Monday, April 8, 2013
A bag of lies
I hesitated before opening them. I can't say that I love truffles, and I was a little anxious about encountering their heady aroma. I imagined what I would write about these chips: "Truffle-flavored chips smell exactly as you would expect - like semen." Finally I poured myself a glass of wine, opened the bag, and... nothing. No truffle smell at all. I put a chip in my mouth. No truffle taste at all. I was astounded.
I tried to remember the last time I had been so let down by a potato chip. Cheeseburger flavored chips do not taste like cheeseburgers, but more like cheesy pickles and ketchup. But their addictive goodness makes you forget about the initial deception. That's all I can think of. Oyster chips taste like oysters, Caramel chips taste like caramel, Roasted Chicken and Thyme chips taste remarkably like the food they claim to mimic. Truffle chips taste like vaguely smoky Salt and Pepper chips.
As I kept eating I tried hard to find the trufflish flavor. The problem is, it's a flavor that's hard to mistake, at least for me. Scientists have found that people react to the smell differently. I don't believe I ever ate any chips from "Sibell" and I'm afraid these will be my last.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Despondant
Friday, March 15, 2013
Che cosa è?
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Ders Kerds Ern Brerklern
It all started when I took a intro improv class at the Upright Citizens Brigade theatre in New York. I was initially wowed by the talent of my classmates, and most of them had agents and real experience and intense aspirations to be professional actors. So when another student asked me to be in a short film, my first response was, "Why me?" Did the others refuse?
I actually thought I did OK and "kept up" while doing improv with the clearly more polished performers in class. I think that my only strength was precisely in my lack of polish, and my avoidance of over-acting or taking over the scene.
The director said she wanted us to do a lot of improv, but we would be shooting on film... and she was poor. So... erm.. clearly there's a conflict (she couldn't just leave the camera rolling and hope some improv gold comes along). We did do several minutes of improv but none of it made it in the movie. At one point I made the real estate agent snap out of character because 'I wasn't respecting her' during some improv (I had innapropriately put my head on her shoulder as she was rambling... not funny.) I stayed in character during and after her outburst... a tiny victory for my craft.
The whole on-set ambiance was just weird. We had only done one rehearsal (which went way better than the actual shoot). There was not enough time to establish any kind of rapport. When I showed up on set at the buttcrack of dawn (as instructed) the director barely acknowleged me. Her eyes were half closed as she grumpily slouched around. An hour later the other actors showed up. Then I had to wait even more while the college crew figured out how to load the camera. Free bagels!
The director had literally nothing to say about the takes. I understand she was preoccupied by the technical aspects, but no feedback at all? I should make it clear that I made a lot of mistakes, and horrible noob mistakes like looking directly into the camera. Everyone was stressed, and the fatality of the whirring film only added stress. I remember at the end feeling incredibly worn out. I had been there for 12 hours, and most of it was feeling hot and sweaty, unfunny, and self-conscious.
I sometimes feel like I shouldn't criticise anybody involved in this shameful display, but that would be to pretend that I have some sort of future doing this type of stuff. Freed of that burden, I can say that the writing stunk, the shot composition was questionable, and the editing was sloppy. And I'm a crappy actor! I'm still happy I was a part of it, and look back at that time with strange fondness.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Bite + Bite = Ouch
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Voleurs
In the past two days two people tried to rob me. First on the bus, a teenager tried to lift something out of my backpack and beelined out the front entrance of the bus (cleverly preventing me from getting at him because of the impending crush of boarding passengers), but another passenger stopped him. At first I thought the good samaritan was rooting through my bag, and I felt ashamed for yelling at him.
Then, late last night as I was walking home a group of 18 year olds drinking mousseux on the street asked me to come have a drink with them. They seemed like they were just drunk and having a good time (as I was) so I went over for impromptu good cheer. Within seconds one of them had his hand in my back pocket... and he wasn't flirting with me. I gave him an elbow and got the hell out of there.
Both attempts failed. The first punk, if successful, would've made off with a glorious booty of pencils, erasers, and used kleenex. The second insulted my intelligence by thinking I'd keep my wallet in my back pocket (not that this wouldn't have worked on me before). A shameful display all around.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Rue Consolat
I was looking for the apartment on la rue Consolat. I took a side street towards where I thought it was, and passed a portly woman sitting on a stoop and asked her for directions.
"Rue Consolat?" she pondered. "Non, je ne connais pas" she said deliberately. "Pardon!" she erupted, surprising me with her seeming inability to modulate her voice.
I continued to the next intersection and looked up at the corner of a building to see a blue sign that sure enough read "Rue Consolat". I looked over at the woman on the stoop who was less than 20 meters away. I waved and yelled "C'est ici!" but she didn't notice me.
After having established the location of the appartment I went to a small café I know to wait for the landlady who is notoriously late. It's a café I've gone to several times, mostly while waiting for Audrey who taught classes nearby last year.
The waiter brought me a pastis. The proper way to serve pastis is to pour a shot over an icecube or two and present with a bottle of water, allowing the customer to add the amount of water he prefers. My pastis came premixed, which is more and more common these days, and is surely an indication of the eroding morals and eventual descent of western civilization.
I was pondering the mysterious black specks floating in my glass when a drunk man in his 60's sat next to me. He opened his packet of cigarillos and asked me if it bothered me if he smoked. I acted surprised, since at least in France they haven't yet outlawed smoking outside.
"Je suis respectieux!" he explained. I appreciated that! He licked his finger and held it in the air. "Tu vois, le vent vient de ce côté, donc ça pourrait te gêner!" You're right, I said. I'm asthmatic I said. But I didn't say that I just don't like people breathing smoke on me, no matter what the associated health risks. He obviously didn't expect me to actually ask him to not smoke, and reluctantly said, well, I guess I'll go over there... No, no, no, I said, let's just switch seats. That way the smoke will blow away from me and you'll still be in the sun.
At first he was reluctant, but then his ruddy cheeks beemed, clearly pleased that we could come to such a civil and mutually beneficial agreement, and we congratulated ourselves for our sensitivity and politeness. Not a common sight these days, he'll tell me.
Now he was on my right. "Oh! Je vais commander" he said. He came back with a small glass of red wine. Since I engaged him before, he now felt comfortable to chat me up. He asked me what I do, and he told me he had heard about ancient DNA before. He told me about his cats and their names. He talked about how young I am and how old he is. I found out that he was a diesel truck mechanic. He punctiated all of his phrases by prodding my arm with the back of his hand.
He was a prodder. This inebriated exagerated tactile need that can be found worldwide. His hands were tough and dirty, and frankly I didn't like it at all. Relax, it's just your overcoat. Just the other day you scraped pigeon shit off of it without a second thought. The outside of my coat had become part of the public urban landscape.
Finally he remembered that he wanted to light his cigarillo. It was quite windy, and even someone with all of their senses would have a hard time. He failed miserably 4 times.
Then another customer's dog jumped on a passerby, who was drooling drunk. He was a poor, poor bastard, and decided to stop and slur indignations on the dog's owners. He told them that the dog damaged his pants. His hobo pants had so many patches that there was practically nothing left of the original set of jeans. He called the dog names.
The drunk next to me derided the other drunk, and if he wasn't such a nice guy he'd pop him one. Poor dog, he said.
Ah, just another beautiful Saturday afternoon in Marseille I thought.