Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Strawberry Field (Gates) Forever


After 100 years of use and over 40 years of admiration, the Liverpool branch of the Salvation Army has taken down the iconic gates of their orphanage Strawberry Fields. The Woolton suburb has been a pilgrimage for Beatles fans wanting to gaze upon the gorgeous wrought iron gates that inspired John Lennon to write the 1967 hit. While the charity has tried to reassure music lovers that they would be getting exact replica gates, sadly the timeless magic of the ruby red gates went into storage with the originals.


Following in the steps of every music mecca monument, 40 years of graffiti covers the mossy brick walls around the Victorian gates bringing an added element of ultimate community to the abandoned site. There is something incredibly special of seeing such brilliant red handiwork in the midst of the northern England climate and general color palette. It stood out as a beacon of hope for wayward children, and stands out as a burst of light in the dreary streets of working class Liverpool.


The Salvation Army made a statement that the gates were "worn-out" and were being taken to a "secret storage facility", but when I visited last February the gates in question seemed to be in pretty good shape for being over 100 years old. They were beautiful and sturdy as I ran my hands over the flowers and decorative swirls. It was iconic, original, and free to see.

What was incredibly emotional about actually being present at the Strawberry Fields gates was how silent and calm the scene was. Being alone with the silence of the misty overgrown facility grounds covered in beautiful shades of green was a moment that I will never forget. While I was surprised at how small the gates actually were compaired to the monstrous mental image I had, they were beautiful and unlike anything I had ever seen, or will ever see again.





It's sad to see the gates leave their original home for the dusty basement of some storage facility, but the legacy and memories will continue to live on through the photos and whimsy of the music.


(the music video was shot nowhere near the real Strawberry Fields, but it is still fun)

All of the images are my own from my trip to Northern England in 2010. Special thanks to Emma Walker for helping me find the gates!

Saturday, May 7, 2011

DEALBREAKERS

Shit you guys, this was supposed to be my way of keeping up with blogging, and I blew it. My bad. Anyway, this week in dealbreakers:

You Treat Me Like Shit And Make Me Think I'm Crazy When I Call You Out On It

I think this one goes hand in hand with the whole Nice Guy thing, which is quite possibly the worst adage of all time. You are not a nice guy; most human beings are assholes. I don't go around calling myself a ~nice girl, even though I'm not particularly horrible to men, because I know I can be an asshole, and I know that I have done some not-so-nice things. Seriously how did the whole Nice Guy thing start? Guys who actually say that about themselves are bigger assholes than the actual assholes for acting like they're so god damn pious. Shut. Up.


ANYWAY, a lot of guys (and girls) do this, and sometimes its so subtle you won't even notice it until much later. I've never dated a guy who straight up treated me like shit, because I think I have enough self respect to not stand for that. I have, however, found myself in situations where I'm left wondering why I'm so miserable after spending time with someone I should be happy with. So then when you finally decide to call him out on something like not wanting to meet your friends ONE TIME for like, 5 minutes he's like, "wait what? You know I have to be somewhere." Then you're like "uh why are you even here then" and he's like, "because you said you wanted to hang out so I came to see YOU. I have to go deliver some drugs now, are you coming or not?" And then you start to feel bad because he did go a whole 3 miles out of his way to come get you. So then you convince yourself that its totally normal to leave 10 of your friends in your apartment because he really needs to get to Santa Monica in the next 20 minutes. You even find yourself defending him to your friends when they give you quizzical and disappointed looks, and forget you ever tried to confront him about anything. I am forever Kelly Kapoor.




Friends don't let friends date Dennis Duffys.



Friday, May 6, 2011

Basketball?


imamodrocker 9:39 pm
also the coach
hit one of the players!
i think thats rude

sayitifyouwant 9:39 pm
whgat??
nuh uh

imamodrocker 9:40 pm
yeahh
pau?
is that one
is that a laker?

sayitifyouwant 9:40 pm
the tall white one

imamodrocker 9:40 pm
yeah

sayitifyouwant 9:40 pm
haha pau is that one


imamodrocker 9:40 pm
yeah. so glasses hit him!

sayitifyouwant 9:41 pm
dick

imamodrocker 9:41 pm
i know i felt so bad
i didnt think that was nice. hes just trying his best

My McCartney

It has just come to my attention that Sir Paul McCartney--and my favorite Beatle--has just been engaged to his long time girlfriend Nancy Shevell. Who really cares what her name is though, right? While it is true that I actually don't want to marry a man so close to the age of 70 (to be fair he does look great for 68), the idea of marrying Paul the Beatle, Paul the Wings member, even Paul the Ram or McCartney was always in my the back of my dreams from when I was a little girl watching A Hard Day's Night every other day when I came home after preschool. He was absolutely perfect!

Adorable haircut


Precious smile


Great Dresser


Clean face (and public persona)


British accent


Wonderful voice


I was such a fan of him and Linda that I didn't even mind he was off the market. I also really appreciated the fact that she was American, giving all of us girls a chance at our respective British crushes. She was also a fantastic photographer.

Whoever this new lady is, she is definitely no Linda, but at least she'll be better than Heather Mills...and hopefully not a gold digger...also hopefully with two legs. What ever happened to that baby they had also?

No more heartache for Paul please!

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Mimi

There are common phrases that you use, but never really understand them until you have truly experienced them in your own life.

When it rains, it pours
Bad things happen in threes
Everything happens for a reason


It is with great sadness that I now understand these common phrases more closely than most of the people I know.

After the death of my grandfather in January I thought that this would be a hard spring. Earlier this month my mother fell hiking and broke her leg and I knew this would be a difficult summer. Last week I was informed that my Mimi had passed away in the night.
This is going to be a tough year.

When it rains, it pours
Bad things happen in threes
Everything happens for a reason


Unlike my complex and confusing relationship with my late grandfather, I knew Mimi like the back of my hand. She was true family and easily one of the classiest people I’ve ever met. My first memory of her unique air of status was when I learned her name. Mimi was only the pet name that she let her grandchildren (my cousin, my younger sister, and myself) call her because as she bluntly put it: “The word grandmother makes me seem so old!” She could have chosen to be a granny or a nana, but none of these terms of endearment would really encompass all that she was. I always thought that she was just Mimi—like Madonna or Cher—but when I was about eight years old, I asked my dad why Mimi’s cards always were sent to a woman named Barbara Pennick. He explained the whole double names thing and it promptly blew my tiny mind. Only Barbara Pennick could be one of the greatest grandmothers of all time without even actually being a grandmother by title.

Vain genius with good intentions.

It was this vain genius that continued to entertain and impress me throughout the 21 years that Mimi was physically in my life. When she would visit us in California (always in the spring or summer months to make sure she got only the best weather), she would sit by our pool with a vodka tonic vowing that someday this would be her entire life. I loved being her vacation. It made me feel special. Even after she made her face up, she would still dare to get in the pool with the splashing machines that took over my sister and I whenever we touched water. Gliding effortlessly around the pool with the help of a kickboard Mimi would never get her hair wet. I never understood how she did it, but I guess I never tried hard enough.

How could I not look up to a woman who made everything look so graceful and cool? I didn’t even mind that she smoked that much because the smell of her cigarette smoke mixed with Chanel No. 5 was so inviting, so natural for her personality. She was my definition of New England royalty and always played the part so beautifully.

During my last days with Mimi this past March I learned more about who Barbara Pennick was. Barbara Pennick was a dedicated single mother of three beautiful children, the eldest being my father. Her life was not always full of Chanel No.5 and pool side lounging. As a Catholic mother trying to take care of her kids, “no meat Fridays” and hiding from the paper boy on collection days were regular occurrences. Sitting around a table drinking wine, these stories were full of hilarious embellishments and the rose tint that often comes with looking at your life through the rear view mirror. I thought about these stories I had heard over and over at dinner tables throughout my life as casual chatter and realized how hard Mimi had it. It was at this moment that she became not only one of the most beautiful women that I have ever had the pleasure of knowing, but also one of the strongest.

Everything happens for a reason

There is something special in the fact that my grandfather died first because it gave me the gift of being able to see Mimi one last time. I don’t take it lightly and I thank him from the bottom of my heart because I am completely satisfied with my relationship with Mimi right up to the moment that I drove away from her to Logan airport. People continue to send their condolences to me because of how much death I’ve had to deal with this year, but they shouldn’t. It happened on a perfect schedule all thanks to Joseph.

Now I know that Mimi would be upset that I spent some of my writing about her on her ex husband especially considering they had been divorced for over 40 years, so let’s salute the woman who taught my father how to dress, and a family how to stick together.

To the woman who thought Talbots was an acceptable gift for a 13 year old girl!
To the woman who once said “She doesn’t know I don’t like her!”
To the woman who made me listen to Frank Sinatra when I only wanted to listen to the Spice Girls.
To the woman that sent me cards in college for no occasion at all.
To the woman who always believed in me.

To Mimi.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Wedding Whimsy

I was never one of those people who pretended that I wasn't excited about the upcoming Royal nuptials. I love weddings. I love the Royal Family. I love the pomp and circumstance. I love the uplifting excitement of a whimsical day. I love that it was a UK Bank Holiday. People can naysay all they want, but I enjoyed every minute of it.

A Few Favorite Aspects

The music was just incredible. Prince Charles helped Kate pick out the hymns and it was just gorgeous including a beautiful rendition of the National Anthem "God Save The Queen" which Piers Morgan from CNN deemed able to "absolutely raise the roof of Britain". I don't know about all that, but it was magical. The bands were wonderful and the choir was just angelic.


Westminster Abbey was the perfect place for their wedding, but if we are honest, its not a very welcoming and inviting kind of building. The addition of the Birch Trees to the interior of the gallery just brought a new sense of life and magic to the traditional ceremony.


Normally I am pretty wary of veils on brides especially with the modern cuts of dresses, but paired with her gorgeous McQueen dress, Kate's sheer veil only added to her beauty and the mystery of the occasion. It complimented her body and her dress stunningly. With regards to the dress, I thought it was fantastic, but there was a wow factor that was missing. I'm not particularly a fan of Diana's dress, but it was clearly a dress fit for a princess.


The Beckhams. Best looking guests around. Enough said.


And last, but certainly not least, the adorable Queen of England herself. A vision in yellow!

And with all of the build up and all of the excitement, the day is over and done with. It really inspires me because even if Kate's life is a living hell for the rest of her life because she is a princess, at least today was a dream. A dream that she actually got to live.



Good Luck Will and Kate! Everyone pray for Harry.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Track Take: "Cornerstone" (Arctic Monkeys)



After the explosive approval to their first album Whatever People Say I'm Not, and the lackluster response to their second album Favourite Worst Nightmare, the Arctic Monkeys really had nothing to lose commercially in planning and recording their third album. While Humbug is a very interesting and disjointed album in its entirety, "Cornerstone" is not only the best song on the album, but it's one of the best tracks that the band has ever produced.

Front man and resident songwriting genius Alex Turner is incredible interested with the surf guitar sounds of the 1960's (see The Last Shadow Puppets for his obsession at full blast). Here the watery sound of slide guitar and blurred notes beautifully compliments the confused and desperate character in his song. Beyond the accented lead guitar and the jangling rhythm, the track is very simple. This doesn't make it boring--instead it makes it addictive and so unsatisfying at the end when he doesn't resolve the rhythm. Alex doesn't find the girl, he is still stuck smelling seat belts and creeping on other ladies.

While the song is appealing sonically because of its timeless sound mixed with Turner's unique Sheffield voice, its the universal theme of lost love haunting every turn of your life that makes it a classic. Instead of churning out another song about a break up, Turner takes us beyond the last fight and leaves us with the pathetic attempts to remember a lost love's face.

It's fresh, yet maddeningly commonplace.