Monday, March 7, 2011

And we're back.

Cripes, can't believe I've let this go almost an entire year.

Oh wait, yes I can.

. . .


In other news, the short film for which I ran wardrobe like two years ago is finally finished! Better yet, it's in the Wisconsin Film Festival!


The festival screening will be on Saturday, April 2 at 9:45pm at the Chazen Museum Theatre, along with six other short films. Get your tickets now before they sell out!

Friday, March 12, 2010

Let's Just Say It's Spring

Both my roommate and I are currently suffering from a bit of post-drinking delirium. I wanted to write something (new laptop!) before I have to leave for work, but I keep drifting back to the kitchen, where she's eating some kind of microwaved fish and giggling at this week's Onion. It's a little rough trying to take anything seriously right now. For example, here is a bicycle that started living in our house about a week ago:



It's so cartoonish. I have no idea where it came from.


She asked me if it's spring yet. I have decided that it is. The windows in my room have been open for the past twenty-four hours, the gross snow has finally melted into mud puddles full of cigarette butts and other detritus, and the trees across the street, though looking a little worse for wear, are covered in moss. It's green. I find myself becoming one of those Midwesterners who can't stop talking about the weather.


Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Is February over yet?

I'm a busy kid. I've been writing a lot, but I'm too tired to edit or know if any of it's good. But here's something I've been enjoying lately: Subnormality [disclaimer: it is a comic. It is also quite dark. And wordy.]

Monday, February 8, 2010

Coffee

Here is something. I wrote it. It isn't really anything, so I can't say it's 'not finished', exactly. It's just a very small something.


            It’s been an insomniac morning. I woke at five, crashed around the house for a glass of water, then came to the annoying realization that I was actually awake for the day. The sun was taking forever to rise. I crawled back into bed and read for a while, but the wheezing radiator was too hot and it was a stupid time of day and the reading material was too esoteric. I got out of bed to do the next logical thing, which was to make coffee.

            There is something about this early-morning light that I have come to associate with Europe, probably because I always woke up so early during those two-week vacations to run the cobblestones with my dad. I don’t even remotely enjoy running, but I’ll join him on his morning routine of compulsive chemical needs—twenty minutes or so of jogging quickly transitions into the pursuit of the elusive Decent Cup of Coffee, which really means something strong enough to stick a spoon in so it could remain vertical, suspended in the steaming, bitter liquid, since he is also going to need a pitcher of cream and four packets of sugar. Travel dehydrates me, but he’ll buy me one as well, which I drink black from the small porcelain or Styrofoam vessel, and I can already feel it working through my bowels while we watch farmers and their wives erect their market stalls of lettuce and radishes, the dew already evaporated from the clumps of dirt still clinging to the rots. There are men in the bar drinking those thin glasses of pale beer, a sight that turns my stomach at that hour (or maybe it’s just caffeine and stomach acid) and offends my father’s sensibilities, but we conclude that it is perfectly civilized—nay, every working man’s right—to enjoy a beer or two with his buddies after work, even when it’s the third shift. It’s odd how our vices are acceptable as long as they are on schedule.

            It is not possible for me to become a Real Person before ten a.m., so I’m thankful that this is one of the things my dad can order for himself: Deux cafés, s’il vous plaît, and if the person behind the counter doesn’t speak French, the coffee won’t be strong enough and we’ll move on.

 

            The machine in the kitchen emits five chirps, and I pour a mug that is too hot to drink. It is still too early. I realize that my dad is probably running right now, doing this little cloverleaf pattern through the streets around the house I grew up in, despite the February chill and icy sidewalks. After 2.6 miles, he will stretch while the cats sniff at him inquisitively, probably wondering what that man is doing on the floor again. He will fill the kettle and brew his cereal bowl of sugary, intensely coffee-flavored half-and-half. My mother makes her own pot of coffee in the regular machine, because she isn’t picky, either, but needs something before she can put her eyeballs in that morning.

            Out on the porch, watching steam rise from my mug, I concentrate on these little wisps of feeling like we’re all together on vacation right now, enjoying a little quiet time before another day of glorious adventures in Belgium or Germany or France. I’m sure it’s later than I think it is, that I should shower and do something about my hair and stop pretending I’m not in Wisconsin in February. . .


In other news: http://puttingweirdthingsincoffee.com

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

I'm back

I have been “ordered” to blog again. I’m going to leave that in the passive voice to create the illusion that there is more than one person who ever reads this.

My initial reaction was hey shut the fuck up you can’t tell me what to do you’re not my mom, but after further consideration, I guess I could start doing this again. I’d like to focus it more on my clumsy messings-around with creative writing projects, but I guess we’ll see what happens. I just ordered a new camera charger this morning, so there may soon be further forays into food porn.

In case you care, I’ve been fine, thank you, but busy with the usual Life Stuff like Getting Paid and New Haircuts and Maintaining a Presentable Room, which I am getting pretty good at. Stella has gotten fatter, I went to Arizona over Christmas, and I’ve settled in nicely at the Turkish restaurant as my latest Stressful Job That Kind Of Takes Over My Life, which is not an altogether bad thing. It’s cold in Wisconsin. Spring semester has started. Everybody, myself included, has been sick, and morale has been low. I’ve also got a new stack of books, which includes:

  • Pushcart Prize Best of the Small Presses 2010
  • Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende
  • Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri (recommended by my roommate)
  • A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again by David Foster Wallace
  • and the Collected Fictions of Jorge Luis Borges

Most recently, though, as I mentioned, I have been quite violently under the weather, and though I may have spent the past four days quarantined in the squalid nest of infection that was my room, I have since bathed in the noxious green waters of the river of NyQuil, and here I am, emerged, renewed, though finding it difficult to hear out of one ear, which is kind of awkward.

Anyway, just writing to let you know I still care, sort of. I’ll be back later with something interesting.

xoxo

Ellie

Thursday, October 29, 2009

This gun's for hire

We made a video to win Springsteen tickets, and it's pretty much cinematic genius:



And in case you haven't had a chance to see it at any point during the last. . .25 years, here is the original.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

There's another photo shoot happening at my house


. . .what else is new?

This is just me being a creep off to the side; I'm sure the finished photos will be wildly superior. This photographer girl even speaks better French than I do. Damn.

Also, Erica should wear this outfit out sometime.