Snow Days Sunday 12 February 2006 was apparently the snowiest day in NYC history - some 26" fell on Central Park. Here are a couple pics from the Upper West Side:
Celebrity Sightings For what it's worth... our ongoing list of celebrity sightings. (N.B. These are real sightings as opposed to professional encounters e.g. for business or at live theater) Latest Update 4/2007 - Elvis Costello and Diana Krall at Time-Warner Jazz 11/2006 - Governor-elect Eliot Spitzer - running
VoIP My home phone has been ported to VoIP. We beta-tested Voicepulse for about three months; everything went fine, so we put in to have the port done. Any calls to our home number will now be digitized, packetized, fragmented, routed, and then reassembled automagically. Or so they say. Let me
Trivial Earthquake Simon Winchester's A Crack In The Edge Of The World is the most fascinating and simultaneously frustrating book I've ever read. Chock full of scientific info and trivia concerning the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, the book is also written in the most annoying self-agrandizing fashion imaginable and rambles on
Rumormongering A Rumor Has It is a failure of a movie. The premise is that the classic The Graduate is actually based on our heroine's (Jennifer Anniston's) family. Hijinks and lack of hilarity ensue as she goes back home for her sister's wedding and confronts this myth, personified via her grandmother
Narnia What more can one say except that The Chronicles of Narnia (etc) is a children's movie? I've never read the books, and only somewhat recall the old BBC versions, so it's a bit of a surprise to see so much energy expended on so slight a show. But as they
TV Tapings I've been to a couple tapings of TV shows this week: Sunday, I attended "The Actor's Studio" interview of Ralph Fiennes. The whole show took about three hours to tape, a bit of an ordeal as Fiennes is not particularly extroverted (or funny). And it doesn't help that he's still
Ring Of Fire Some have pointed out that the Johnny Cash bio-pic Walk The Line ought to be named after a different hit song, "Ring of Fire". Apparently, "Walk The Line" was dedicated to Cash's first wife, while "Ring of Fire" concerned his turmoil with pain-killers and his affair with June Carter --
Capote It's bio-pic season. Capote eschews the standard birth-to-death story arc, instead concentrating on the critical years when Truman Capote worked on his non-fiction masterpiece, "In Cold Blood". The difficult task of humanizing our hero is handled wonderfully by Philip Seymour Hall -- one of those impersonations which seems to transcend
SpamSpamSpamSpam Spamalot is great fun, though a badly fractured second act is almost a letdown. The inimitable Python film "...and the Holy Grail" has been transformed into broad slapstick on Broadway with extended music, etc by Eric Idle, and stuffed with visual humor by director Mike Nichols. The good news, for