Friday, March 18, 2011

The Trip: Thursday through Friday

I'm going to New Orleans, for a bachelor party, I've saved $1000 for this event. I stole the "Culture Diary" idea from The AWL, who stole it from The Paris Review, who likely came up with the idea. Here we go. Maybe it should be noted that all of this is from memory.


5:30pm - I prepare to board my Continental Flight to George Bush International in Houston, TX. I hear the middle-aged flight-attendant-woman at the gate desk make a spiteful remark about how Southwest Airline does things compared to how she (a representative of the Continental/United Airline) does things. Then I hear her calling out my name. I begin to fantasize about being upgraded to first class. When I reach the desk she hands me my 3M UV protected safety glasses that I use as sun glasses. I dropped them at some point.

6:o3pm - I'm in the plane, we're taking off. I start to think about 14o character sentences I would be tweeting, if my phone wasn't off. Most of these were jokes about being inside George Bush. In other news, the guy sitting next to me is sleeping, and smells like feet. The leg room on this plane is comical.

8:05pm - I'm inside George Bush. I eat a bag of jalapeno chips and consider buying a coffee (besides a few 20 minute "power naps", I haven't' slept in over a day). I check College Basketball scores for the tournament, I am genuinely embarrassed by my standings in the few bracket pools I've entered.

9:10pm- After a 20 minute delay I get on my next flight. It's a much larger plane with far less people. I have a whole row of three seats to myself, I am ecstatic. I purposely store items on and under each unused seat.

9:30pm - I'm flying.

10:35pm - I arrive in Louis Armstrong International in New Orleans, LA. I begin the 17 hour countdown until I can check into my hotel. I was very excited about this trip from the moment I was invited. I booked my flight immediately. Plans changed, everyone booked their flights for Friday, and the rooms for Friday. I chose to not take the $150 fee to change flights and just hang out in New Orleans all night, sleep in the airport, drink, do those sorts of things. I told no one else going on the trip that I would be there 17 hours before them.

12:00am - The no sleeping starts to really hit me hard. I've accomplished all the mindless tasks I could (bills, kickball blog entry, organize calendar, email, etc.). Anything that requires brainpower makes me fall into a light sleep. I sit amongst the homeless in the main lobby and copycat their techniques of arranging chairs and laying on sacks of clothes (their sacks look far more comfortable than my bulky luggage). I sleep, very lightly. I wake up several times, homeless people start disappearing, I bury my face deep into my bulky luggage.

3:00am - I am fully awake, though still completely exhausted. I pack up my stuff and begin walking the terminals. I consider leaving, but there are no taxis or shuttles at the airport until flights start landing again (6am).

4:00am - I'm convinced I'm being followed. I hide in a bathroom for awhile, brush my teeth, and reapply deodorant. 12 hours until I have a room.

6:00am - I pay $45 for a taxi to my hotel. The taxi is a giant SUV, I counted 8 seats and an enormous amount of trunk space. A large black women is driving, she calls me hun. I slip on the step meant to help me get into the SUV, she tells me to be careful, she said she's liable if I get injured. I laugh it off, I explain to her that I am a notorious klutz, she doesn't care. We listen to gospel music, and I begin to notice the excessive Jesus iconography throughout the car, as well as a sign next to me that says "NO HUGS. NO KISSES. NO FUNNY BUSINESS." She begins to sing along with the gospel music. I am thoroughly enjoying the ride as she weaves through traffic, flashing her brights at people driving slower than her in the fast lane, I learn a lot about her from the way she drives. At one point she honks at a car we dwarf that refuses to turn left on a yield green light. She stats yelling PG obscenities at them, follows them, rolls down her window to continue to let them know how stupid they are. We made it to the hotel and she nearly drove away with my luggage. I flagged her down and she apologized. I'm sure she realized at that moment that we're all stupid sometimes, and maybe chasing strangers in your giant SUV because of a few lost seconds is pretty stupid, too. This moment reminds of this David Foster Wallace essay.

6:30am - The hotel employees are extremely relieved that I am fully aware/understanding that I can't check-in until 4. They hold onto my luggage, and I venture out into the French Quarter as the sun just begins to show itself. Post-St. Patrick's Day drunks stumble around me. The sun sky gets brighter and the roads fill up with delivery trucks, and sanitation workers.

7:00am - I have breakfast at a fancy restaurant, cost: $40. Pictured: Eggs Benedict with crab, side of potatoes, and fresh squeezed orange juice.

8:00am to noon-ish - I hunt down a coffee shop. My first two choices aren't open at 8am, so I go to CC's Community Coffee House. It's a New Orleans based chain that feels a little too Starbucksy for my taste. Though, their internet is fast and they have coffee, I'm pretty fucking happy right now.

This may be my only post, until I depart on Monday.




Thursday, December 18, 2008

Thursday Video Post!

Well, it's been a week since my last post and I still haven't thought up a name for this damn thing. So, please continue to deal with the current/awful title. I've been busy with finals, so I'm also sorry for the lack of blogs. Here's your damn video.







I watched Synecdoche, NY last Friday, alone and at 7am. It's written and directed by Charlie Kauffman, and though I in no way feel like I understood it, I definitely thought it was a beautiful movie. Go see it. I plan on watching it one more time, and then maybe I'll give you my full review.

Choo-Choo

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Winter Break is Back!

What I plan on doing this winter break: take photos. Here's picture of my camera, it's HUGE.





In other news, best quote from work tonight: Drunk girl says, "What?! I'm not on the list? But Kelly put me on the list... HE, LIKE, WORKS AT PANERA BREAD! He's like 40! Is there anyone 40 here tonight? Maybe they, like, know him." She was completely serious and very mad at me, eventually some sucker bought her a ticket.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Thursday video post!

I think I'll start posting a video every Thursday (it says I posted this on Wednesday, but in fact it's Thursday, for whatever reason my blog thinks I live in California). I'll come up with a better title than "Thursday video post" later, just deal with it for now.


Beached II from Keith Loutit on Vimeo.




Metal Heart from Keith Loutit on Vimeo.




Bathtub II from Keith Loutit on Vimeo.

I first saw still images skewed to create an effect of a small scale set a few years ago in a photo magazine called Contact Sheet. These still images struck me immediately, they forced me to question what I was seeing--had I not read the blurb at the beginning of the magazine I would have no doubt thought they were small scale reproductions--and they just simply looked fucking cool. Earlier this year I saw a video in Wholphin Magazine that used the same effect with film. Then I found Keith Loutit's Vimeo site; I'm not sure if he's the guy from the two magazines, but his videos are super cool (he uses a variety of techniques including tilt-shift and time-lapse photography). Personally, I don't think there's much more to these videos than what you see, a refreshing look at normal landscapes, but they are fun to watch.

My favorite is Metal Heart, it brings back memories of being five years old in Michigan and obsessing over monster trucks. Watching them on TV, playing with mini versions of the trucks, and imagining crushing other smaller lesser cars with them. I think I still have some Bigfoot kids books buried deep in my parent's basement.

-Choo-Choo

The Question: What Good Have I Done Today?


(photo by Alec Soth)


My daily schedule is all over the place, but here is an attempt to put my daily routine in words.

My alarm goes off at 6:45, I then press the "snooze" button and sleep for 15 more minutes. I get out of bed, let the dog out, let the dog in, feed the dog. I then, very slowly, get dressed in the living room. I always attempt to make breakfast every morning, but usually as soon as I get started I realize that getting dressed took me twice as long as I had hoped--why do alarm clocks have snooze buttons? If only I could get those fifteen minutes back. I frantically get my things together and head to class. After class, I head home and check my email. I then spend the time between work and class avoiding homework, and wasting time on the internet. People say that TV rots your brain, I don't have cable so the internet will have to do. Between 3pm and 6pm I head to work (work doubles as my social life) and get home around midnight. I avoid my homework for another hour or so, then finally do as little of it as quickly as possible. I get back in bed around 3am, fall asleep pretty easily, and the process starts again.

I should note that weekends are usually used to catch up on sleep.

Not a very interesting routine, and certainly a routine I would someday like to change (why am I writing this blog, when I should be writing a paper about this blog?). If there is one thing obvious in my daily routine, it is that I am the instigator of my own short comings. So much time, so little done.

-Choo Choo

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

I Change My Clothes in the Living Room

I stumbled upon this blog that posts daily routine's of well-known people (mostly writers). It's aptly titled "Daily Routines." I've only skimmed through it once, but immediately found it very interesting. Here's a pretty good post about a pretty well-known guy:

---
ERNEST HEMINGWAY

INTERVIEWER
Could you say something of this process? When do you work? Do you keep to a strict schedule?

HEMINGWAY
When I am working on a book or story I write every morning as soon after first light as possible. There is no one to disturb you and it is cool or cold and you come to your work and warm as you write. You read what you have written and, as you always stop when you know what is going to happen next, you go on from there. You write until you come to a place where you still have your juice and you know what will happen next and you stop and try to live through until the next day when you hit it again. You have started at six in the morning, say, and may go on until noon or be through before that. When you stop you are as empty, and at the same time never empty but filling, as when you have made love to someone you love. Nothing can hurt you, nothing can happen, nothing means anything until the next day when you do it again. It is the wait until the next day that is hard to get through.

The Paris Review, Issue 18, 1958

---

Check it out, Daily Routines


-Choo-Choo

(Photo by Jan Von Holleben)


(Photo by Jan Von Holleben)

Monday, December 8, 2008

Curving a bullet is it real?

What's the deal with bad movies? Why do they have to be so entertaining?! I've been in a drought of movie watching--I work and go to school full time-- and when I do have a spare two hours I feel obligated to watch something decent, something I can talk about in public without gritting a self-conscious smile, something I can talk to my co-workers about without saying, "No, really! It's totally bad ass!" I don't want the good though. I want the cheese, I want non-stop shit, full throttle obnoxiousness, I want to watch the National Treasures of contemporary cinema. At one point in my life I was proud of my movie snobbishness: my complete collection of Wes Anderson Criterion Collection DVDs and my Sergio Leone Anthology, but those timeless movies are dead to me. Who cares Who Virginia Wolfe Is? Am I right? Is it wrong to watch two sexy stars with superhuman killing abilities make a bullet curve in Wanted? Because damn it, that's something just stupid enough for me to be intrigued by for two hours. I love bad movies and here is my top ten of the genre:

The Shit List
1. Independence Day
2. The Rock
3. Con Air
4. Speed
5. Twister
7. National Treasure
8. The Core
9. Total Recall
10. Pootie Tang

That felt good.

-Choo-Choo

! count: 5
? count: 6


© Maximilian Haidacher