Thursday, October 2, 2008

For someone who was (and is) a huge fan of mid-90's ska, this was pretty cool to see (it's the Cal marching band):


Monday, September 22, 2008

Not in my movie

Right now my wife is watching "27 Dresses." Even though this was a free rental, it still wasn't worth the time it took me to walk to the store on my lunch break and enter in the free movie code into the Redbox machine. Anyway, I think the reason I don't like it is because of Katherine Heigl. There are just some people that I would never put in a movie if I were a casting director. Here are a few of those people:

1. Katherine Heigl
2. John Lithgow
3. Michael Rappaport
4. Jeremy Sisto (the dude that tried to hook up with Cher on Clueless)
5. The blonde dude from Minority Report and Band of Brothers
6. Ashton Kutcher
7. John Leguizamo
8. Giovanni Ribisi (he played a weird guy on The Wonder Years)
9. Nicole Kidman (recently named the most overpaid actress)
10. Debra Messing (if this were in order in terms of most disliked, she would be number 1)
11. Dane Cook
12. Dax Shepard


Honorable Mention:
1. Eddie Murphy (He still has goodwill banked from Trading Places)
2. Cameron Diaz (If it wasn't for There's Something About Mary, she would be on the list above)
3. George Clooney (He was on the list until I saw Michael Clayton last week. Great movie.)

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

The bonnie banks of Loch Lomond

This past December I decided that it was time to hang up the blogging "cleats" and walk away from the game. Well, I'm back now and the best part is that I doubt anyone will read this.

Since finishing school and taking the bar exam a little over two months ago, I have been reborn, so to speak. I've picked up where I left off three years ago when I started law school. I'm reading books again, I'm happy again, and I've decided to try out some new things in my extra time.

If you are married, have kids, and are in school, it's almost impossible to have any kind of a hobby. That doesn't mean that the life of a young student-dad is depressing, it's just that other people come first when your bulbous nose isn't in a book. Here is a small list of things I would like to accomplish within the next few years:

1. Go hog hunting with a bow in central California (this is very close to happening and I will talk more about it later)

2. Write a book. I can't imagine wanting to sit down at a computer and write more after doing it all day at work, but I think it would be quite an accomplishment.

3. Buy a car.

4. Take cooking classes at the local community college.

5. Learn to play the baritone saxaphone.

These are just a few of the things that I would like to accomplish now that I'm done with school. Speaking of school, my ten year reunion was this past week. I didn't go. I wasn't planning on going and then I got the invitation and it was $90/person. I didn't feel like watching people I didn't like in the first place get drunk from the open bar that I paid for with my admission fee.

I think not enjoying your high school years is a hard concept for someone who did enjoy high school to grasp. For me it's like talking to someone who doesn't like cheese (even though he will never see this...my apologies to the one guy I know who doesn't like cheese. I'm sorry for all of the questions). I wish I could go back and talk to myself as a ninth grader. I would tell myself about how great life is once you get out of high school. Actually, I would probably tell myself to do home schooling since it probably would've been a lot more productive.

The question that keeps running through my mind is whether or not those four years are necessary for each individual to learn more about himself/herself. Is high school a necessary evil? Do you have to suffer through those four years to fully enjoy the college years that follow?

It finally feels like the high school yearbook has been closed now that my last friend from school is married. I think every person who has met his wife probably feels bad for ever bothering him about how long (relatively) it was taking him to get married.

In a sense, marriage is like your religion. Once you've converted, you want other people to convert too. It helps to justify your actions a little more. You also kind of look down a little bit on other people who aren't married and sometimes it's hard to be around them because they don't seem to think like you do. When you get together with other married people you talk about friends you know that aren't married and say things like "How come he isn't married? Is he gay? Is he just weird? Does he have fear of commitment? Is he selfish?" It's almost an insult to you that someone you know isn't married. The funniest part is that every person who has ever been married sometimes thinks about how great it would be to be single again. If it's a constant thought, chances are things aren't going so well for you in your marriage. But if the thought crosses your mind every once in a while, you are probably just like that other 99% of married people.

By the way, the whole being married/being a member of X religion is a great comparison in my mind, but it didn't come out so well typed. Maybe I should hold off on that book idea.