

Misc

Yeah, I've been quiet recently.

Work has been...demanding, and I haven't had the energy for much else.

A few things: first, see The Illusionist. It's a great movie that's getting no publicity.

I have sent a 10-page play to PlayGround in an attempt to get in their writing pool. I'll hear back from them by October 1.

The president of the Tech Museum attended a performance of the New Works Festival and loved it, so there might be life for my play in the future.

And finally: 36 hours from now I'll be on a plane to NOLA. Lord almighty do I need it.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

Whew!

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Damn


(From the National Hurricane Center)

Thursday, August 24, 2006

My Vacation Foiled by Ernesto?

I'm flying to New Orleans for Southern Decadence on Wednesday.



Or maybe not.

Battery

Ha ha ha! Stupid Dell laptop owners! Watch out that your computer doesn't catch on fire! You should have gotten a 15" PowerBook G4, like me, then you wouldn't have this problem! Ha ha ha ha!

...

Uh-oh:
Apple recalls 1.8 million laptop batteries.

Um, never mind.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Listen To Your Mother

When I was a child, my mother told me "never buy shoes mail order, because you'll never know if they'll fit."

I should have listened to my mother, and kept to my original plan to buy running shoes in person, rather than over the Internet.

BTW, just for the record, New Balance M895GB shoes run small and narrow. As opposed to every other pair of New Balance shoes I've ever owned, which tend to run a little big.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Last Day

All good things must come to an end, and today is the last performance of Community Property.


The Palo Alto Daily published their review on Friday. It was...odd. The reviewer's tastes ran opposite to everyone else I've talked to.


The reviewer also made a number of odd mistakes, including claiming that a character (in another one of the plays) that wearing a sweatshirt sporting the Hindu god Shiva was Muslim.


Mental note: not reading reviews is a good thing.


But nevermind. I've had a lot of fun on this show, and I will miss it.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

But Scooby Doo Was Nowhere To Be Seen


The parking lot of Fry's Electronics Palo Alto, 10:30 this morning.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

What to Write About Now?

Now that rehearsals are finished and the show is up, I find that I don't have a lot to write about (the next performance is tomorrow). So I'll update you on a couple of things.

First, my running program: I ran for 25 minutes both Monday and this morning. On Monday that translated to 2.15 miles, but this morning I was faster and ended up going 2.5 miles! That twice as far as the longest distance I ever ran in high school gym class (the last time I ever did any jogging). I find myself a lot less winded and exhausted than I remember myself being back then, probably because this running web site has a better training philosophy than any of my old gym teachers.

I do think I need to go shopping for real running shoes this weekend, though.

Also, I've finally gotten back to revising Swimming the River. All the parts of my next draft are in place, but they need some polishing, which I should have done in a week or two. It's much improved since the reading in June, and I think I'm going to feel pretty comfortable sending to the Santa Cruz Actors' Theatre Play Contest.

I'm actually looking forward to getting Swimming the River done, as I've been working on this since last fall and I'm itching to write something new.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Very Happy

We're done, for this weekend. Opening night went off very well, and Saturday's show was even better.

I spent most of yesterday organizing the pictures I took Tuesday night. I made a CD for each cast member that had the best 20-40 pictures from each show. I've also put the pictures here (if that link doesn't work, try here and click on "New Works Festival").

Daniel asked if there would be video from this show. One of the authors did videotape the show last night, and I'll get a DVD, but I haven't talked to anyone about whether or not it could go up on YouTube (I'm not sure who all has to give permission). At best, I'll be able to after the show ends next week.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Opening Night Tonight

Tonight is opening night! I'm very excited. We had a free preview last night that attracted a good number of people. My actors have really come together over the last week and the show has started to crackle. I'm very happy.

A critic is coming tonight. Oh my. I wouldn't have expected that for this show. This will be the first time a critic will review a work I've written. When I'm acting, I don't read reviews, but a review of this show I just might read.

Opening night cards/gifts are traditional, so I've gotten cards and little Whitman's Samplers to give to my actors and director tonight.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Click Click Click

Last night was our first run with costumes and makeup. Our producer asked me to take some pictures, and so I spent all of last night's run doing so.

Total picture count: 628. That's more pictures than I took on my first vacation to Europe, in 1997. That was a two week trip that included almost a week in Paris. I got 125 of my play.

Behold the difference between digital and film photography.

My only regret is that so many of the pictures from my play are slightly blurry. This ties into the dim lighting I've been moaning about. With dim lighting it becomes quite hard to capture motion. My play has a lot of motion.

I've thought about trying again tonight, but a digital SLR camera "clicks" each time you take a picture, which can be quite distracting for actors. So I think I'll leave it be.

Fortunately there's one place where they're all standing still:


Right to left that's Emma, Chris, and Emma's husband Harold. Emma and Harold are clownfish. Chris is a stoner starfish who moves in with them.

Perfect for Kids!

For the kid who has everything: plush doll versions of disease-causing microorganisms. Everything from Rhinovirus (the common cold) to HIV.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Rehearsal Accident

We had our first full run-through last night. Everything went well, except we managed to drop a door-frame on an actor.

The theatre has a door, mounted in a metal frame, on wheels that is brought out for one of the plays. Last night it was brought out, but the wheels were not locked in place. An actor came through the door with great energy, causing it to fall forward and strike the back of his head.

He seemed to be all right, but by the end of the evening was feeling pretty bad. I'm hoping he'll be okay tonight.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Dim Lights, but Otherwise Pretty Good

I just got back from tech rehearsal. Everything went really well, though my play was pretty easy to do lights and sound for (it just has opening music, closing music, and a lighting configuration that stays the same for the entire play). The lighting seems rather subdued, though, and not just for my play. I'm not sure if that's due to a limitation of the theatre or what. But while I was thinking about taking pictures of the various shows, I think the lighting may be too dim; even my digital camera, which works really well in low-light situations, was having trouble tonight getting clear images. I'm going to try my uber-wide lens (a Canon 50mm f/1.4) tomorrow and see if that helps.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Brownies

Tomorrow is the tech rehearsal for the New Works Festival. "Tech" refers to sound and lights. We don't run the entire play; we just go from one sound or light que to the next. So if, after setting up the lights at the top of a show, the lighting doesn't need to change until page five, then we skip ahead to page five.

Nevertheless, tech rehearsal has a well-deserved reputation for being long and boring. Often actors will spend long periods of time just standing on stage while the lighting designer, director, etc. make adjustments. We're scheduled to go from 5:00 Sunday evening to 11:00.

Since it will be a long day, the playwrighting instructor, CW, suggested we bring snacks to feed the actors, crew, etc. I'm going to make brownies. My recipe (stolen from the New York Times) is below. It's good with Ghirardelli chocolate; heavenly with Scharffen-Berger.


Chewy Fudge Brownies

This is the classic fudgy brownie that pastry chefs, cookbook authors and home cooks have relied on for years. They're crusty on top with a dense, rich, gooey interior. The ingredient proportions were spelled out in The Fannie Farmer Baking Book by Marion Cunningham (Knopf, 1984), but the revised directions are adapted from Alice Medrich's Bittersweet (Artisan, November 2003). Makes 16 brownies.

4 ounces (4 squares) unsweetened chocolate
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter
1 1/4 cups sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cold large eggs
1/2 cup flour
2/3 cup chopped walnuts or pecans (optional)


Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Line an 8-inch square baking pan with foil or baking parchment, leaving some to overhang two opposite sides.

In a medium saucepan over low heat, heat the chocolate and butter, stirring frequently, until melted and smooth and hot enough that you want to remove your finger quickly after dipping it in to test. Remove from heat and stir in the sugar, salt and vanilla with a wooden spoon. Add the cold eggs, 1 at a time, stirring well to incorporate each. Stir in the flour and beat with a wooden spoon or spatula until the batter is smooth and glossy and beginning to come away from the sides of the pan, 1 to 2 minutes. If desired, stir in nuts. Spread the batter evenly in the prepared pan.

Bake for about 20 minutes, or until the brownies just begin to pull away from the sides of the pan. The top will look dry, but a toothpick inserted in the center will come out wet with chocolate. Immediately place pan in refrigerator, or place in larger pan filled 3/4-inch deep with ice water. When completely chilled, lift up the ends of the foil or parchment liner and transfer to a cutting board. Cut into squares. Store in an airtight container for 2 to 3 days.

Per brownie: 173 calories, 2 gm protein, 20 gm carbohydrates, 11 gm fat, 43 mg cholesterol, 6 gm saturated fat, 46 mg sodium, 1 gm dietary fiber

Friday, August 04, 2006

Dreams vs. Privacy

An XKCD cartoon on dreams vs. privacy.

(h/t The Naked Nerd)

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Earthquake!

We just had an earthquake.

This is why I have the USGS California and Nevada Earthquake Page bookmarked.

8:10: It takes a few minutes for the site to post the magnitude. It does say it was in Santa Rosa, which is about 80 miles from where I live, so I'm assuming it was big.

[Refresh]

8:12: Still nothing.

[Refresh]

8:13: Here we go: magnitude 4.5. Hmm, I would have guessed 5.

[Refresh]

8:14: Make that magitude 4.7.

[Refresh]

8:15: Make that 4.4.

Okay, enough. It can't have been that bad. My ISP is in Santa Rosa, and they're still up.

Acquisition

I just learned that my former employer, company X, has been acquired by company A.

When I left company X this year, I ended up exercising all my stock options.

Now, before you get all excited for me, you need to learn about something called a "liquidation preference." When a venture capitalist invests, say, $10 million in a company, often they will include a clause in the contract that says "if the company gets bought out, we get the first $10 million dollars, right off the top." Or $20 million. Or $30 million. Or more. So if the company is bought for, say, $15 million and the liquidation preference is for $20 million, the VC gets all the $15 million and everyone else gets $0.

That everyone else would include current and former employees, of course.

Given what I know about the company's situation, I would sort of suspect that whatever it was bought for is less than whatever the liquidiation preference is.

So I shouldn't really looking at this sale to provide me with enough money to buy, say, a cup of tea.

But you never know. For reasons I'm not going to mention, this hasn't been a terribly good week; I can definitely use whatever good news (not to mention opportunities for fantasizing) that I can get.

Update: I just talked to a former co-worker, and I'm getting $0. Oh well, at least I get tax write-off this year.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

35?!?

While perusing a gentlemen's website last night, I came across an ad that said

Gay Mature Men
Meet Gay Men Over 35!


35? 35?!?

I was so upset that I threw a handful of prunes at the monitor.