Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: February 2013

    • Oscar Nigh a Winner

      Posted at 2:17 am by kayewer, on February 24, 2013

      So it’s award season at last, and the movie industry would like to convince you that there are some good pictures in contention for a sleek humanoid trophy.  My issues with movie awards is that the guys in suits who bankroll the films we watch all year go out of their way to promote their films as great, yet a majority of the big attendance productions don’t get recognized at award time.

      I think it’s a plot.  And not one found in a script.

      The theatres put out a few movies a week.  Most get packed theatres the first weekend, then they taper off because social rules state that if you don’t see the film the first weekend, you’ll be on the back-end of the discussions about it.  In fact, one must know all about the actors, the shooting schedule, the special effects, the scandal and the spoilers before entering the theatre.  If you don’t, some goof seated behind you will fill you in while talking on his cell phone to his computer geek friend who can’t leave the house while Worlds of Mayhem Part 19 is loading on his gaming system.

      The movies that get nominated for minor categories like costumes, effects and such might well be designed for that purpose.  One or two well-done movies still need competition to look good when they win.

      The blockbuster movies are specially filmed, casted, promoted and fine tuned to lure a huge demographic of people who fit in a nice middle range in the system of categorizing populations.  You buy the tickets, the nachos and the promotional clothing and tie-in gear.  By the time you leave the theatre, the hype is over like the restroom door slamming behind you; quickly forgotten. Like a roller coaster with one big plunge, there is a moment of exhilaration, then it’s just another ride.

      The B-grade movies draw a more exclusive demographic and will never make in profits what was spent.  They also never get nominated for an award.

      I actually did see Les Miserables and it was a good movie.  It was not great, but it had the mechanics of a well made production, and that is what matters.  It won’t win anything major because it is a movie version of a Broadway musical based on a classic novel.  That’s three strikes in a world where brief YouTube videos are more popular than novels and musicals are looked upon as creative fodder for filler films rather than a trustworthy source for good movie material.  I don’t agree with that, but it would take more than a blog to explain it all.

       The award season is still begging for good movies.  Sure we recognize the best, but even that isn’t all we could have.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged academy awards, oscars
    • Killing Joy

      Posted at 3:01 am by kayewer, on February 17, 2013

      This past week, two people were charged with conspiracy to commit murder.  The weaponry to be used against their intended targets included a knife and gun; the gun was a  .45-caliber semi-automatic handgun and the knife was 3.25 inches.

      We hear about murder plots every day. The shocking part of this incident is that the boys are fifth grade elementary school students, ages ten and eleven.  Their primary victim was a girl–a fellow student whom they both dated previously but they claim made fun of and annoyed them–and they plotted against six other students they intended to lure away from school one by one to kill. One brother intended to use the knife while the other stood guard with the gun.

      The gun belonged to one suspect’s older brother’s late grandfather and had been stolen when the brother visited the grandfather’s home.  He is also a juvenile.

      So let’s look at the story in detail for a minute.  Fifth grade students dating?  They shouldn’t even be looking at each other.  Then after experiencing two breakups, the boys think about murder, while the girl entertains her friends with derogatory stories about the failed relationships.  Worse, these young men are under the impression that the best way to handle other persons’ shortcomings is to kill them.

      This is the generation we should worry about because they don’t seem to know how to tackle anything that does not provide gratification or instantaneous results.  Bottle-fed on ego overstuffing ads and commercials, brainwashed by the concepts of manufactured perfection and entitlement, and visually bombarded by the constant stimulation of instant messaging, thanks to youngsters like this pair we are engaged in a fight against a type of prejudice and gang ethic nobody could have imagined twenty years ago.  These young people may grow up to be spin-off radicals that make the Taliban look like a poker night social party.  If you worry about bullying now, wait until the school system collapses completely under the weight of a student body out of control.

      If somebody annoys you, kill them?  What would they do to a teacher who gave them a “C” in social studies?

       

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged juvenile violence
    • It Was Clean. Really

      Posted at 3:25 am by kayewer, on February 10, 2013

      Image  I cleaned the kitchen a few days ago, but this morning I caught the sunlight bouncing off a cobweb under a chair.  Isn’t a cobweb a strange concept?  A spider spins a spider web, so I assume a cob spins a cobweb.  That was one fast cob, too.  Makes me look bad, too, to have cobwebs under my kitchen chair, especially when I just cleaned.

      Cobwebs in visual media like television and the movies symbolize unused creepy homes or neglected hidden rooms.  My kitchen is not part of that category.  In fact, I just finished a gigantic pot of lentil soup in my cobwebby kitchen (which I had to delay in order to remove said cobwebs from the chair).  The recipe came from a magazine a few years ago, and I’ve made this soup quite a few times.  It contains vegetable stock, carrots, onions, cumin, tomatoes and baby spinach.  I doubled the recipe to give some to a friend, and I wasn’t sure it would all fit into the huge dutch oven I had chosen, but the spinach shrank suitably and I wound up with two big containers and a bowl for a week’s worth for myself.  Not bad for an hour in the kitchen: an hour and ten minutes if you count my cobweb removing duties.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment | Tagged cobwebs, lentil soup
    • Dinner for Lunch? Linner?

      Posted at 3:15 am by kayewer, on February 3, 2013

      I have a favorite term for the meal that falls–either accidentally or on purpose–between the lunch and dinner times:  linner.  Like brunch (the time for a meal not considered totally breakfast or lunch), linner can be a meal of any size and be almost anything to get you through the afternoon.

      It seems that people are increasingly falling into the habit of eating a big meal for lunch.  My company cafeteria prepares wonderful meals starting at 11:00 in the morning, including turkey breast carved from the actual bird, salmon with risotto (which I hope would not make Gordon Ramsay’s blood boil) and a variety of specialties one would not expect to sit on a hot table with a sneeze shield.

      The problem is that linner can cost $5.00 and up, while preparing a meal at home can be much less expensive.  Now that some of the tax breaks we enjoyed until the new year have gone away, my food budget went down with my take-home pay.  Who can spend $25 or more a week to eat lunch?  Or linner?

      Of course the food offered for lunch is comfort food (one must have stuffing and gravy with that turkey breast carved to order), and nutrition experts and exercise gurus would advise heading to the salad bar instead.  I’ve done that, too.  A few spinach on a foam plate with mushrooms, tomatoes and vinaigrette can do the trick on some occasions.  It doesn’t always fill the gut until 5:00, though.

       The struggle for a good three meal day goes on.  Do brunch and linner count as four meals or just two?

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