Sunday, January 3, 2010

क्या?!!

Why oh why was I being translated into Hindi? No matter. This is a brief entry to say farewell to 2009 and to Fridandme.
2009 saw me in the best physical shape I been in in years (although, the holidays have taken it's toll) and fortune allowed me to travel to my beloved Bharat twice. I can only hope that trend towards bliss continues.

As for Fridandme, it never had a focus or purpose. I just don't feel the need to stand on a soapbox and rant about the things that make me sad, glad or angry. That's what I keep a journal for and the day to day whimsies, that's what Facebook is for ( you may hit your virtual "like" button now).

Ciao and best wishes for a Happy Twenty-Ten or Two Thousand and Ten whichever you prefer.

Sherri
P.S. I expect that I will soon starting writing my other blog Biwi No3

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Garbage Strike Day 6

Here's a couple of pics taken on Queen Street.  I find it amusing that Torontonians in a bid to not litter,  removed the seal put on the public trash cans to prevent people from filling the cans the city knew were not going to be emptied, and filled the trash can.  And the when the trash can was full, they placed it close to where they know it should go.  " Look Mommy! I tried."

Why it didn't occur to any of these citizens that answer to their waste was to take a travel mug, bring a refillable water bottle, bring their own bag and take the garbage home with them.  Oh well, Queen St is the only neighbourhood I've seen like this.  Kensington, Yorkville, St. Lawrence, Chinatown are immaculate.  I'm making a generalization here but it is predominately youth that populate Queen Street and they are at a stage of life too self-centered to contemplate what impact their grande skinny caramel machiatto frappaccino has to their fellow humans.   Like all mothers say, " That mess isn't going to tidy itself.  Clean your room!"

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Short days, Hot Days



Time seems to follow the laws of physics and moves faster the hotter it gets.  It feels like just yesterday June began and this weekend it will be all over.  Solstice has past and the nights are getting longer; the days more humid. And the humidity has gone to people's heads as the city workers have gone on strike-no garbage pick up, no recycling, no pools, no community centres, no ferry for island residents, no childcare,  no public works.  The LCBO ( liquor store for those not from Ontario) threatened to strike leading to panicked shoppers emptying out stores.

The Worldwide Short Film festival wrapped up last weekend.  Pride is in full swing and Canada Day is just around the corner.  July is another cornucopia of festivals.

Many people ask me if they will ever have another chance to see films from the Short Film Festival.  There are many resources for short film.  There is Movieola the short film channel and if you are unable to subscribe, they post online.  If you live in Toronto or Montreal, the National Film board has Mediateque where you can sit a comfortable viewing station and access hundred's of the NFB's back catalogue.  They also have a number of films available on line.  And with a little research, I was able to locate a few films from this year's festival online ( I am in no way promoting them or rating them as favourites, they're just the ones I could locate):

Post-It Love  An endearingly sweet office romance.
Pencil Face   Lives up to the title
The Herd A little bit of documentary about an unusual member of the herd
Between  An experimental film exploring dark areas of human psyche
King of Laughter A documentary about the Guinness Book of World Records title-holder for longest laugh.
Lost Tribes of New York Funny animated film featuring voices of New Yorkers.
Everyday is Fish Day  A day in the life of an ordinary Norwegian fish.
Western Spaghetti  A creative animated dinner 
Loop Loop  A playful experimental film derived from film and stills taken on the directors journey in Vietnam ( I know I said I would not pick favourites but this was my fav of the few I had time to see.  The sound and editing are supurb)



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Thursday, June 11, 2009

Mmmmmm....brekkie anyone?

Oh, those mad Englishman.  Anyone from across the pond ( or staunch Anglophiles), will wax poetic on the British crisp.  The British potato chip is a very different affair.  Thin but firm, cut from smaller potatoes and flavour which seems to be a glaze on the chip, not the powdery mess of the North American variety.  And speaking of variety, the tastes are a tantalizing diversion-prawn cocktail, Worcester sauce, steak & onion, pickled onion, and the list goes on.  The leader of the industry is Walkers.

Over the years, Walkers has introduced many enticing, limited edition premium crisps.  One of the stand outs being roast lamb and mint.  It was just like eating roast lamb with potatoes and mint sauce ( of course, they did contain real lamb in the flavouring). 

Recently, they ran a contest called "Do us a flavour" inviting the public to submit flavour ideas. Six ideas were selected and produced in a limited runs: Cajun Squirrel, Fish & Chips, Chili and Chocolate, Crispy Duck & Hoisin, Onion Bhaji,  and the winner Builder's Breakfast.

Jamie Oliver must have blown a gasket when he discovered the winner.  All that hard work of getting the British off of greasy, processed foods undone with a single crisp.  "Oi.  Look at that! Full English in a convenient snack. Pukka, innit?"

For those not familiar with British foods, a "Full English" is a breakfast consisting of egg, bacon ( not the bacon you know ( that would be "rashers" in England)), fried potato, baked beans, sausage and fried tomato.  There are some regional variations such as mushrooms, blood pudding and fried bread.  Did Walkers succeed in capturing all that?
They did indeed.  In what a friend described as a "Violet Beauregarde" experience (view here if you need a reminder),  the flavour comes in waves.  Bacon. Pepper. Egg. Baked bean sauce.  It could be summarized as what the fried potato in a Full English tastes like after being dipped in runny yolk and the baked beans.  
My tastebuds eagerly await the next new flavour.

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Thursday, June 4, 2009

A short note

Here's a brief note until such time as I'm able to:
a) find time
b) compose my thoughts
c) do my laundry
d) get sufficient sleep 
and e) in general, get my act together

I am alive and well. Over and out.

P.S. a reminder ( plug) that I will be working for the CFC Worldwide Short Film Festival in a few short days.  Yo! Check it out dog!



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Thursday, April 30, 2009

April Showers

The last day of April is upon us and I can't be sure whether Spring has arrived or not.  The temperature has yo-yo'd all month between 7º-27ºC ( often on the same day).  
April has brought the gift of green.  Brown lawns have become lush again.  Spidery barren branches are dotted with green buds...and pollen.  The cursed, cursed pollen.

Unfortunately, I am one of the millions of allergy sufferers whose bodies unleash a fury against the perceived invasion.  My nose cannot distinguish between a little pollen and the swine flu.   I will spare you the messy details but imagine, dear reader(s)*,  your worst ever cold.  Then imagine that this cold will last from the first bud on the trees until every leaf has emerged.  That's Spring for me.   On any given day, you can check the pollen report to gauge my mood and physical condition.  If I go missing,  just follow the trail of empty tissue boxes.

Oh well,  it will be Summer soon enough...and heat, humidity, mosquitoes, smog.  

*I hope there is more than one of you out there.  Otherwise, I will keep my whining to my journal.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Out like a lion...

March closes it's eyes one last time.  Tomorrow, April will open it's eyes for the first time and the world will be renewed.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Frida and myself went to the ROM (Royal Ontario Museum).  I've been avoiding going since it's re-opening.  I loathe the Michael Lee Chin addition.  It's an eyesore; incongruous with the rest of the museum and neighbourhood. It looks like a battered, defeated Transformer has sat down on the building and died.  The addition has even proven to be dangerous.  Due to it's shape, it has grown enormous icicles in the winter requiring the sidewalk to be fenced off lest some passerby be crushed by it.

I wasn't in the door 2 minutes when I greeted by the Gestapo,  " You have to check your bag".  The request did not surprise me.  I've visited many galleries and museums around the world but the force used was uneccessary.  I turned toward the coat check, put my coat in my backpack and handed it to the attendant.

"That's one dollar"

"Excuse me", I replied, "the sign says bags are free.".

" Your coat in bag.  Coats one dollar".  We repeated this argument until I gave up and slammed a toonie on the counter.  You may think I was niggling over a paltry amount but how cheap is that for the museum to extract another dollar when it costs $22 Cdn for admission?!  The coatcheck is free in Britain's National Gallery ( which is free) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York ( which is pay-what-you-can).

When I calmed down and entered the lobby ( the former armories for those who remember the museum 2 renos ago) and was immediately baffled.  There was no signage ( except to the two restaurants) nor galleries visible to lure you beyond the empty space.  There was no natural flow between the galleries and often a long crooked journey.  God forbid you should stumble into the Michael Lee Chin crystal.  You are confronted with heavy industrial grey doors.  I watched people turn away from them or open them with great trepidation as there was nothing to indicate whether you were heading into a display or private area.  Once through the doors, its metal grate walkways that end abruptly into a corner and dizzyingly angled walls like being trapped in a German Expressionist film.  Don't look to closely where the crystal's walls meet the original structure.  It looks like a cheap slap-up job.
On to the next bone of contention-the cafeteria.  An overpriced menu catering strictly to the family crowd.  Burgers and fries, chicken fingers and fries, fries, poutine, pizza.  Pricey pasta and packaged sandwiches was the only adult fare( I'm excluding the nasty looking soups).  I opted for a grilled cheese sandwich for $4.50.  Two slices of squishy white bread and processed cheese served on a paper plate.  Add to it a coffee and a brownie for Frida and the bill came to $9.19.  Jamie Oliver has demonstrated that you can serve healthy cafeteria food and economically.  Look at the fantastic job the AGO has done and the food comes on china.  The Food Shop was appalling and came off as nothing more than a money making scheme.  A brief aside-Where did the drinking fountains go?  They used to be outside of the washrooms ( which have not been upgraded) and now they are gone.  Guess you have no choice but to buy bottled water.  This leads to the next unpleasantry.  I used the washroom off of the cafeteria, washed my hands and stuck them under the only hand dryer.  I'm assaulted by the odor of hot fresh diapers.  What fool designed a hand dryer with integrated garbage?
Back to the galleries.  The displays were confused with insufficient signage.  Cultures clashed with no clearly identified cases.  Aboriginal cultures were embarrassingly segregated from "civilised" cultures by a bridge.  The once thrilling dinosaur gallery ( many of my age group fondly recall the terror it instilled) is jammed into the akward space like one would discard items higgledy-piggledy in the attic.  There is no drama.
"Look at the lion!", said the girl pointing at a mounted tiger.  The mother didn't correct her not that there was sign for the mother to have read (presuming she didn't the difference between the two).  Which begs the question, " Is this the new face of museums?"  Have museums just become glorified gymkhanas?  I was nearly run down on many occassions by tank sized strollers with their passengers merrily eating, seated over enough luggage for a round-the-world tour.  Maybe this explains the lack of signage.  Who's going to read it?  The toddler?  The parents cooing over the baby and ignoring the toddler that's crawling under the barriers, sticky hands stretching towards irreplaceable objects?  The museum is just a background for family photos ( flash photos are permitted?!).  I'm not trying to condemn lack of parenting skills or consciousness but maybe, the ROM needs to build a separate children's museum where parents can let the kids off-leash.  It would be a good use for the abandoned Sir Robert McLaughlin planetarium.

I spent some time speaking with a visiting museum curator about the new ROM and he said this:

 " If you can't see the artifacts because of the building or display design,  the museum is a failure".

That sums it up.  The building and design overshadows what is a world class collection.  Treasures I adored are lost in the midst of design concepts or still off-display.  Wasn't the addition supposed to add gallery space not just be the architectural equivalent of a neon sign?
The one positive.  The fourth floor of the crystal houses the Contemporary Culture gallery  The current show "House Paint" brings together several of Toronto's spray artists to pay tribute to the former tent city.  It's bold and dynamic and the only exhibit that effectively claimed the space. 

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Sunday, February 15, 2009

Zoo Valentine's Day

Frida has returned from a long sabbatical.  She was upset over being denied a visa to India ( something to do with being a deceased Mexican artist made in China).  Anyhoo, she joined me on a trip to the Toronto Metropolitan Zoo.




To our surprise, the African elephants, tigers ( both Sumatran and Siberian ( also known as Amur) and lions were outside for the day.  The elephants were amazingly eating the snow.  Who knew?  They all had developed different methods for picking up the snow.  One elephant scraped it's trunk over the snow like it was making a snow cone.  Another, broke off a piece of ice and used it's trunk like a vacuum to bring it to it's mouth. 





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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

It's been a long, long, long long time


I am still alive and well.  And I did have a most fantastical time in India.  And I did make it home alive and relatively well ( a small dose of traveller's sickness which was more comedy than tragedy).

And what have I been doing since, you might ask ( well, why aren't you asking? Ask?!), and the answer would be everything and nothing.  I am no closer to finding the surface of my worktable or the other half of my couch than I am to creating a good piece of artwork but I keep working at.  My squared Moleskine ( and constant companion) has been joined by a Moleskine sketchbook to better capture my collages and doodles.  A new camera has inspired me to get out take longer walks and visit neighbourhoods that I haven't seen in years.  The re-newed AGO has become a boisterous temple I visit whatever my mood.  Nature has been teasing me away from the streets and I am always amazed at how close solitude can been found in Toronto.   And the coffee shops have been luring me in to scribble away the hours. 

And just tonight in an attempt to add some blogs to follow,  I inadvertly started another blog.  I don't write regularly in this one; I don't know what I'll do with a second.  Eeeeeepppppssss!




Sunday, September 28, 2008

हैप्पी दौघ्तेर्स Day

I don't why this computer just ओउत्पुत my Happy Daughter's Day into देवनागरी। I arrived safely in Dehli at 0035 this morning. It was really, really humid and hot. Today has cooled down to 29c or what I would call a good August day in Toronto.

Strangely, I haven't felt overwhelmed like I thought I might but I also haven't left the neighbourhood। Right now I would compare it to Buenos Aires but without the street signs, lights and paved roads।
ता फॉर नो.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

All Kit No Kat

I don't know what to make of this.  This morning I bought a Kit Kat.  When I bit into it, I discovered it was solid chocolate.  No wafer whatsoever.  I don't know that I was disappointed but it makes me think of the adage "expect the unexpected".  And this is how I will get through India.  

Tomorrow is the big day and it's just now starting to sink in that I am getting on a plane for India.  Am I ready?  Absolutely not.  

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

10 Days to Go

In ten days, I will board a plane for India.  People are asking me if I'm excited and the answer is, "No".  When I have a boarding pass in hand and passed through security, then I'll be excited.  Until then, I'm in stasis.  No lingering in the past.  No dreaming of the future.  Not even in the present.

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Falling off the Wagon

These guys just make me laugh.  

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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Zoom

I'm so very sad.  Zoom Airlines has gone out of business.  My heart goes out to anyone stranded; it's something I fear every time I purchase a flight.  

Of the many airlines I've travelled with,  Zoom was always my favourite budget carrier.  They always offered a level of service that exceded expections for the price of the flight.  The staff was always chipper and the snacks/breakfasts were tasty (it's not just me-check out the ratings on airlinemeals.net). 


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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Curious Foodstuffs

 This mushroom cropped up in Toronto's Sculpture garden a couple of months ago.  Looking at this photo brought a couple thoughts to mind.

Firstly,  I was visiting my local T&T Supermarket admiring the selection of exotic beverages when I came across asparagus juice.  This was no bad translation issue .  There was an illustration of what was most definitely asparagus stocks. The ingredient list confirmed my fears.  Who came up with this idea?  Was it some derranged parent that thought this would be a great way to add more veggies to their child's diet?  Someone who likes to eat asparagus but hates all the bother of cooking it?  Did I miss an article on a bumper crop of aspargus that had to be juiced because the asparagus market was flooded?  I hope somewhere in the world this is a delicacy and that being seen sipping your tetra pak of asparagus juice assures you entrance to the upper eschelons of society.

Secondly, I purchased some mock chicken loaf this week.  Fear not!  This was not the action of an addled mind; it was nostalgia.  I was fed a lot of it when I was a child.  That, and mac and cheese loaf but that's another story.  As an adult,  I find it most curious.  Why was it called mock chicken?  It doesn't taste like chicken.  It doesn't look like chicken.  It's not made with chicken. Is it because of that paprika coating?  Was there ever a time that the price of chicken was so great that it warranted producing a pork-based chicken substitute?  I just don't know.  

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Thursday, July 3, 2008

John Barrowman at CBC-The Movie

While traveling through the wilds of the internet, I discovered this video of John Barrowman signing autographs at the CBC.  I laughed when I remembered the story he told about having a cardboard cutout of the Capt. Jack photo he was signing.  I was surprised when I heard my laughter in the background.  But I was knocked of my chair when I realised  I was in the video.


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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Mermaid Parade 2008


Here is Frida on top of 50 Rockefeller Plaza.  

June 21 we took a madcap trip to New York to see the Mermaid Parade on Coney Island.  
The journey started with an overnight bus trip arriving at Penn Station 8 AM Saturday morning.  After breakfast at the Tick Tock diner, we took a friend to see some sights-Rockefeller Plaza, Times Square, Staten Island Ferry before taking the long subway journey to Coney Island.

The parade is a magnificent affair; a bohemian fantasy of glitter and paint, sweat, blood and beers.  And we could not have asked for a better day.  It was sunny, 27˚C, blue skies and no humidity.

When the parade ended,  the boardwalk became a heaving sea of humanity.  We dove in for awhile and all too soon, it was time to go back to Manhattan to catch the bus home.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

John Barrowman at CBC


What a treat!  To promote the new CBC television series "How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?",  the 10 Maria finalists, Simon Lee, Gavin Crawford and  "genetically perfect" John Barrowman made a lunchtime appearance at CBC Toronto's Barbara Frum atrium.  

I managed to grab a couple of pics and an autograph and learned that John will be in our Pride Day parade.  Doctor Who and Torchwood fans rejoice.  Lay-ee-odl-lay-ee-odl-oo!

 

WSFF Jun 10-15


Frida snapped this picture of me Sunday in between thunderstorms.

I took holidays from my day job to work for the Worldwide Short Film Festival.  It was physically exhausting working on average a 12 hour day with no dinner breaks, 5 hours sleep but always worth the effort. Reunited with old friends, worked with some fantastic volunteers and was party to a friend's most embarrassing festival moment ever ( to which I will only taunt you).


Seeing how I was working,  I saw very few films.  My favourites were "I Am Bob"- a comedy starring Bob Geldof, German drama "Sommersontag"and "Wishbone and the Machine"-a captivating film of kinetic sculptor Arthur Ganson.

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