Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Deborah Sarnoff and Robert Gotkin are big fans of modernist architect Robert Venturi. So when they found out one of his houses, a beach cottage in Long Beach Island on the Jersey Shore, was to be demolished, they bought it and moved it to Glen Cove, on the North Shore of Long Island. So the house took a trip on a barge, witnessed by Venturi and other curious onlookers and fans, resulting in not your usual N.Y. Times slideshow. It arrived safely 20 hours later to settle in next to Sarnoff and Gotkin’s existing Venturi house.
Weyerhaeuser, one of the largest lumber producers, maintains a garden of tiny trees. Their Pacific Rim Bonsai Collection of 60 bonsai trees has been open to the public for 20 years. But to cut costs, the company is closing down public access to the collection, saving them a full-time and a part-time position. The bonsai curator will remain to take care of the trees and there is hope the garden can open again when the economy turns around. Weyerhaeuser’s business has dropped dramatically with the reduced demand for building materials. They’ve been closing down plants and distribution centers around the country to reel in costs. Here are photos of their bonsai from the Puget Sound Bonsai Association.
Raw food for pets? The idea is starting to grow alongside the slow food movement. I still remember from Beverly Cleary’s “Henry Huggins” book the phrase “a pound of horsemeat for Ribsy please.” This article does mention that before the 1970s pets got scraps from the butchers. Now we don’t kill horses for meat or go to the butcher.
We still have analog cable from Comcast in our house. So old skool, eh? We did upgrade to a nice HD TV last year and our cable service includes many local stations in HD, but our Tivo is still standard def. Comcast is itching to get people like us onto digital cable but we were never happy with the plans that always cost more and were more confusing than the expanded basic plan we’re content with. We knew we were lining up dominos when we bought the new TV: new cable plan or switch to a dish, HD Tivo, new DVD player and DVDs, various ways to download programming — and making it all work well together. But we weren’t rushing to tip that first domino over. Then in December the Seattle Times announced that Comcast was forcing the digital switchover, moving channels above 29 to digital format and requiring a converter box to receive them. Comcast was not forthcoming with details on timing, which I attributed to a phased rollout plan to minimize unified screaming from their customers and technicians. Brier Dudley updated his Times blog FAQ post from December as he learned more, and in March he announced that Comcast had begun the switch in certain areas. They plan to complete all of Washington by the end of the year. We receive a letter every month from Comcast enticing us to switch. Now we’re waiting for the one that doesn’t present it as a choice.
My orchestra stand partner mentioned that when she was in Russia she attended several concerts (as musicians tend to do in foreign countries) and noticed that much of the audience would spend intermission walking in a circle around the lobby. How odd, I thought, I am certainly going to look that one up on the Internet! Surprisingly, the only real hit popped up from my frequent haunt, Ask Metafilter. Someone had read about the observation in Fred Plotkin’s “Opera 101” that German audiences will walk in a circle in the lobby. Interesting.
We’ve been using Stone-Buhr flour since we discovered it at random at our local Safeway or QFC and noticed it made our bread extra yummy. I never researched the company, I just figured that any producer can do better than generic supermarket flour, though at some point my husband pointed out that Stone-Buhr did even better than King Arthur and Gold Medal (my mom’s “reserve for special occasion” flours — she’s frugal that way). Last week the N.Y. Times, attracted by a great P.R. gimmick, wrote about Stone-Buhr’s FindtheFarmer program. Buy their flour, go to the website, and find out what farm grew the wheat. Actually you get the actual names of the families running the farms, a photo, and a bit of history and future plans. Stone-Buhr is owned by Josh Dorf who bought the company from Unilever six years ago. Previously, Dorf worked in e-commerce.
Marianne Perlak has created sculpture out of old books by folding their pages into flowing forms. Perlak is a former art director of Harvard University Press and her career as a book designer has of course informed this endeavor. Her exhibit, “Text to Texture” is at the Wellesley Free Library in Massachusetts until the end of the month.
Tweedy & Popp Ace Hardware is the oldest hardware store in Seattle. The Wallingford store, opened in 1920, is a neighborhood institution. When the store moved across the street on Saturday almost a hundred customers and neighbors showed up to help out. They formed a bucket brigade, moving inventory to the new digs despite the cold rain (it’s Seattle after all). Flaggers helped handle the cars at the crosswalk. Volunteers passed hinges, bags of grass seed, and other hardware store staples from hand to hand. Others made good use of the wheelbarrows.
I just saw this HP Touchsmart commercial from last year on an old Tivo’d program. It has lovely special effects of a man conducting and gesturing his way through documents and other files, set to Vivaldi’s Four Seasons (Summer). According to Youtube comments, which are of course suspect, the conductor/actor is Philip White (the one listed on IMDB perhaps; another guy didn’t fit the bill). The music is performed by Sejong, which is, perhaps ironically, a string orchestra that does not use a conductor.
This N.Y. Times article about the government auction of 605 diamonds seized in a drug-related sting operation has some interesting facts on auctioneer Rick Levin’s recent business. “In the last few years alone, he has sold for the government smuggled horses in Arizona, stolen cab medallions in Boston, 54,000 pounds of smoked Chinese scallops, a shipping container of blue jeans, illegally marketed Freon and a million packs of untaxed cigarettes.” But most relevant to these economic times, Levin also holds a contract with the FDIC to sell the furniture, fixtures, and equipment from failed banks. I guess when the FDIC takes over, they salvage whatever assets they can.