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Don't get me wrong, I adored the TV show even though the last season was really over the top with the fashions and Samantha's sex life. Anyway four years later and a couple of viewings of the trailer I have one word to say-- Netflix.
The previews looks so majorly annoying and the reviews have been lousy. The thing I loved about the show was the single girl doing it for herself (ahem, ahem). Love didn't come along and tie everything together for these woman, mostly they had each other and I could relate. I don't want this movie wrapping it all up for me with product placements galore and Samantha never examining in the therapists office why she is such a slut (Maybe because her character was written by a gay man). I'd rather let the story end with the memory of the television show because that was a classic.
Below is the NYTimes review.
The Girls Are Back in Town
By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: May 30, 2008
A little Botox goes a long way in “Sex and the City,” but a little decent writing would have gone even further. A dumpy big-screen makeover of that much-adored small-screen delight, the movie was written and directed by Michael Patrick King, one of the guiding lights and bright wits of the original series, based on Candace Bushnell’s newspaper columns and subsequent book. Once again, Sarah Jessica Parker has stepped into the dizzyingly high heels of Carrie Bradshaw, that postmodern Lorelei Lee — a hardly working New York writer with a passion for men and Manolos — but this time she’s taken a terrible tumble.
Fans of the show were accustomed to Carrie’s falls, metaphoric and literal (as in her spectacularly horrible trip during her catwalk promenade); they were crucial to the show’s appeal, softening its hard, brittle edges. Then in her mid-30s, Carrie was one of New York’s most fearless of the zipless It Girls, able to leap tall men in a single bound without batting a single mascaraed eyelash, but as the show’s nifty opening credit sequence reminded you, episode after episode, she wasn’t above getting muck on her tutu. Her vulnerability — and that of her girlfriends — was the badly kept secret of the show, the glue holding together the froufrou, the lunches, those absolutely fabulous and ghastly clothes and all that muscly man bait.
The froufrou and the lunches are back, as are, kind of, Carrie’s three girlfriends, Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), Charlotte (Kristin Davis) and Samantha (Kim Cattrall), all tricked out with their customary accessories (men, children, handbags). Also back and in and out of Carrie’s bed is Mr. Big (Chris Noth), the longtime lover and habitual heartbreaker with whom she had (hallelujah) reunited during the show’s bitter and sweet finale four years ago. Written by Mr. King, that episode opened with Carrie wandering Paris in a funk and then stumbling into bliss by literally falling to the ground with Big. At once melancholic and defiantly hopeful, it was the kind of rueful happy ending that didn’t make you choke on your own tears.
“Sex and the City” delivered the television goods for six seasons, no small thing in the pop culture annals. That should have been enough or at least plenty for all concerned, but Ms. Parker apparently felt compelled to go big screen, making good on a project that had started to come together in 2004, only to fall apart over money issues and Ms. Cattrall’s reluctance to climb aboard. I wish Ms. Parker had let that bee in her bonnet go silent, because the movie that she and Mr. King have come up with is the pits, a vulgar, shrill, deeply shallow — and, at 2 hours and 22 turgid minutes, overlong — addendum to a show that had, over the years, evolved and expanded in surprising ways.
There are no surprises in the movie, at least not good ones. On opening, all the peas are in their designer pods, from Carrie and Big cooing in his swank New York digs to Samantha and her boy toy, Smith (Jason Lewis), sunning in a seaside Los Angeles perch. Charlotte and her husband, Harry (Evan Handler), are nesting in Manhattan; Miranda and her husband, Steve (David Eigenberg), are bunking in Brooklyn. All is right in this carefree world until Big casually asks Carrie if she would like to get married, a question that leads to the usual luncheon postmortem (oh my gawd, he proposed) and then the usual rom-com clothing montage and a staggering number of product placements. (Louis Vuitton co-stars.)
Somehow it all goes lugubriously south. Carrie is let down Big Time, and she licks her wounds down Mexico way, accompanied by her amazingly accessible gal pals. Jokes about Montezuma’s revenge ensue (really), along with hard laughter and free-flowing tears and yet more clothes (and clothing montages) and jokes and jokes, most of them flatter than Carrie’s steely six-pack. Unlike the show, which allowed the men to emerge occasionally from the sidelines with lines of actual dialogue, the male characters in the movie stand idly by, either smiling or stripping, reduced to playing sock puppets in a Punch-free Judy and Judy (times two) show. I’m all for the female gaze, but, gee, it’s also nice to talk — and listen — to men, too.
I guess size does matter after all, if not in the way that the sex-addled Samantha might assume. On television and in tasty 30-minute bites, the show “Sex and the City” managed to entertain and sometimes even enthrall with self-consciously glib morality stories about love and desire in the modern world. Everything scaled nicely to television’s modest dimensions, from Ms. Parker’s Cubistic face to Patricia Field’s costumes. Kooky and at times insanely unflattering, the clothes caught your eye instantly, directing your attention to the itty-bitty figures, exactly what they were supposed to do. But those same loud outfits, mugging faces and picayune dramas just don’t translate when blown up on a movie screen, which makes all that small-screen stuff seem even punier.
There was something seductive about the bubble world that the show created back in 1998, in the fantasy that all you needed to make it through the rough patches were good friends and throwdown heels. That was a beautiful lie, as the show acknowledged in its gently melancholic return in the wake of Sept. 11. Back in Season 3 Carrie asked, “Are we getting wiser, or just older?” The ideal, of course, is to do both. There is something depressingly stunted about this movie; something desperate too. It isn’t that Carrie has grown older or overly familiar. It’s that awash in materialism and narcissism, a cloth flower pinned to her dress where cool chicks wear their Obama buttons, this It Girl has become totally Ick.
“Sex and the City” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Sex in the city.
Rosie.com shows us Malibu beach where I spent some of last summer. Don't forget to watch it on full screen. Gorgeous.
I have never, ever been a huge fan of Hillary Clinton and I voted for Bill twice. I believe she will stoop to ANYTHING to win and that's exactly what I don't like about her (That and the fact that she puts up with a cheater and she voted for Bush's war). As an Obama supporter, I'm certain Barack and Michelle are an ambitious couple but so far they haven't worn it on their sleeves. I wish we Dems could count on Hillary to do the right thing, but I'm sorry to say this latest low blow of hers tells us we can not.
Click below for videos!
Update: More Hillary humor
"Let's look at this, for just ten seconds, in an attempt to fully appreciate the inanity of Mr. Icahn's remarks. A Republican president, assisted by a Republican Congress, took this country into an immoral war in Iraq. A war that has killed thousands of American soldiers. Destroyed the lives, culture, infrastructure and very soul of the Iraqi people. (Like when the cops in Philadelphia bombed the house in 1985 and burned down several blocks of homes and killed eleven people, including five children. )"
Read the whole article here. I love it!

The new, updated GI Bill just passed (thank goodness) but the following Republicans (naturally) voted "nay" on the bill....
Alexander (R-TN)
Allard (R-CO)
Barrasso (R-WY)
Bennett (R-UT)
Brownback (R-KS)
Bunning (R-KY)
Burr (R-NC)
Cochran (R-MS)
Corker (R-TN)
Cornyn (R-TX)
DeMint (R-SC)
Ensign (R-NV)
Enzi (R-WY)
Graham (R-SC)
Grassley (R-IA)
Gregg (R-NH)
Hatch (R-UT)
Kyl (R-AZ)
Lugar (R-IN)
McConnell (R-KY)
Sessions (R-AL)
Voinovich (R-OH)
If any voter who lives in these bloodsuckers’ states don't vote them out of office, you will not be SUPPORTING THE TROOPS. And shame on all of them and all of you!! BTW- Both Sens. Obama and Clinton voted in favor of the bill. Sen. McCain skipped the vote. Lovely. I hope someone rips the little yellow magnet off of his car!
I like that Obama recently used the term "low class." My mother always used that term to explain what was appropriate behaviour and what wasn't. When she called something low class we three kids knew it was way off limits. My mother defines the following as low class:
* Cursing
* Tattoos
* Crude jokes or off color remarks
* Loudness
* Excessive drinking
* Mistreating others
* Violence or criminal behaviour
* Poor personal hygiene
(If I think of more later I'll post them)
Who is this Shepard Fairey? He is a skate punk -- with a secretary. A CEO in Puma sneakers. The rebel who did Pepsi ads. If you live in a big city, including Washington, you have probably seen his handiwork. Since 1989, during his student days at the Rhode Island School of Design, Fairey has been slapping stickers and pasting posters depicting the face of the Andre the Giant, the deceased French actor and professional wrestler, on every available surface, legal and not. Fairey has spent two decades shimmying up lampposts and over chain-link fences in a tenacious public art enterprise, irony performed on a landscape scale. Thousands of his Andre stickers include the word "OBEY" in bold lettering. What are we dealing with here? Obey what? Obey whom? A giant from France? Aha. You have cracked the code. It is reverse psychology. ( Pssst! Don't obey.)

My niece Lea (age 6) had her dance recital today on the campus of Swarthmore College. She performed to, "I Feel Pretty." How adorable!
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Little sister Becca (age 3) was there to support Lea

Tomorrow my 6 year old niece has a recital at Swarthmore College, but tonight I took my oldest niece to her first classical music concert. I knew she would love it and she did! We saw my favorite baroque orchestra Tempesta di Mare. This kid is a chip off the old block and I will always cherish this evening.

Jessica at the concert tonight. (photo by: Aunt Lizzy)

Orient Express
For years now I've longed for a trip on the Orient Express. I knew someone who took the trip and it seemed fabulous. Recently, Town and Country magazine featured a piece on luxurious train travel and the prices were out of this world, far beyond my reach anyway. Below I've posted another great article on train travel and the Amtrak sleep car seems more within reach. If I can't have the art deco surroundings of the Orient Express, this might be the next best thing.
Take the virtual tour of the Amtrak sleeper car here.
See photos here of luxury train travel. The cars are elegant!
Click here for a lux train website.
by Beth Wechsler May 18th 2008 @ 1:00PM
Filed under: Transportation, Travel
This post is part of our series ranking the top 25 bygone products and trends we'd like to see return.
There's something romantic about train travel. Is it the memories of the model train running on tracks around the Christmas tree, the luminous artwork in "The Polar Express"? The clips from old movies of the rich and fashionable strolling down the platform, carrying luggage in a gloved hand?
Maybe it's the names of the trains. The Silver Meteor which has run from New York to Miami since 1939. then there's The Cascades, The Adirondacker, The Heartland Flyer.
The sound of the wheels on the tracks, the blur as the country slides by outside the window of the dining car, has universal appeal. Train trinkets abound: On May 9th, there were 90,081 listings under "trains" on eBay, 12,109 under "railroad," with more bids than one might expect in the current economy.
But train travel is more than just a novelty. It is econ-friendly, for starters. Then there are more sights accessible by rail in the U.S. than most of us might assume - including the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls, Yellowstone Park, and Disney World. The last full service railroad in the U.S. is the Alaska Railroad (http//alaskarailroad.com/arrc53.html) which offers special events including a beer train.
An Amtrak North America Railpass allows unlimited stops to over 900 destinations in both the U.S. AND Canada and is valid for up to 30 consecutive days. As gas prices rise and air travel gets more arduous, this may be just the ticket.
Think of all the forms of transportation Americans once depended upon. Which would you like to see return?
If the idea of overnight travel by train intrigues you - and especially if you're traveling with children, it just might - you can take a virtual tour of Amtrak sleeper service options (which include meals - and sometimes an in-room toilet and shower) for two to four people.
Travel by rail was at its peak in the 19th and early 20th centuries and it's just possible that it can make a comeback. Can Amtrak Travel Green? It's their position that train travel contributes less greenhouse gasses "per passenger mile" than either car or train travel? It isn't clear how close to full the train has to be for the calculation to work out that way.
What is clear is that there's lots of information available, including J. David Ingles' book, "Guide to North American Railroad Hot Spots (Railroad Reference Series), John Pitt's, "USA by Rail - 6th Bradt," and Karen Ivory's, "Eight Great American Rail Journeys - A Travel Guide." There are also companies, like North American Rail Specialists, that advise about rail tour options and know which hotels are closest to the railroad stations.
It's tempting.



I am finally, finally, finally going to the Cape. Cape Cod has been a dream destination of mine for YEARS. For the first time in my life, I'm staying at a bed and breakfast. I never had an interest in a B&B before but this year along with my refusal to board a plane a bed and breakfast seemed like a good idea because I didn't want to chance an iffy hotel stay. Gas prices are crazy but my car gets great millage (Thanks Toyota) so we will be driving.
Our itinerary is simple; ferry to Martha's Vineyard, shopping, walks on the beach and dinner out. At night we will watch DVD's. The place we are going too serves a gourmet breakfast everyday with scrumptious entrees like lemon pancakes and crème crulee French toast. It sounds like my sweet and simple idea of heaven.
Guess what? That really handsome marine I always mention who is an amazing photographer and has had gallery showings asked me to write something for his blog.
Please feel free to check it out what I came up with.
For more Jayel pics click here!

Here's the Top 10 weekend box office:
1. Iron Man - $50.5 million
2. Speed Racer - $20.2 million
3. What Happens In Vegas - $20 million
4. Made Of Honor - $7.6 million
5. Baby Mama - $5.8 million
6. Forgetting Sarah Marshall - $3.8 million
7. Harold and Kumar... - $3.2 million
8. The Forbidden Kingdom - $1.9 million
9. Nim's Island - $1.3 million
10. Redbelt - $1.4 million
Anymore, I can't see spending money on something I might and most likely won't enjoy while surrounding by obnoxious people. I am a total Netflix junkie. When it comes to Netflix then I see it in the comfortable, luxurious surroundings of my own home. :)
I received the following email via the UA messenger:
Subject: 11th grade picture
Really entertained by your extremely extensive blog late at night in the
Midwest. Your 1981 picture is cute - my senior picture in '75 was hideous. By
the way, my daughter has worked here in Moline for Obama, it kind of looks like
you're rooting for him.
Have fun! Jim F.
My Reply:
Thank you Jim for saying my year book pic was "cute." When I was in school the blond girls got all the attention. I bet it's still that way although diversity is more celebrated now I suppose. I'm happy you enjoy reading my blog and yes I voted for Senator Obama in the primary, but will support which ever Democratic nominee come the Fall.
Warmly,
Liz
*Not that Hillary will exploit anything but watch this clip from her website.
As some of you may have noticed, I have naturally bushy brows. Well ABC News is reporting the bushy brow is back! I'm throwing my tweezers away right now.

With the recent death of Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski in Philly, we are reminded that any form of police brutality is as unacceptable as guns on the streets.

"Only Brit Brit would board a private jet wearing stained booty shorts and wedge flip-flops. The Walmart plastic bag is also a nice touch. She probably bought beef jerky, pork rinds, Combos, Easy Cheese and Sour Patch Kids for the ride. Lynne told her she had to bring some fruit. That's why she bought the Sour Patch Kids." ~ Michael K. of dlisted.com

I'm in a good mood today, not that I'm a terribly moody person anyway but Obama won NC last night. The Republicans are pissing their pants, my DSL connection is fixed and it's a gorgeous day. :)
"inside i worry
my lesson too
u cant muscle god
let go" ~ Rosie O'Donnell
Lately, I decided I needed a bunch of answers to the questions of my life. I sought out the advice of a friend/spiritual advisor and it helped. At least it got me refocused and back on my square but now I realize this person/avenue isn't going to be the way for me. At least not right now. I hope she isn't insulted but I've learned to trust myself. The answer is there are no answers it's all about being in the now.
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Lining up the dolls all in a row, but aren't they more fun when you play with them?
"The graphic was popularized in the early 1970s by a pair of brothers, Murray and Bernard Spain, who seized upon it in a campaign to sell novelty items. The two produced buttons as well as coffee mugs, t-shirts, bumper stickers and many other items emblazoned with the symbol and the phrase "Have a happy day" (devised by Gyula Bogar). It can show many different emotions." ~ wikipedia
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I am seeing these smilie faces all over. It's like when I was a kid in the 70's and they were every where you looked. I snapped this picture this morning and right after this truck turned, a car appeared in front of me with a smilie on a bumper sticker. Between gas lines at the cheaper stations and smilies, it's like the 70's all over again. Now that I've mentioned it you will see them every where too.
Musician John Mayer is so impressed with himself because he has decided to rock the traditional 80's feathered hair do. Nice try John but personally, I think I did it better the first time around because I had the Brooke Shields eyebrows going. Yay Brooke!
Me in 11th grade, circa 1981. I remember trying not to smile too hard because I wanted fuller lips like Laura in General Hospital. That was around the time she married her rapist Luke.
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