9.30.2007

Curtains, Manhattan

Yesterday my roommate and I went to Union Square for the market with one of our friends. The market was really amazing, and we got some bread there that was absolutely delicious! We spent the rest of the day looking for professional clothes for my roommate at various stores including Ann Taylor, H&M, Gap... no need to list and list.

Anyhow, the point is we were right near Rockefeller Center, and I had been reading in my "Not For Tourists" tourist book about how there was a Pret A Manger in the concourse there. For those of you who don't know, Pret A Manger is just about my favorite sandwich shop in the whole world, and they are a European chain. There are 14 Prets in the US, all of which are located in NYC, so I just happen to be in the only place in the whole of the country where I can get my favorite sandwiches in the entire world.

So we had to go to there for lunch. I had my favorite sandwich (Chicken Avacado), and my day was made.



Second, we really need to put curtains up in our living room. Brittany and I have noticed a crazy man in the apartment across the way smoking every night in his window. Hmmm. It's only a tiny bit sketchy for now, but still I'd feel better having a wall of white fabric blocking his view.

9.23.2007

My Weekend (Into the Wild)

Since having moved to NY, my roommate and I have been trying to take full advantage of all that NY has to offer. With the magazine Time Out NY to guide us in finding all activities free, we've done a lot of cool things (international pickle festival, art parade, book festivals and more).

This weekend was really great - on Saturday Brittany and I volunteered to spruce up a local park, and we were put on the task of erosion control! This basically means that we dug trenches for logs, hammered stakes into the ground, and I spent 20 tedious minutes with a handsaw getting nowhere (but that's not the point). It was so much fun, and we met a lot of really cool people, so I am definitely hooked on that project. The only negative bit was that there were a lot of worms in the dirt, which I didn't appreciate too much.

Yesterday evening we went to see a movie at a movie theatre near Lincoln Center (actually, it might have been in the Lincoln Center for all I know) called "Into the Wild."


This article sums up the movie really well:
McCandless grew up in Virginia with affluent and attentive parents. But after he graduated from Emory University, he gave away his $24,000 in savings to charity, abandoned his car, went by the name Alexander Supertramp and hitchhiked around the country and then up the coast to Alaska, telling his family virtually nothing.

There, he spent more than 100 days living in an abandoned bus in the brush. When he ran out of food and decided to leave, McCandless found the river too swollen to pass. Desperate and ravenous, he mistakenly ate some wild plants that he soon realized inhibited his body from absorbing nutrition and he died of starvation.
Needless to say, I left the theatre before seeing the end of the film. Do I really need to see someone starving to death? No, not really (especially when the acting is so convincing). The above article continues by discussing the making of the end of the film:
Creating that moment on film, when he knows his fate is sealed, was one of the toughest for Hirsch. Throughout the shoot, Penn had encouraged him to preserve his analytical mind but never second-guess his instincts. After Hirsch had done one take and wasn't satisfied, Penn approached him with a thought.

"You know, this is your life," Penn told Hirsch. "I can't tell you what to do here. This is your life.' "

"Then he walked off," Hirsch said. "It was just an amazing moment. How can you tell someone how to react when you find out you're going to die like that? He wanted it to be so personal and real. He just gave it to me."
Anyhow, if you have a stronger conscience than I, I'd really recommend seeing this movie. I've always liked Emile Hirsch, and he's really amazing in this film. There are also some really incredible messages about how you choose to live your life and how you treat the people who know you, so it's truly a worthwhile movie.

9.14.2007

MyxerTones


What a fun site! If you have a phone and lots of music and don't want to pay for ringtones because they are a) overpriced or b) feel you should have to pay again for music you already own, then this is the site for you!!

The site (MyxerTones) allows you to upload songs to the internet, select the part you want to be the ring tone, and then sends the song clip to your phone. It's easy, free, and works like a charm.

It's also a great for procrastination, because not only can you put your own tones on, but you can also browse other people's tones, so it's a fine way to waste an afternoon... I now know.

Google Disaster

Holy cow. I just googled myself for the first time in a long time, and tons of stuff came up that surprised me. Like my power point presentation for my astronomy and public policy class. Like the classes I TAed for in college. Like sample pictures I put on Amazon for a camera. Like posts on message boards.

All that stuff is all well and good, but I did find two things that are highly bothersome to me, the first being that a private email I sent to a company about myjob search was posted on their website without my permission, using my full name and location.

Second (and even more bothersome) is that there is another Meghan Me out there who is the owner/webmaster of an Elmo website, as well as a Barney lover. All I can say is, I hope that whoever googles me for whatever reason has the good sense to realize that there is more than one Meghan Me out there in the world.

This journal doesn't come up, which is both good and bad, I suppose.

9.13.2007

Re-entering the 21st Century

Hot damn! We finally got the internet in my apartment today. My roommate has been trying for ages to get the internet set up, and finally after a month and a half of extreme effort, we've finally done it!

I feel so happy, I'm quite ashamed. I mean, I feel like a part of who I am was missing and now it's back, and really, the internet shouldn't be that important.

Anyhow, I'm happy to have it, and happy to be able to post in my blog again. Now I can regale you with stories of my wonderful students... I think I am teaching 108 kids, so it makes for some good stories.