4/28/08

Mona Lemur


Would you like to go to work every morning with this guy staring at you? It's an ad campaign for Animal Planet that is in the subway cars. Amy tries to make this face but can't quite get it yet. It's one of those curious elusive expressions I guess. Jill Greenberg is the photographer responsible for the photo. She has done a whole series on monkeys and apes. If you are ever bored you should look at some of the great pictures she has done.

4/27/08

10th Floor of an old folks home.

Scott and I have settled into our new home. It's a medium sized studio, but has amazing views, the best kitchen we've had to date, and is surrounded by friends. Not a day goes by that we do not see someone that we know.
The big thing that we failed to mention, is that we are living in a building formerly used for Senior Housing. Tons of seniors still live here-there is even a cafeteria, pool table, and games section towards the back of our lobby, and every month, a van comes to take them on outings. It's funny, I thought they would hate us. The building is just now going through the phase where they turn it into normal housing, hence Scott and I being able to snag a spot, but it's been the opposite. They love us. I've made friends with a lady named Dolores, who rides in her wheelchair and makes jokes all day, and there is a friendly guy on our floor, who introduces himself to me every time we meet. I brought a friend over from work one day to show her the space, and two guys were having wheelchair races in the lobby. Nothing says welcome to my new home, friend, like that. One of them then drove into the elevator with us and told us to look out for his cherry red wheelchair-apparently it's his secret weapon that he only brings out on good days. Two other senior men were bickering by the mailboxes when Scott and I went to check our box-they were calling each other names like scum and ugly. I love it. We live in a 24-7 comedy house.
Here is our space. For the next year, maybe more, it'll be home.








4/15/08

moved...ish

well day 1 of moving is done and it could not have gone any smoother. Dudes show up and I point at what to wrap up and take. Dudes wrap it up and put it in the truck. I meet them at the new place and point at where they are to put it. They unwrap it all and put it there. Done and Done.

Tomorrow we go back for some little stuff. Also, the new decor is delivered tomorrow. Pics to come..

Write this down

Our new address as of today:

DeVores

546 Main Street #1005

NY, NY 10044


Send baked goods, gift cards, and/or money...now.


Also, a HUGE thanks goes out to the sweet families (of the school I teach at) that live on Roosevelt Island with us. We are going to one's house for a homecooked welcoming dinner tonight, and for the next 2-3 nights, dinner is being brought over by others. Do not let this stop those of you who live in FL or other parts of Manhattan from sending items though......we do not discriminate against "non-islanders."


~Amy~


4/12/08

Hello Goodbye

My Dad and Louise were in town last week, but I just realized that I have zero pictures of our time together. They stayed in the hotel that connects to the school I teach at, so I was able to see them on my breaks and in passing, which was very nice. They took us to several amazing dinners, places that we had never been to (though I hear you can eat at a different restaurant in NYC every night for 5 years and still not tried them all here), and I showed them Coney Island. It's a fun place, but I have to give props to FL as the beaches here don't even begin to compare to back home. I cried when I got into my taxi the night before they left town, but that's no surprise-I'm a Daddy's girl and am ridiculously attached.

On another note, this is our last week living in Spanish Harlem! The movers come on Tuesday and Scott and I will come back to get the little things the following day. By this time next week, we should be all settled in! No more 6 flights to walk up just to get to our front door, no more "hey ladyyyyyy hey" or "ju wanta my jacket lady?" (as he giggles and winks while riding by on his bike) or my favorite, the man who stands on the corner and just simply states "yes" as I walk past him every morning. It's no wonder I arrive at work every day feeling like I'm the hottest piece alive.

The blogging might be slow for the next week as we get situated, but check back soon for pictures of our new home all set up!

4/9/08

Birthday Wishlist

It's my birthday this 9th day of April. So, buy me one of these things on my wish list. Do it!

1)Ferrari F40 Koenig
2)60" Plasma TV
3)Canon 5D camera
4)Godzilla on a leash
5)New couch
6)iPhone
7)G5 8-core Mac
8)Hairless cat
9)Winning lotto ticket(attempts are welcome)
10)Taser gun(reusable kind)

I know some of you have access to some things on this list. Make it happen people. Thanks

4/4/08

$Green$

This was written by Glenn Beck. I post this because of the last paragraph.
Maybe it will inspire somebody to spit the sinker out of their mouth and think about something.


NEW YORK (CNN) -- We all want to live in a world that's clean, healthy and prosperous.

We all want to hand that world off to our children in slightly better shape than we received it. No one, even the supposedly evil oil executive, has any reason to want anything different. But, for some reason, we find ourselves searching for villains. Surely they exist, but the endless quest to create them sometimes overwhelms our better judgment, whether intentional or not.

Congress has picked "Big Oil" as their enemy of the week. These companies inexplicably put profits above people, ravaging the environment and financially assaulting the poor to put another couple of dollars on their balance sheet. That's the storyline we've all been taught.

Yes, times are tough for many. Sure, oil companies make a lot of cash. But, for that money, they get us to work, get ambulances to the hospital, keep our homes warm, and employ thousands of our friends and neighbors while financing their retirement, paying their health care, and providing energy to millions. Because of capitalism, they have the incentive to do that. I've yet to see what our government does for us with their rather large chunk of each gallon of gas we buy, and I've yet to see them offer to return it or suggest a gas-tax-windfall-tax-tax.

The other villain of the moment is the global warming "denier." Anyone who disagrees, even in the slightest, must be ridiculed. On "60 Minutes" last weekend, Al Gore said: "They're almost like the ones who still believe that the moon landing was staged in a movie lot in Arizona and
those who believe the Earth is flat. That demeans them a little bit, but it's not that far off."

Approximately 6 percent of Americans believe in the fake moon landing theory, although I've always heard there was a conspiratorial consensus that it was staged in Nevada, not Arizona. I'm going to guess quite a bit less than 6 percent believe in a flat Earth, but no one seems to be asking that question in polls anymore, so I can't be sure. So, who are those people Gore was demeaning "a little bit" by these comparisons? There's a good chance it's you. That's because the vast majority of Americans believe something that categorizes them as a flat earther to environmentalists like Gore.

Despite the media's one-sided view (the Business and Media Institute says dissenting voices about global warming are outnumbered on CBS News broadcasts by a 38 to 1 ratio), only 21 percent of Americans say "the release of greenhouse gasses is the most important factor causing global warming" according to a 2007 New York Times/CBS News poll.

The "60 Minutes" piece wasn't just filled with misrepresentations of opinion; it had plenty of Gore-style hypocrisy. He was embroiled in controversy when it was revealed his mansion used 20 times more energy than the average American. His explanation? "Since then" his house has been retrofitted with solar panels. I'm sure Eliot Spitzer hasn't been renting many women since he was caught either. (Although I'm not betting my life on it.)

We then see footage of Gore's parents' farm that will, sometime in the future, be run on wind power. Apparently, the windmill store has been out of stock for the past 20 years.

Perhaps most comically, Gore is seen dragging an entire film crew on a jet to India to give a
climate presentation to about 100 people. Gore claimed: "We just don't have any choice. I wish I knew a better way to do it. I constantly ask myself, 'How can I be more effective in getting this message across?' " The most effective thing you can think of is flying halfway across the world to speak with 100 people? Maybe you had other things to do while you were there, but I'd be surprised if there was anything essential that couldn't be accomplished with a telephone and a computer. The people in India will be able to see your fancy graphs on their screens, and you'll cut demand for those evil overseas flights.

The entire "60 Minutes" piece felt like a commercial for Gore's upcoming commercials. He's spending $300 million in advertising to convince people of something he claims there is already a consensus on. To put that much money into perspective; it's more than Sen. Barack Obama, Sen. Hillary Clinton, Sen. John Edwards, Sen. John McCain, former Gov. Mike Huckabee and Rep. Ron Paul raised in all of last year combined. Think of it as going green by getting lots of green.

Where is all that money coming from? Gore says he's donating his profits from "An Inconvenient Truth," and his Nobel Peace Prize cash award. Let's be generous and say there's only $290 million left to explain. Apparently, a follow-up question to find the origins of this nine-figure sum would have involved six seconds that "60 Minutes" wasn't willing to commit.

What is there to learn from all of this? Whether it's politicians on both sides of the aisle or our vaunted environmental superheroes, the quest for power overwhelms even the slightest instinct of self-examination.

In the end, the timing of the Gore interview airing couldn't have been better. It fell on the same weekend as the first "Earth Hour," when the world supposedly came together to turn our attention to climate change by shutting the lights off for an hour. The imagery of monuments like the Sears Tower in Chicago, Illinois, going dark was plastered over newscasts everywhere.

But those pictures highlighted the global warming movement and the congressional attacks on energy companies in an entirely unintended way.

Behind the darkened Sears Tower was the city of Chicago, with lights shining brightly as far as the eye could see. For one hour the Sears Tower knew what it was like to be Al Gore: A larger than life symbol, blocking our view of reality.