Category — hobbies
Take these broken wings…
This is going to sound nauseatingly cute but, most mornings I make a lunch for Joe and put a sticky note picture on it. Oh come on, it’s adorable.
However, I got out of the habit for a few weeks about 3 months ago and when I decided to start again, it seemed like I couldn’t draw stick people anymore.
How ridiculous is that? All they are is a circle and some lines! But that morning, it was all misshapen heads and uneven arms and squiggly bodies.
I felt really disheartened. It should be simple, it’s stick people. I’m good at stick people!
After about twenty minutes and several crumpled up sticky notes, it all came back. I watched my hand make nice circles and put reasonably expressive faces in them with proper bodies, arms, and legs.
I don’t claim to be an artist, but I really like drawing stick people. It’s fun and it’s a nice outlet; I’d have been pretty sad if my “talent” for drawing them had somehow evaporated.
Plus, Sticky Note Friday would be a total bust without the sticky notes.
February 27, 2009 3 Comments
You’re a mean one, Mr. Grinch…
I was looking through the mess on my desk this morning and I found this:
It’s one of my earliest attempts (2001 or so) with water-colours and ink. I drew it using the original How the Grinch Stole Christmas by Dr. Seuss as a guide.
Four more days til Christmas! Woo!
December 21, 2008 2 Comments
I want my MTV
I just finished reading a great post on Pannonica’s site called A World Without Celebrities? and I had a few things still to say (I posted in the comments – but I can’t write a five-hundred word reply in there; it’d be rude).
Pannonica questions whether we, as a society, are capable of going without celebrities and all the attendant coverage and media madness that surrounds them.
Ultimately, she believes the answer is no – and I agree.
I understand why we’re obsessed: they’re beautiful, rich, they get to hang out with other beautiful and rich people. They wear designer clothes, drive expensive cars, live in palatial mansions and receive favours and gifts from people simply by virtue of being in the public eye.
I think we figure it like this: Some celebrities start out just like us – living a normal life, doing normal stuff, wearing clothes from Walmart or Target and then Something Magical happens and they are suddenly living like gods – the world at their feet, everyone wanting to know them, see them, and if at all possible, to BE them. They have everything.
We want some of the Magic too – we want to know how to get there and failing that, watching them do stupid things like get arrested for drunk driving, shaving their heads in a fit of madness and depression, or seeing a photo of them looking frumpy, tired and badly dressed is fair compensation. If we can’t have what they have, we want to see them lose it. Watching famous people mess up or look bad makes us feel better about ourselves. It makes them more human and brings them back down to our level.
What if we simply stopped being interested? What if, as Pan envisioned, we turned on the news and saw coverage of actual news instead of the latest shenanigans on Big Brother or American Idol?
What if we went one step further and deep-sixed our cable TV and picked up a book, or decided to spend more time with the kids instead of the idiot box? What if, at the grocery store we didn’t buy entertainment magazines because we simply didn’t care all that much about Brad and Angelina’s new babies? What if we stopped squeeing over their love lives and screw-ups?
What happens if we stop watching – and thus, supporting - crap like Big Brother, Blind Date, American Idol, America’s Top Model and all the other tripe that passes as “quality programming”?
It won’t happen of course. It’s far easier to be entertained than to entertain yourself. Simpler to veg out in front of YouTube or the TV and just let the voices and pretty colours wash over you.
Joe and I got rid of our cable over a year ago and it was weird at first. We had so much more time in the evenings. I spend more of it reading now, writing, playing video games and going out with friends, talking to Joe and generally being engaged with the world. We do buy a couple of shows on DVD (House M.D. and Heroes) but if I didn’t get to watch them anymore, I’d be OK with it.
After all, no one on their death-bed says, “I wish I’d watched more TV when I had the chance.” or “Please, God, just one more YouTube video of dancing hamsters and I’ll come quietly.”
A world without celebrities? I want that world, but I think I’m in the minority.
October 12, 2008 3 Comments

