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July 31, 2004

Bush v Kerry – the difference?

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It very much looks like the race for the Whitehouse will be running over a few national boundaries now that Mr & Mrs America are becoming aware of the existence of ‘overseas’ – bless their little cotton socks.

So US political debate has now a worldwide audience and this little number from JibJab has been causing a stir – being litigious capitalists the stir is around the use of the old Guthrie protest song ‘This land’ and not the message of the cartoon but then again the message is a little obvious (although I like the bits where they do the burlesque dance and the bit where Clinton gets man-bitch slapped for fondling what unaccountably looks like virgin Mary Tyler Moore dressed as the Stature of Liberty in a bikini…)

Anyway either you have seen it or you ‘aint so if you ‘aint take a gander now!

Posted by Tony at 05:52 AM | Feedback (2)

July 28, 2004

What’s playing on TNT tonight?

I have just been watching Dog Day Afternoon and wallowed again in that 70’s vibe. The story takes second or third place now to the feel of New York in that period and brought back the words of a old media studies teacher I knew (old media studies teacher? – A misnomer perhaps as media studies is a fairly new academic branch... perhaps he studied with Edison and Lumiere) who said there is a wealth of social detail in film if only you look. So the story of a looser holding up a bank to pay for his lover’s sex change becomes a snapshot of the culture that existed at that time – a piece of social history more telling than any documentary.

It has to be the most difficult job in cinema to recreate a period that tells you more than the story Spike Jones with Crooklyn and Summer of Sam, Scorsese with Goodfellas and Mean Streets come close but detail is not all – you have to get into the soul of the age and I suspect it may be impossible.

It is easier to recreate a past we are unaware of and make it real with the use of detail – say Gosford Park – but the closer to our own age the harder it is to pull off.

Funnily enough the best recreation of my perception of 80’s Miami I have seen was in the game Grand Theft Auto – Vice City perhaps it was because as I get immersed in the game for a length of time it has resonances of old Miami Vice episodes! Of course Miami Vice was probably no nearer to the real Miami than Dick Van Dyke’s ‘lovable’ cockney chimneysweep in Mayry Poppinns ( as he would say…) but it works for me !

I have strayed from my point but next time you see some old Warner Bros ‘social conscious’ film from the 40’s or some swinging 60’s grove flick or even a great 70’s blacksploitation epic watch what is telling you about the times as they were and you too can be a media studies expert!

Posted by Tony at 06:47 PM | Feedback (1)

July 25, 2004

I Want, I Want!


Pink cotton ballet slipper in soft basket weave pattern with buttonhole ankle strap. $72.00

Posted by Liz at 05:10 PM | Feedback (3)

PMS blues

This month's PMS has been especially annoying. The two biggest highlights include a craving for chocolate, and tearfulness. This morning I found myself channel surfing and landing on MTV's Ashlee Simpson show. When nubile little Ashlee discusses living in sister Jessica's near perfect shadow, I was balling my eyes out. UGH! This spoiled rotten kid Ashlee is annoying, why am I blubbering? It's not just moist eyes, its is the sniffing and sobbing brand of crying! It's not rational, it's simply PMS. Chocolate desserts aren't safe around me and either is the box of klennex.

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Dig in!

Posted by Liz at 10:55 AM | Feedback (0)

July 24, 2004

Synopsis Post

Last night we went to Cirque du Soleil and saw Alegria. This was my second time seeing a Cirque show and I appreciated it just as much. For me its two hours of pure magnificence and astonishment, like a religious experience of sorts, only a lot less guilt! (Spoken like a girl who went o Catholic school). I'm flabbergasted as these performers take their life’s work to the next level right before my eyes. Most of the performers come from the Ukraine, Russia and Canada. I watched the Bravo series and saw what the performers go through to join this troop. The audience goes nuts for them. Standing ovation, screams and applause. I’m guessing that means a lot to them and sustains them through the tough times.

I got an email from Sherman Austin’s camp today. Sherman has been released into a halfway house for the remainder of his sentence. He looks well in the picture, heavier, don’t you think? Sherman has been to hell and back and he has a lot of admirers, me included, whether he knows it or not. My hope for him is that he takes the pain he has endured and turns it around for himself. With hope there is invention, invent Sherman, invent. Write and get in front of people whenever possible. Share your experience, strength and hope as often as you can. Keep finding reasons to be grateful, and you will end up grateful for this experience. Right before our eyes you will become the person you always admired in others. You will take flight and soar.

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Sherman (R) Released

Posted by Liz at 08:02 AM | Feedback (3)

July 23, 2004

YYY's

Last night I met up with a person from my new Philly social group (MEETINPHILLY) named Evan (not Swattie Evan in the previous post). We were going to the free Y100 concert at Penns Landing featuring Yeah Yeah Yeahs. I picked up Evan and he brought our dinner along from Cosi. We made a mad dash for the water front and talked about mutual interests.

Tons of people at show but not too many that we couldn't see the bands. I think I liked the Yeah Yeahs better than Evan. I really liked them live. Karen O sounded great and guzzled H2O as she ripped out various sounds within each song. Evan hit the nail on the head by comparing them to 80's college radio sensation Siouxsie & the Banshees (best known for Peek-A-Boo). Look, truthfully, I see a glove on one hand ala Thriller and ripped clothes, I'm sold. I love the 80's stuff. I saw so many kids with buttons pinned to there checkered bags it made my heart swoon. I love seeing the look and hearing the sound, new millennium style. The first band that opened took me back to the band Berlin and their hit, The Metro. Was I in my glory or what? Post punk is alright with me. Hey, Sid Vicious is dead, Johnny Rotten is a little long in the tooth, I'll take my punk anyway I cant get it. I think we need another British invasion.

Evan is a super classy guy with glowing blue eyes and we hope to catch a movie or something else next week with the group.! Thanks Evan picking up dinner, all the great feedback on things and a generally fun evening!

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Yeah Yeah Yeah's just shot a new video with the man himself, Spike Jonze

July 21, 2004

Make Evan Greer Happy

Ivan sent me an email and suggested I post the following links and make our buddy Evan Greer happy. You can send donations and help them stand up for a better America. That is what this is about you know. Now that Saddam is out of the way, being the big threat that he was, we Americans can't sit back, relax and wait for the next set of lies from both sides. Evan will be at the DNC making his voice heard. Read these sites carefully, make a donation to a REAL cause, and before you ask me the answer is YES, I agree 100% with the ideology and actions of these organizations, in fact, I admire them.


"We do not support the two-party duopoly that forces our society to choose between two corporate whores. We're all anti-authoritarians, but this really isn't about politics. This is about the rich corporate elite invading our town and turning it into a locked-down police state." ~Bl(A)ck Tea Society

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"A forum within the World Social Forum process, the Boston Social Forum has been called to help progressive activists to begin to answer some very basic questions: What kind of future do we want for Boston? For our region? For our nation? For the world? What is our vision of a better society?"~~ Boston Social Forum

Posted by Liz at 10:44 PM | Feedback (0)

MeetInPhilly Friends

Today I decided to check out two social groups in Philly and West Chester. Considering my life has taken a complete overhaul anyway why should the social end of it be left behind? I've been meeting tons of new people in the past eight months. People that are smart and fun and have the same interests. It's been great. I want to keep the ball rolling so today at work, bored I found this site for people in and around Philly who are looking for activity friends, not a hook up. They seem super nice and sincerely looking for the same thing I'm looking for. We relay our interests in a message board format. I enjoy having plans for the weekend that don't include children's parties or video rentals. Ha!

Posted by Liz at 09:34 PM | Feedback (0)

Self Portrait

I have discovered the greatest thing since sliced bread. I can play on this thing for hours. Make yourself, create your friends or make over someone you are pissed off at. No harm done, just good clean fun. Click below to see the pics I did of friends.CLICK here and begin your self-portrait now!

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How accurate is it?


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Liz as Andy Warhol

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Liz as Bjork

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Liz as a French girl

rage.gif Liz is in RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE!

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Liz as Racer X

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Liz as a Flapper

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Anarchist Lizzy

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Tropical Liz, chillin

Posted by Liz at 08:10 PM | Feedback (1)

So True

Sagittarius:
This month you're successfully sloughing off the weight of the past and getting your life on a firm new footing. Those who may have doubted or pooh-poohed your resolve are coming to their senses and changing their tunes. Be ready to do some tough negotiating when Saturn conjoins the sun near the 8th. Miraculous breakthroughs set partnership affairs on a fresh course, especially near the 17th and the 20th. You're emerging from a period of questions and doubts, and close relationships are on an upward spiral. With the blue moon of the 31st lighting up your travel angle, getaways hold rare delights.

Sag girls rock!

Posted by Liz at 07:50 PM | Feedback (0)

Your Sean Lennon Headquarters

I love Sean, ever since his CD, Into The Sun. I'm going to meet him someday and he is going to take me for a visit to my dream house, the Dakota.



Sean and friend (Mick's daughter, Elizabeth) at the NYC opening of Fahrenheit 9/11

Posted by Liz at 07:29 PM | Feedback (0)

July 18, 2004

Jailbait

Tonight myself and a friend went to the Philadelphia Gay/Lesbian film festival. It was our second time attending and tonight we saw Stephan Adly-Guirgis and Michael Pitt (look out Brad, is the running joke) starring in the prison drama called Jailbait. I thought it was amazing. The performances were compelling as they took us inside an abusive prison relationship based on sex and survival.

After the movie, the director stuck around and took some questions. Brett C. Leonard explained that the film was shot in nine days with a limited budget. I heard him say he didn't give up on his picture. When thefunding dropped out on the equipment he was supposed to use he found himself with two choices; scrap the whole project or rewrite. He moved on to plan B and rewrote the script according to the technical demands he was saddled with.

I can relate to that for my own life. It was a nice reminder to not become discouraged as I pursue different objectives. Three months after leaving a job I loathed, I was able to score a meeting with a local newspaper. Not to shabby and I need to remember that in the future. Tonight was an incredible evening for nine dollars.

Posted by Liz at 11:35 PM | Feedback (2)

Dragnet

THEY CAUGHT HIM! They finally caught that crazy, militant bastard! We can all feel safer today. Who did we capture, Osma Bin Missing? Oh hell no. He is still languishing in a cave somewhere. Why the US government has finally captured that menace, Bobby Fischer, former world chess champion. That's right, he was apprehended in Japan, current vacation spot of our very own Aussie Nicole. That's one more genius chess player off the streets, again making America safe for our children! *Music swells in the background*

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It's Your Move

!Check out the film, Searching For Bobby Fischer, starring Ben Kinsley.

Posted by Liz at 07:36 AM | Feedback (0)

Dangerous Liaisons

I found myself in big apple today for the Dangerous Liaisons exhibit at the Metropolitan. Tons of people swiftly clamoring along the street, yellow taxi's delivering and fetching folks as the sun shines brightly in between the skyscrapers. Unknown actors and dancers rush to make it to the theatre on time. Famous people like Eric Stoltz star in the latest productions. Lots and lots of coffee shops and Jewish Deli's with fresh cold cuts delight the senses. I love seeing newspapers in every language cluttering the stands. Every imaginable race, creed, color together living life. It makes me feel hopeful for the world. I cut through Central Park with its street performers as vendors sell everything from watches to tee shirts that say I NY.

At the Metropolitan, I entered 18th century France. I observed a music lesson and a hairdresser creating a vertical masterpiece on a willing subject. I looked in the mirror of Marie Antoinette's vanity and wondered if she liked what she saw in that mirror. We laughed and lunched at a café. We sat and people watched and smiled at the looks of fascination on children's faces.

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I was so happy and content today, I welled up with tears a couple of times. I can't think about not having more days like this one ahead of me, with the people I love.

Posted by Liz at 12:46 AM | Feedback (0)

July 15, 2004

Urban Addiction Hits Virginia

A while back I recieved an email asking permission to use something I had written about Diane McKinney, a local writer. Of course I gave my permission and just asked that they mention UA. I asked them for a group pic so I could write up something on the group. Today, I got this reply from the group. I wish them all the best and I'm looking forward to recieving the newsletter!

"BookClubEtc. is an African American book club based in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia. We meet once a month to a discuss book written by an African-American author. The meetings of this diverse group provide an excellent forum for the exchange of ideas and opinions on the selected publications. We host a open mic/poetry reading (at which time we publish a poetry book, Ancestral Rites {we have three volumes so far}) during April in celebration of National Poetry Month. Also, we participate in community activitities. Unfortunately, we do not have a group picture. I will be glad to send you a July newsletter after they're printed."

Posted by Liz at 12:57 PM | Feedback (3)

July 14, 2004

Postcard From A Friend

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I recieved this beautiful postcard today from Aussie Nicole. She is free wheeling through Japan as we speak. Her blog, Nicole 1980+, will surely be the place to be when she returns home.
Thankyou for the card Nicole. I LOVE it and so did my nieces!!

Posted by Liz at 04:55 PM | Feedback (1)

July 11, 2004

A Crazy Brit, Cuba Gooding Jr. and Me

This weekend I worked. It was the first time in ten years I worked a weekend. I car pooled with an up and coming actress (think Lindsay Lohan).She recently worked on Cuba Gooding Jr.'s latest film Shadowboxer. She was telling me on the hour long drive what a sweetheart he is which I feel certain that is true. She also worked on the set of Jersey Girl and told me JLo requires the make-up artists to refer to her and number one at all times. This is insuring that they stay mindful of her priority in relation to the other actors. Jenny from the block sounds more like Jenny the bitch. It doesn't end there. She said JLo's body guards announce if you find yourself looking at Jen, you’ve looked too long. You know Ben Affleck’s friends were jumping for joy when that nightmare ended!

Later at the job, we meet a co-worker who hales from the north of England. Laying the "British gent" stuff on thick he starts correcting the younger guys for their language, "not in the presence of ladies" and all that business. They were really harmless and seemed confused at being corrected.

I asked him how he was able to work in this country and he explained that he had married an American, twice. Surprisingly enough, this dandy dud was also divorced twice. Of course, I couldn't resist my crazy Brit/American story. You know the one I tell, *wink, wink*. My co-workers sat with their mouths gaping open, stunned in disbelief. At this point Tweedle Dee informs us of his resemblance to Hugh Grant. Actually I had been thinking more along the lines of Napoleon Dynamite.

He pestered the actress for two days. Asking her out, trying to be charming, creeping up on her at every corner. Volunteering information on his suicide attempt, sex addiction (doesn’t everyone suffer from that) and a head injury, this cat was an open book. Unfortunately it was one of those books you find in the clearance bin.

Do I sound harsh? I just can figure some people out. I mean really. Today he saw fit to present her with a typed letter containing all his pertinent information and solemn promise to back off until she contacts him. Let's just say theres a better chance of me contacting George W. Bush.

I'm glad this weekend is over. Now it's Monday and time to begin the new work week and all the adventures that holds.

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You know you're a stud muffin when you look like Hugh Grant !

Posted by Liz at 10:31 PM | Feedback (6)

Disturbing

My parents went to see White Chicks tonight. What the F*&^! They already have a white chick. Hehe I have no interest in something like this.

Later that evening...

The review: two thumbs down.
Well no kidding, I could have told them THAT!

Posted by Liz at 09:23 PM | Feedback (0)

July 05, 2004

The Weather Underground

I went out today briefly to run an errand. The police were around every corner. I saw at least three different cars pulled over, it was unnerving. On that vibe I rented a movie called The Weather Underground and took it home to watch.

This is a documentary about the rise and fall of the Weathermen. They were a group of political radicals who protested the Vietnam War and American Imperialism with bombings and protests.

It is absolutely freighting at the way the Richard Nixon's rhetoric for the Vietnam War parallels that of the right today and George Bush’s axis of evil and if your not for us your against us mania.

The film suggests that thinking you are absolutely right and correct is a dangerous license and the basis of wars. Throw God in there and you have a combustible formula for destructive justifications. We have already seen this in Iraq. The point is this government takes away our liberties by telling us it knows how to keep us safe, when in fact, none of us is safe until the whole world is safe.


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November is coming.

Posted by Liz at 08:54 PM | Feedback (3)

July 04, 2004

Happy Fourth of July?

Come on, you know me better than that! I'm not going to try and pass off conventional wisdom on this, the Fourth of July. My friend Bob, a Union man, sent me this today.....

Men and Women:

What is patriotism?

Is it love of one's birthplace, the place of childhood's recollections and hopes, dreams and aspirations? Is it the place where, in childlike naivete, we would watch the passing clouds, and wonder why we, too, could not float so swiftly? The place where we would count the milliard glittering stars, terror-stricken lest each one "an eye should be," piercing the very depths of our little souls? Is it the place where we would listen to the music of the birds and long to have wings to fly, even as they, to distant lands? Or is it the place where we would sit on Mother's knee, enraptured by tales of great deeds and conquests? In short, is it love for the spot, every inch representing dear and precious recollections of a happy, joyous and playful childhood?

If that were patriotism, few American men of today would be called upon to be patriotic, since the place of play has been turned into factory, mill, and mine, while deepening sounds of machinery have replaced the music of the birds. No longer can we hear the tales of great deeds, for the stories our mothers tell today are but those of sorrow, tears and grief.

What, then, is patriotism? "Patriotism, sir, is the last resort of scoundrels," said Dr. [Samuel] Johnson. Leo Tolstoy, the greatest anti-patriot of our time, defines patriotism as the principle that will justify the training of wholesale murderers; a trade that requires better equipment in the exercise of man-killing than the making of such necessities as shoes, clothing, and houses; a trade that guarantees better returns and greater glory than that of the honest workingman...

Indeed, conceit, arrogance and egotism are the essentials of patriotism. Let me illustrate. Patriotism assumes that our globe is divided into little spots, each one surrounded by an iron gate. Those who have had the fortune of being born on some particular spot consider themselves nobler, better, grander, more intelligent than those living beings inhabiting any other spot. It is, therefore, the duty of everyone living on that chosen spot to fight, kill and die in the attempt to impose his superiority upon all the others.

The inhabitants of the other spots reason in like manner, of course, with the result that from early infancy the mind of the child is provided with blood-curdling stories about the Germans, the French, the Italians, Russians, etc. When the child has reached manhood he is thoroughly saturated with the belief that he is chosen by the Lord himself to defend his country against the attack or invasion of any foreigner. It is for that purpose that we are clamoring for a greater army and navy, more battleships and ammunition...

An army and navy represent the people's toys. To make them more attractive and acceptable, hundreds and thousands of dollars are being spent for the display of toys. That was the purpose of the American government in equipping a fleet and sending it along the Pacific coast, that every American citizen should be made to feel the pride and glory of the United States.

The city of San Francisco spent one hundred thousand dollars for the entertainment of the fleet; Los Angeles, sixty thousand; Seattle and Tacoma, about one hundred thousand... Yes, two hundred and sixty thousand dollars were spent on fireworks, theater parties, and revelries, at a time when men, women, and children through the breadth and length of the country were starving in the streets; when thousands of unemployed were ready to sell their labor at any price.

What could not have been accomplished with such an enormous sum? But instead of bread and shelter, the children of those cities were taken to see the fleet, that it may remain, as one newspaper said, "a lasting memory for the child."
A wonderful thing to remember, is it not? The implements of civilized slaughter. If the mind of the child is poisoned with such memories, what hope is there for a true realization of human brotherhood?

We Americans claim to be a peace-loving people. We hate bloodshed; we are opposed to violence. Yet we go into spasms of joy over the possibility of projecting dynamite bombs from flying machines upon helpless citizens. We are ready to hang, electrocute, or lynch anyone, who, from economic necessity, will risk his own life in the attempt upon that of some industrial magnate. Yet our hearts swell with pride at the thought that America is becoming the most powerful nation on earth, and that she will eventually plant her iron foot on the necks of all other nations.
Such is the logic of patriotism.

...Thinking men and women the world over are beginning to realize that patriotism is too narrow and limited a conception to meet the necessities of our time. The centralization of power has brought into being an international feeling of solidarity among the oppressed nations of the world; a solidarity which represents a greater harmony of interests between the workingman of America and his brothers abroad than between the American miner and his exploiting compatriot; a solidarity which fears not foreign invasion, because it is bringing all the workers to the point when they will say to their masters, "Go and do your own killing. We have done it long enough for you."

...The proletariat of Europe has realized the great force of that solidarity and has, as a result, inaugurated a war against patriotism and its bloody specter, militarism. Thousands of men fill the prisons of France, Germany, Russia and the Scandinavian countries because they dared to defy the ancient superstition....

America will have to follow suit. The spirit of militarism has already permeated all walks of life. Indeed, I am convinced that militarism is a greater danger here than anywhere else, because of the many bribes capitalism holds out to those whom it wishes to destroy....

The beginning has already been made in the schools... Children are trained in military tactics, the glory of military achievements extolled in the curriculum, and the youthful mind perverted to suit the government. Further, the youth of the country is appealed to in glaring posters to join the Army and the Navy. "A fine chance to see the world!" cries the governmental huckster. Thus innocent boys are morally shanghaied into patriotism, and the military Moloch strides conquering through the nation....

When we have undermined the patriotic lie, we shall have cleared the path for the great structure where all shall be united into a universal brotherhood--a truly free society.

"Anarchist" Emma Goldman asks, "What is Patriotism?", San Francisco, CA, 1908.

Posted by Liz at 11:35 AM | Feedback (2)

July 03, 2004

Weekend

Friday night Ivan and I hung out and after some discussion we decided on Napoleon Dynamite at the Bourse. Good movie, funny at parts, but mostly it was the same joke over and over. The dance sequence however, does make it worth the price of admission.

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Ivan's lips, looking good since the piercing last Friday.

Afterwards, we joined Ivan's friend and his fellow art students at Cosi. Good conversation, good coffee, a really fun time. I even managed to score an interview with a girl named Lauren. Super pretty, she had an abstract vagina tattooed on her arm. She does art on skateboards and her stuff is showing now, at a local Philly gallery.


Today, I went to a local park for some Fourth of July neighborhood festivities. Normally, this would not be my scene, but I was there to help my sis-in-law, who was an organizer of the event. I don't know how much of a help I was. OK, I know not much help at all, but I did over hear some conversations that were disturbing.

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The only people that can get me out of bed early on a Saturday morning

A chubby kid grabbed a brownie and shoved it in his mouth. His father chastised him in one of the most shameful ways I have ever heard. I thought to myself this kid will spend the rest of his life, heavy, and eating just to piss his father off. The look on the kids face was horrifying as his father lectured.


Around the same time, young mother turns up with what appeared to be her parents and her four small children. You know how some parents and children look needy? Well, they had that look. She was so mean to these kids, even to the point of smacking the little boy who was about one. Not much nurturing was happening there.


A young Marlon Brando, need I say more?

Later I went out and rented Last Tango In Paris. I really liked Marlon Brando. His parents were both raging alcoholics who both found recovery before they died. Unfortunately, his life was forever shaped. His son murdered someone, and his daughter hung herself at twenty-five years old. He didn't go to her funeral.

Posted by Liz at 10:57 PM | Feedback (1)

July 01, 2004

Love

Our first and last love is.. self-love.

I really like this line, it's so true.

Posted by Liz at 09:15 AM | Feedback (1)

Sayonara Nicole

Dear friend of Urban Addiction, Aussie Nicole, is leaving for Japan until the end of July. I'm so excitied for her. She was there once before as an exchange student and she is heading back now for a 2nd time. She plans on meeting up with old friends and even some fellow bloggers. I met online friends in London and it was the highlight of my trip. Of course, I reminded her to not return without lots and lots of cool pictures. As for me, looks like I'll have to settle for popping in my DVD of Lost In Translation again.


Photo courtesy of 35 Degrees Blog

Posted by Liz at 01:15 AM | Feedback (2)