Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Fun little finds...



I can't get enough of this kinda stuff... and apparently neither can my nieces. So funny. I love the baby and that he laughs at him. But the accents kill me softly.

This one is pretty priceless too:


Saturday, December 15, 2007

I can't help myself...

This reminds me of a dear friend.... and makes me laugh... and puke all at the same time. Love.
Man Likes Woman So Much He Marries Her

The Onion

Man Likes Woman So Much He Marries Her

WELLTON, AZ—After making a bunch of sappy vows he probably meant, Leighty open-mouth kissed his bride in front of all the guests and nobody even tried to stop him.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

BYU does it again...


I have to say that I am usually impressed with the caliber of performance that comes out of the theatre department, and this one was no exception. There were, as usual, things I liked and things I did not. Looking at it from a practioner's perspective, I tried to identify and understand what was going on in the creation of this show that made it successful and not so successful to me:

+ I loved the set. The cut away house was fun and added a sense of realism to the story, forcing the characters to really go upstairs a level (rather than platforms or otherwise).

- Not so sure that I loved the choreography. There was not a need for an ensemble in the show at all, and to be quite honest, they distracted me from the real story. The story seemed fairly grounded until random people had to dance the set on and off-- who needs that? In fact, it seemed more like a chance for all of those students who are aspiring MDT students to get to be in a main stage production. If the concept had something to do with it and that was more obvious- I think it wouldn't have bothered me as much as it does.

+ The acting was quite good. I thought each scene felt important and I was impressed to see how high the stakes were for each of the characters- mark of a fine director and some good directing takers. I thought the songs were better interpreted than I had heard on the CD. These characters understood the humor of the scenes so well and it was so enjoyable to watch the mini discoveries that took place throughout the show. The singing was all quite exceptional as well.

+ The way they chose to portray Beth's death was interesting as well. It is written to be sweet and tender, and I enjoyed that part of the scene, but I also enjoyed a little extra piece of interpretation that I don't know we would have gotten anywhere by here: A woman in white came on and danced with Beth's kite as Jo and her sang "Some things are Meant to Be" (again, I didn't need the dancing). After she died, the woman in white comes back on and pushes Beth's wheelchair off into a light. Before they reach the end of the stage, Beth gets up and walks off stage on her own. I think it was a neat way to throw an LDS stamp on the meaning of death and how it seemed more hopeful than destitute. I love that we can do that to a piece of theatre to tell our stories and to communicate to an audience.

"I, personally believe... that some people out there... don't have maps...."

I will be the first to admit that I am not as informed about the 2008 elections as I would hope that I am. I barely know who is running and I sure don't know much about politics in general. I wish i cared more about that. In fact, I always try to be informed and it feels like I will simply never know everything there is to know because there is so much information to follow! So many people, so many heated discussions... I don't have opinions on most of them. But when it comes to elections, I do at least try to know what is going on. I feel like it would be unfair of me not to vote or know anything about the leaders of the country, and then complain if something isn't working the way I would hope it would.

I came across this site that has all of the campaign advertisements for all of the various candidates and I just kept being amazed at how they are so manipulative of the audience! At times they would bash their opponents, or use dramatized testimonials of how great they are, one even uses Chuck Norris for humor. Is this starting to feel like a fifth grade Student Council war to anyone else?

Some of the candidates use interview more and talk straight to their audience and campaign for themselves. Others have images and footage of them in action. It is interesting to break down the way these were made because I think it says more about them than the finished product and message does.

Here is the link to the advertisements: http://pcl.stanford.edu/campaigns/2008/