Monday, April 17, 2017

Songs

Songs that I dislike with a decent amount of passion:

Creep, by Radiohead. This one is a perfect description of that horrible thing, so therefore I don't like it because I would prefer not to listen to music that is reminiscent of that horrible thing.
Every Breath You Take, which is a creepy song if you pay attention to the lyrics.
Pumped Up Kicks, which I dislike because it sounds annoying. It isn't necessarily because of the subject matter, seeing as I enjoy other songs about murderous matters.
A cover of Love Will Tear Us Apart by Fall Out Boy, since it is an awful cover that butchers the original song.
David Bowie gets an honorable mention because he looked weird (for the very most part) and his music was weird (also for the very most part). However, there are two exceptions - one song of his that is actually fairly decent is Something in the Air, and (very surprisingly) he looked... good, at least compared to how he usually looked, in some science fiction movie he starred in back in the 70s.

In addition to these, an assortment of annoying pop songs that have been on the radio in the last 5 to 10 years.

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Have you ever considered online dating?

An alternative title: why are people on the online dating website so ugly/otherwise unappealing????? (maybe it just means that I am too picky? I mean, I have standards, you know) 

Have you ever considered the idea of using an online dating website? If yes, my candid advice to you is... don't. If you absolutely must, don't go into it with high expectations at all. Go in to it with the mindset that it is a somewhat unique/more in depth form of people watching (and the people that you see will most likely be no more than average looking at best), which is what I treat it as currently. 

Most people that you see on there will probably be ugly, or no better than average looking (based on my experience) and therefore, they are not particularly appealing to me. This might make me shallow (a topic I have mentioned in the past) but I think it is somewhat important for a person you date to be good looking (meaning better than average at least by somewhat). 

If you are me, you have a certain person with very blonde margarine-colored hair in mind who is definitely good looking and could be a model (not to mention various actual European models that I know of, or certain favorite actors); the appearances of the people on the online dating website will certainly pale in comparison. 

Alas. Anyways, I have pretty much mostly given up on the idea of actually finding someone that I would actually want to date on the online dating website and I use it mostly out of boredom here and there. 

Here is a theory: all of the good looking people have already found people to date in real life without the help of an online dating website, so therefore all the average and below average people end up on the online dating website. Does this therefore mean that I'm below average looking?? I think at the very least I am average looking. I certainly am better looking than that horrible thing, for one. 

Friday, March 24, 2017

Things to ponder

Here are a few obscure and somewhat minor things that occasionally come to mind and worry me.
1. That there will be someone hiding in the bathtub behind the shower curtain
2. That my hair will catch on fire, probably while using the stove
3. That somehow one of my favorite shirts will get ruined.
This is more of a thing I wonder about: will I someday be watching Intervention (as I am now, writing this during a commercial break) and see someone I know on the show? Nobody plans on becoming a drug addict. It's possible. I do wonder.
Here is something that I doubt the person in question worries about, but if they knew that I think it would be interesting to dye their very real pale blonde hair a bright unnatural color, I think they would worry about it. That someone (me in particular) will dye their hair when they're not expecting it.
I also wonder if I will become a drug addict.

Edit: I just thought of a new thing that I have worried about in the past that would fit well on this list. I was watching a documentary on PTSD and I remembered thinking in the past that I worry if there will for some reason (which, let's be honest, is perhaps more likely in the current political climate) be another draft and I will have to be in the military. I don't want to be in the military. I don't want to end up like a female version of that poor translator character in Saving Private Ryan. Eek. I believe this is a (relevant) quote from Full Metal Jacket: "War is hell" and therefore I would not like to experience it firsthand as a solider. Maybe as a journalist, but certainly not as a member of the military. I will end this with another quote that I find rather memorable: "Signing up to get killed doesn't sound like much fun." Guess who said that! [Incidentally, the person who said it originally said it just about exactly 2 years ago to this day! Imagine that! 2 years ago we had a discussion about the military which included that quote. And me speculating on what compels people to join the military: "I think perhaps part of it is because men want to feel tough and macho and stuff and they think the army is a good embodiment of those qualities. And/or they're patriotic and want to fight for their country. Or, in other circumstances, they got drafted." 

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Musical opinions

Here are some opinions for you. They are regarding David Bowie, who was a famous singer and is dead. He died sort of recently. In any case, I watched a movie that he had provided the soundtrack to although it was hard to really discern the music in the movie. So later, I decided to listen to some various songs of his. The short of it: they were weird. I am not quite sure why he got so famous. He seems like him as a person and also his music was weird. Michael Jackson could also be described as such although there are a couple songs of his that I think are actually halfway decent and not horrible weird. 

If anyone would like to convince me that David Bowie is worth my time to listen to more, I welcome you to try. As it stands, I don't have a particularly interested impression of him. Also, I think he was kind of creepy looking, in a bad way. This could also apply to Michael Jackson post-plastic surgeries. Still, a song like Man in the Mirror is actually fairly decent and makes me feel like dancing even though I don't really know many songs of Michael Jackson. On the other hand, the songs that I listened to of David Bowie just made me think that they were weird. 

So, for the time being, my opinion is that David Bowie is overrated and he looked strange and his music is/was weird. It doesn't exactly fit with a genre that I can easily discern, but maybe that was the point of it? Who knows. I think I may have read somewhere that Muse have been influenced by him, but I might be misremembering and even if I'm not, it doesn't show that much in their music which is a good thing. Sure they have a number of songs about apocalyptic subject matters but at least those songs are enjoyable to listen to. 

For the final thing in this post, I will mention that one of the models I like had a picture taken of him (I think for a magazine or something) where he was made up to look like David Bowie. I wonder what he (the model) thinks of David Bowie. 

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

3 weeks later

(approximately; it is actually slightly less than three weeks)

3 weeks later, that encounter that I wrote a post about (which is how I know it was around 3 weeks ago) is still apparently making an impression on me. So much so that I have decided to write a handwritten note on a card regarding said incident. Incident seems like it has a bit of a negative connotation, so maybe the word 'event' or 'occasion' or 'encounter' is more apt. This note is a compliment and I am going to mail it and hopefully it will reach its intended recipient. The compliment is about the occasion (covered in the previously mentioned post) when I was walking outside of a store and a police officer walked by in the opposite direction and I looked at him and he smiled at me. And I was very pleased by that and I still am quite pleased by that even weeks after the event. So I figured that I might as well attempt to compliment this officer. A few days ago I looked at the county website for when you want to complain about the bus service, for one thing, or otherwise find out about county related things like recycling bins, for example. However it was down for maintenance so I had to wait a few days and only now did I get back to that. For bus service complaints, you can submit them via an online form and I thought that it would be the same for police officer compliments. However, it is not and apparently the way to send in a compliment must be done via the mail. There are addresses provided to mail the compliment to and that's what I'm doing. Apparently, after they received my complimentary letter I am supposed to get a letter notifying me of that. So I think that will be interesting, theoretically. Again, hopefully the compliment gets to who it's supposed to get to and hopefully he is pleased because he got a complimentary letter and perhaps it will encourage him to continue to smile at random people and perhaps those other people will also feel compelled to write in complimentary letters and so on. I think the last part is the least likely to happen because I feel like other people probably do not feel compelled to write in complimentary letters to police officers because they got smiled at by one. However that event made my day and could even possibly make my month of February, which seems quite likely, considering this post. Thankfully I made a note of this police officer's name from his name tag when I was looking at him as I walked by him. That way the compliment has a higher chance of getting to the right person instead of it being directed to some nameless police officer who happened to be at Walmart a few weeks ago. 

Monday, February 6, 2017

mtt dmns tth

Try to decipher the title!
Here is a post about (un)important issues like:

"Teeth
Roberts: He does have nice teeth.
Kimmel: I mean, they can't be real, right? They're so perfect. They're obviously something that some Hollywood witch doctor put into his head somewhere along the line, possibly on one of his jaunts to China where he disappears for six months and suddenly has a whole new look. One day he's Jason Bourne. The next day he's Liberace's fiancĂ©.
Damon: True.
Larry Rosenthal, D.D.S., declined to respond to multiple requests for comment."
-GQ

Like a previous post on a different body part, I don't think it's a mystery why this one would be interesting to me. I decided to look up about Matt Damon and this came up. It is from a story in GQ. I just wanted to put that out there. Matt Damon I don't have a negative opinion of like I do of George Clooney, but I haven't watched as many movies of his as I have of Leonardo DiCaprio. In my hierarchy of actors I like/dislike, he's probably somewhere a little bit above Brad Pitt. Definitely above Johnny Depp because he doesn't look creepy like Johnny Depp does. And it goes without saying that he's above George Clooney.

tell ee vision

To preface this, I should begin with the fact that I watched the Super Bowl and it was interesting, which was actually somewhat interesting and that kind of surprised me because I would not consider myself to be interested in football. However, I think that watching the Super Bowl is one of those American things to do, and I would feel like I was missing out if I didn't watch it. So I watched it and I thought that Tom Brady looked like Matt Damon and also that he had nice teeth. From what I saw of him, he seems like a nice person. Something about just.. his manner or something. I don't know. Maybe if I were more familiar with him it oculd turn out that he's actually an idiot. Like I said, I don't know. 

Anywyas, after the Super Bowl there was a premiere of some show. I odn't know if it's a completely new show or if it's just a new season of an already existing show. It started with some violence and murder, so obviously I was intrigued. It continued with some scenes being un-violent and mundane interspersed with others that were violent and suspenseful. The show made use of various split screen shots throughout the episode, which was kind of interesting as that's not commonly used in the shows I've watched. Apparently Requiem for a Dream is notable for its use of split screen shots as well, so there's that little tidbit to consider. From what I gathered, this show is about politics/government/terrorists. I don't think I could watch a show completely about politics in this current day and age, but this show seems to be kind of a mix and not purely a drama/soap opera like Grey's Anatomy. I would consider it to be in the genre of action, somewhat. It reminded me of a combination of James Bond movies (although those are somewhat lighter, to be honest) and a show I watched... the first season of, at least, a couple of years ago, called The Following which was about a serial killer/murderous cult, at least as far as I remember. That show had a decent amount of implausibilities, which also was somewhat prevalent in this show as well. 

And now, on to the little details that I like to focus on so much. Being about politics/government/terrorism, the show is set in/around DC, an area with which I am decently familiar. As such, there were some scenes involving a Metrobus. Said Metrobus was apparently a route 13 and the destination sign said "Wisconsin Avenue." Naturally, I wanted to see if this was an actual route, in addition to looking up designs of Metrobuses because the one in the show did not look like the ones I've seen in my current daily life. It seemed like it was an older model. According to my research so far, there is no such thing nor has there been a route 13, so this was a fictional invention. Many Metrobus routes are named with a number/letter combination, such as "J2." I'm not sure what the letters are supposed to signify, if anything, but I guess it just allows them to have more combinations for route names. From what I can tell, I think the model of buses shown in the show may still be in use somewhere in the Metrobus service area, although around here they have all been replaced by newer models.

 I'm not sure if it's too much to ask that tv shows get all the little local details right. Perhaps there's a position for "local details consultant" that I could fill. It makes me wonder about the show NCIS, which is also set in the DC area. As far as I'm aware, it is not filmed on location in DC. I haven't watched it enough to notice how wrong/right that show gets the little local details. However, it brings to mind an episode (don't remmeber which one) of the show Criminal Minds which I no longer watch because I became bored with it. In any case, said episode had a scene that supposedly took place in a Metro station, yet clearly the station it was filmed at for the show was not a Metro station. I know that show is filmed in LA so I guess they just used a station around there. One of the nice things about the Law and Order shows is that they all were (are in the case of SVU) filmed on location in NYC which lends them an extra little bit of authenticity regarding local details. You know the subway station is going to be a real NYC subway station. I don't know off the top of my head any shows that have taken place in and were filmed in DC. I know the West Wing took place in DC but I don't know where they filmed it. Come to think of it, the new-ish show that Dick Wolf created called Chicago PD is a thing. I wonder where that is filmed. 

Anyways, so far this new show seems to be decently interesting (honestly, it was the violence that drew me in) so I might watch the future episodes if I have time.