idiosyncreant: cartoon avatar of blue eyed redhead with curly hair, underdyed with black (instaloli)
This is a rant that has been coming on for a while, because I've been binging on Lord of the Rings movie stuff after long abstinence, because my brother sent the family the Lego game for Christmas, and you know how it is with that little taste of an old addiction...

Anyway. Viewing it in a sort of post-LotR-dominant world is a little bittersweet.

Here's the thing: fans have gotten so jaded about it.

Yes, everyone has a right to gripe about the things left out. Whether there were inferiorities.
(For goodness sake, *I've* discovered that I've outgrown this vision of Faramir, and Strider's so hot I'm reluctant to leave that part of the movie behind...)
But fandom loves too well to hate a thing because it became popular with the mainstream, having gone outside the original fans (which is rot, my mother was in high school when these books were having their first revival of popularity, these fanchildren can get over it)

And it's so rank of privilege, in a way.

This movie was my Star Wars. I grew up watching movies with the toolset to create fantasy worlds from it's pioneering, but Lord of the Rings was the kind of awestruck experience that I think the first generation of Star Wars viewers felt in the theatre. There was an art to it, a skill to the mastery of new and old techniques, used to a whole other level. Suddenly, even what you could do with writing had to level up accordingly.

It was a masterpiece. John Howe and Alan Lee helped create a thematic realization of their whole bodies of work in fandom. Weta Workshop pushed the envelope for skill and artistry in both digital and physical design. Whole ranks of artists labored, some of them just to put together masses of chainmail, for years, that would hang right and be structured correctly.

And so maybe Peter Jackson has jumped the Phantom Menace shark with the Hobbit. My teen brothers love it, because it's the sprawling epic fantasy they are looking for, though the reason I love the Hobbit best of all books is because of the quiet threads of British humor and Bilbo's delightfully domestic outlook on these events of great moment. The man is an artist, like anyone, and can you imagine living with that over your head, as probably the greatest achievement of your life or at least the most notable? Who wouldn't go into a bit of sequel madness?

(And let's not even try to figure out how much studio politics must have gone into this incarnation, as well. Jackson got to produce LotR without any forces of expectations of a knowing public, and very little oversight from powers that be. That has no doubt changed a LOT.)

And you know what? I am SO SICK of feeling defensive because I fell in love with this movie, and gave it a piece of my heart I am never getting back.

Lord of the Rings was amazing.

So maybe Orlando Bloom, not so much.

And ten years from now, there'll be a more artsy rendition in which all the characters are less archetypical and more artsy, and I won't like it as well, but I'll give it a fair chance. But it'll be because PJ made it possible.

And no doubt some coming-of-age filmmaker who imprinted on that masterpiece will be doing something spectacular with innovations we can't even imagine.
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by which I mean I just sent an e-mail to Robin McKinley's actual factual e-mail address.

Amazing.

I am going to post it here, because why not? Apparently by sending her mail I give leave for her to publish any questions and responses to her blog, which is alright by me.

Dear Ms. McKinley,


Recently I was nudged to, for real this time, write to you. I saw
Sunshine on the library shelf last week, and got it out to encourage the
library in this behavior. I'm rereading it, and it's been long enough
since I read it the first time I am rewarded with the slacker bookworm's
greatest prize: I don't remember most of it. Lovely book!


A Long-Deliberated Fan Letter )
I also sent three short stories out, an act which I haven't done even for *one* short story in many, many moons.

So basically my virtue is restored except I'm not sure this really makes up for watching about 17 total episodes of drama in the past week, but yanno.

Each day is a clean slate?
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courtesy lastfarewells of Tumblr

It may be I'm out of my mind.

But from this angle, my K-Pop crush looks like Spock...
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Spoiler Disclosure: I do not find it possible to write about things at any length without revealing some of what is going to happen. I don't think any of these things will be enough to ruin the twists and turns of this drama if you have yet to watch it, or all of the episodes I've managed to watch so far. But if you want to go in completely unaware of what's going to happen...skip. Your loss. ;)


That said. I've only watched through episode 6, don't spoil me! XD;




1.

I approve of the way you have seen how we fangirls* can appreciate a Motley of Men who are neither young nor beautiful (I blame Sungkyunkwan) and have decided to make City Hunter a festival of mature actors.



Best sidekick ever, actually.


*including myself sort of generously in this teen-dominated field, because many of the fan "girls" of better K-Drama are in fact old like me, and not teenagers--there's even a regular fangirl at DramaBeans.com who's actually a married man. I think that's both fantastically weird, and seriously awesome.


2.

I approve of whoever is letting Lee Min Ho(t) move from role to role in very different shows.* There are shades of the arrogant rich-boy tormenting poor-girl that made the JunPyo and JanDi dynamic, in the romance here, but we know he's actually grown up being trained as a guerrilla warrior, and the girl is less Special Snowflake, more Kick-to-the-Face Awesome. So that's, you know. Different.

Yeah, let's look at his projects: The first? Straight up teen drama. The second? Straight up career rom-com. This third? ACTIONADVENTURESTRAVAGANZA thank you. We will be happy to see Lee Min Ho iPad hack the government from on his stunt bike at any time.

*Please, please, let this happen to Hyun Soo as well. Tx.)



3.

I approve of having even the heroine in a story be carrying guilt and secrets and motives (instead of being the only white hankie in a field of blood-stained bandannas).* And the way that we see things creeping toward a gnarly mess with all these people who are interconnected is fantastic writing. I seriously love that everything runs deep and soon it will blow up like a landmine. And there will be loss of limbs. PRECEDENT.

*yeah. That metaphor could be either really awesome or really stupid, but I'm not capable of judging that right now...






4.

I APPROVE OF VILLAIN DADDY

I mean. Man.

He does unscrupulous things, and it's a part of who he was made to be, as a special operative. By the men he's set out to destroy with that very cold, calculating goal-driven attitude that caused them to betray him.

And he is an amazing villain, who just happens to be also the boss of the hero. And I can't wait to see how they're going to eventually come against each other and see Min Ho's character beat such an awesome guy.


idiosyncreant: cartoon avatar of blue eyed redhead with curly hair, underdyed with black (Default)
on the last post

in the 5th episode's preview, it really looks like the hero-guy is going to veer toward hero-girl because of how in episode 4 she, very much in a wife's role, has smoothed things over with his work, and is supporting him wisely when his own arrogance has got him in trouble.

Granted, he's a bit upset about something Girlfriend did.

BUT STILL
telling the hot girl, that the girl she's manipulated him into pretended a relationship with, is awesome because of this very matronly trait?
THIS HAS NEVER BEFORE BEEN SEEN IN DRAMAS
and actually, for a very matronly-skilled sort of person is hugely exciting. XD

This drama. It is more awesome than I even knew, earlier this morning.



Oh Powers of Drama, if you muff this, I will be impressed.
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Oh, Mike He.

I so want to believe in you.
But you look like your Calling Big Star character--worn out on acting. Doing it for the career.

I will hold to my hope that soon someone will hand you something exciting again.

Meanwhile, skimming lightly over Sunny Happiness,

I remain,

provisionally yours



P.S. I note you are 28 now, and maybe just looking older. BUT don't make those excuses. I've seen Lee Sun-Gyun and he's always been older than that. And yet he's on FIYAH.
*cough*
Sorry. But yes, this is a threat.
Love and doubting, Bethany P.
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I'm having a poetry identity-crisis, which is not helped by the fact that one of the main instigators is now giving me mixed signals. 0_O

Is it okay for me to use complete sentences because that's my style, or are you going to rant at me again? MAKE UP YOUR MIND.

...anyway. BUT my spinster skill is currently behaving and we now have this:



Eboshi Robes
is yet another Mononoke themed yarn, but was never meant to be Ashitaka, so see, it's DIFFERENT. I've been wanting to do her for a while, and this one did not disappoint. I ended up throwing in more bright stuff, off the cuff, as I was blending up portions, and I'm really glad I did.

This looks a little more particolored, but in person, the bright parts make the dark foundation just pop more.

My brother commented that this looked like a Toothless yarn to him [foreshadowing]
because this next one is even moreso. I just did it based on colors that would look good with this orange ply I have orphaned from Tatara Nightfall, but as I added a blue strand, and threw in some highlights of lighter blue and purple, I realized it was turning into colors just like his mottled black-blue skin. Even if it doesn't end up looking much like Toothless once plied, it's going to be pretty.

There is no teal for the orange and brown to run amok on.  -_-
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I'm having a relatively good time, reassembling the opening of Vigil.

For one thing, it's wicked good to just have the thing feeling like it's WORKING.
The first time, there were things I really liked about each character, and each conversation, and a lot of the scenes...but no real chemistry.

And now it seems like that's fixed. I'll finish the redraft of a certain scene and chuckle evilly.

Because everything makes that zinging sound as it goes by.



***

I wanted How To Train Your Dragon Sunday, and it was awesome and adorable, and a piece of art in every way (except maybe plot, which was a solid, working form, no complaints)

but

The SCORE. It is a seriously masterful fusion of Celtic and modern world-style melodies in a symphonic soundtrack. It ranks as one of the few scores that while hearing it made me not only more excited about the story, but really made me want to hear the music itself.

This may  seem to be a problem, as far as just underscoring the story without being obtrusive, but I'm a musician of a kind, the same as I am a storyteller, so I notice what's working. Lord of the Rings was one score where sometimes the music was so amazing I thought "I have to know who is doing this". Pride and Prejudice was another.

I'm particularly drawn to notice when they use themes from the actual story (P&P: Regency/Baroque phrasing) to be part of the world-building in the music.
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Nobody told me Brian Jacques was gone.

It must have been one of the library trips I missed, working. And I was kind of waiting for news on Diana Wynne Jones, but I didn't know anything of him, to keep an ear to the ground. The NYTimes on it...

So this is all old-news, and maybe it will seem like not-very-big news, but we're dealing with my scale of importance here.

I feel a little sad about it.



Everyone has an author like this--you grow up and laugh at how awesome you thought those books were when you were small.
It becomes a memory of growing up, the time you realized that you were getting tired of the books being the same.

I'm very loyal, and it felt like I was betraying something, to no longer have that same fire of love for it. It was a little painful.

Brian Jacques' books were the ones that I adored around the same time I  started writing novels of my own, at 11, 12, 13. The first I collected for myself with my own money.

Now I'm much older, I'm not  dismayed about my love for them, or the fact that I outgrew them, anymore.



Redwall was my first epic fantasy. You may argue the descriptor here, but with these books I first met the concept of valorous death, the fascination of warrior-lore--about sacred swords, and brotherhood in battle. I've since lost a little of my taste for a lot of these tropes without really masterful handling and more subtlety, but the bright shining images of these scenes are part of my literary heritage now.

I also probably encountered for the first time in the series a book that did not end the way I expected, so much that I revolted against it--only to later learn why it worked.

Characters that you wanted to see more of died. People were changed by their experiences, so they couldn't go back to how they were. But good always got the better of it, and no matter how bad things got, with enough friends different from themselves, the heroes and heroines always found their way through.

Plus, there were some really cool, tough warrior girls. I wished I had half their sass...

Redwall Squirrel by Skyelar

So here's to Brian Jacques! I know for a fact he'd rather we drank to him than anything else.
Thank you for helping raise me as a bitty writer, and I hope someday to do you proud.

***


...n'aw man, now I'm going to cry. WHY DO YOU PLAY ME THE SAD THEMES FROM GHIBLI FILMS RIGHT NOW, SHUFFLE MODE
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i need to figure out how I want to write out Korean names, this is getting ridiculous



Oh honey, I take back all the mean things I ever implied about you.

I mean, the things I actually said, about your acting, and That Show in which you started your acting career, are still accurate, and I'm pretty sure I still don't know if you should keep on being cast as a romantic lead since you show so little chemistry with cute big-eyed girls (and I can hardly Google a name like yours and the big question with any trust in the results) BUT

I had kind of assumed you were in a boy-band because you look like ^ [that] ^ and can sing a little, though I'd never heard any of your music.
I also kind of assumed the same was true of why you were cast in dramas in the first place.

But now we're hanging out together in WGM reruns (is it a re-run if I'm pulling them up on the internet?) I was starting to see that charisma that got you into trouble in the first place. If I were to connect with any character from one of your shows, I'd say I totally see Baek Eun Jo in you--that is, Seung Jo's mini-me, who is a little less chilly, a little more emotive, and FREAKING ADORABLE



*cough*
'm all right. Just a little babo-noona moment there.

[I really am becoming an aunt-person overnight, it's kind of scary. I gave my sister my leather jacket last night because she looks better in it.]

Anyway, back to you, Hyun Joong.

When I actually realized I was so wrong about you, though, was when I heard you and the boys singing a capella.
This does say something about me, but even more about you, because if you sound that good on reality-tv-steady-cam A CA-BLOODY-PELLA well

let's just say I will never ever ever ever ever dismiss your talent out of ignorance again.

Being adorable in a kind of bent way in personality helps your case with me a lot, yeah, but that was around from the beginning and I was not won over despite being amused until that moment.


***


This has been Letters to Superstars, a new segment in which Bethany publicly airs things she wishes to tell uberfamous people she will never get to talk to in person. Since most of the people she has these sorts of intense bursts of interest over don't speak English as their first language, she figures she's at least safe from them being embarrassed about it, though they will no doubt become private entries after a couple of years...
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Sometimes I'm a bit sad to know that any future children of mine will live in a house that's quiet and orderly...

because that's certainly the way this house is when my mom's gone for a while and I'm in charge. And it's so different from how I grew up!


My parents are away, going to a conference for my dad's work, and then a few days of tourism. It feels like a vacation here, too, because the sun has returned, and the rhythm is different--I'm getting out and gardening a lot as well as cooking. Trying to get some sort of extra housekeeping task done each day. Today I need to photograph yarn, on my own side...



This is my Hobbit yarn, Smaug Napping. I think he's stinkin' cute, but don't tell him that, at least not in those words...



I have to get more of him, though I spent a good hour (and 217 shots) on it the other day--I hadn't done the step yet of shocking it into place in hot water, and whacking it out to fluff it a bit. He looked pretty good before, so I thought it was okay, but he's a GORGEOUS specimen of dragon now. Feh.

At least I have a completely unphotographed yarn to make it less of a rerun. Another try at an Ashitaka yarn! Still not *quite*...
but let's be honest here.

I have a passion for Ashitaka and Princess Mononoke that can carry me through DOZENS of yarn projects.



Also, I have come up with the perfect rendition on the proposed LJ name, which makes it less of a poetaster and more of a fun change. YAY, now to decide to shell out for it...
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Pasta was an odd show--in that there were several reasons I wouldn't have liked it, if presented with them, though only one even phased me while I was watching...

Cut for the Dissenting, i.e. non-K-Drama-addicts, of my F-List )



In the end, the stumbling blocks that would have made it not work for me in a more standard show were trumped by the fact that sometimes it went with K-Drama tradition, but in certain key places it veered off from expectation.
Taking the main annoying antagonist of the characters, and putting him at a disadvantage, so he's more that character who's always bumbling along trying to do the evil boss's bidding--except he's got no evil boss. Taking the wide cast of characters and pitting them against each other, and weaving them into shifting alliances.


Even taking the two characters I kept confusing for each other, and putting them side-by-side, being annoyed by their similarities.

In the end, the humor of the show was more subtle and humane than most of the dramas I watch. I'm impressed.
...And I got to see mah favorite Ajussi get the girl, even if he had to be a jerk to do it. 9_9
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Princess Lolly! Soon to be visible on Etsy, as well! But for now drying after a quick bath.
I had a delightful time combing together the colors for this--trying to go for an iridescent candy look, just like the lollipops on the gameboard I remember. After a few mini-batts I wasn't psyched by I figured out the trick to leaving them kind of painterly in stroke, and just admired the colors going together...



I mention this because it's a detail that's not really obvious in the yarn itself, but is very important to me, stylistically.
... what a stuck up thing to have to say. >,<

It was one of those projects that seems to take way longer than usual--and the reason on this was because I was spinning 300 yards! This is fantastic, for me.

And it just turned out really nicely...

***

Kodama Forest did not quite come out the way I'd wanted it to, but apparently it came out well enough! I sold it this morning after listing it yesterday...to a Ravelry friend, but that totally counts.



I'm going to try again for the same theme--being Ashitaka of Princess Mononoke--but with a roving that's dyed just perfect for him, instead of trying to cobble together his colors from odd ends, and ending up with only the forest colors being really strong.

***

Today I improved on my first sunburn of the year from the other day by doing more garden restructuring--which led to a visit to the store for a new gardening fork, after I busted one. My complete glee to be picking out baby plants to bring home made me realize I've never actually done that before--adopted plants from other homes, yeah, and been handed things to plant, sure. Not the same!

I just HAD to get the dianthus named "Firewitch" and then I bought her a friend, some Irish Moss, because in for a penny...
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Pasta is getting more and more fetching as it goes along--the strength is the characters, rather than the plot or the cinematography, so the way it's unfolding makes a lot of sense.

It is, however, still a rare specimen in that way.

The one I've really been won over by is Secondary Lead Man San, who is decently matched against my top middle-aged crush by being more conventionally handsome, and having a voice not quite as distinctive but definitely in the running. I mean, if *I* was being playfully wooed by one and playfully tormented by the other, I would have a hard time picking, too...



One thing I like about him is you get this vibe that it's a crush that's lasted longer than he expected, and now they're in more direct contact it's getting swiftly worse. He's never been very serious, and his heartbreak is starting in realizing his mistake--how hard is that, realizing it's real because you've lost your chance? Yoo-Kyoung the adorable still treats him the same, and that makes it obvious she has no clue.

It's his own fine fault, but that don't ease the sting...

And I'm curious, watching him stew a bit, what he's going to do to make her realize. Man, we have 10 more episodes, though, so I'll keep still...

The female second lead is also rare, instead of being one of those venom-bots with no human motive in their mechanizations of EVIL

Yoon-Ju mug courtesy DramaBeans.com

or even the more reasonable, but somehow surreal tenacity of Bitter Bitter Jealousy of less beautiful, less successful, but at least CHEERFUL people

In-Hee moment of vulnerability courtesy ibid

we have a chick with long hair, a bright smile, a somewhat fluctuating motive, tho' her tenacity links her to the above sleek-coiffed Ambition Divas. I'm not sure what Secondary Girl wants from her Ex, because she's not really doing what anyone would call good at making up with him. She's said in the latest episode I watched that she wants to be acknowledged by him--with her history of getting ahead by betraying him, rather than being the best, she's probably trying to exorcise that.

Though it's hard to tell with an actress who just smiles in her incredibly adorable way to give punch to any line of significance, I'm thinking she's got this bulldozer way of proceeding, and so this is her way of making it up to herself.



And what's up with her and secondary lead Man?

Something else I'm halfway into the show and can't figure. I mean, Se-Young pretty much doesn't seem to see our Lead Girl as a threat at all, so it's kind of hard to tell which guy she'd be jealous over...




But, you know. These two are just going to end up together, so it doesn't really matter.
This is my own abysmal screencap, to get a shot of that mad fashionista scarf, but it really actually captures the charactters and their interactions so far REALLY well.

After the first episode he yelled in, his shouting is more an outburst of frustration now than terrorist tactics, so I'm okay with him. Not in love, but...

It doesn't matter, because Yoo-Kyoung is so adorable and yet strong that I'm happy every time he's nice to her and snicker every time he's mean and then smirks as soon as she's out of the room. And also, I want him to get over his past heartbreak.
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I'm about to watch the finale of My Princess.

This show is utter fluff. However, it's fluff that takes its artful aspects seriously, and knows where its charm lies, so that it was fun to watch the whole way through.

song seung-heon,k-drama,korean drama,my princess,park haeyoung,hae young,mr p

The sets are not only gorgeous, but the shots are set up so that comes through. Most of the opening shots of important scenes are painterly in composition. The mix of new palace grandeur and old royal style don't clash. The music is subtle.

 



My favorite thing about the music is that they never overused it. There are several scenes that would have been looped with the themed emotion soundtrack song in most dramas. In this, they trusted the actors to carry the moment, and there was space because of it. (I also get to enjoy the songs after looking them up, because I have hardly heard them!)

The usual summary makes it seem like a rip-off of Princess Diaries or many other similar tales, so I'll recap what I think is the actual plot:

(mild spoilers for the first few episodes...)

Seul Lee has spunk and self-confidence, though she drools over her history professor in class rather than hearing anything he's saying.



She's more gratified than surprised to find out she's a descendant of the royal family of Korea—but when the big business tycoon who's trying to reinstate the monarchy confesses to this is the cause of father's early death and fugitive life, she wants nothing to do with it. This suits his grandson, since his inheritance was going to be given to the Royal Foundation, and he offers to pay for her to leave the country until it's a moot point.


Seul thinks she can go to Egypt and bump into her history professor there, like the Indiana Jones she's imagined him to be—but after her dramatic goodbye notes to her mom and said professor are delivered, they discover she's been barred from leaving the country.

As with all good stories, Hijinks Ensue.

And now I've finished it...javabeans at DramaBeans.com mentioned there was tension, and of the right kind, to the end, and I am kind of awed by how they managed that. I mean...there was even an airport in it, and no one cried or kissed or was dragged back out of the airport itself. IN THE LAST EPISODE.

This alone gets a drama shiny star stickers in my book. I mean, seriously, the carrying-on-in-the-airport scene is so overdone I dread seeing airports in dramas. In “My Girl”, the heroine staging such a scene to get past security is hilarious for the very reason that you recognize it and know everyone else does, too.


And of course, because there are men in My Princess who are professionals, they have some excellent suits...
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A whole subculture of my F-List was posting about Avatar: The Last Airbender, finishing the shows and so on.

I had watched the first episode early last year (? maybe?) and never got back to it, so I figured now was the time to buck up and do it.

I'd mistakenly said something about it being the American voice acting that bothered me the first time--this is true of any anime I watch, anyway. I'd rather watch it in Japanese, even if the casting is usually obvious. It may be partly that it weirds me out to see Japanese people speaking in English, or something--being stubborn, as if I understand the original language's intent that didn't have to be translated.

Actually, it's the animation of Avatar that sorta bothers me--the exaggerated expressions for some reason niggle at me ways the Japanese animation exaggerations don't. (The ones that I've seen.) I didn't grow up on American cartoons, so I'm just not accustomed? I guess.


Anyway. It's a perfect match for me now I can knit. I don't have to look at any expression for long, as I glance down at what I'm doing.
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Winter has returned to Oklahoma, as if we needed a reminder it's still February. Pity.

I am happily scribbling away, and knitting away, too, to try and justify this new bizarre taste for Korean idol reality TV. (Don't ask.)

Yesterday I bought a great little book at the library book sale called The Nanny Handbook, the 2003 edition but with some much more outdated ideas. This is actually a resource for Vigil, which is officially working titled: The Nanny Rules of Vigil Assistance because rather than being sidekicks for the superheroes, they're more like PAs. And being PAs to semi-celebrity law enforcer superhumans is...a lot like being a nanny.
I'm hoping that the book will help me come up with the comic strips Jackson is going to be creating, but it's great entertainment on its own.


snippet: Jackson's First Day At Work

The man who threw open the door was the classic white posterboy for college extracurriculars or trendy jeans, except old enough to have laugh lines. The dark blonde of his hair, and lighter, scraggly half-beard brought out his jaw line and dark eyes. These eyes seemed to flinch when he saw her, but his smile right after that was warm enough. Maybe it had been the sunlight.

Hi, I'm Jackson Marino, with Vigil Assistance—”

You're even almost on time—I just blew up the microwave. Do you know how to work a gas range?”

He stood still, as if she wouldn't be welcome to enter if she said no.

I've operated a couple,” she said carefully.

Great, come on in.” He led to the kitchen. He wasn't very tall, she realized—when he'd been barring the door he had been disproportionately intimidating. “To be honest, this morning I had no idea what they thought you could do for me. I do all the cleaning for Karel anyway, he's just the living alarm clock. Don't take this the wrong way, but I am out of diapers several years now. You know what they say about acting high and mighty, though. Of course the microwave was going to blow.”



KPop Mini-Feature of the day: A Live Performance with a neat show idea for mostly non-dancing ballad crooners, 2 AM
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The first episode only had snippets of what the students at this performing arts school were doing, so I kind of planned to come back to it later for the *promise* of seeing that stuff. The focal character had gripping problems, but she also has attitude problems, and not the fun kind...

Watching first part of the second episode, though, I've already gotten a more awesome moment of the arts-in-media than I expected.

The character in focus above sees the one out of focus dancing in an outer hallway of the school on audition day. The dancing is really captivatingly good--but they way they show the guy we already know as a break-dancer being transfixed by the clean style and movements of this other dancer is just AWESOME.

And after some drama, our hero's alone on a rooftop, drops his bag, has a flashback--and begins to dance himself.


It's not the same. They're two different dancers. But you can tell what he was looking at.

And that's what it's like, those moments when you confront something of the art you're hungry for.




K-Pop Not...I now am fully behind the pop-star casting of several roles now, because those boys have been trained to bust a move, if nothing else...

uh-oh.

Feb. 1st, 2011 10:33 am
idiosyncreant: cartoon avatar of blue eyed redhead with curly hair, underdyed with black (Default)
I seem to have found a K-Pop girl group I like. I mean, "all their songs on YouTube I will listen all the way through" kind of like. 0_o



(You don't have to watch this.)

I poke at why this terrible thing has happened to me )

Also, at one point apparently the 80s came back hardcore in Korea...mostly, I'm sure, because they didn't have them the first time around. But the clothes are just so fun to look at...

...yes, I'm all about the hobo-chic, okay?

There is no excuse for this post, except that when I have something I like that I know I should be ashamed of, I pretty much confess straight away. I'm not very good with my own secrets.

Also, there are two non-Koreans in this group: Amber, the rapper, is a Chinese-American for whom Korean is a *third* language, and Victoria, second from the right with the mahogany hair, is a Chinese girl.

I've been saying that I think Korea is the real upcoming star as far as entertainment goes, and it occurred to me that this is another sign: how many people they're able to draw from abroad. Not only do their pop groups have a following in other Asian countries, but they even have tours and events in the US that are growing.

I've been scoffing at the idea of an Asian actor moving to the US and maintaining their same stardom (because American entertainment is prejudiced, sorry--it's true) because in manga and dramas, it seems to be an unrealistic idea. But then I was looking up Rain, to see if it WAS the same guy who was cute but not very deep as an actor in the K-drama Full House, and found out that Ninja Assassin got him an MTV award, and he was on the Colbert show.

Whenever I scoff, I get duly punished. XD



Rain and Victoria and DANCE DRAMA

Now, off to watch We Got Married - Khuntoria couple

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