Feb. 19th, 2007

gordonzola: (Default)
One of the things I did while sick this week was watch, "When the Levees Broke", the Spike Lee documentary about Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. It was well done and compelling, though a little depressing for the edgy emotional state I get into while sick. I watched it in dribs and drabs, sometimes because it made me cry and sometimes because I found I couldn't concentrate because of my sick brain.

The only part I watched where I was like, "Hmmm, this seems a little picky." Was the scene where a teenager gives a tour of his FEMA trailer, complaining about how cheaply made it is. I didn't dwell on it but Lee had just documented how few people had gotten the trailers at all so it seemed a little, I hesitate to write this, ungrateful. It was a minor moment, but to me it seemed like a false note, a moment of less righteous anger in a film where "righteous anger" was the baseline .

And you know what? I was totally wrong.

Not 15 minutes after watching that I read a Nation article that just came out. Written about a year after the movie was filmed, it detailed that those trailers are making people sick because the materials aren't rated for people to actually live in them. Truly much of New Orleans is toxic still, and it would be hard to separate the toxicity of formaldehyde from the toxicity of sewage, mold, etc without massive study. But, man… It just keeps coming.

In other movie news I finally saw "Pan's Labyrinth" last night. I never get tired of seeing Fascists killed, especially Spanish ones. My favorite scene was right near the end so I probably shouldn't mention it until the movie is out of the theaters, but as someone who grew up watching war movies the "Fuck your honor" moment was incredibly satisfying and against genre. As it should be.

I also somehow got that James Bond movie from Netflix... "The World is not Enough" starring Remington Steele. It was so bad that I actually returned it unfinished. I realized about half way to the mailbox that I actually forgot to watch the last 15 minutes and I totally didn't care. I swear I don't know how that got on my queue. I think the name confused me. Maybe I was thinking it was "The World Can't Wait" and it was about sectarian front groups, I dunno.

my debts

Feb. 19th, 2007 02:02 pm
gordonzola: (Default)
while sorting through my books, I realized that a bunch of folks loaned me books when I got my appendix out over a year ago. My memories of that time are fuzzy from the morphine so I totally don't remember who loaned me what. [livejournal.com profile] anarqueso? [livejournal.com profile] amarama? [livejournal.com profile] jactitation? Do I owe you guys books? Anyone else?

I will try and make a list later, but if there's anything you remember in particular, let me know.

Here's the list. I honestly don't remember which of these are gifts and which are loans.

Rennie Airth -- River of Darkness
Megan Abbott -- Die a Little
Ian Rankin -- Resurrection Men
Jeffrey Eugenides -- Middlesex
Iva Pekarkova -- Truck Stop Rainbows
Lisa Lerner -- Just like Beauty
Phillip Roth -- The Plot Against America
Phillip Roth -- The Human Stain
Barabar Wilson -- Murder in the Collective
Tim O'Brien -- The Things They Carried
Thron Kief Hilsberry -- What We Do is Secret
Ed Wood -- Death of a Transvestite
gordonzola: (Default)
Here are details about memorial services for Heather MacAllister next weekend. All events are open to everyone by the community and organizers, however El Rio is a 21+ venue and we're unsure how lenient they'll be for people with children and younger folks. There are also events planned Sunday in NYC and Detroit.

--------------------------------------------
Saturday, 2/24/07
7:00 pm
Goddess Rosary in memory of Heather MacAllister
HerChurch, 678 Portola Drive, San Francisco

This is a church that Heather used to attend, specifically for the "goddess rosary" services. The minister remembered Heather and offered to do a special service in her honor.


---------------------------------------------

Sunday, 2/25/07
1:30 pm: Funeral/Mourning/Goodbye ritual
Precita Park, corner of Folsom and Precita, San Francisco

2:30 pm: Somber procession (walking and driving) up Precita to El Rio

3:00 pm: Wake at El Rio, 3158 Mission St., story sharing, etc.
feel free to bring mementos, photos or other items for the temporary altar

--------------------------------------------

Thanks [livejournal.com profile] fattest

Profile

gordonzola: (Default)
gordonzola

June 2019

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425262728 29
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 6th, 2025 03:52 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios