Monday, January 13, 2003
Had two "Its a Small World" experiences recently. This is quite common in New Zealand. (1) Was invited to a board gaming session at the home of a friend of Michael Switzer's. Turns out that Gordon (the friend) had purchased the house from my wife's best friend, Jenni Murphy-Scanlon and her husband. It was strange to go to a house that I had previously visited regularly and seeing some one else living in it. (2) Was out at dinner with some work colleagues and made a humourous disparaging remark about the time when I worked on a project in Tokoroa. Hayley, (next door office at work to mine) defended Tokoroa as she had grown up there. It soon turns out that her husband is the best friend of a guy called Darren Hepple whom I used to hang out in a group with at university. She says that he visits them regularly from his home in Wellington and will put us in contact next time he is up. Weird! but it happens a lot in NZ...
Well, the trip to Wellington was a roaring success. I enjoyed the LOTR:TTT movie. I had a good seat in the Premium seating at the Embassy. The sound was awesomely full and the action was deliciously frenetic. I liked the fact that everyone (except Legolas of course) gets tired and dirty during the film. Just as travellers on such a journey really would. Viggo Mortenson really is Aragorn.
The movie story itself had its ups and downs. I'm afraid that despite all the hype, the CGI animators have not yet conquered the gravity thing completely. The worst instance was where the riders charged out of Helms Deep down the causeway, knocking Uruks away left right and centre. To my eyes, those bad-boys just didn't fall "right". (That's right I am a picky bastard)
OTOH, Gollum was very good. (Qui-Gonn never really wrestled with Jar-Jar, it was more of a tackle). However gravity still wasn't right in some of his moves. Also, I think my ears must be packing up on me as I could not understand all of the G-thing's lines.
Overall a good effort. If you consider the trilogy to be the analog of the "Three-Act-Structure", then the second act is always the hardest to keep all juggling balls in the air at one time.
Also went to the LOTR exhibit at Te Papa. Awesome. Cost NZ$12 to get in (plus NZ$7 for the audio tour, which I highly recommend). Queued for tickets for 45mins. Queued for entry for 30mins. Enjoyed the exhibits for 2 hours. The amount of work that everyone involved put in was just unbelievable. No wonder they grabbed 4 technical Oscars.
Sadly my favourite bagel joint on Johnston St. was closed so I had to yomp all the way to the Willis St. branch. Well worth it, though.
Sunny day...
Sidewalk table...
Yummy bagel (Smoked salmon, cream cheese, lettuce and capers on Onion) ...
Good coffee...
What more could you ask for?
The movie story itself had its ups and downs. I'm afraid that despite all the hype, the CGI animators have not yet conquered the gravity thing completely. The worst instance was where the riders charged out of Helms Deep down the causeway, knocking Uruks away left right and centre. To my eyes, those bad-boys just didn't fall "right". (That's right I am a picky bastard)
OTOH, Gollum was very good. (Qui-Gonn never really wrestled with Jar-Jar, it was more of a tackle). However gravity still wasn't right in some of his moves. Also, I think my ears must be packing up on me as I could not understand all of the G-thing's lines.
Overall a good effort. If you consider the trilogy to be the analog of the "Three-Act-Structure", then the second act is always the hardest to keep all juggling balls in the air at one time.
Also went to the LOTR exhibit at Te Papa. Awesome. Cost NZ$12 to get in (plus NZ$7 for the audio tour, which I highly recommend). Queued for tickets for 45mins. Queued for entry for 30mins. Enjoyed the exhibits for 2 hours. The amount of work that everyone involved put in was just unbelievable. No wonder they grabbed 4 technical Oscars.
Sadly my favourite bagel joint on Johnston St. was closed so I had to yomp all the way to the Willis St. branch. Well worth it, though.
Sunny day...
Sidewalk table...
Yummy bagel (Smoked salmon, cream cheese, lettuce and capers on Onion) ...
Good coffee...
What more could you ask for?
Wednesday, January 01, 2003
My wonderful wife, Helen, gave me an ultra-cool Xmas present. A plane ticket to Wellington to see The Lord of the Rings : The Two Towers at the Embassy theatre. Staying overnight at the groovy Downtown Backpackers hotel.
I leave early tomorrow morning.
I think I shall luncheon at my favourite spot in Wellies : Wholly Bagels on Johnson St..
Helen is the grandmaster world champion of present buying.
I leave early tomorrow morning.
I think I shall luncheon at my favourite spot in Wellies : Wholly Bagels on Johnson St..
Helen is the grandmaster world champion of present buying.
Another SportsCafe "Big Question" Win.
Question was "How did the Ivy League get it's name?"
My Answer:
There are two main popular (but, alas, incorrect) explanations for the
origin of the term "Ivy League"
The first refers to the group of older established Universities of the
Eastern United States (Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Brown, yada, yada, yada).
Because of the length of time they had been in existence, they had ivy
growing over the buildings. Newer upstart colleges had not been there long
enough to grow the creepers up over the structures. It implied an image of
permanence, wisdom and solidity. Exactly the image that the college founders
wanted.
The second misconception relates to a mythical inter-college athletic
competetion run between teams from the four major institutions. The Roman
numeral representation of four is "IV". Hence the "IV" (Ivy) League.
Both of these misdirections were invented by the president's of the
universities in the 1930's to cover up the real (and more sordid) origin of
the name "Ivy League".
In the wild 1930's, prohibition had finished and America was starting to
loosen up a bit.
This was not the case on the east coast amongst the upstanding and
respectable Universities. Saloons and brothels were closed down and ejected
from the college towns as fast as they could spring up.
An enterprising bootlegger and notorious brothel keeper from Chicago, named
Ivy Boniface, realised that there was a niche market for a mobile cat-house
and gin-palace that travelled from town to town, never setting down long
enough to attract the attention of the town authorities or police. The
prestigious universities were full of young men with piles of cash and
nowhere to expend their ... errr ... energies. Ivy's custom built party
train would pull into the nearest station to the university and hold wild
parties where the young scions of wealthy America would booze and hump their
way through their generous allowances. Since the wealthy tended to attend a
select set of school's, these became a regular circuit for Ivy's mobile
business.
To attend a university which Ivy Boniface's party train would actually
visit, was a real source of underground pride among the students. These rich
pricks would taunt the poor saps from lesser colleges at football matches by
saying that their opponents' school was so shitty that it was not even in
"Ivy's League" (meaning that the train never went there). Eventually the
name stuck. If you attended one of the wealthy schools, you were in the "Ivy
League" and were tarred with the brush of studliness that the name implied.
Of course, all of the involved colleges will deny the truth of any of this.
They have an image to protect.
But now you know the truth.
Regards
Evan Yates
This is of course a complete fabrication, but it won me a "Black Hawk Down" DVD plus movie branded shirt, bag , cap and jacket. Cool.
Question was "How did the Ivy League get it's name?"
My Answer:
There are two main popular (but, alas, incorrect) explanations for the
origin of the term "Ivy League"
The first refers to the group of older established Universities of the
Eastern United States (Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Brown, yada, yada, yada).
Because of the length of time they had been in existence, they had ivy
growing over the buildings. Newer upstart colleges had not been there long
enough to grow the creepers up over the structures. It implied an image of
permanence, wisdom and solidity. Exactly the image that the college founders
wanted.
The second misconception relates to a mythical inter-college athletic
competetion run between teams from the four major institutions. The Roman
numeral representation of four is "IV". Hence the "IV" (Ivy) League.
Both of these misdirections were invented by the president's of the
universities in the 1930's to cover up the real (and more sordid) origin of
the name "Ivy League".
In the wild 1930's, prohibition had finished and America was starting to
loosen up a bit.
This was not the case on the east coast amongst the upstanding and
respectable Universities. Saloons and brothels were closed down and ejected
from the college towns as fast as they could spring up.
An enterprising bootlegger and notorious brothel keeper from Chicago, named
Ivy Boniface, realised that there was a niche market for a mobile cat-house
and gin-palace that travelled from town to town, never setting down long
enough to attract the attention of the town authorities or police. The
prestigious universities were full of young men with piles of cash and
nowhere to expend their ... errr ... energies. Ivy's custom built party
train would pull into the nearest station to the university and hold wild
parties where the young scions of wealthy America would booze and hump their
way through their generous allowances. Since the wealthy tended to attend a
select set of school's, these became a regular circuit for Ivy's mobile
business.
To attend a university which Ivy Boniface's party train would actually
visit, was a real source of underground pride among the students. These rich
pricks would taunt the poor saps from lesser colleges at football matches by
saying that their opponents' school was so shitty that it was not even in
"Ivy's League" (meaning that the train never went there). Eventually the
name stuck. If you attended one of the wealthy schools, you were in the "Ivy
League" and were tarred with the brush of studliness that the name implied.
Of course, all of the involved colleges will deny the truth of any of this.
They have an image to protect.
But now you know the truth.
Regards
Evan Yates
This is of course a complete fabrication, but it won me a "Black Hawk Down" DVD plus movie branded shirt, bag , cap and jacket. Cool.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)