Musings on topics of small or large importance. Especially partial to subjects that include baby boomers, public figures, friends, Corporate America, the Denver Broncos, NASCAR, my previous home towns of New York City and Columbia (Maryland), stupidity (mine and others'), diets and health and who knows what else!

Thursday, December 28, 2006

How Private Should Sex Lives Be?

Isn't sex a great topic for a blog? I'm too chicken (and smart?) to talk about my sex life or lack thereof in this blog or any other, but I find a certain lawsuit for $20 million fascinating. A former U.S. Senate aide, Jessica Cutler (who wasn't former at the time) divulged lurid details on her "Washingtonienne" blog of her sexual encounters with another Senate aide, Robert Steinbuch, which quickly got linked to another blog, Wonkette, and later became fodder for a book (The Washingtonienne: A Novel). Steinbuch is suing Cutler for $20 million. Whew!

It's beyond me why anyone, especially someone who works in a forum as scrutinized as the U.S. Senate, would put any details of their sex life on the Web. It's even more beyond me why anyone would betray a lover, former or current, by revealing their, shall we say, idiosyncracies. "Sex in the City" is one thing -- I loved the one about Carrie farting for the first time with Mr. Big -- but real life is quite another. To do that is disrespectful, vengeful and/or stupid. Once that stuff is out there, there's no taking it back. Not only is it a total betrayal, whether the relationship ended badly or not, it also usually damages the reputation of the accuser, er, revealer, at least as much as the accusee or revealee.

I've been a journaler since age 10. I have been known to write in some detail about all aspects of my life, since my journal is my therapy more than it is a chronicle of my life or even a commentary on life in general. And keeping journals help me to think my life is real and enables me to revisit events to see if I remember them as I experienced them at the time. It's amazing what the mind does to an event over time. Much of what I write is mundane, repetitive and hardly good writing. But it's meant for me and me only.

If I knew today that I would be dead tomorrow, I'd burn my journals. Not knowing that (and hoping not), I am willing them to someone I trust with the agreement that they will not be released to anyone for any purpose until 25 years after my death. By then, the innocent and guilty parties (some of whom are disguised) will either be dead or beyond caring. Hopefully, anyway. If I live 25 more years, that will certainly be true. It's not all that interesting anyway, probably only to me.

Meanwhile, I wonder what Cutler was thinking and if she regrets going public with her exploits. I bought her book awhile ago on a whim but haven't read it. Maybe I will dig it up now and at least scan it. But I ain't puttin' my own adventures on any blog any time soon. (Note to Mr. X: You're welcome.)

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Stereotypes Alive and Well in BMW-land

Have you seen the TV commercial that has two children, a girl and a boy, under the Christmas tree opening a present that so excites them that they scream for half if not most of the commercial?

It took seeing it at least four times before I could have told you that it was for BMW instead of some toy for adults or children. Well, you could certainly call a BMW a toy for adults, albeit quite an expensive one, but it's not something you can put in a box under the Christmas tree.

The screaming is obnoxious enough. But what bothers me more and more as I keep seeing it on TV is the way the boy and girl are portrayed. The boy is clearly the dominant figure in the commercial; the girl is clearly the follower. The boy has possession of the box, even though it's apparent that it's for both of them. He makes big, possessive, circular motions on the top of the box while shrilly screaming, whereas the girl's hands remain on the periphery of the box. He merely screams. She's the one who yells "Thank you!" over and over. He never even looks at her, not once. She is focused on what he is doing through the whole 30 seconds. He raises his fist and thrusts it while loudly chanting, "Yes! Yes! Yes!" She does the same but only in sync with the gestures and timing of the boy.

BMW, what the heck are you thinking?!? Don't you know that in the majority of cases the woman makes the primary decision as to what car is purchased, even if it isn't for her? Why would you perpetuate the stereotypes of the boy being in charge and the girl following his lead? Even the fact that she's the one crying "Thank you!" only plays to the idea that men can be unruly and do what they want and women follow along behind doing the right thing in the situation, being the polite, obedient, thoughtful, considerate one.

Rude boys grow into rude men, and docile little people-pleasing girls grow up to need therapy. Fortunately, I know many men who weren't allowed to get away with screaming bloody murder even if it was in delight. And many who could and to some degree still do. And unfortunately, I know some women who are as rude as any obstreperous young boy ever thought of being. And many nice ones. And they all buy cars. I don't know about them, but this commercial makes me want to go look at Nissans or Cadillacs or Lexuses or Jaguars, but not BMWs.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

The Fantasy of More Time

For the past several years, when I'd feel overwhelmed at work, or bored or tired or had some passive-aggressive colleague whose antics prompted me to want to strangle him, I'd fantasize about time off. No work. No having to rouse myself early every day, squeeze myself between two surly businessmen on the 3-seat row on a rush-hour train, get belched out into the workday for all those hours that could be spent so many other joyful, satisfying ways.

In this fantasy world of less stress and more time, I'd see myself on a tranquil lake in a small, simple boat, the kind that movies love to put shy lovers in, just loving the mild sunshine and peaceful environs. That's pretty funny because in real life I can't fathom ever going out on a little rickety boat like that, especially alone, and I'm not much of a water person anyway. Give me the mountains any day, both for excitement (I used to be a pretty good skiier) and emotional and mental nourishment (the mountains just inject me with an idyllic, heavenly, swoony feeling).

My fantasy also includes working at some no-brainer, no-stress job, such as working for Starbucks. I have friends who are Starbucks veterans and they tell me it's quite stressful as well as physically demanding. But hey, it's a fantasy so job conditions can be any way I create them to be. It wouldn't be Starbucks anyway, because I MUCH prefer Dunkin' Donuts coffee. It's just that Starbucks stores have much more appealing atmosphere (can't say that I've even seen atmosphere in a DD) and a cachet that both fit well in fantasies.

Now I have that time that I've fantasized about for many years. I got laid off a month ago tomorrow -- well, my position has been eliminated or some such corporate gobbledygook -- and I don't have to do the daily grind right now. How is it? Is it as great as I'd envisioned? Is it fabulous and wonderful?

Oooooooh, yes!!!

I have puh-lenty to do in my workless life, believe me. I have had to tell people that I have not had time to get back to them, meet them, send them something I'd planned to, etc. But it's all *my time*. And I am loving it.

My friends have time envy (like penis envy -- which I get every time I have to pee BADLY when I'm in a car -- only better). They fantasize like I used to. They glamorize my days, thinking I can sleep late, eat bon bons on the couch while watching "The View," go to the gym when it's not crowded, meet friends for long lunches or a drink in the middle of the afternoon, take the trips I haven't had time for, catch up on all of my hobbies, read all of the classics, learn a language, take a nap in the afternoon, talk to friends I haven't talked to in years, write that book that's dying to emerge, clean out all of my closets and smile all day long.

Is it like that? Sure! Of course, I haven't done nearly enough of those things. But I could. And yes, it's as wonderful as I fantasized it would be. Relaxing, re-energizing, therapeutic, fun! I just won't want to do this forever. Probably. Ask me in another month. Or two.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

4,844 Miles To Go

When I told a former colleague and friend that I would be traveling from coast to coast three times in two days and why, she said, "You have to write about it!" So I kept a sort of flying diary yesterday when I flew to Los Angeles and back. As usual, it proved to be more of a journey than just from one place to another and back. (This is long, so if you don't read it all, at least read the parts in bold.)

Friday I went from Phoenix to San Diego to Newark to wrap up a business trip. Best thing about my flight back: the tasty, fork-tender short ribs dinner entree when I got upgraded to first class. A surprise -- good food on an airline!

I got back home about 1:00 a.m. With all of two hours of sleep under my belt, on Saturday morning I left my house at 5:30 a.m. and flew from Newark International Airport to Los Angeles (LAX) and an hour later was on a plane back to Newark. Now why would I -- or anyone -- do that? Because I was short 4,844 miles of the 50,000 miles I need by Dec. 31 to make it to the Premier Executive level in United Airlines' Mileage Plus frequent flyer program.

Let me explain.

For several years I've been a loyal United Airlines flyer. By and large they go where I want to go, they're reliable, and, best of all, they've got that extra leg room in their "Economy Plus" area on their planes for Premier members and above. I'm tall and not a small person so I will do nearly anything for more room. Nearly.

I've been Premier and I've been Premier Executive and I like Premier Executive. You have to fly 25,000 miles in a calendar year or go on 30 segments to qualify for Premier, 50,000 miles or 60 segments for Premier Executive. When you reach either level, you can check in at the airport in a much shorter line, at some airports go through a much shorter security line and always board flights in the first group, which means you get your carry-on in the bins first. It's extremely selfish but those perks add up to major time-savings over a year. Premiers get a 25% mileage bonus on flights, Premier Executives get 100% -- and those miles are good for upgrades, free trips and Red Carpet Club membership. You can sit in the Economy Plus seats and choose them online, but only on United.com, not through travel agents or Travelocity-type sites. There are other perks but these are the ones that are important to me.

When I figured my mileage for 2006, including an upcoming trip, I came up 4,844 short of qualifying for Premier Executive. If you're that close, in January United usually offers a way to get there but it's the least cost-effective way to do it. Flying to Los Angeles and back, if you get a good fare, is cheaper than buying your way in later. You have to actually fly; you can't just buy the ticket and have it count. So I chose that route. All in one day. And that day was yesterday.

I caught the 5:53 a.m. New Jersey Transit train north and took the AirTrain from the Newark International Airport station to Terminal A. Rode the AirTrain with a boy-next-door-looking young Marine who was just back from his second tour of duty in Iraq. He said, "It's not as bad over there as people think," and then told me he'd seen fellow Marines get killed right in front of him. It was hard to hear him over the incessant, intrusive recorded voice over the loudspeaker listing every airline at each train stop, but he railed on for awhile about thinking we shouldn't be there. "They're going to kill each other anyway -- we don't have to be there for that," he said. Our flights both left at 8:15 a.m., so I was going to invite him to be my guest in the Red Carpet Club but he was going on American Airlines -- different entry to those gates -- so that wouldn't work.

For once, I was traveling with no laptop computer and no carry-on luggage. My oversize Vera Bradley bag held the essentials for a trip like this: my Michael Connelly thriller, my journal, an empty 20-ounce soda bottle, one peanut butter and bologna sandwich made 24 hours earlier, one turkey and cheese half-sandwich purchased 18 hours earlier, a single-serving bag of Ruffles poached from the Red Carpet Club and a plastic bag packed with several 4-packs of small creme-filled cookies, all left over from the trip the day before since I got upgraded then to first class on the long leg.

I sailed through Security and ducked into the Red Carpet Club. Whatever money or miles I pay each year for my membership there is so worth it! I popped two strawberry-banana yogurt cups in my purse and got one of the attendants to fill my empty 20-ounce plastic soda bottle with Diet Coke. I am never without the latter when I fly; that way I can drink it when I get thirsty, not when they deign to serve me. I am addicted to Black Cherry Vanilla Diet Coke but with the no-liquids rule I have to settle for the plain jane Diet Coke I can get at the airport.

A few minutes before boarding, I hustled to the gate. The man in the seat next to me at the gate and I started chatting and it turns out that he's a 1K flyer (flies 100,000 miles a year, wow!) on United, and guess what he was doing! Same as I was, assuring his status with a LAX-Newark turnaround trip. He'd taken the red-eye in and was going right back on this early morning flight. So I wasn't the only crazy one.

Our plane, an A319, wasn't very crowded. I had an exit row window seat with no seat in front of me and no one in the middle seat, my idea of coach class heaven. Things got interesting after we boarded. There was a contingent of probably 30 people from (presumably) China on the flight and one of them parked herself in an exit row seat. No one else was assigned to that seat but at length the flight attendant asked to see all of our boarding passes in the exit rows because she knew who belonged there and who didn't. The woman tried stalling, seemingly unable to find her boarding pass. The flight attendant patiently and sweetly waited until the elusive stub was found. She made the woman move to the area behind the exit rows, which I fondly call cattle-class hell. United has very generous Economy Plus space but their regular coach class seating is torture, beyond the limits of human decency. If that's not incentive to keep my Premier-something status, I don't know what is. (Shhh, don't tell United. I don't want to encourage them to keep their sardine-spaced regular coach seating.)

After a brief (45-minute) scare that we might have a longer delay while they found and fixed a small leak in the system that supplies oxygen to the face masks, we were on our way. The movie was "The Da Vinci Code," a movie I never wanted to see in the first place and which I saw on my way to San Diego last week. I request a window seat on long flights so I can control the window shade. I hate flying in the dark during the day and no amount of pressure from flight attendants or fellow passengers will make me lower my shade. I will never be voted Ms. Passenger Congeniality.

Halfway through the movie, the Chinese woman whom the flight attendant earlier shooed from the exit row had sneaked back to a different exit row seat, as had a fellow countryman. The flight attendant told them both they would have to go back to their assigned seats. Five minutes later when she came back, neither had budged. She used sweeping hand gestures to motion then back to the sardine section and they moved with quite visible disdain.

With the exception of a "closed" lavatory ("Someone made a mess," the flight attendant told me), one of just two for an entire coach section, it was a normal, uneventful flight. We arrived on time.

With an hour to go before my flight back, I wanted to get my blood going. With 5-1/2 hours of sitting and another 5 or 6 to go, walking felt good.

When I approached my gate to go back, the gate was filled with people and, fearing a crowded flight, I felt waves of dread and fatigue sucking me under. Everything and everybody irritated me like I get when my blood sugar is low, which was not the case. I thought, God, how will I make it in another plane if I'm squished in cheek to cheek with someone else for 5 hours?

But Providence was good to me. I had a window seat in an exit row in a 767 and in the 2-3-2 seat configuration no one was next to me. Big sigh of relief!

I never or rarely fly in 767s, which became embarrassingly clear. At the start of the flight, the purser announced that movies would be available on four channels. There was nothing I wanted to see but I thought I'd catch the surprisingly truly funny "Talladega Nights" again. I saw no screens and thought maybe they would drop down but wondered how we could each view different movies. I wondered an hour or so after we took off why they hadn't started the movie yet.

Nearly three hours into the flight, I navigated my way down the narrow aisle to the lavatory and on the way back, I saw that everyone had a screen built into the back of the seat in front of them. Aha! But the bulkhead and exit row seats didn't have the screens. Oh, so we get gypped, I thought. They should tell people that they don't get movies if they choose those seats, I thought. Then I saw that one person in a bulkhead seat in front of me had a screen that came up on an arm from beneath one of the armrests. Eventually I found the release button on mine but it took me several minutes to figure out how to turn the darn thing on. I flown nearly 50,000 miles every year for the last half dozen and I couldn't figure it out so I had to laugh at myself. Finally I did and voila! I was just in time for the credits.


I'd been entertaining myself with United's Hemispheres magazine, found in every seat pocket. Ah, but just try to find a pristeen one with the crossword puzzle not filled in or the Sudoku puzzle not attempted or some pages torn out. Since the plane wasn't full, I tried three and finally found one with the Sudoku puzzle page there and unmarked. The crossword puzzle, however, someone had completed. I immediately started filling in one of the four Sudoku puzzles, but after a good hour at least, I'd run into a snag -- some number or other was clearly wrong and even with that, I'd probably only filled in 1/3 of the boxes. (Hey, I'm new at Sudoku.) So of course I ripped out the page to work on it later.

We landed at Washington's Dulles International Airport about 8:30 p.m. My last flight left at 9:40. It was a tiny EMB145, with a 1-2 seat configuration. I got on the side with one seat; the people in two seats were v-e-r-y cozy. I could barely walk upright. And some jerk with a megaphone-loud voice was talking business on his wireless set at 9:30 on a Saturday night. I was glad when all cell phones had to be off.

Our pilot or first officer looked a lot like Steve, the large fiance on "My Big Fat Obnoxious Fiance" reality show of a couple of summers ago. His substantial body filled up the entire aisle space and he had to stoop to walk so he wouldn't bump his head. But he flew the plane just fine.

That flight was short, smooth and a visual delight. The small plane flew low enough so we could see more below. The East coast was nearly all city, town, city, town, and the lights and patterns from above resembled a cross between the paintings of Jackson Pollock and Thomas Kinkade.

We landed at 10:37 p.m., well ahead of our scheduled time of 10:59 p.m. That enabled me to walk through the nearly empty, nothing-open Newark Terminal A to the AirTrain and, despite rerouting for maintenance purposes, I made it to the warm waiting room at NJ Transit/Amtrak's Newark International Airport Station. I easily made the 11:30 train to my little station, drove the 3-1/2 miles home, yawning, and at midnight my 18-1/2-hour marathon flying day was over.

Actually, it was one of the easier, more comfortable flying days I've had. And I'm glad I did it and that it will get me to Premier Executive. But that doesn't mean I want to do it again any time soon. Today I indulged myself in the luxuries of sleeping prone and drinking Black Cherry Vanilla Diet Coke. Ah, life is good.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Love and Power: Are They Mutually Exclusive?

Okay, here's my confession: Every day my Replay TV (competitor to TiVo) records "Oprah." At night, or once a week, I catch up. I watch some of them and I am not interested in some so I just erase them.

I'm more of sucker for the celebrity interviews than the person-on-the-street stuff, extraordinary things happening to ordinary people, etc.* Nah, give me a celeb and give me some insight into who they really are and what makes them tick. Danny DeVito's (allegedly) drunken appearance on "The View" earlier this week gave me a new angle on him -- he's a cute, happy, loquacious drunk -- and the ladies. Rosie O'Donnell very kindly rescued him by pulling him onto her lap and cuddling him like a baby. Barbara Walters was pissed at his behavior and tried to get him to talk about his movie that he was there to promote. Joy Behar and Elisabeth Hasselbeck just went with the flow.
*There are exceptions -- I just wept while watching Oprah's inspiring "Pay It Forward" show of Nov. 27. Wow.

As a journalist who has never covered the celebrity beat, I've only interviewed three of them: Annette Funicello, Patrick Duffy (Bobby on "Dallas") and the late Buck Owens. I found Annette and Patrick way too guarded so I didn't get much insight into them. My day spent with Buck while writing about country radio station KNIX in Phoenix, which he owned, was a truly wonderful and enlightening experience. What a sexy, charismatic man! Yes, Buck Owens! In person he was hot! I felt a special chemistry with him and felt like we were pals as well as journalist and celebrity. Such is the magic of a truly charming man. (Yes, Buck Owens! Get over it.)

On the Nov. 30 show of "Oprah," Oprah and Ellen Burstyn were talking about giving their power away to men. They both said they had done that in the past. Ellen finished talking about her own struggle with that by saying, "And finally you have to be able to say, 'It's all right -- I can be powerful and be a woman and be loved all at once.'"

I was astonished. I have long admired Ellen Burstyn -- her incredible acting and her as a person. She plays strong, dignified, intelligent women. That usually means powerful, if not toweringly powerful at least personally powerful. To hear that she's been "giving her power away to men" was unfathomable to me.

I had such a hard time relating to the struggle of being powerful vs. being a woman and being loved. I have been in love and loved more than a few times but can't remember a time when I felt I had less power in a relationship than outside it. In fact, I feel much more alive and happy and beautiful and able to do anything when I'm in a relationship. Even when they have gone bad, they've been sad and painful and frustrating but even when I didn't feel powerful when or after they ended, I didn't feel like I gave my power away to anyone. And I always counted on my friends to infuse me with their power to hurry along my healing.

Maybe it's because I was an only child that I always relied on myself, my friends, my parents and Providence to take care of me, guide me, soothe me and fuel me every day. I just knew that someone would always be there, even if I didn't know exactly who. And they have been. Even strangers. Especially strangers. You just never know where help will come from. And knowing you can get help for whatever you're going through makes you feel powerful.

I think only children tend to be cherished, doted on, attended to and encouraged that they can do and be anything. When someone important to you has faith in you, you do feel powerful. I am so fortunate and grateful that I can't relate to the idea of giving my power away to a man. Only The Man. :)

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Closed on Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving has never been a big, sentimental holiday in my family the way Christmas and birthdays are. My family is 2,500 miles away and my friends all have families-plus-one-or-two-or-ten on Turkey Day so every year I get a handful of generous invitations to join one horde or another. Sometimes I say yes, sometimes I prefer going solo to making a big shlep somewhere and behaving myself with people I wish weren't there. I like my friends but their squirmy, whiney parents or the squirmy, whiney kids who belong to some relative or guest just make me uncomfortable and irritable. (Sound kind of Bah! Humbuggy, don't I? Ah, well.)

The times I've joined friends and their immediate families and a close friend or two I've usually enjoyed the day. A few times I've made the mistake of going with friends to somebody's house where I don't know the hosts very well or there is such a mob that I feel like a stranger in a strange world. Those times have been pure torture. One time a few years ago when I still lived in Manhattan, I joined two friends, also from Manhattan, and we trekked out to the farthest town on Long Island to join friends of theirs in a huge house with at least 1,000 boistrous people I didn't know but who all seem to know each other. Not really 1,000 but it felt that way. The minute I walked through the door, I felt a discomfort that made me want to turn tail and leap onto the first train back. That was a loooooong day.

So after some tentative plans fell through for today, I found myself searching for a good turkey dinner at the last minute. Kentucky Fried Chicken drive-thru just didn't appeal to me, nor my leftover pizza in the freezer. So many places are closed on Thanksgiving -- I tried calling several restaurants that I frequent that I figured would have decent turkey dinners but they were all closed. Geez, even TGIFriday's was closed -- I figured I could count on them! The Denny's near me was open and I love their Super Bird (it's made with turkey) but I couldn't see myself there on this day.

At length I thought I'd try a little local Italian restaurant, Mulberry Street, and BINGO, I got a winner! Yes, they were open and yes, they had turkey dinners and yes, I could get in right away.

So I took the three-minute drive there (in the rain) and was delighted to see only six cars in the parking lot. I got a nice big table in the corner and enjoyed a scrumptious traditional turkey dinner with fresh everything, including cranberry sauce, which I usually can do without, made with fresh berries and some fresh fruit to dilute the characteristic tartness - delicious! Great service, not too expensive, all in all a relaxing and satisfying experience. I waddled out of there nice and full.

I thought about doing something charitable on this day, something for someone else. But with no advance planning I wasn't sure where to go. And frankly, I just wanted a whole day to do what I wanted, even if it was not much. So I went to the gym, talked to a good friend on the phone, got my (obviously artificial) Christmas tree out and started getting it set up, e-mailed a friend, talked to another friend on the phone, took a nap (the ultimate luxury), took some time to reflect on how fortunate I feel, talked to my mom on the phone and am writing this as I watch the Kansas City Chiefs kill "my" Denver Broncos. Wait - the Broncos just scored. Maybe there's hope for a 100% fabulous Thanksgiving Day. Instead of just 99%.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Biting Back at Time

Okay, okay, I'm sorry! I have neglected my blog for several months. It's not that I haven't had anything to write about. I moved, and the challenges and traumas and joys of that could have provide several days' worth of entries. The HP spy scandal fascinated and repulsed me for several weeks -- let me count the ways. Living in New Jersey, the whole equal-rights-for-gays decision handed down by the court last week and whether marriage between gays should be allowed certainly provided good fodder. And, best news of all, Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams, who has been suffering from a rare affliction that takes away the ability to speak, got his voice back!

I blame time. It's time's fault. Time is stingy with itself -- whenever I ask for more, I am denied. Time is inconsistent -- at times it speeds up (especially when I'm doing something pleasureable, so I feel cheated out of some of it), at times it is so pokey that it torments me (especially during nights when insomnia plagues me).

Okay, I can't blame time. We all get the same amount each day.

Anyway, I'm back. I'm baaaaaaaack! So stay tuned.

Sunday, June 11, 2006

We Kill Him and Then We Care Whether We Were Fair in His Last Moments?

Would someone please explain to me how this all works? We (the American military) kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in a violent way -- presumably dropping two 500-pound bombs on a safe house can be considered violent -- and then we're sending in people to ascertain whether the troops on the scene acted appropriately toward him as he lay dying?

What, are we going to say they treated him cruelly? Wasn't the whole point to kill him? Isn't bombing a safe house, and wiping out others in the house also, pretty darn deliberate? If someone is going to go that far to try to kill someone, if he were still alive, wouldn't they do whatever they had to do to make sure they finished the job?

I mean, really, will there be an investigation into whether the troops beat him or didn't provide medical treatment? And what if they did beat him? Will they be punished or reprimanded? Presumably someone thinks it might be inappropriate or, even after bombing the place with the specific intention of killing him, they wouldn't be sending someone to look into it. Where did that idea even come from? Please, someone, explain that to me.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

United 93 -- The Nightmare, The Heroes, The Movie

I knew I had to see "United 93." I was living and working in New York City when our country's soul got punched in the gut on 9/11. (No year is necessary -- we all know.) Despite living in the West all but the last 18 years of my life and considering myself a blood-deep Westerner, on 9/11 and in the three or so months following, my bond with "the City" got permanently deeper and stronger. We all felt the same grim connection with Washington, D.C. -- a good friend of mine worked in the Pentagon at the time and had run out into the parking lot when the plane hit -- and with Pennsylvania.

Knowing what "United 93" was, I had to go when I was in a quiet, strong and centered enough mood to handle it. Today, I decided, was the day. Well, technically yesterday, since it's after midnight. No "DaVinci Code" or "X-Men" for me. The film has left a few more theaters each week since its release, replaced by the real or hoped-for blockbusters du jour. I had to drive 30 miles to see it the one time today that the theater showed it, 9:00 p.m.

I got there early and when I entered the room, theater 14, it was empty. I chose a prime seat in the center and sat quietly. I felt like I was waiting for a funeral to begin.

The room started to fill and I was surprised at how many young couples came. I wouldn't think of "United 93" as much of a date movie. Everyone was quiet, almost reverent, until a pack of about a dozen youngsters came. Well, older teens or younger 20's ages. They were laughing and teasing and boistrous. One girl in particular had an especially annoying nervous giggle, which seemed incessant. I found myself tensing up and wanted to stand, turn around and yell, "Shut the fuck up! Don't you know what kind of movie this is going to be?!" But I didn't. I just sat tensely, very irritated. They carried on throughout the previews and I was getting pissed. But then "United 93" started, and to their credit, I never heard another peep out of them.

The movie affected everyone in the theater, certainly including me. I sat there with my body tense and wanting to back away, just like I feel in the dentist's chair, and I kept having to tell myself to relax, just like I do in the dentist's chair, and it didn't help, just like it doesn't in the dentist's chair.

Sniffles could be heard as soon as the real-life television footage of the second plane hitting the north tower (or was it the south?) came on as the air traffic controllers in the movie watched, frozen with their mouths open in disbelief. It's controversial whether real footage of that horrific event should have been used in a commercial movie, but this felt very much like a sensitive depiction of what happened that day and the real footage seemed totally appropriate to me. Since I'd been watching the Today show that morning on the NBC station in Manhattan when local broadcaster Jane Hansen broke in with the news, I saw that second plane hit "live" and when it came on in the movie, my heart pounded, my breath drew in and my eyes let go of the tears I didn't know were there. Not one soul in the theater moved a muscle.

I'd heard that "United 93" wasn't exploitative, and I agree. Writer/director Paul Greengrass' understated tone made it much more dramatic for real than movies that try to make the drama more dramatic with over-the-top dialog or hit-you-over-the-head music. The people on the plane in the movie were the people who were on the real fated plane, played by professional but not particularly recognizable actors (which would have been too distracting -- good move!) and they were wearing approximately what the real people were wearing and doing approximately what the real people did as far as they could determine after speaking with surviving family members. That is admirable and will make this movie endure and be meaningful for a long time.

It surprised me that so much of the movie centered on the air traffic controllers in several states and the military, what they knew when, how they found out, how confusing it all was with little or conflicting information and what they tried to do about it. It made for a much more interesting and palatable film rather than staying in the plane the whole time. In the credits (which people actually stayed for afterward), several of those air and military officials played themselves -- very impressive.

The terrorists in the movie were depicted not exactly sympathetically but relatively humanely, especially the leader. This very serious man was shown praying and calling someone to say he loved them just before he boarded the plane. He was clearly following his convictions, as have hundreds of instigators and leaders of brutal wars for centuries.

We all know how it ends so I won't give anything away by saying that the movie goes to black before the plane slams into the ground. The words across the screen afterward tell some interesting facts, the saddest being that the military folks responsible for sending the fighter jets to intercept the planes didn't find out that United's flight 93 had been hijacked until four minutes after it crashed. My God.

I cried what Oprah Winfrey calls the ugly cry for several minutes. Not a sob or a weep but a silent, streaming-tears cry. And I wasn't alone. I think that's why so many people stayed to watch the credits, because they didn't want to walk out yet. It was a disturbing film, difficult to watch but riveting and fascinating. I watched most of it with my gut churning. But I'm glad I saw it and if you're brave enough, I recommend that you go see it too.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

McGreevey Comes Out Again

I recently indulged in my favorite guilty pleasure: BookExpo America. This year it was in Washington, D.C.

It's three days of book-lover's heaven, intellectual (or not) decadence, gluttony for the imagination. It's every publisher imaginable showing off their books -- their best sellers, their dogs, their upcoming catalog of hopefuls -- to booksellers. And checking out their competition.

It's 3 days of authors signing their books, including the biggest ones on the best seller lists and prepublication copies from authors we all know (the most precious of all). Attendees stand in long lines to meet the authors and load up on books. Some seem to spend all day in author lines. As a book lover, I revel in the atmosphere where practically everyone is so weighed down with books that they can hardly walk. No wheelies are allowed unless there's a medical reason to have one, and those folks have colored wristbands to identify them. So whatever you can lug or stash somewhere, you can have. BookExpo has a huge shipping room where attendees can get a book box (at a ripoff price of $25 a box -- whew!), mark it with their names, leave it in the room on a long table with hundreds of other boxes and fill it up as they gather their books. The honor system seems to work pretty well, as the boxes and their contents can be accessed by anyone. I stood in line to ship back my one paltry box (which held probably 20 books), following a bookseller who was shipping back six. And she's a bookseller!

The author autographing is definitely a highlight. Over the years, I've met many of my heroes: Vince Flynn, Jeffery Deaver, Scott Turow, Lisa Scottoline, Lee Child, Linda Fairstein, Michael Connelly, Dominick Dunne, Scott Adams, Cathy Guisewite, and probably my favorite ever, Edna Buchanan. Well, actually Terry Anderson (the journalist held hostage for seven long years in Beirut) is probably my favorite author to meet. Shortly after he was released, he was at BookExpo signing a little excerpt booklet (which they give out if the full book isn't ready). The line to get it and meet him was one of the longest that year. He was so gracious and humble -- I was blown away at how concerned he was about the people he was meeting after everything he'd been through. I was deeply disappointed not to get the whole book then. I did buy it when it came out (in hardback too, which I try to avoid) and it was one of the most memorable books I've ever read. What a man. But I digress....

This year, one of the authors was Jim McGreevey, signing "The Confession," his book about his life in politics and as a very closeted gay man, at least until he very publicly resigned as governor of my current home state, New Jersey. Although it made national news, I thought it was more of a local story so I figured his line would be short.

Hardly! McGreevey's line stretched way long.

I was near the front and was delighted to see the ex-guv looking quite bright-mooded and healthy. He was gracious, gave plenty of time to each person and didn't seem horrified or humiliated to be there. I was disappointed as hell to just get an excerpt of the book instead of the whole thing -- it won't be published until September. McGreevey said, as if he was joking but he probably wasn't, that it's in its 9th draft.

Josh Margolin, the reporter from the Star-Ledger who covered McGreevey during his governorship, was there with a photographer. The highly energized Margolin scribbled as his photographer snapped (the pictures, not psychologically). His May 21 article delves extensively into McGreevey's book preview. Margolin covers politics so he is much more interested in the political scene from an insider's point of view than I am. I just want the juicy details of the scandal. Well, that's not totally true. I also want to know what led up to it and how he felt and what he thought about it leading up to it and since his resignation. (Hey, I got my degree in psychology, not political science.)

I asked McGreevey -- in my usual tactful way -- if in the book he told the truth and went into the real issues or if it was just a surface story. He said he definitely told the truth. Great! Then I can't wait to read it. I may read all of it, including about the crazy and dirty New Jersey politics, and not just the juicy personal parts. Every state thinks their politics are unique. I don't know that New Jersey is stranger than anywhere else -- I lived in Arizona during the Meacham years; now THAT was strange! But, back to McGreevey: I was glad to see him coming out again. Whatever I think of his politics, as a human being, I had empathy for him and his fear of being exposed as a gay man and possibly losing it all. I think he gained it all when he had to come out -- I'm sure he feels much more free and authentic than when he had to hide who he was, what he did and how he felt. I want to read his book -- I will probably even buy it in hard cover -- but I wonder if his story is finished yet. I'd like to see his second autobiography in 30 more years.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Back Up Your Hard Drive -- Don't Do as I Do, Do as I Say!

I'm a (semi) techie. I write about information technology. My life revolves around technology. When I travel, my various chargers take up more room than my clothes. Well, certainly than my shoes. We write about data storage and the importance of keeping data secure. And of keeping data, period.

I recently read a good article about backing up data based on the disastrous experience of a tech site columnist. "Back up your data," he advised. Strongly. Good idea, I thought. Did nothing.

So...here I was on St. Patrick's Day eve and my trusty Dell laptop, only two years old, was acting up. Just not responding right. You know, when you live with something every day you *know* when something isn't right. The bond between you and that inanimate object (inanimate? I never think of them as not living) is so strong that any little quiver is significant. Long before any symptoms, as such, show up, you know.

Well, my Dell quivered. I don't worry much about Dells. I've owned probably half a dozen of them and won't buy any other brand of PC. They're not moody. They're able to withstand a decent amount of dropping, jostling, shaking and food invasion. That's why I buy them, among other reasons. So I wasn't overly alarmed.

I rebooted while in the middle of a good chat with someone because it was acting sluggish and I figured two minutes later I'd be chatting with my friend at my usual furious pace.

Wrong-o!

To make a long, painful story short, that was it. I couldn't get past the beautiful blue ("crystal") background pattern on my screen. No access to programs, documents, settings, etc. This couldn't happen to my laptop that my company owns and supports, where they would take it away and bring it back all better. No...this happened to my personal PC, which had all kinds of things on it that are not backed up on our servers at work and that were not duplicated or retrievable from anywhere else.

I (fortunately) paid for Dell's "Gold" service when I ordered my Dell, which meant I could get a live human being on the phone -- at no charge to me -- who would stick with me until the problem is solved. And they're U.S.-based, a rarity these days in tech support.

The diagnosis, after probably two hours of trying everything, was that my partition had crashed. This is like when my trusty (really!) auto mechanic tells me that the solenoid is bad. I don't know what that means but I know it's not good. Well, I was told that I'd have to reinstall the operating system, which meant wiping out whatever was on the hard drive. All my data would be gone!

To make another long story short, I looked into several data recovery services and was given prices from $350 to $2,700. For the same thing. Ugh! How many times have I focused on what's bad about my life and then it's struck me that if we all threw our problems in a huge pile, I'd fight like crazy to get my own back versus anyone else's? All I wanted was "mine back."

Thank God I have a friend who's a true techie, and he has a friend who's techier than he is, and that friend took away my ailing laptop and came back with my critical data on five CDs. I didn't get all of it back, some was just gone (all of my music but it's on my MP3 player, also a Dell, so I could get it back onto my laptop after the OS had been reinstalled...and my saved AOL mail, which, unfortunately, had a lot of phone numbers and other info embedded in it). But pictures, Quicken data, tax data, etc., were all on those precious disks, so I could reinstall and not be totally screwed.

I'm still not "back" totally, but I'm getting there. Lesson learned: back up my hard drive!! So now I have critical data on CDs and thumb drives and intend to buy an external hard drive for backup. Yep, I'm gonna do that. Any day now. Sure.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Reveling in the Oscars

Watching the Academy Awards is one of the highlights of the year for a movie nut like me. I don't always see all of the movies that are nominated, and in fact I think it was last year that I had only seen one of the Best Picture nominees. This year, however, I "crammed" and saw nearly all of them. I have to say, this year the movies overall were really excellent, each in its own way. I didn't think any "filler" movies were nominated just to round out the minimum number, in any of the major categories.

This year's 78th Annual Academy Awards tonight seemed so uncharacteristically *adult* compared to earlier years. Nobody acted badly or wore bizarre clothes (Lara Flynn Boyle's tutu a few years ago comes to mind). Nobody streaked across the stage or jumped on top of seats on the way to accept their award. The clothes and jewelry everybody wore were tasteful and elegant. Even irreverent host Jon Stewart's humor was more maturely political and less Hollywood than usual. (I will refrain from commenting that possibly much of his humor was over some shallow Hollywood types' heads. That would be prejudicial and unfair.)

Most of the expected people won, including Philip Seymour Hoffman (for "Capote") and Reese Witherspoon (for "Walk the Line"), and "Crash" and "Brokeback Mountain" also did well, as expected. However, how does it happen that the Best Director (Ang Lee, for "Brokeback Mountain") didn't direct the Best Picture ("Crash")? That happens a lot, actually, and it is strange unless you figure that the Academy structures it so that different people vote for the two awards. The acceptance speeches were appropriate and gracious and nobody forgot to thank their spouse...though I think Ang Lee thanked nearly everyone in his movie and his family except his two stars, Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal. If he thanked them, I missed it.

Probably the most bizarre moments were when star and legend Lauren Bacall was attempting to read the intro to the tribute to film noir and kept stopping and stumbling. No glasses? Teleprompter malfunction? Adult onset dyslexia? Worse? It was hard to watch this elegant, classy, smart woman have such trouble getting through her brief script.

Absolutely the shock -- and delight -- of the evening was when the Best Song award was announced. Presenter Queen Latifah could barely believe it herself and let out a squeal when she saw "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp" from the movie "Hustle & Flow" on the card. The winners were like little kids who'd been let into the adult party and who could help but be thrilled for them? Can you imagine that song title now being forever on the list of Academy Award-winning Best Songs? Ha! It's worth it almost just for that! I like the song a lot, and I'm not prone to appreciating rap.

Speaking of "Hustle & Flow," I thought Terrence Howard was amazing in that movie. Philip Seymour Hoffman got all the pre-Oscar hype. (Yes, he was fabulous as Truman Capote.) David Strathairn, who played Edward R. Murrow in "Good Night, and Good Luck," also got mentioned quite a bit. (Sad that that excellent movie got nuthin', not even one Oscar. Director George Clooney got the Supporting Actor award for his role in "Syriana" but I bet he'd rather have the recognition for his own movie.) The fact that Terrence Howard, who played DJay, a pimp with a dream, got zero hype or mention by the critics as one who should win, was an unforgivable oversight. DJay was very, very outside his own persona as much as Aileen Wuornos in "Monster" was outside the norm for Charlize Theron, and she won the Best Actress Oscar for that role two years ago.

Tomorrow the entertainment shows on TV and the tabloids and People magazines of the world will be filled with deadly-dreary post mortems of what actors did what to whom or didn't do what for whom, and, worse, what they were all wearing and who looked stunning and who looked dreadful. Sorry, but my attitude about all of that is...who the hell cares?!?!

Monday, February 20, 2006

Sharing Sadness and Laughter with My Favorite Fergie

How do you handle the crumple-to-the-knees pain of losing your father when you are the comedian-host of The Late, Late Show on CBS and you're supposed to be funny, light and entertaining? If you're Craig Ferguson, you go on with the show but devote the next program to your father, and you pull it off by fearlessly letting your pain show, digging deep to find the humor in the memories and, to top it off, joining the bagpipe group that's to play in tribute at the wake later that night.

I was already a fan of Craig Ferguson. Now I'm a complete devotee. (Photo of him "borrowed" from The Late Late Show Web site.)

Whether it's that I'm a night owl or an insomniac, I watch The Late, Late Show more nights during the week than not. Now I've also taken to recording it on my precious ReplayTV (better than rival TiVo, from what people tell me) so I don't keep myself from falling asleep for fear of missing anything. After all, I do have a full-time job that starts early in the morning.

The host, Craig Ferguson, is one of my favorites on tv right now. Or ever. The Scotsman consistently makes me laugh out loud. His outlook on American culture from an outsider's point of view is insightful -- we do have our quirks -- and his material is funny and his ad-libs with the guests are even better! I love his kind of isn't-this-amazing-but-it's-true approach to humor, and he delivers the punch lines cutely with that sexy accent, slightly mussed hair and an almost little-boy mischievous demeanor. He isn't mean like Letterman can be. His approach is more like Ellen DeGeneris than Jay Leno -- he is timely but mostly he talks about everyday things and finds the irony and humor in them.

But when a father you were close to dies, the laughter inside you hides and you have no desire to seek it out. My own dad, whom I worshipped and adored, died of prostate cancer 11-1/2 years ago and I remember those first few weeks and months so painfully well. My mom and I were zombies for awhile. How in the world Craig could have the presence of mind to do a show is amazing. A month after my dad died, I couldn't even keep it together when I spoke at the memorial service. (When he died on a very hot August day in Phoenix, everybody was out of town, even the minister, so we put off the service -- a very good decision.)

Craig on his Jan. 30 show talked about not knowing how to handle his show under these circumstances. No pretense, no "show biz," just the real Craig man. How refreshing!

He talked about that his father used to put his hand on the top of young Craig's head as a gesture of affection, and that he did that in the hospital again. Harkens back to childhood, something long left there. When my dad got very ill, I started calling him "Daddy" again, which I hadn't done in decades. It just felt right.

Craig said he had a hard time seeing his father well in his mind since his last memories had been of him so ill. I had the same challenge -- it took a long, long time to get the images out of my head of my dad on the day I realized the cancer had taken his sight or of him being insensitively poked while barely conscious by a young, unknowning hospital aide or of him helpless and comatose. Now, thank God, I see him more often as the young, healthy, vital, inspirational and fun dad I knew for all but the last few months.

Craig said something about that his father didn't specify what he wanted for his funeral. I asked my dad some questions about his preferences for a service for him and he said, "I won't care -- I'll be dead."

Craig's very touching tribute to Robert Ferguson (1930-2006) revived my best and also my most painful memories of Jack Schriener (1921-1994). Thank you, Craig, for sharing your father's life and passing with us. You brought me to tears and you made me laugh through the tears. Your humanity is the best thing about you -- please don't hide it. Even when you let it out, you're also still very funny!

Monday, January 23, 2006

Broncomournia

I have a bumper sticker on my wall at the office that proclaims that I'm a "Broncoholic." Clearly that means I've been immersed in Broncomania all season...til yesterday.

I won't even get into the problems or the criticisms or the analysis or anything. It's too painful. I have gotten many condolence calls from friends and razzing from my now-former friends. (Ha!)

I'll just say, as a friend of mine said, "After the National Anthem, it was all downhill."

Saturday, January 21, 2006

"Urine here..."? Shame on you!

At the wonderful International Builders' Show put on by the National Association of Homebuilders in Orlando, Florida, a week or so ago, where I was with 100,000 of my closest friends, I was taken aback when I went into one of the ladies' rooms in the Orange County Convention Center and saw, on the mirror over one of the sinks (over a SINK!!!) a maroon sign that said:


"Urine here, you should be there,
[with an arrow pointing down, into the sink]
booth W4494 in the Tech Home Expo
SketchUp, www.sketchup.com"

Where's a camera when I need one? I knew I should have gotten that camera phone.

Clearly it belonged at the very least in the men's room above a urinal, where the arrow would point there instead of into a sink (geez, a sink!). I should let the folks at SketchUp defend themselves, hopefully tell me that it was the mischievous act of a misguided competitor, but since this is a blog, I will just say that I think it's tacky at best and offensive for certain for them to have produced the sign in the first place, for any rest room. I can assure you that the women who saw the sign while I was gauging reactions in the ladies room were put off, not amused and perplexed as to why it was there. After I saw it twice, a (female) show official removed it. She didn't wad it up and throw it away. Wonder what she did with it.

Friday, January 20, 2006

Update on Friend Who Had Aneurism

Great News! And I'm sorry it took me so long to come here to report it.

Mike Kidder (see item below this one) is recovering very, very well! He's home, he's working (geez, don't overdo it, Mike), he's looking good, he's doing great! I think it was all of the prayers, vibes, good thoughts and determination of his friends and family that accelerated his healing.

Keep it up, folks! And welcome back, Mike!