Monthly Archives: April 2014

Throw-Back-Monday: An Art Garfunkel Concert Anyone?

With the headline of Paul Simon’s arrest today, I was thrown back to my college days where I had an opportunity to see Art Garfunkel in concert.

It was one of those things where I actually hesitated to go for a few reasons:

1. As weird as this may seem, I’m not really a concert goer. See, I’m not a big fan of deviation. I am the girl in the audience who wants the highly processed perfect version I play repeatedly on my system at home. I don’t want to hear new music. I bought a ticket because I bought your album. I didn’t buy a ticket because I think when it comes to all things musical , I believe you have the Midas touch. I also don’t want to hear a scat rendition of your most popular songs, either. There’s a reason the way you sang it for the album made you famous. Please don’t mess with something that made me like you.

2. The cost. The cost is crazy!!!! They are a lot of dough, particularly when you are a teenager, which is when you have time to waste and money to burn (and concerts are one of the few things that can keep you away from your folks all night long with an automatic curfew extension). But to me, that’s a hell of a lot of babysitting gigs and mowed lawns. I could see almost ten movies for the price of one concert (back in the day when my local theater cost $5 a show). They last about as long. And the Dolby Surround lets me catch every word, unlike at a concert where the deafening screams of my fellow goers muffles pretty much every word being muttered on stage. The entire thing ends up sounding like a performance by the teacher from Peanuts. So the ratio of bang to my buck is just not great enough for me.

3. The smell. Inevitably the same smells are prevalent at every concert I have ever been to. B.O., patchouli, beer, cigarettes, baby powder and CK One just don’t mix.

4. Art Garfunkel is not Paul Simon. If you had to see one or the other, I mean, c’mon?

However, regarding the one thing that always seems to matter (and tugs at my  heart strings a little, too) – Art Garfunkel had my hair. I was in.

Art being groovy.

Art being groovy.

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Total-Take-Back: Gone With The Wind

Here’s the thing. Gone With The Wind is one of my mother’s favorite films, if not the favorite. She had the book, she had the videos and she eventually had the dvds. I saw the covers. And yes, I do judge things by their covers. I saw the guy who gets the girl embracing with the sun setting behind them and knew how the story goes. I read the synopsis on the back and it didn’t take much guesswork to fill in the gaps, let alone the ending.

Gone With The Wind

Gone With The Wind (http://web.calstatela.edu/library/mmc/100/~g3.htm)

Besides, growing up in the 80s and 90s, the phenomena that was Gone With The Wind had been around for over fifty years. It was ingrained in pop culture. Everyone knew the story of a snobby Southern Belle named Scarlett and her roguishly debonair lover/foe Rhett Butler.  Thanks to Carol Burnett, we knew she wore curtains for a dress. We knew Scarlett would “never be hungry again.” Kids on playgrounds everywhere would say, “Frankly Scarlett, I don’t give a damn” (it was a way of getting away with swearing because you were quoting a classic).

If you were aware of all of this, you were also aware of how ridiculously long the book and the film are. Like The Wizard of Oz, no need to waste your time when you knew the happily ever after.

Except there was no happily ever after. WHAT?!! Continue reading

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LYTM Experience Continued: The Rehearsals

Listen To Your Mother: Atlanta at the Strand Theater in Marietta

Listen To Your Mother: Atlanta at the Strand Theater in Marietta (photo by Miranda Wicker http://www.findingwalden.com/)

Is it over yet? Has the fat lady sung? What the hell was I thinking? Don’t get me wrong, I  am SO excited to be cast in LTYM: Atlanta, but these were the thoughts I had as I walked into Taco Mac one cool spring evening a couple of weeks back. I’d missed the first rehearsal because I was away on business. That means the cast got together without me. That also means everybody already knows everyone and I am officially the last kid picked at the next kickball game.

The producers had taken pity on my plight and were willing to set up an independent read-through with me. I was thankful for their pity and grateful when I found out that someone else had missed the rehearsal, too. Now there would be another who would duke it out with me for that second to last spot on the field (because being the last man standing when being cherry picked by your peers is never a desirable result).

I walked in and there was Shelly Davis. She peeked around the first booth in the joint. “Are you Libby?” I smiled. She had my hair. Everything was going to be ok.

Miranda Wicker (producer #1) slid in the booth right behind me. We cajoled, ordered beers, and eventually got down to brass tax. After I read my composition, I felt calm. After Shelly read her work, I felt even more at peace. After Miranda shared her essay, I felt this was going to be good. This was going to be really good. If their pieces were indicative of the rest of the casts’ caliber, it’s not going to be really good – it’s going to be incredible.

A second rehearsal was just around the corner. I was finally going to meet the rest of my teammates.  I strolled into Panera, ordered my sweet tea and headed to the conference room (by the way, am I the only one who didn’t know Panera has a conference room?).

The first person I saw in the room was familiar at least – Jana Anthoine (producer #2). As everyone gathered, sharing their hellos and making small talk, all I could do was smile. Whatever I’d gotten myself into, there were thirteen others in it with me. And I was about to find out they were thirteen totally amazing others.

I listened to everyone’s stories. I was in awe of the pure talent that was before me. And to think, I’d actually be sharing a stage with these people in about two weeks’ time (as Wayne and Garth might lament – so not worthy!)  Each was a personal portrait of their reflections on or their experience with motherhood told in a way that had me laughing, crying, and at times almost wishing I was a mother (and you know that would take some pretty heavy convincing).

I sat in that back room of Panera Bread inspired and thankful and totally indebted to my producers for seeing something in my work I clearly didn’t see. I love all of these people who have offered up bits and pieces of themselves in order to celebrate motherhood (and I only met them like five minutes ago!). I was having one of the best kinds of no-take-backs there are: the warm and fuzzy kind.

Jana Anthoine (totally awesome producer)
Miranda Wicker (totally awesome producer)
Benjamin Carr (totally awesome castmate)
Robin Dance (totally awesome castmate)
Shelly Davis (totally awesome castmate)
Tracy Kistler (totally awesome castmate)
Leslie Marinelli (totally awesome castmate)
Denise Des Soye Mount (totally awesome castmate)
Sarah Beth Nelson (totally awesome castmate)
Ashley Robinson (totally awesome castmate)
Renee J. Ross (totally awesome castmate)
Lyssa Sahadevan (totally awesome castmate)
Katherine Stone (totally awesome castmate)
 
 

These people have put themselves out there, just like me, and are finding a powerful return on their investment. The more you put out, the more you get back, people. It’s that simple. So why not make it a warm and fuzzy no-take-back week for yourself? And if you are in the Atlanta area this Saturday night, come and join us for Listen To Your Mother.

 
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Guest Post: Tastes Like Chicken

Community member umalum99 shares her story about a no-take-back Easter experience. 

I moved to Denver in 2009.  A few months later, some friends stayed with us and, upon returning to their home state of California, they sent us a thank you card and a gift certificate for a French restaurant called Ze Cafe (get it?).

eiffel tower

And to drink? Peru!

We made reservations for dinner one night when I didn’t feel like cooking and arrived at the appointed time.  One of the items on the menu was a dish starring fresh, hand made wide noodle pasta, broth, and locally raised rabbit.  I had never tried rabbit before, heard it tastes like chicken, so I ordered it.

I was astounded at the flavor!  The chicken, er…rabbit, seemed to melt in my mouth.  I salivated over every bite.  The pasta and broth complemented the perfectly cooked meat for one of the best meals I had ever eaten.

mmm mmm good!

finger lickin’ good!

Then, I realized what day it was.  It was Easter Sunday.  Then, I thought about what I was eating.  OMG!  I was eating the Easter Bunny!  I heard millions of children giving a collective cry as I downed every last bite.
Now, some might think this is a total-take-back.  I mean, who wants to be known as the person who feasts on rabbit the one holy day fluffy bunnies are celebrated the world over?  For most people, you might be right.  For me, this was a no-take-back because, as it turns out, the Easter Bunny was DELICIOUS!
Thanks umalum! And to that I say:

Happy Easter!

Happy Easter!

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Throw-Back-Monday: I Ruined Easter

Easter is fast approaching. It’s that time of year where retail stores spew forth obnoxious pastels and hordes of chocolate bunnies. They encourage traditions like gift giving in baskets filled with fake elastic grass and dyeing hard boiled breakfast nosh in an array of colors for decor. It has become the holiday where retail kings have made plastic egg hunting the order of the day.

Cheesy baskets and chocolate bunnies.

Cheesy baskets and chocolate bunnies.

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I Tested An APP – And I Liked It

Please know the following really isn’t an advertisement – it’s my version of a review. It’s about a recent no-take-back experience I had with an app. Just turns out I think the app is SUPER cool.

I have been on a journey. For the last 45 days or so I have been fortunate enough to embark on a self-imposed adventure and I’ve been using a life-logging app called SAGA to document it all. Yeah, I didn’t know what life-logging was either.

This winter I was selected by the creators of SAGA to be one of several excursionists. Essentially this meant I would test their app for one month while I went about my day to day business and my travels. My excursion specifically dealt with quirky roadside attractions and BBQ joints. How could it not?

I didn’t exactly understand what life-logging was when I signed on. Why would I care where I’ve been? I take pictures. I tweet. What could this app do that I couldn’t do through other things already? Boy, I was in for a surprise. Continue reading

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Throw-Back-Monday: Being Open

Experiencing four inches of snow while traveling in Pennsylvania last week has had me pining for sunshine and swimming pools a bit early this year, which always brings this favorite no-take-back to mind. Enjoy!

I can’t pinpoint exactly which summer it was, but it was summer and we were definitely in high school. Because all ridiculously mortifying experiences happen in those awkward years.

We were at my grandmother’s pool. We were playing monkey in the middle or keep away or whatever you want to call it. Darewood was in the middle with his crazy monkey arms that could basically get anything thrown within a ten foot radius (and I think Eric may have been there, too). Chelle was my partner in crime on the other side of the pool. Whatever we were throwing, it was in my hands.

Monkey in the middle.

Monkey in the middle.

Across the way, all 4 feet 11 inches of my bestie was jumping up and down trying to get my attention.  I could barely see her between Darewood’s height, huge head and crazy monkey arms. Finally I caught Chelle’s eye as Darewood moved to the side.

She was still jumping, but she looked kind of funny to me. Was it because she was so far away? Was it her height? Her hair? I couldn’t quite pinpoint what was off, but something was amiss. I heard her screaming, “I’m open! I’m open!” Right. I needed to throw it to her. And just as I’m about to toss the object her way, it clicks. Continue reading

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