The Twilight Report

Your Home For Snappy Repartee

rt: california

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Made two trips to California this year. The first was on a business trip to the NetCon all-hands meeting in San Jose. It was on a Monday, so I flew out the Friday before to hang out Tyler. I had been wanting to go to La Brea Tar Pits to see the dusty old bones. They had lots of wolves and a whole team of folks processing the remains on display.

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They also had some mammoths and mastodons.

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Here is one of the pits that they are taking remains from. It was stinky but interesting. I like old stuff.

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There are lots of gum trees (eucalyptus) in southern California. I am a little torn, as I love gum trees and they remind me of home, but they are not native and in California they are a bit of a pest. There are so many invasive species in Australia that have wrecked havoc on the native critters that I am not crazy when I see Australian species being a pest outside of down under.

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The second day we went to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) for a Tim Burton exhibit. It was a lot of fun. I kept seeing pieces and thinking to myself “I had forgotten that he had done that”. I had also just seen Ed Wood the week before. They were quite militant about ensuring no photographs were taken. Coincidentally, LACMA is right next to the tar pits we had been just the day before.

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We meandered through some other parts of the museum. Outside they had this great interactive sculpture that was a hit with the little ones.

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My second trip to California also piggy backed, in this case, Lena had a conference at the Disneyland Hotel. I flew in on the Friday, rented a car and we went to Disneyland on the Saturday. I am a bit conflicted about Disneyland. I don't view Disney very positively as a company, but Lena and my mum are both very fond of the place, and there is something friendly about the place. When I was growing up, we went several times.

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My favourite is Mr. Toad's Wild Ride, I think because I identify somewhat with Mr. Toad? Is that weird?

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The submarines have been mostly supplanted with Finding Nemo's Wild Submarine Ride.

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The Jungle Cruise is about 95% bad puns and 5% animatronic ducks.

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Me and the pirate ship. I don't think it is a pirate ship, but everyone seems to call it that anyway.

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It was nearly Halloween so there were lots of Halloween decorations. Speaking of Halloween they have also updated the Haunted House.

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On our second day in the area we went to the Richard Nixon Presidential Library. Richard Nixon has a bad rap because of the way he left office. He was an outspoken anti-communist, but in his library he honours a number of communist leaders, like Brezhnev and Khrushchev here. He was complicated. He also created the Environmental Protection Agency and ended the offensive biological weapons program by executive order.

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The grounds are really pretty. Nixon was born in the little house the other end of the reflecting pond that was built by his father, and he is buried near that. It is not a bad final resting place.

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They also have the helicopter that Nixon road away on after he resigned. It is a famous image I am sure you remember it. Lena took this cool photo of it.

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We went to Jack in the Box after the library, and I was almost ready to call it a day, but Lena found these cool ruins on the Internet so we drove down the 405. It's the Mission San Juan Capistrano. I like old stuff.

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pretty little court yard with bells.

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Stairs.

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A place to sit.

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Lena had a fun time photographing me through this window.

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They also had some fish.

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Babel

Thinking about Babel, which as mentioned in the previous post I saw yesterday. I’m not giving anything away by saying that the story is divided into three largely unrelated stories. The connection between the stories is tenuous, but they drive each other. The central characters for two of the stories have been nominated for best supporting actress: Adriana Barraza for her character Amelia in Mexico, and Rinko Kikuchi for her character Chieko in Japan. I wonder how unusual it is for a picture to receive two nominations in the same category like that. Anyway, the nominations, and the award if it follows, would be well deserved for either. Kikuchi (26) delivers a particularly believable performance of a deaf teenager.

It makes me wonder though, why “supporting” and not “starring”? It seems mainly because they aren’t Brad Pitt or Cate Blanchet, who received top billing. Their performances were good, but not brilliant by any stretch of the imagination. It seems to me the Mexican and Japanese stories are just as important, and much more interesting than the Moroccan (American centric) story. Making the American and Australian actors the stars and the supporting actress nominations for the non-native English speakers reinforces the belligerent Ugly Americanism of Pitt’s character, who sees the world revolving around himself.

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ex-IBMer

I've been an ex-IBMer for a couple of days now. I may therefore reveal that "The Company" = IBM. I am pretty sure that comes as a surprise to nobody.

Today is the first day that I would have gone to work if I hadn't signed those papers on Friday. My last day I felt oddly detached. I was immune to things and people that ordinarily bother me, like my manager and Jeff. On the other hand I went around and said good-bye to people. It's harder to go wrong with that.

My going away party was on Saturday at Brian's house. I will be seeing people this week, but it is probably the last time that I will see "everyone" together. (Not that it could really be everyone without Sherry, Megan, Joanna and Padraic). I got to say goodbye to Sherry over lunch a week or so ago, and I hopefully I will get to visit Joanna and Padraic in California before I leave.

Everyone should come out and visit me in Salt Lake City for a ski holiday (I'll be there about 6 February to 8 March, with a short trip to New Mexico sometime the week of 22 February), or in Australia (anytime starting May 2006).
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