Sunday, June 22, 2008

Saturday, June 14, 2008

VISA, Versa.

Now that I'm within the three month window of leaving the U.S., I'm in the process of applying for my visa.

Last week I filled out a very extensive online form, which asks some too-personal questions, and certain questions which no one really knows the answers to.--It's important that the British consulate knows where you went to school when you were eleven-years-old.

So after filling out all of these forms I get a date to go to the Immigration Office in St. Albans, Vt. Date set for Friday the 13th at 13:00--I'm by no means superstitious, so this hardly phased me.

I've been dreaming of this office looking like a modern day Ellis Island, lines and lines of people waiting for green cards, officials Americanizing names to their liking, grumpy older men forcing you through a metal detector, sterile back rooms where people are searched.

My dreams were crushed. I drove up to a very new looking one story brick building, five minutes late and already assuming that because of my tardiness I will never be able to leave the country of stars and stripes. I was one of two cars in the parking lot--still thinking to myself how all the masses inside got there--they must have bussed them in.

To my dismay there were no crying babies, no drug sniffing dogs--just one slightly grumpy middle-aged man who met me outside the building to ask what business I had being there. I walked in and through the metal detector with no problems. Finally 35 seconds later I was escorted into a back room where a sweet lady in her mid to late 30's told me she was going to take my "biometrics" and said, "Honey, you can place your paper work over here, I promise it will be safe."

Well, Ms. Sweetie took me over to a machine with red lights that took my finger prints and then took a mildly absurd looking digital photo of my face. She explained that they do this as a favor to the British consulate in New York, and I told her how nice that was of "them". All I could really think is that Bush made this deal with them so that they would enter Iraq--I'm sure it's less complicated than that.

All in all, I was in and out in 7 minutes without being degraded, strip searched.

A disappointment.

To the Immigration Office in St. Albans: you did not entertain all of my hopes and dreams.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

There are plenty (plenty, plenty, plenty) of reasons I'm excited for my internship at Soundcheck - like the first half of today's show: Sasha Frere-Jones and Jake Paine will evaluate Lil Wayne's claim that he is, in fact, the best rapper on Earth.


Seems a little absurd (in a very fun way), and interesting - I wonder what Sasha (pop music critic for The New Yorker) and Jake (senior editor of hiphopdx.com) have to say. Also, I'm sure they'll be reviewing Tha Carter III on the fly, which itself would be worth listening for; aside from a couple of tracks, the album is pretty burned out - a lot like Lil Wayne, actually.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

In today's New York Times, Jim Dwyer touches on the history of Poetry in Motion, an initiative that exposed commuters to classic and contemporary poems for more than 15 years by publishing them in subway cars, in place of advertisements. The project was introduced by the MTA and thrived with help from Barnes and Noble and local cultural institutions.


Last month, it came to an end; now, commuters can look forward to prose excerpts instead.

From Dwyer's article:

Ms. Martinez, of the authority, says the shift can be traced to the resistance she felt over using a selection from “Hamlet,” in which the prince, resigned to the possibility that he could be killed in a duel, says: “There is special providence in the fall of a sparrow.” A colleague argued that it was prose.

“I thought, ‘Why not prose?’” said Ms. Martinez, a former college English professor.

Whether it's poetry or prose that's scattered throughout the transit system, the importance of this project seems undeniable - especially in such a big and busy place. A small dose of literature can go a long way, maybe more so when it's unexpected: You're being jostled in a subway car by a rush of bodies and briefcases, it's early, you're grumpy, then suddenly, you've got a quiet human reminder - some inspiration for your day, or just a bunch of words that work well enough together to get lodged into your brain.

Less dramatically, Dwyer's article testifies that Poetry in Motion has helped many people get excited about creative writing, and make a place for it in their lives:

“People will remember a first line,” said Brett Lauer, the managing director of the Poetry Society. “They remember where they were going when they first read a poem.” One woman who worked as a waitress and was planning her wedding asked him for the text of “A Bouquet,” a poem by the Chinese poet Bei Dao. An excerpt begins:

Between me and the world

You are a calendar, a compass

Hopefully prose will go over just as well.

I'm looking forward to seeing the placards first hand.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

It's 12:34AM EST. I'm in Burlington,VT and have been for nearly a year now. It seems silly to make a post about a place that I'm traveling to in just under three short months--but I'm excited.

I will be living here:
(a block from Buckingham Palace)









(If Dani can post pictures--I will too)

Things to look forward to (myself included):
-Descriptions of funny museums and exhibits
-Pictures of characters met on the street
-British sayings I plan on picking up
-Self-produced dancing videos
-A tour of biker pubs (If they don't have them in London, I'm leaving.)
-Sketches
-Songs about fish&chips
-A video montage of me and Amy Winehouse having great times.

love,
M

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

BoltBus or Bust

When I first applied for my internship at WNYC, the idea of moving to New York - away from Boston, where I've spent my early adulthood, and back toward the place I spent my early childhood - it seemed like a sort-of-real possibility. Not really real. Even after the station accepted my application, and months and months passed, I wasn't sure I'd make the move in July - I guess because so much of the process was up in the air for a while: I had nowhere to live and no steady source of income outside of Boston. (Actually, I still don't.)

Now that my housing deposit is set for New York, and my housing plan in Boston expires June 27, I feel finally like yes, hi, soon, I will be somewhere else. So, of course, I'm starting to feel like yes, hi, soon, I will need an effective way to visit friends in Boston, and to coax friends into visiting me.


So, I am pretty into BoltBus. Prices seem like they're on par with Fung Wah (cheap cheap), but!, BoltBuses also have:
- lots of leg room
- electrical outlets so you can charge things in transit
- wireless internet

Oh, and according to people on Yelp, they don't smell.

Getting Ready, Getting Started

I've got a little more than three weeks left in Boston before I pack this room and transfer its contents (old lamp with browning lampshade, pictures in frames, bulletin board, clothes, instruments, ten thousand books and notebooks, records, plastic turtle, etc.) to another room, in a different city.

For a long time, that room was purely hypothetical. I knew I had to find a place, but failed to do any of the legwork involved in, I don't know, not living on the streets. Thanks to my university, though, I snagged something quick and easy, at the last minute, and even saved money and many, many hours of (proactive) nail-biting.

I will be living here, at Hotel St. George:


Just kidding. My Hotel St. George is in Brooklyn Heights, and it looks like this:


Less sand, fewer soothing waves, more gum on the streets.

Great news: Google Maps said I just have to cross the Brooklyn Bridge on my bike to get to my new job at WNYC.