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Friday Five!

It’s time for the (duh) Friday Five, unusually this week presented here actually on Friday. 1. What was the first thing you ever cooked? Probably instant oatmeal. One of the…

It’s time for the (duh) Friday Five, unusually this week presented here actually on Friday.

1. What was the first thing you ever cooked?
Probably instant oatmeal. One of the first dishes I remember cooking when out on my own, however, was mini-pizzas using pizza sauce, mozarella cheese, and English Muffins. Yum.

2. What’s your signature dish?
Margie does most of the cooking in our household (and that’s certainly not any surprise for those who have been blessed by her cooking). My “signatures” are desserts — chocolate pecan strata probably being the most so, though I bake a mean pecan pie.

3. Ever had a cooking disaster? (tasted like crap, didn’t work, etc.) Describe.
Heh. A casserole that called for diced green chiles, but I didn’t find any at the store, so I bought diced jalipeno peppers. Heh.

4. If skill and money were no object, what would make for your dream meal?
Being a meat-n-potatoes kind of guy, money is not usually an object (insofar as I don’t have a yen for pickled hummingbird tongues or anything). And skill — well, I can follow any recipe, and Margie is a damned sight better than that, so that’s also not usually an object.

The fact is, I usually get to eat my dream meals. Chile verde. Pepper steak. Cottage fries. A wide array of desserts. Yum, yum, yum, and I have the waistline to prove it.

The only place where money might be an object — a really good wine with dinner, a good port afterwards. But I can also usually make due with cheap stuff, too, if well-selected.

5. What are you doing this weekend?
My in-laws are in town, so probably some sort of a project (we finally built Katherine’s bunk bed this afternoon). A real doorbell, perhaps? Then, Sunday, we’re having fried turkey with friends, hopefully with a working burner this time.

It’s the Saturday, er, Friday Five!

Yet another edition of the Friday Five, this one clearly focused on Valentines Day. 1. What’s the most romantic thing you’ve ever done for someone else? That’s tough, largely because…

Yet another edition of the Friday Five, this one clearly focused on Valentines Day.

1. What’s the most romantic thing you’ve ever done for someone else?

That’s tough, largely because I tend to not be good about remembering such things.

Okay, it would probably be my proposal to Margie. It was Thankgiving, we were at her folks’ house, and, in fact, my folks were there, too. I was still in Southern California, but had gotten a transfer to Denver, leaving that coming Monday. Margie and my relationship was no deep dark secret, obviously, but the clock was ticking on my popping the question. Ordinarily, it would have taken me another six month, I suspect. But with my departure, things were getting urgent, at least in my mind.

I took Margie up to her room at her folks house — oops, Jen was there, trying to calm Ana to sleep. Okay, her brother’s room (how romantic). I knelt down, said something, and handed her a gorgeous engagement ring.

Or not, since I knew that she was going to get one of her heirloom rings, and I didn’t know which one, and I certainly wasn’t going to ask her folks about it ahead of time. So instead I gave her a ring made of aluminum foil.

Didn’t stop her from crying out so loud that Jen was worried there was something wrong.

Yeah, that was all pretty darned romantic.

2. [pardon the cosmo question] What are your erogenous zones?

Margie has taught me to be far more sensuous (senses/touch-loving) than I used to be. I’d guess probably the ear lobes, here and there, and the Usual Suspects.

3. How old were you the first time you had sex? Care to expound?

Pass. (My parents read this blog, fergoshsakes. Margie knows — she’s the only one who needs to.)

4. What’s the most unusual place you’ve ever had sex?

Given that I am, ah, kind of a stick in the mud, I don’t have tales to regale folks of having sex on top of a hot air balloon flying over Venice or anything.

Hmmm. On the dock of a lake at twilight. Fishermen interrupted us …

5. Do you have plans for Valentine’s Day or is it just another Thursday?

No plans at the moment. Margie doesn’t like to go out on VD (“Worst service of the year”). Not sure what we’re going to do. Margie might cook me something really nice, but that doesn’t answer what I’m going to do for her. Chocolates? Cliche. Flowers? Wilt. Something wildly expensive and fabulously beautiful? Margie would hit me.

Hmmmmmm.

Blogger Insider

Woo-hoo! These weren’t due until the end of next week, but since Kara (of Sanity Denied) and I exchanged questions (and answers) so soon, I might as well post these….

Woo-hoo! These weren’t due until the end of next week, but since Kara (of Sanity Denied) and I exchanged questions (and answers) so soon, I might as well post these. Besides, Blogger Insider took a break last fortnight.

Here are Kara’s questions and my answers. Hit her site for the reverse.

1. I went back and read your archives. I was really enthralled by the way you seemed to post and update exactly how you felt at each moment durind the terror of 9/11. I think a lot of people’s blogs from that day stand as an incredible monument to their feelings and the powerful emotions of that day. Do you ever reread that section of your archives, and if you do, what are your feelings?

I’ve been intentionally not going back and rereading things until I get to some major anniversaries. The 24th of this month, for example, is six months since I began blogging, and I’ll probably do something then. And when we get around to 11 March, I’ll probably go back and reread them.

Well, that’s not 100% true. I had cause to go back and take a quick look, and it was interesting watching my emotions bob up and down that day, and the few days following — lots of anger, but also lots of trying to intellectualize the whole thing.

All I know is that I’m glad I have the blog, because, frankly, I don’t remember much of those couple of days.

2. How is your New Year’s resolution coming along?

Heh. Well, my pants have been feeling a little loose. I’ll know tomorrow, because a few days after New Years I was in at the doctors and was Officially Weighted at 248 … and I’m going in tomorrow and we’ll see what they say.

I was just noticing that, in trying to keep Katherine from ruining her appetite for dinner, and so not giving in to her desire for snacks, I’m also perforce not snacking, which is probably a Good Thing. Scratch that — I know it’s a Good Thing.

3. What is the most unexpected or suprising experience you have had as a
parent?

As a global thing, just the incredible time sink it’s been. I look back on those feckless days of, “Sigh, here we are in the afternoon on a weekend with just nothing to do. Let’s hop in the car and drive someplace,” and marvel.

As a specific thing, it was probably the first time Katherine climbed out of her crib (during an afternoon nap), toddled downstairs, past where I was sitting at the breakfast table (within eyeshot, if I’d turned my head), went out to the living room, got a knick-knack, and walked back to me and … I finally spotted her. “Gah!” (That was me, not Katherine.)

4. What was your first meeting with Margie like? There has to be a good
story behind all that love!

Actually, Margie and I met in college, introduced by a friend of ours who was running a D&D game and invited us both to it. We were friends then, good friends, and stayed in touch through the various intervening years (and a marriage on my part, where Margie was one of the bridesmaids, as she was also a friend with my now-ex).

So I don’t remember much of that first meeting. Certainly it was not memorable in terms of anything interesting happening, but it was memorable in that we met playing That Evil Demonic Game (which, in fact, is where I’ve met probably 90% of my friends).

Now, asking her out for our first date … there’s an interesting story. But that’s not what you asked. 🙂

5.Tell me more about NaNoWriMo, and how you conquered it.

National Novel Writing Month, a/k/a “Take November, Wad It Up Into A Little Ball, And Throw Any Non-Writing Activities You Had Planned Then Into The Trash.” I conquered it by (a) being someone who writes a lot as part of his job, (b) deciding I would do something fun, not profound, (c) deciding I would not go back and revise lest I never get past the first chapter, and (d) having a wonderful wife who let me sequester myself upstairs for a couple of all-day catch-up fests. Having a friend who was also doing it helped, too, since that made it a bit of a competition.

6. Name your top five places to visit on the web (not weblogs).

In terms of frequency of visits? Amazon, Google … er, SpamCop … um, RefDesk, … damn, I really don’t go that many other places these days, besides blogs. The Rocky Mountain News, the Christian Science Monitor, Yahoo News, and the Wall Street Journal as news fodder for my blog.

7. Do people “in real life” know about your weblog, for instance, people
from work or extended family members? Have they ever reacted negatively to
anything you’ve blogged about? If so, how did you deal with it?

My folks know about it, and read it — my mom does, at least. I’ve mentioned it to my in-laws, but they’re not much into Web stuff. Most of my local friends know about it. I don’t know that anyone at work knows — but I assume that they can find it, so I’m always very discreet about work-related stuff (especially anything involving managing or HR or stuff like that).

So far I’ve not had any negative reactions from anyone from those arenas — but I endeavor at all time to be inoffensive, so …

8. Do you consider yourself an “artist” or a “scientist”?

Tough one. I’d probably say artist, if pressed — but I try to apply logic and reason to the things I do, esp. at work, as well as creativity.

9. Favorite book?

Urg. I hate this question, if only because I read voraciously, and I only tend to read what I enjoy (reading is entertainment for me, not education). So I’m drawing a blank here. I can tell you what I’m presently reading, which is Which Lie Did I Tell? by William Goldman, one of his books detailing his career as a screenwriter. Vastly entertaining and an interesting introduction to the screenwriting trade.

10. The answer is… 16. What is the question?

“When did you learn to drive?” “What’s four squared?” “What base is hexidecimal?” “How many comic books are in the bag you just picked up from the comic book store?” And we’ll leave it at that.

The Friday Five

Yet another installment of the Friday Five. 1. Have you ever had braces? Any other teeth trauma? I’ve had both tremendous luck and lousy luck with teeth. On the lousy…

Yet another installment of the Friday Five.

1. Have you ever had braces? Any other teeth trauma?

I’ve had both tremendous luck and lousy luck with teeth. On the lousy side, I went through extensive orthodonture from before junior high (I believe) all the way through high school. Retainers. Braces. Headgear. More retainers. Some incredibly painful rubber thing with metal gripping knobs to wear at night that made tears come to my eyes to put it on (“No thanks, dear, I’ve done the S&M thing and only got straight teeth out of it”).

And then I had to have bunches of wisdom teeth removed (not that I seem to lose substantial amounts of wisdom by doing so, not having much to begin with) after college.

(My orthodontist was Dr. John King Wong, who was very nice, very knowledgable, and who had a bad case of dandruff. One of the occupational hazards of being a dentist is having clients who have nothing better to do than to stare at you for prolonged periods of time.)

On the tremendous side, though my teeth were a higgledy-piggledy mess in their placement, they were and are extremely healthy in and of themselves. I had two cavities around 7 or 8 years old, and that’s all I’ve ever had. I try to brush twice a day, but I seem to be one of those folks with good enamel, thank God.

2. Ever broken any bones?

Nope. Not a one. Well, maybe a toe, not long ago. But never any broken legs or broken arms or stuff like that. Not a very athletic kid, which helped, I suppose.

3. Ever had stitches?

Heh. Two inguinal hernias, in the 3rd and 4th grade. (The result of which is that, instead of learning to play kickball with the boys, I got to learn folk dancing with the girls. Go figure.) Also a few stitches on my forehead where a sebacious cyst was removed a year back.

4. What are the stories behind some of your [physical] scars?

Well, I mentioned the ones above, though the hernia scars disappeared years ago. I still have scar tissue on my right knee (and a “football injury” pain there when it rains) from where I skidded out on my bike when I was probably in the 5th or 6th grade. It was my introduction to hydrogen peroxide, and probably should have netted me some stitches. I have some scars on my knuckles from scrapes where I picked at the scabs (in my younger years). And then, of course, there’s my facial complexion, which consists of not a small amount of scar tissue.

5. How do you plan to spend your weekend?

Friday night: Margie’s off at D&D tonight, and I’ve been working on my blog stylesheet and watching Dragnet videos.

Saturday & Sunday: Nothing planned. Off to buy a bed for Katherine, some headphones for my cell phone, some Gorilla Racks for the basement, and some mulch for the side yard. We’ll probably end up being more socialbe than that sounds. Tomorrow morning is My Saturday Morning with Kitten, so I’ll be up early (and, likely, blogging).

Friday Five, on Monday

More fun and laughs with the Friday Five. 1. What cologne or perfume do you wear? None. And I usually don’t care for it when others do. If you bathe…

More fun and laughs with the Friday Five.

1. What cologne or perfume do you wear?
None. And I usually don’t care for it when others do. If you bathe regularly, you probably don’t need to try to deaden others sense of smell by dowsing yourself in scent.

2. What cologne or perfume do you like best on the opposite sex?
See above. At best, something very light, just hinted at, slightly floral or perhaps fruity.

3. What one smell can you not stomach?
Rotting or spoiled food. Literally. Bananas don’t do much for me, either, but Katherine’s fondness for them has forced me to overcome that particular aversion.

4. What smell do you like that others might consider weird?
Mimeograph fluid. Not only does it smell neat (the smell of damp ditto pages), but it’s evocative of a bygone era.

5. How do you plan to spend your weekend?
See previous blogs … 🙂

Friday Five!

It’s time once again for the Friday Five. 1. What do you have your browser start page set to? I have it set to nothing, nada, blank page, tabula rasa,…

It’s time once again for the Friday Five.

1. What do you have your browser start page set to?

I have it set to nothing, nada, blank page, tabula rasa, avoiding-errors-when-not-tied-to-the-Net. I go to so many different pages when opening new windows that having a “standard” start page just slows me down.

2. What are your favorite news sites?

BBC Online is probably my favorite conventional news site. I’ll also hit CNN.com if I’m casting about for further info, or else the Rocky Mountain News site for local news. As far as news feeds, Yahoo probably has the best collection of them.

3. Favorite search engine?

Google. Absotively. They’re still wicked-fast, and while they’ve added the occasional bell and intermittent whistle, it’s always had the feeling about it of being well thought out in order to keep up the high level of service they provide.

Though Google has a site-specific search tool, I’ve tended use Atomz for the search buttons on my own sites.

4. When did you first get online?

Spring 1994, I first had Internet mail access at work, and plenty of time (or lack of interest in work-related stuff) to pursue it. I started on the web in probably the Spring 1995 (via, bleah, AOL).

5. How do you plan to spend your weekend?

Our Twelfth Night party is next Saturday, so I plan to be a busy little elf, sweeping and scrubbing and (most of all) putting stuff away. And since my new supers RPG starts next Sunday, I plan to spend some playtesting time on its system, too. Plus we have our Hungry Flock dinner on Saturday night. Busy!

Blogger Insider

Time for another installment of Blogger Insider, where Keith Berman pairs up folks to ask questions of each other. My partner this bi-week is Michael Kuker, whose own blog (and…

Time for another installment of Blogger Insider, where Keith Berman pairs up folks to ask questions of each other.

My partner this bi-week is Michael Kuker, whose own blog (and the questions I asked of him) can be found here.

1. How long have you been on the Internet, and how did you discover it?

I can actually date this one pretty well. When, in April or May of 1994 I returned from my “Three Hour Tour” in Martinez, Calif. (a/k/a, “The Short Business Trip That Turned Into A Six Month Bataan Death March”), my company was just rolling out Net access. This was great, as I was a serious burn-out case, and I started hitting all sorts of Internet mail lists, two of which (Belief-L and B5-JMS) I’m still on today.

Nobody in my company was doing browser stuff yet. That came along, for me, about a year later.

2. Why do you blog?

A. It helps me to organize my thoughts and reactions toward life.

B. It lets me share (A) with folks who might be interested in knowing.

C. It lets me entertain people.

D. It’s the ego thing, man.

3. Where were you September 11?

I was at work. I got a call from someone who works for me in Houston, telling me that a plan had crashed into the WTC. This was an ironically appropriate phone call, since the person in question is in charge of Business Continuity Planning. I quick started hitting the web to learn more (figuring it was a civil aviation accident, some Cessna gone horribly awry), but couldn’t get in anywhere. It wasn’t until I got to the BBC site that I started learning more details.

I don’t remember a lot else about that day, except hitting Reload a lot and somehow getting home. It was, though, just after I had started my blog, so I can actually go back to then and see what I was thinking.

Odd way my life was affected: my folks had been staying the preceding weekend, flying out that morning. We ended up rescuing them from the airport and putting them up for a few days longer until they were able to rent a car and drive home.

4. What are your top five Desert Island Discs?

Had that one on before, but it’s worth trotting out again:

  • Sting, Nine Summoner’s Tales
  • John Barry, Moviola
  • Handel, Messiah (pref. the Christopher Hogwood recording)
  • Loreena McKennitt, The Visit
  • Bach, The Brandenburg Concertos

    5. Doc Brown has loaned you his flying time-traveling DeLorean. Where and when do you go? Why?

    Having just watched part of Part II, I’d be really leery about flying anywhere. My immediate thought, though, is to fly back to 10 September and try and warn someone about 9-11. Then that drags me back to 7 December ’41, or trying to kill Hitler, or something like that, and that way madness (and the Law of Unexpected Consequences) lies.

    Two other thoughts, though.

    1. Visit myself in, say, 1979. Just graduated from High School. Better grow the beard back, though. I’ve got this real desire to see what was going through my head, then, really. How I came across. On the other hand, I strongly suspect I’d seriously frell things up.

    2. Hit Jerusalem around AD 35 or so. Keep an ear cocked for word of another of those crazy prophets making the rounds. Check him out.

    6. Everybody has quirks and idiosyncrasies. What’re your oddest idiosyncrasy?

    I could write volumes. (Actually, maybe that’s the answer in and of itself.) Hmmmm. I have a real Thing about folks flipping ahead in my page-a-day calendars (to see future quotes, cartoons, whatever the calendar is about). Bugs the living hell out of me. I get very rude when people try it.

    7. Who was your biggest influence in your formative years? What values did this person give you?

    I suspect it was my dad. (Though my mom would be a close second there.) He taught me about hard work. About high expectations. About responsibility and duty and being a father. Not a bad package to pass along, all things considered.

    8. What was the worst movie you’ve ever seen?

    Nightfall, starring David Birney. The only movie — the only one — I have ever gotten this close to getting up and walking out on, except I wouldn’t give it the satisfaction of moving me that much. Either this film killed Asimov, or else it caused him to spin madly in his grave. Words cannot describe this abomination. It is indelibly etched in my mind as the worst movie I’ve ever seen, and I’ve seen a number of stinkers (and am notoriously charitable to them).

    9. Describe the most traumatic moment of your life so far.

    See #8. No, ah, let me think. I would probably end up picking one of several incidents with my first wife when she was going through some severe mental and emotional problems. That I came out of that relationship with a modicum of sanity and stability is a minor miracle. I won’t go into any details, both because it doesn’t seem right and because it’s, honestly, too disturbing to recall.

    10. How old were you before you felt like a “grown-up?”

    I will be perfectly honest with you. Even at 41 (yeesh!), with a wife and a child and a well-paying job, I still have this mental image of myself as just out of college, still verging on adulthood, but not quite there. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing.

    11. Do you like gratuitious wacky questions to finish up Blogger Insider?

    It beats my standard, “Why did you sign up with Blogger Insider?” question.

    12. Do you want to slap that “Dude, you’re getting a Dell” kid as badly as I do?

    I want to force him (the kid in the commercial, not the actor), as well as the ad team that made it up and the Dell execs who approved it, to sit through a three week marathon of Nightfall.

    If that would cause problems with Amnesty International, I’ll settle for little Freddy’s mother slapping him, and then forbidding her son to ever see him again, and then calling store security, who rough him up and throw him in a dumpster behind the store. The one with all the broken appliances in it.

    13. Are you sick of these questions yet?

    Not when they’re as easy to answer as this one.

    14. Do these questions suck?

    No. Nightfall sucked. These questions were actually pretty good, even if they inflated your question count past mine. 🙂

  • Blogger Insider

    I almost missed my deadline here, but I managed to squeak it out. Yes, it’s another installment of Blogger Insider, where random bloggers send 10-15 probing, penetrating, and otherwise inappropriately…

    I almost missed my deadline here, but I managed to squeak it out. Yes, it’s another installment of Blogger Insider, where random bloggers send 10-15 probing, penetrating, and otherwise inappropriately touching questions to each other.

    My partner this week is Eleanor Holmes. Of the three BI folks I’ve been linked with, she’s doubtless the most “compatible,” since she enjoys both RPGs and “Undercover Blues.” Her being from Australia lends a mysterious, exotic, foreign air to her great question — along with that cute Australian accent.

    Since I just sent my questions to her (almost missing it, here in Faerie), she probably hasn’t answered them yet, but here are hers to me.

    1. Ah-ha… Someone I could have lengthy LotR discussions with, I see! So, what would you define as the central theme of the books, and how does that relate to the movie? (I feel like I’m setting exam questions here!) I think that Peter Jackson has nailed it right on the head. The theme of the books is the influential role of the individual in the affairs of history. Sure, you’ve got this grand, sweeping, epic drama, with prophecies and the like scattered like buckshot. But, bottom line, the story is about how a couple of very small, very ordinary country folks manage, through great personal struggle and sacrifice, to overthrow the greatest evil in the land. Frodo is the least likely individual to do away with the Ring. Aragorn, Gandalf, Galadriel, even Boromir — all the Mighty and Powerful would seem far better choices. But against all odds, his personal dedication — and the dedication and love of his friend, Sam, make it happen, where any of the others would ultimately have failed. Great stuff, and very unexpected for most people.

    2. Blogging: the lovely SJ stole my initial question (what made you start?) so I’ll ask: if you could have your blog be as beloved and famous as any other idolized blog, which would you pick? Eep! That’s a tough one, as there are many other blogs out there which I admire (as the Link List o’ Admired Blogs off to the left indicates). I’d probably have to say InstaPundit. I have a lot of admiration for the author (even when I don’t agree with him), and I think that in addition to something informative and entertaining, he’s actually providing a public service. Good stuff.

    3. What’s your favorite smell in the world? Sauteeing onions and garlic. The basis for many, many, many good meals that Margie has cooked me.

    4. I’m impressed to see that you did NaNoWriMo; I tried, but found that I just didn’t have time, and stopped. Tell us a bit about where you got your inspiration, and words of wisdom you’d pass to those trying it next year? Well, I have to confess that I will probably not do it next year, largely because it shot the bloody hell out of both my November and December schedules. That having been said, I was inspired by my wife (who supported me), my pal Doyce (who suggested the damned thing in the first place, the Infernal Gateway Drug that he is), any number of comic book writers, Kevin Smith, Stephen Brust, Neil Gaiman, and my own personal muse, who is still lolling, sated, somewhere in the back of my head. Words of wisdom I have to pass on from Roger Zelazny:

    I try to write every day. I used to try to write four times a day, minimum of three sentences each time. It doesn’t sound like much but it’s kinda like the hare and the tortoise. If you try that several times a day you’re going to do more than three sentences, one of them is going to catch on. You’re going to say “Oh boy!” and then you just write. You fill up the page and the next page But you have a certain minimum so that at the end of the day, you can say “Hey I wrote four times today, three sentences, a dozen sentences. Each sentence is maybe twenty word long. That’s 240 words which is a page of copy, so at least I didn’t goof off completely today. I got a page for my efforts and tomorrow it might be easier because I’ve moved as far as I have”.

    5. When you write, what do you need in your immediate environment to make you productive and efficient? Not much. A keyboard (because I can type about 40% as fast as I can think, which is far better than with any other medium). Some scrap paper. If I want to really pound things out, music and earphones help. Margie saved my butt during NaNoWriMo by taking care of Katherine while I sequestered myself in the guest room.

    6. You’re a gamer! Hooray! So, go on. Tell us about your fave character.
    Please? 🙂
    Based on the verbiage I’ve dedicated to him, it would have to be Grinthorn, a half-elvish bard. I played him in a roll-your-own campaign during college, wrote a novel about him (which is not yet finally finished), extended his adventures into an abortive PBeM Mage: The Ascension campaign, and then turned him into a PBeM Amber character. In all incarnations, he’s a sassy bastard (literally), whose taken his childhood experiences of rejection and turned them into an iconoclastic turn-about rejection of authority. Which is nothing like me, but he’s the closest to my “voice” of all the characters I’ve ever run.

    7. One of my favorite questions: If you could live in the ‘reality’ of any
    one RPG or game system, what would you pick? What kind of person would you be?
    Frankly, the “reality” of most game systems frightens the bejeebers out of me, since they are all front-loaded with lots of threats. Not that RL isn’t threatening, but it’s threats I know and can (mostly) manage. I’d probably either choose Phage’s Amber system, as one of the kids of that realm, or some sort of a metahuman hero in one of any number of supers RPGs. The latter is usually relatively straightforward and familiar, but with the bennies of some sort of keen power. The former would be far riskier, but with the possibilities of more significant powers. Plus I’d like to meet Fiona. And Flora.

    [Question 8 never arrived. No, really.]

    9. SJ swiped the Desert Island book question, so I’ll chime in with Desert
    Island Discs: pick a dozen albums you’d take with you to aforementioned
    desert island. (Alright alright, you can have something to play the albums
    on if you like.)
    Not fair! I’m hundreds of miles away from my collection! Yeesh! Hmmmm. A few I can think of:

  • Sting, Nine Summoner’s Tales
  • John Barry, Moviola
  • Enya, Shepherd Moons
  • Handel, Messiah (pref. the Christopher Hogwood recording)
  • Frente, Labour of Love
  • Loreena McKennitt, The Visit
  • Bach, The Brandenburg Concertos

    That’s all I can come up with off-hand … after this I’d have to cheat and start coming up with the 12-Disc Greatest Hits of the 80s, or the Collected Beethoven Symphonies or something.

    10. Many people have talked about the problems of integrating gaming into a normal family social life. Have you found it’s caused problems for you? Being married to a roleplayer must make it easier, but with Katherine it must still be a juggle. How’ve you found it to be? It’s certainly a lot easier being married to a role-player. Katherine has “kept me” from GMing since she was born, but that all changes in a few weeks, so we’ll see. But it does take time, and social commitment, and right now Margie and I are trading off Fridays playing in different campaigns while the other stays home with Katherine (and, truth be told, sort of enjoys a quiet night of being alone, once she’s asleep). Doyce and Jackie, friends of ours, both game, and they’ve managed to integrate Justin, their 11-year-old into the proceedings pretty well — he goes to cons with them, games in some things that Doyce runs, or just hangs out, tolerantly, since they spend a lot of non-game time with him, too. And the latter is probably the secret to making it work.

    11. If you had one hour to spend online every day, what would you do with
    it? How much time reading email, what sites would you visit, what forums
    would you hang out on, where would you surf?
    Egad. I’d probably spend about 20 minutes on e-mail (and cut way back on my mailing lists), 30 minutes blogging, and the remaining 10 minutes doing online “business” — shopping at Amazon, paying bills at PayMyBills, etc. But I wouldn’t like it.

    12. Of what achievement are you most proud? I try not to toot my own horn. Really. I’m always afraid I’ll say, “Yes, I’m horribly, horribly proud of this painting here,” only to have someone say, “Eewwww.” I’d have to say, at this point in my life, it’s been building a wonderful, wonderful marriage (particularly given some problems I had last time around). I had help, of course. But I’m proud of what we have, and what we’ve done, and of the little girl we’re bringing up.

    Isn’t that just too sappy for words? 🙂

  • Friday Five (A Few Days Forward)

    1. What did you want to be when you grew up? At various times, a teacher, a scientist, a computer programmer, a lawyer, a history teacher. I’ve actually managed a…

    1. What did you want to be when you grew up? At various times, a teacher, a scientist, a computer programmer, a lawyer, a history teacher. I’ve actually managed a few of those, remarkably enough.

    2. Do you have any nicknames? Um … not that I know of. Or not that can be mentioned in a family publication.

    3. If you could change something about yourself what would it be? That my complexion looked a lot less like a 16-year-old’s.

    4. Have you ever bought anything from an infomercial? Nope. I’ve been occasionally tempted, but … nope.

    5. How do you plan to spend your weekend? Getting all our Christmas stuff done. Sh’yeah, right — I also planned on catching up on my sleep, too.

    (Via Smattering)

    Blogger Insider

    This week’s Blogger Insider questions are from the Geekman. For my questions and his answers, check his site. 1. You write a lot about comic books, what do you think…

    This week’s Blogger Insider questions are from the Geekman. For my questions and his answers, check his site.

    1. You write a lot about comic books, what do you think are the top 5 comic books ever made? Why?

    Oh, geez, it’s lots easier to critique others choices in this category than to actually come up with a list myself. The criterion of “top” is difficult, too. Best sales? Most influential? Most re-readable? Beyond which is the question of single stand-alone issues vs. story arcs, and other annoyances like that.
    I’m gonna compromise here by IDing my favorite Trade Paperback Collections up
    on my downstairs shelf. And I’m gonna compromise still further by choosing
    six, and not giving any particular order:
    The Books of Magic – Before Harry Potter, Neil Gaiman introduced Tim Hunter, an ordinary bespectacled boy in London who might grow up to be greatest wizard of all — if he chooses the path of Magic, as offered to him by four trenchcoated magical denizens of the DC world. Gaiman teamed up with art notables John Bolton, Charles Vess, Scott Hampton and Paul Johnson, to describe the many worlds of magic, and a young boy faced with a terrible decision. Great art, great writing.
    The Watchmen – This twelve-part series let Alan Moore deconstruct the superhero genre into a tale of humans with strange abilities and funny costumes and dark passions. Dave Gibbons art complements this perfectly.
    Preacher (Vol 6 – War in the Sun) – Garth Ennis’ tale of a Texas preacher with a past, out to find God and make Him answer for the pain in the world, is good through and through. But this particular volume, drawn as always by Steve Dillon (with a backup tale by Peter Snejbjerg), features the origins of Herr Starr and the Grail, some particularly passionate scenes between Jesse and Tulip, and the confrontation between the Saint of Killers and the US Army (not to mention Air Force). Great, over-the-top action.
    The Sandman (Dream Country) – Reprinting issues 17-20 (and over a decade old now), this collection includes the marvelous one-shots “Calliope,” “A Dream of a Thousand Cats,” “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” and “Facade,” individual tales of dreams, horror, and hope, each with a differerent artist, but each with Gaiman’s particular writing touch. While the Sandman story arcs were fine, I liked the single issue stories even better.
    Strangers in Paradise (Complete, Vol. 2) – I love this extended love triangle soap opera written and drawn by Terry Moore. This relatively early collection completes the first “crime story” arc.
    Astro City (Life in the Big City) – The original collection, and still, to my ind, the best. Kurt Busiek — aided by the art of Brent Anderson — imbues his still-recognizeably Silver Age heroes with humanity. The stories are less about how Captain X Defeats the Evil Dr. Y, but about how Captain X spends his spare time, or what the folks watching all of this going on actually think and feel. Really good stuff, duh. Even if Busiek’s health has interfered with more recent production, his work stands for all time.

    2. What�s the worst nickname you ever had?

    In 7th Grade Orchestra class, two of the girls in class insisted on breaking into “The Ballad of Davy Crockett” whenever I arrived.

    3. Assuming god exists and offered to truthfully answer any one question you asked, what would you ask?

    Unfortunately, I suspect any of the questions I’d want answered would be beyond my understanding of the answer. But I’d probably still take a stab at, “Why is there suffering?”

    4. What five things do you never want to hear your children say that you already know they will one day say?

    – Go away.
    – I never want to talk with you again.
    – I don’t love you.
    – And this is where I got the *other* piercing.
    – Time for your meds, Dad.”

    5. Assuming no time for preparation (they meet accidentally and without warning), who would win in a fight, Spiderman or Batman? Justify your answer.

    Batman, no question. Brains over brawn. Not that Spidey is stupid — Bats is just too darned sneaky, and is used to dealing with guys who are stronger and faster than he is. Hell, the guy’s been hanging around with the JLA forever, standing up to folks who can take out Superman, Green Lantern, et al. Brains, m’man. Brains.

    6. What’s the best insult/comeback you never got the chance to say?

    Unfortunately, while I often think of better arguments or rhetorical rejoinders after the fact, I rarely think of insults in that way. I’m just
    too nice of a guy.

    7. What profession, other than your own, would you most like to try?

    Professional philanthropist, giving away reasonable chunks of my vast fortune to good causes.
    Or maybe an accountant. I think I’d make a good accountant.

    8. What one thing would you want your children to remember you for?

    Teaching them, by example, how to be a good person.

    9. What’s the stupidest/silliest/most trivial lie you ever got caught in? Why did you tell it? How did you get caught?

    I was probably 6. My mom was giving violin lessons in the front room. I decided to get my 3-year-old brother in trouble (which needs no further explanation), and went and sprinkled salt and pepper all over the kitchen counters, then ran out to tell my mom. She proceeded to banish my brother to his room.
    Not leaving well enough alone, I repeated the trick, adding sugar to the mix. Unbeknownst to me, my mom could see what I was doing in the reflection from the breakfront’s glass doors. So when I went to narc on my brother for not only such a high crime, but for his breaking out of his banishment … well, in retrospect, hilarity ensued.

    10. What’s the funniest thing you ever did when no one was around to see?

    Damn. I’m not good at remembering things like that. Cop-out, I know, but there you go.

    11. What song most encapsulates your idea of true love?

    John Barry’s “Moviola”. It has no lyrics, it’s just orchestral, but it’s broad, sweeping, nostalgic, inspirational, complex, and utterly romantic. We used it at the end of our wedding video.

    12. Every material item in your home will be disintegrated at the touch of a button. You are allowed to save one thing from this horrendous fate. What item would you chose and why?

    Gah! Probably a piece of art. Much of our photography is duped elsewhere — on-line, or with other people — and so could be replaced. My notebook is backed up. So probably art. Maybe the Mauro over the fireplace.
    Or maybe the “lock box” of stuff that should really be in a safe deposit box but is not yet. How annoyingly pragmatic.

    13. Name three things your S.O. does on purpose just to get on your nerves.

    I can’t even name one. Really. She doesn’t play those sorts of games. There are occasional things she does that get on my nerves, especially when I’m already feeling peevish. But intentionally — no, not really.

    14. Do you believe that it’s possible a child can do something so bad that a spanking is necessary? Why or why not?

    Yes.
    Spanking is not, IMO, an awful, evil thing. I think it’s an appropriate response, usually a last resort for older kids, to providing some immediate painful consequence to an action that’s dangerous (but which you don’t want to actually make good on its danger).
    I’ve been known to flick Katherine’s hand with my forefinger when she keeps reaching up for something that she should not get into, and won’t listen to “No!”
    The point being, of course, that spanking is not meant to inflict injury, nor to make Mom or Dad feel better, but to be part of the balance in teaching kids between “carrots,” simply withdrawing them from the unwanted situation, and “the stick.” It’s certainly something that can be done to excess, to harm — but the same can be said for any tactics you use to help bring up a child.

    15. What makes something worthy of being blogged on your site?

    It’s got to move me (humorously, irritatingly, absurdly) enough that I want to share it with others. That’s I think the underlying bit here — this is all stuff I want to communicate to others. So I do.

    Friday Five

    1. If you were to go to a movie this weekend, which one would you pick? “Spy Games”. Looks like fun, and I’m a Robert Redford fan. 2. What movie…

    1. If you were to go to a movie this weekend, which one would you pick? “Spy Games”. Looks like fun, and I’m a Robert Redford fan.

    2. What movie would you like to rent this weekend? “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” (just (re?)released on video. Been way too long since I watched this one.

    3. What one TV show do you always try to watch? At the moment? “Justice League”. Everything else is catch-as-catch-can.

    4. If you (and your S.O.) were cool with it, what five celebrities (at the most) would it be ‘ok’ for you to have a fling with? Does Not Compute. And I don’t expect I could find a celebrity I’d enjoy a fling with as much as Margie. Hubba-hubba.

    5. How do you plan to spend your weekend? Christmas cards! Christmas gifts! Cleaning!

    (Via smattering)

    The Other Side of the Interview

    SJ has published the other side of this week’s Blogger Insider Q&A (i.e., my questions and SJ’s answers). Check out why Woodward and Bernstein have nothing to worry about….

    SJ has published the other side of this week’s Blogger Insider Q&A (i.e., my questions and SJ’s answers). Check out why Woodward and Bernstein have nothing to worry about.

    A Blogger Insider Exclusive!

    Blogger Insider is an “arranged interview pairing” group, wherein the hapless chap (Keith Berman) who is organizing it solicits volunteers, and then pairs them up to ask each other 10-15…

    Blogger Insider is an “arranged interview pairing” group, wherein the hapless chap (Keith Berman) who is organizing it solicits volunteers, and then pairs them up to ask each other 10-15 questions, said questions and answers then being blogged on the folks’ pages.

    It sounded interesting, so I volunteered.

    My pairing this week is with “SJ D Alexander”. I did a quick perusal of the SJ’s page (to get background for the questions) and discovered that we have so much — er, well, nothing in common, actually. But SJ sent me a bunch of fun questions (and, hopefully, found my questions entertaining and interesting as well), and here they, and the answers, are:

    1) Let’s say you’re a scientific-type guy, and you are given a choice of two places to focus your research and spend your time. Outer space or underwater (oceans)?

    Okay. “I’m a scientific-type guy …”

    Oh. I see. I’d have to say outer space, just because, viscerally, “SeaLab 2020” and “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea” notwithstanding, outer space is a childhood dream of mine. Or going there is — I’m sure outer space actually exists, regardless of my dreams. Now, granted, researching it and being there are two different things. And there’s a lot of cool stuff in both places. But outer space — that’s “final frontier” territory. Gotta do that.

    2)What is your favorite childhood Christmas present or memory?

    Ooooh. Good question. Memory-wise, it’s a melange of different years of my brother and eye eagerly sitting in our bedrooms, watching out the front window on Christmas morning, waiting for Nono and Nona (my mom’s folks) to arrive. That signalled (a) Nono and Nona were there (which was a Very Good Thing), but also (b) we had leave to run out to the living room and see what Santa had brought.

    3)What’s the superpower you always wished you had (as a kid, or even now)?

    Flight. Gotta be flight. Soaring overhead, looking at things a different way. The freedom. The excitement. Being able to skip rush hour.

    Unless it’s teleportation. That’s pretty cool, too. More effective in some cases (no transit time), but less effective in others (the ol’ “How do you go where you haven’t been before” thing).

    Telepathy or telekinesis would be cool, too.

    4)What is the one good quality you hope your friends see in you?

    That I am, by and large, a well-meaning guy who wants to make others happy.

    5)What’s your personal vision of Hell?

    Being confronted with absolute, uncontrovertable evidence of all the times I was a real uncaring, hurtful SOB, and the pain that caused to others.

    6)Have you ever faked an accent for fun? If so, did you get busted by a person who was actually from that country?

    You mean like, go in some place pretending to be from England or something? No — I’d be way too scared of being busted by someone actually from that country.

    Now, simply affecting an accent for fun — yeah, I’ve done that plenty of times.

    7)As a boy- Hoodlum, or Goodie Two Shoes? Perhaps I should say narc-er or narc-ee?

    Oh, definitely GTS/narc-er. A regular teacher’s pet. Not so much to get others into trouble, but to shine in the eyes of authority figures.

    8) You live too close to the power lines, and you wake up one morning with a tail! What does it look like? And is it prehensile or merely expressive?

    I’d hope it would be one of those long, prehensile spider monkey-style tails. That would be fun. Kind of awkward, too, but fun.

    9)I see that, like me, you have an adorable toddler. So, is Elmo annoying, or a necessary tool to help you sit down and read the paper for a minute?

    Heh. We’re not an “Elmo” family. Fortunately Katherine has not yet gotten hooked on anything too horrific — but she does like the TV, and will go over and stand in front of it and make “Pay attention to me and turn this darned thing on!” noises. And there are times when we’ll use it as a very, very short-term “sitter” or distraction — short-term, because that’s about how much attention span she has.

    “Rolie Polie Olie” is a fave. So’s “Inside the Box” (or is it “Out of the Box”?). And “Bear in the Big Blue House” is also fun. I refuse to watch “SpongeBob SquarePants,” though. That show is just weird.

    Ironically, we recently went through an upper management (Margie and me)discussion in which we decided to cut back on “TV running in the background” time (a/k/a, “If there’s nothing on you actually want to watch, turn the damned thing off”). I say it’s ironic because now we tend to run the TV in the background in the daytime, only turned to Nick or Disney or one of the other kiddie channels.

    10)You are so rich you can buy and sell Bill Gates. Do you have a personal driver, a personal ship captain, or a personal pilot? (I don’t know why, but you can only have one.)

    Personal pilot. I like to drive, and I don’t mind hiring “ad hoc” for a cruise. Having a personal pilot, though, would be a blast, since it implies
    a personal aircraft to zip hither and thither in.

    11)If you could start your adult life over again, would you have chosen a different course of education or career path?

    I’ve toyed with this idea before. By and large, I’m pretty happy with where I am right now — and with whom I’m with, especially. I wouldn’t want to do anything to endanger that.

    12)If you could be any one person for a day (famous, historical, or your Aunt Edna) who would it be and why?

    Wow. If I really gave this thought, I could be at it all day. So, off the top of my head, I’d say Dubya’s confidential secretary, because I’d really
    like to see what the hell actually goes on in the White House. (I’d say Dubya himself, but I’d be too tempted to try to do stuff, and there’s little I could do that wouldn’t be reversed by the real Dubya the next day.)

    13)What is your biggest pet peeve, as far as bad manners go?

    People who cut in line. I don’t care if it’s a queue at the market, or a line of cars merging together — we’re all taking turns, being good, civilized, socially-contracted creatures, and you’ve decided that you don’t need to follow the rules we’re all sacrificing for, because your needs, your time-crunch, your *convenience* is more important than all of that.

    Rrg. Makes my blood pressure rise just thinking of it.

    14)Why did you start blogging?

    Because of friends that were doing it. And it looked interesting. And fun. And I love nattering away about stuff (obviously).

    15)What is your ONE desert island book?

    Ouch. That would be a really tough one, since I chew through books like a shredder through confidential documents. I think being left with only one book would be a horrible hardship. Eep.

    That having been said, and assuming I shouldn’t choose something like “The Army Rangers Guide to Survival on a Desert Island” — it would have to be something long. Really long. Something mentally stimulating. Something I could read and re-read and still be entertained, intrigued, still enjoy.

    I’d probably have to say a Complete Works of Shakespeare. Not that Shakespeare’s something I usually read, but it would give me something to slog through, something to keep myself busy, some roles to give the voices in my head, and so forth.

    And when I finally got off the island, it would certainly make for erudite conversation.

    Thanks, SJ!

    Lists of Four Things

    4 things you would eat on the last day of your life: 1) A bag of Mother’s “Taffy” cookies. 2) A pepperoni pizza. 3) Haagen-Dazs Rum Raisin ice cream. 4)…

    4 things you would eat on the last day of your life:
    1) A bag of Mother’s “Taffy” cookies.
    2) A pepperoni pizza.
    3) Haagen-Dazs Rum Raisin ice cream.
    4) Margie’s pepper steak.

    4 CDs from your collection that you will never get tired of:
    1) John Barry/Moviola
    2) Pet Shop Boys/Actually
    3) Eurythmics/Greatest Hits
    4) Bangles/Greatest Hits

    4 movies that you watch over and over:
    1) Princess Bride
    2) Undercover Blues
    3) Judgement at Nuremberg
    4) The Shadow

    4 vacations you have taken:
    1) Britain, with Margie.
    2) The Grand Canyon, with my folks
    3) My honeymoon, with Margie
    4) Santa Fe, with Margie

    4 things you’d like to learn:
    1) To hit a golf ball straight, consistently.
    2) Japanese
    3) Philosophy (formally)
    4) How to draw faces

    4 beverages you drink frequently:
    1) Coffee
    2) Barq’s root beer
    3) Grapefruit juice
    4) Coke

    4 TV shows that you liked when you were a kid:
    1) I Love Lucy
    2) Mission Impossible
    3) Doctor Who
    4) Star Trek

    4 places to go in your city:
    1) The Zoo
    2) The Botanic Gardens
    3) Lo-Do
    4) Cherry Creek North

    4 things to do when you’re bored:
    1) Read
    2) Watch TV
    3) Blog
    4) Read some more

    4 things that never fail to cheer you up:
    1) Margie’s smile
    2) Katherine’s smile
    3) Praise
    4) Knights of the Dinner Table

    (Via sillycow)