Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Tuesday, 21 August 2012
Paris Part Deux...
Paris, in all her gay abandon, sizzled.
It was warm. I did get rather hot under the collar. But I breathed her beauty in. It was heavily rose-scented, like petals can smell on a dusky evening, with a caramel top-note... Paris has generally stopped smelling of wee, after many years of trying to get it right. Her aroma is once more enchanting.
And, once I'd learned the words for walking cane/stick and crutch at the pharmacist's, we were away!
My OH's foot became sore with walking. (Sh)It happens from time to time. Particularly more so this year in the life of the Travelling Fhina. I left him en lit, while I went to scour the local traders to see if I could find a cane to help him get up and about.
Having googled the word for stick on an American tourist's travelblog, I felt able to cope with the local pharmacy in Montmartre, which was exceptionally busy. Wandering quickly past the tempting displays of products designed to keep Frenchwomen toned and souple, I spied some walking sticks. Pretty enough for me to carry about, they were festooned with more flowers than you'd see at a Church Festival. And they were scarily expensive - 'Trop cher pour moi', I intoned, to no-one in particular.
I sauntered down a back-street. It was day-time after all. Back-streets are where it is actually happening in Paris. Where all life is at. Glimpsed from a bus off the Rue de Richelieu, people go about their daily lives there, hidden from the average tourist. Here, see the children play. There the baker is open (in central Paris, in August!). Corner cafes are brimful of locals, stopping for some gossip and small beer.
All beer is small in Paris. To be savoured and sampled by the thimbleful. Vase-styled glasses of frothing ale are for tourists. Like Fhina. I wandered on, stopping only to buy two cheese salad filled baguettes to take back to sustain The English Patient.
As is the case in Paris, you don't have to go far before you find another pharmacy. There are little neighbourhoods everywhere... I lost count of the number of opticians I espied. (More about that spectacle later!)
Anyhoo, this pharmacy was quiet, just down from the Moulin Rouge. I explained to the young assistant that my husband had, among other words, '...un pied arthritique'. I'm not sure if that was the right saying, but I was going with it, in full flow, arms waving like said windmill.
I asked for, 'Une canne, svp?'
She tootled in to the back of the shop and emerged to place two packets on the counter. One was to be smoothed liberally across the foot, the other was to be sprinkled into the shoes...
I struggled on - 'He has an arthritic foot, he has difficulty walking, I need to get him a cane, not a cream...'
She looked at me like I was talking another language... To her I probably was.
'And what's the powder for?' - I couldn't help myself. Perhaps the French had discovered a cure for arthritic conditions that no other nation yet shared?
'For the athlete's foot - 'athletique', she said...
I became at that humid moment in time the Facepalm emoticon.
I mouthed 'a walking stick', and mimed it, drawing a peppermint candy cane in the air. A reassuringly young pharmacist, bespectacled (always a good sign), came to my rescue.
I know I'm from the north, but really. My accent isn't all that thick.
He emerged once more with a suitably medical looking implement, a sort of stick/crutch,showing me how to lengthen and shorten it and how my hubby should walk with it, his arm at a jaunty 45 degree angle - 'Never straight!', he chastised.
Filled with delight, but also with fear at what this was going to cost my holiday budget, I trepidatiously asked the price. He smiled and said that this particular model would cost around nineteen euros. Phew, for the cost of three large vases of blanche, I had procured a reason to return to the hotel room. At last.
With my purchases in hand, I practically whistled my way through the streets of Pigalle.
I found that anyone dodgy-looking swiftly moved out of my way on account of that cane I was brandishing.
Next episode: Finish this sentence: 'As blind as a...'
Monday, 2 January 2012
Happy New Year - New me? Know me?!
Well, this Christmas and New Year holiday has been a bold, relatively quiet and muchly daft one...
We've had no snow to speak of - Just a few short flurries which didn't do any damage - Do you remember, we've been snowed in for the past three years until cabin fever set in and I threatened to eat the chair legs!
We've been mainly ferrying a somnambulent and nocturnal teen (he turns 20 in February *gasp*), as he segued from one social appointment to another, returning every other day to refuel and snore the rafters loose (or was that me?!)... It was like having to take a toddler off to playdates again! This meant we could go nowhere special...
We spent part of some evenings in the pub, catching up with gossip - Who's put whose windows in, driven their car into a ditch, run off with whose wife, that kind of thing - Toasting our tootsies by the fire - Drinking our spoils from the Annual Leek Club Bottle Draw - (I won back the ghastly bottle of white wine I had in fact donated!) - while trying to avoid the fall-out from the septuagenarian landlord and landlady, who are my sort-of substitute parent figures, but who are also at each other's throats over her plans to semi-retire, finally and long-deservedly... This situation will be resolved in one way or another, I'd guess. I hope it's happily.
A lost earring of mine - Silver, with a tiny heart that dangles - resurfaced. My friend had only recently gifted them to me for my birthday. Phew! I am hopeless with earrings, but I do still love them.
Meanwhile, I watched some of the films I had been longing to retreat into, and became a part of my sofa. I even squeezed in Hitchcock's Rear Window, with my favourite, Jimmy Stewart!
We stoked the stove, burning coal on it for the very first time and occasionally feeding it fragrant logs.
We tickled the rats and, at the same time, learned something about neuroscience from scientists LINK.
Sadly, Grizz broke up with his lovely girlfriend (owner of said rats). We think that means we've got custody... We don't know why they broke up and can't find out... I know it's not our business, but we are sad about it...
In other news, with my 'gin-goggles' on on New Year's Eve, I bought a beautiful handbag in local designer, Karina Hesketh's, sale. I've lusted after it for months at full price, and then I take it as an omen that if no-one else has bought it in her sale, it and I are meant to be... Karina's going to be designing some more soon. Oh dear. Mind you, I do only buy one-ish of her uniquely designed and beautifully hand-made bags a year, so I can't be described as anything like obsessed. No...
This is a metallic pink leather brogue bag with a cross-body strap, integrated with a vintage (Fifties'?) scarf depicting the Dolomites in Italy. This is a bag that called my name, like a Siren ensconced beside the River Coquet!
And, we learned on New Year's Day (but not from Bono) that my eighty-plus year old father-in-law had run himself over with his own car... Three weeks ago. And my helpful sister-in-law only saw fit to inform us on New Year's Day...
I rail against my socially apathetic in-laws, out-laws, I do!
I don't know what I can do about them? Obviously nothing... 'You can't teach old dogs', etc!
Meanwhile, I build bridges, forge friendships, make amends...
Happy New Year, mes amis, bold and beautiful as you are...
I wish you all that you could ever wish for yourselves...
For myself, all I require is some peace and some certainty.
Meanwhile, your love and comments are enough!
Merci mille for you and them. Mwah! Well, the mistletoe's still up above the doorway, so I'd suggest a kiss is in order!
We've had no snow to speak of - Just a few short flurries which didn't do any damage - Do you remember, we've been snowed in for the past three years until cabin fever set in and I threatened to eat the chair legs!
We've been mainly ferrying a somnambulent and nocturnal teen (he turns 20 in February *gasp*), as he segued from one social appointment to another, returning every other day to refuel and snore the rafters loose (or was that me?!)... It was like having to take a toddler off to playdates again! This meant we could go nowhere special...
We spent part of some evenings in the pub, catching up with gossip - Who's put whose windows in, driven their car into a ditch, run off with whose wife, that kind of thing - Toasting our tootsies by the fire - Drinking our spoils from the Annual Leek Club Bottle Draw - (I won back the ghastly bottle of white wine I had in fact donated!) - while trying to avoid the fall-out from the septuagenarian landlord and landlady, who are my sort-of substitute parent figures, but who are also at each other's throats over her plans to semi-retire, finally and long-deservedly... This situation will be resolved in one way or another, I'd guess. I hope it's happily.
A lost earring of mine - Silver, with a tiny heart that dangles - resurfaced. My friend had only recently gifted them to me for my birthday. Phew! I am hopeless with earrings, but I do still love them.
Meanwhile, I watched some of the films I had been longing to retreat into, and became a part of my sofa. I even squeezed in Hitchcock's Rear Window, with my favourite, Jimmy Stewart!
We stoked the stove, burning coal on it for the very first time and occasionally feeding it fragrant logs.
We tickled the rats and, at the same time, learned something about neuroscience from scientists LINK.
Sadly, Grizz broke up with his lovely girlfriend (owner of said rats). We think that means we've got custody... We don't know why they broke up and can't find out... I know it's not our business, but we are sad about it...
In other news, with my 'gin-goggles' on on New Year's Eve, I bought a beautiful handbag in local designer, Karina Hesketh's, sale. I've lusted after it for months at full price, and then I take it as an omen that if no-one else has bought it in her sale, it and I are meant to be... Karina's going to be designing some more soon. Oh dear. Mind you, I do only buy one-ish of her uniquely designed and beautifully hand-made bags a year, so I can't be described as anything like obsessed. No...
This is a metallic pink leather brogue bag with a cross-body strap, integrated with a vintage (Fifties'?) scarf depicting the Dolomites in Italy. This is a bag that called my name, like a Siren ensconced beside the River Coquet!
And, we learned on New Year's Day (but not from Bono) that my eighty-plus year old father-in-law had run himself over with his own car... Three weeks ago. And my helpful sister-in-law only saw fit to inform us on New Year's Day...
I rail against my socially apathetic in-laws, out-laws, I do!
I don't know what I can do about them? Obviously nothing... 'You can't teach old dogs', etc!
Meanwhile, I build bridges, forge friendships, make amends...
Happy New Year, mes amis, bold and beautiful as you are...
I wish you all that you could ever wish for yourselves...
For myself, all I require is some peace and some certainty.
Meanwhile, your love and comments are enough!
Merci mille for you and them. Mwah! Well, the mistletoe's still up above the doorway, so I'd suggest a kiss is in order!
Monday, 14 March 2011
Missed Opportunities...
Thank you muchly for your recent kind recommendations for digital cameras...
Armed with the extensive information, I chose the time period 'two hours before flying to Paris' to try to procure a marvellous Nikon Coolpix camera.
FAIL!
I am now the proud owner of practically the only camera that Currys could offer me, which is a Canon Ixus 105. The lovely lady in the store advised us helpfully that the worst time to buy a camera is the day before you go on holiday, as you are likely to spend the entire time trying to work out how to use the damned thing.
GULP!
Needless to say, the practical instructions (or should that be 'destructions?') remain in their tight cellophane cocoon, and GJ and I did manage to work out the machinations of the camera nonetheless. Photographic evidence of our Parisian sojourn will be displayed at a later date, for reasons that shall become clearer in time...
You see, the trouble with buying a nice piece of kit, such as a digital camera, is that you spend most of your holiday trying to prise it out from the paws of your ever-so-techie other half, while he pretends to be a slightly younger and a tad porkier, blond version of David Bailey...
You will also find, that the very moment you need the camera - as you visit Paris around the time of Paris Fashion Week - to capture the fleeting image of divine French designer, Jean-Paul Gaultier, who happens to be crossing the road before your very startled prying eyes, your other half is trapped inside a hermetically-sealed, hygienically self-cleaning, public loo (GRATUIT!), with said camera in the inside pocket of his yachting jacket.
Just saying...
Saturday, 5 March 2011
Monday, 31 January 2011
Paris, je t'aime...
Last week, when I announced to GJ via e-mail from work that I'd filled in all the forms to register to be made redundant - (yes, even tho' they are compulsorily shutting the doors on 31 March, we still have to apply in writing for them to let us go - Go bureaucracy!) - He bounced back an e-mail immediately, letting me know that he'd just booked us on a super-duper, cheapo flight to Paris at the end of this month.

When I say cheapo, we're probably flying strapped on to the wings - No at-seat service, then!
Five days.
In Paris...
In the Springtime.
Je m'en reve...
Thursday, 29 January 2009
A Paean to Paris, Some Red Carpet Awards and a Tag-Along!
Beautiful Auntie Gwen from Auntie Gwen's Diary has been kind enough to tag me...
The rules are:
Go to the 4th folder in your computer where you store your pictures
Pick the 4th picture in that folder
Explain the picture
Tag 4 people to do the same
As I'm not technically gifted enough to store my own photos, and rely upon my family to do this for me - They are on Grizzler's laptop...
Here instead is the fourth photo taken from my fourth album on Photobucket. This album is called City of Lights, and you might not be surprised that, like Auntie Gwen's, it concerns a love of Paris, the capital of France.
This picture is of Sacre Coeur in the area known as Montmartre, once filled with vineyards, once the haunt of artists and painters, musicians and writers... Now it is a higgle-piggle, hodge-podge of tinsly touristy shops, (some) seedy clubs, and many, many bars and cafes. Oh, and the splendiferous modern meringue that is Sacre Coeur itself...
The views that open up from the steps of the church are wonderful, and I cannot resist a trip up the hill on the funicular railway, jostling with tourists!
Still, the peace and tranquillity and a scintilla of what magic the area once held can still be found, by wandering the streets of Montmartre and stepping away from the crowds...

I cannot resist adding in some of the other pictures in this album. Hope you don't mind?
Paris in the palm of your hand!
City of Lights


Ah, the atmosphere and drama of Black and White photography...Timeless!

One little vignette from our last trip to Paris a year last Christmas - the first time we have ever had Christmas away from home, and it was uplifting, invigorating and enchanting for us as a family.
(And, to be fair, we got a good deal then in terms of Sterling against the Euro - We could not afford to take that trip again this year, even if I had been in full fitness with my back... Alors, my fond commiserations to my British chums sequestered in lovely France, who are struggling quite a bit with the credit crunch...)
As a family, we always trot about Paris every day of our trip, and religiously try to avoid the many beggars and merchants lining the streets of the most familiar attractions and landmarks.
Grizzler has been brought up to do as we do, head down, a swift "Non!" and hurtling past the many African-origin hawkers and tradesmen.
When we reached the bottom of the steps at Sacre Coeur on Christmas Day evening, we had got slightly separated from one another in the crowds. I reached for GJ in the dimming light, and found him, but where was our 6' 4" Griz?
We spotted him with his blond mane above the many other heads in the crowds; He was in the process of having Rasta braids woven around his index finger by a stocky black man. Our hearts sank - Just how long would this take, just how were we about to be fleeced by these men, how could we escape, they are so experienced in inveigling change from the unwitting tourist?
We approached the chap and found a bemused Griz... The fellow was chatting away to G about the luck this weaving would bring him, and how this bracelet - in Jamaican colours - red, gold and green - would last until he saw us again.
It was a cold night, the throngs of tourists were anxious to be on their way, and by now we had a crowd of the merchants surrounding us, curiously laughing and bantering away.
The deed finished, the bracelet clamped to Grizzles's wrist, GJ began to negotiate a price. They asked us where we were from, and one of the guys spoke of living in London until quite recently. GJ mentioned working in Nigeria of late, said he was accustomed to haggling (he lied!) and named a price, half of what the chuckling merchant wanted.
We finally agreed on what was probably not a fair price, and scuttled away. We reasoned afterwards, once securely ensconced and laughing in a local eaterie, that it would have been pretty slim pickings for those men that night, and how they were obviously 'all for one and one for all' in this endeavour, making their living in a relatively haphazard way.
We opined that they would likely as not have shared what they had managed to fleece, good-naturedly, from the average tourist, and felt we had in the end paid for a half-hour's entertainment and friendly banter!
Still ringing in my ears were the merchant's final words to me, en Francais, about my husband, "You bring your man back to me again next year, and I will give him lovely braids in his hair!"
This made us hoot hysterically; GJ has longish locks for most men, together with a pronounced widow's peak, and is thinning up top it would be fair to say, and has been since I met him when he was 21...
Laugh, he nearly cried!
and to end, a Gargoyle of Notre Dame
In the spirit of tagging, I need to pass this on to 3 or 4 more people in accordance with the rules, so, hoping you don't mind, I tag:
Moannie at The View From This End for her winsome writing;
Saz at Fat, frumpy & fifty for her colour, honesty, warmth and integrity;
Scriptor Senex at Rambles from my chair... for his intelligent ramblings and wonderful pictures, and
Michelle at Raw Cool... Black is the new Blog for her sassy soul!
As for the Premio Dardos award kindly proffered to me by Diane at Diane's Addled Ramblings the other day, I passed it to Moannie, but I also need to pass it on to 3 other people to acknowledge the values that every blogger shows in his or her effort to transmit cultural, ethical, literary, and personal values every day....

Drumroll please, Maestro!
Auntie Gwen at Auntie Gwen's Blogspot for her beauty, warmth and, almost daily, witty honesty and insights;
Saz at FFF for the obvious - The woman is a follower-magnet, she writes so effortlessly;
Kate Coveny Hood at The Big Piece of Cake because we all need cake, comfort and good sense in our lives!
The rules are:
Go to the 4th folder in your computer where you store your pictures
Pick the 4th picture in that folder
Explain the picture
Tag 4 people to do the same
As I'm not technically gifted enough to store my own photos, and rely upon my family to do this for me - They are on Grizzler's laptop...
Here instead is the fourth photo taken from my fourth album on Photobucket. This album is called City of Lights, and you might not be surprised that, like Auntie Gwen's, it concerns a love of Paris, the capital of France.
This picture is of Sacre Coeur in the area known as Montmartre, once filled with vineyards, once the haunt of artists and painters, musicians and writers... Now it is a higgle-piggle, hodge-podge of tinsly touristy shops, (some) seedy clubs, and many, many bars and cafes. Oh, and the splendiferous modern meringue that is Sacre Coeur itself...
The views that open up from the steps of the church are wonderful, and I cannot resist a trip up the hill on the funicular railway, jostling with tourists!
Still, the peace and tranquillity and a scintilla of what magic the area once held can still be found, by wandering the streets of Montmartre and stepping away from the crowds...
I cannot resist adding in some of the other pictures in this album. Hope you don't mind?
Paris in the palm of your hand!
City of Lights
Ah, the atmosphere and drama of Black and White photography...Timeless!
One little vignette from our last trip to Paris a year last Christmas - the first time we have ever had Christmas away from home, and it was uplifting, invigorating and enchanting for us as a family.
(And, to be fair, we got a good deal then in terms of Sterling against the Euro - We could not afford to take that trip again this year, even if I had been in full fitness with my back... Alors, my fond commiserations to my British chums sequestered in lovely France, who are struggling quite a bit with the credit crunch...)
As a family, we always trot about Paris every day of our trip, and religiously try to avoid the many beggars and merchants lining the streets of the most familiar attractions and landmarks.
Grizzler has been brought up to do as we do, head down, a swift "Non!" and hurtling past the many African-origin hawkers and tradesmen.
When we reached the bottom of the steps at Sacre Coeur on Christmas Day evening, we had got slightly separated from one another in the crowds. I reached for GJ in the dimming light, and found him, but where was our 6' 4" Griz?
We spotted him with his blond mane above the many other heads in the crowds; He was in the process of having Rasta braids woven around his index finger by a stocky black man. Our hearts sank - Just how long would this take, just how were we about to be fleeced by these men, how could we escape, they are so experienced in inveigling change from the unwitting tourist?
We approached the chap and found a bemused Griz... The fellow was chatting away to G about the luck this weaving would bring him, and how this bracelet - in Jamaican colours - red, gold and green - would last until he saw us again.
It was a cold night, the throngs of tourists were anxious to be on their way, and by now we had a crowd of the merchants surrounding us, curiously laughing and bantering away.
The deed finished, the bracelet clamped to Grizzles's wrist, GJ began to negotiate a price. They asked us where we were from, and one of the guys spoke of living in London until quite recently. GJ mentioned working in Nigeria of late, said he was accustomed to haggling (he lied!) and named a price, half of what the chuckling merchant wanted.
We finally agreed on what was probably not a fair price, and scuttled away. We reasoned afterwards, once securely ensconced and laughing in a local eaterie, that it would have been pretty slim pickings for those men that night, and how they were obviously 'all for one and one for all' in this endeavour, making their living in a relatively haphazard way.
We opined that they would likely as not have shared what they had managed to fleece, good-naturedly, from the average tourist, and felt we had in the end paid for a half-hour's entertainment and friendly banter!
Still ringing in my ears were the merchant's final words to me, en Francais, about my husband, "You bring your man back to me again next year, and I will give him lovely braids in his hair!"
This made us hoot hysterically; GJ has longish locks for most men, together with a pronounced widow's peak, and is thinning up top it would be fair to say, and has been since I met him when he was 21...
Laugh, he nearly cried!
and to end, a Gargoyle of Notre Dame
In the spirit of tagging, I need to pass this on to 3 or 4 more people in accordance with the rules, so, hoping you don't mind, I tag:
Moannie at The View From This End for her winsome writing;
Saz at Fat, frumpy & fifty for her colour, honesty, warmth and integrity;
Scriptor Senex at Rambles from my chair... for his intelligent ramblings and wonderful pictures, and
Michelle at Raw Cool... Black is the new Blog for her sassy soul!
As for the Premio Dardos award kindly proffered to me by Diane at Diane's Addled Ramblings the other day, I passed it to Moannie, but I also need to pass it on to 3 other people to acknowledge the values that every blogger shows in his or her effort to transmit cultural, ethical, literary, and personal values every day....
Drumroll please, Maestro!
Auntie Gwen at Auntie Gwen's Blogspot for her beauty, warmth and, almost daily, witty honesty and insights;
Saz at FFF for the obvious - The woman is a follower-magnet, she writes so effortlessly;
Kate Coveny Hood at The Big Piece of Cake because we all need cake, comfort and good sense in our lives!
Sunday, 25 January 2009
10 Things I Can't Live Without
10 Things I Can't Live Without
1. Colour in my life - I often dream in colour, and they say that we don't...

2. Paris - Sights, sounds, smells, tastes, views, being In Seine (groannn!)... you get it

3. Magic - Spells, incantations, chanting, hoping, wishing, do-gooding... all that and wishing on stars! Oh, and luck... "If it wasn't for bad luck, I wouldn't have no luck at all...!"



4. Laughter in my life......

5. Greenery and Scenery - I cannot exist in a grey world far from greenery, even if it is just the verdant leaves of a plant...

6. I cannot live without my wild heart...

7. Strong, funny, witty, crazy, beautiful women...

8. Music

9. Words and Language

10. And, last but by no means least...
1. Colour in my life - I often dream in colour, and they say that we don't...
2. Paris - Sights, sounds, smells, tastes, views, being In Seine (groannn!)... you get it
3. Magic - Spells, incantations, chanting, hoping, wishing, do-gooding... all that and wishing on stars! Oh, and luck... "If it wasn't for bad luck, I wouldn't have no luck at all...!"
4. Laughter in my life......
5. Greenery and Scenery - I cannot exist in a grey world far from greenery, even if it is just the verdant leaves of a plant...
6. I cannot live without my wild heart...
7. Strong, funny, witty, crazy, beautiful women...
8. Music
9. Words and Language
10. And, last but by no means least...
Friday, 16 January 2009
The Power of the (Flash) Mob, Performance Art and the Feel of Silence
For those of you who missed yesterday's, Thursday's post concerning Geordie Ferrets, please see further down the page - I have been all over the place with the dates for my posts, sorry for any confusion caused!
Today is Friday, so I really don't understand why the blog is now showing Thursday - I have had it with Blogger! Bring on the Luddites!!!
Ever heard of Flash Mob? Here's a very short introductory clip courtesy of Look North - the North East's local TV Station about the phenomenon, including crappily posed piece by the studio staff!
Just shout if you need anything translated - but you can see how people really get into it, and onlookers, even the elderly, aren't unsettled; They are amused, bemused and perhaps pushed a little bit outside their comfort zones, but hey, they seem ultimately cool about what has happened to them.
It wouldn't be me without a little bit of WIKI history, would it?
"The first flash mob was created in Manhattan in May 2003, by Bill Wasik, senior editor of Harper's Magazine. The origins of the flash mobs were unknown until Wasik published an article about his creation in the March 2006 edition of Harper's. The first attempt was unsuccessful after the targeted retail store was tipped off about the plan for people to gather.
Wasik avoided such problems during the second flash mob, which occurred in June 3, 2003 at Macy's department store, by sending participants to preliminary staging areas—in four prearranged Manhattan bars—where they received further instructions about the ultimate event and location just before the event began.
More than one hundred people converged upon the ninth floor rug department, gathering around an expensive rug. Anyone approached by a sales assistant was asked to say that the gatherers lived together in a warehouse on the outskirts of New York, that they were shopping for a "love rug".
Subsequently, 200 people flooded the lobby and mezzanine of the Hyatt hotel in synchronized applause for about fifteen seconds, and a shoe boutique in SoHo was invaded by participants pretending to be tourists on a bus trip.
Wasik claimed that he created flash mobs as a social experiment designed to poke fun at hipsters and to highlight the cultural atmosphere of conformity and of wanting to be an insider or part of "the next big thing." The Vancouver Sun wrote, "It may have backfired on him... [Wasik] may instead have ended up giving conformity a vehicle that allowed it to appear nonconforming."
And so, flash mobs are a form of performance art and spontaneous social interaction. The phenomenon uses modern communications technologies, (just like us!), including decentralised personal networking, known as smartmobbing, the Internet, email, chat rooms and text messaging, so not actually spontaneous at all, but definitely subversive and 'underground'. Sometimes these get-togethers are used as a means of making charitable donations, such as taking food to the homeless, so they're a good thing, right?!
The first recorded use of the term flash mob was in 2003 in a blog entry posted in the aftermath of Wasik's event. And so we are returned to our world of what you could call Flash Blogging... You know the kind of thing:- Where someone writes a poignant and meaningful piece, or chooses particularly touching images, and it sets you or I off on a chain of thought, that serves to influence our writing or thought patterns in turn...
This short video shows the recent Flashmob Finger Gun Fight at the Tate, London
My own first experience of these flash mob performances, was when I and GJ were two out of only 100,000 people in the UK who tuned in to the newish station BBC Three to watch Flashmob - the Opera, which took over London's Paddington station one evening when people were making their way home from work.
Three professional singers and 65 musicians from the BBC Concert Orchestra belted out popular arias from operas such as Madame Butterfly, Don Giovanni and La Traviata. They were joined by opera lovers and performance buffs, who wanted to play their part in the fun, bringing opera to the commuting masses... Unsuspecting travellers wandering around the concourse were regaled with an aria from a woman, dressed in a red winter coat, who appeared to be going about her normal business, while mourning her lovelorn state. commuters.
Over the years and months since 2003 there have been other kinds of social gatherings, across the world, and these are just a few:
... Pillow Fights across the world, here in Paris.
and here in, I think this is Germany:

Giant Conga Lines, just like the one in Newcastle:

And people just doing something odd - It looks pretty cold for the posers of this piece:

I just recently learned from a colleague about the trend for wedding parties to break out into an impromptu rendition of Michael Jackson's
'Thriller' dance - Look for it on Youtube, there are many amateur videos, some obviously more rehearsed than others...
Great fun, and seeing the brides taking their dance so seriously in their frou-frou dresses is priceless! This sits slightly outside the world of Flash Mobbing, but is based on the same principles, of course.
Which brings me to another form, and my favourite Flash Mob performance - The Big Freeze in Paris. Please take the 5 minutes to watch it - The music isn't bad either. This is the official video by the way, and it's just amazing to see people's reactions to the freeze, including the Police and the many tourists. And some of the poses being held for 5 mins are incredible...
What moves me in this piece is the stillness, and to be fair, appreciating those still moments in life, in our ever hectic lives, is not the easiest of things to do... How often do any of us just sit, still our minds, and properly reflect for more than five minutes?
Do we allow ourselves the thinking time we deserve, when we are busy with our children, our animals, and our understandable and ever-present cares and our woes? Ought we not to occasionally stop to smell the flowers, and not just photograph them, for example?
Braja recently posted on silence and its strength, so I will not replicate that here, but it is important to note that:
'The benefits of silence and an empty mind are well known: less stress, clearer thinking - Studies have even pointed to a strengthened immune system and better heart health. Silence is something to welcome. It's nurturing and refreshing. It offers a unique feeling of peace'. (Source: allspiritfitness.com)
So, do look out for Flash Mob - There is a website - Google it if you want to take part, and you could be alerted by text message to the one nearest you, and you could be the next Flash Mob Ninja, or Still As A Statue I see!
Today is Friday, so I really don't understand why the blog is now showing Thursday - I have had it with Blogger! Bring on the Luddites!!!
Ever heard of Flash Mob? Here's a very short introductory clip courtesy of Look North - the North East's local TV Station about the phenomenon, including crappily posed piece by the studio staff!
Just shout if you need anything translated - but you can see how people really get into it, and onlookers, even the elderly, aren't unsettled; They are amused, bemused and perhaps pushed a little bit outside their comfort zones, but hey, they seem ultimately cool about what has happened to them.
It wouldn't be me without a little bit of WIKI history, would it?
"The first flash mob was created in Manhattan in May 2003, by Bill Wasik, senior editor of Harper's Magazine. The origins of the flash mobs were unknown until Wasik published an article about his creation in the March 2006 edition of Harper's. The first attempt was unsuccessful after the targeted retail store was tipped off about the plan for people to gather.
Wasik avoided such problems during the second flash mob, which occurred in June 3, 2003 at Macy's department store, by sending participants to preliminary staging areas—in four prearranged Manhattan bars—where they received further instructions about the ultimate event and location just before the event began.
More than one hundred people converged upon the ninth floor rug department, gathering around an expensive rug. Anyone approached by a sales assistant was asked to say that the gatherers lived together in a warehouse on the outskirts of New York, that they were shopping for a "love rug".
Subsequently, 200 people flooded the lobby and mezzanine of the Hyatt hotel in synchronized applause for about fifteen seconds, and a shoe boutique in SoHo was invaded by participants pretending to be tourists on a bus trip.
Wasik claimed that he created flash mobs as a social experiment designed to poke fun at hipsters and to highlight the cultural atmosphere of conformity and of wanting to be an insider or part of "the next big thing." The Vancouver Sun wrote, "It may have backfired on him... [Wasik] may instead have ended up giving conformity a vehicle that allowed it to appear nonconforming."
And so, flash mobs are a form of performance art and spontaneous social interaction. The phenomenon uses modern communications technologies, (just like us!), including decentralised personal networking, known as smartmobbing, the Internet, email, chat rooms and text messaging, so not actually spontaneous at all, but definitely subversive and 'underground'. Sometimes these get-togethers are used as a means of making charitable donations, such as taking food to the homeless, so they're a good thing, right?!
The first recorded use of the term flash mob was in 2003 in a blog entry posted in the aftermath of Wasik's event. And so we are returned to our world of what you could call Flash Blogging... You know the kind of thing:- Where someone writes a poignant and meaningful piece, or chooses particularly touching images, and it sets you or I off on a chain of thought, that serves to influence our writing or thought patterns in turn...
This short video shows the recent Flashmob Finger Gun Fight at the Tate, London
My own first experience of these flash mob performances, was when I and GJ were two out of only 100,000 people in the UK who tuned in to the newish station BBC Three to watch Flashmob - the Opera, which took over London's Paddington station one evening when people were making their way home from work.
Three professional singers and 65 musicians from the BBC Concert Orchestra belted out popular arias from operas such as Madame Butterfly, Don Giovanni and La Traviata. They were joined by opera lovers and performance buffs, who wanted to play their part in the fun, bringing opera to the commuting masses... Unsuspecting travellers wandering around the concourse were regaled with an aria from a woman, dressed in a red winter coat, who appeared to be going about her normal business, while mourning her lovelorn state. commuters.
Over the years and months since 2003 there have been other kinds of social gatherings, across the world, and these are just a few:
and here in, I think this is Germany:
Giant Conga Lines, just like the one in Newcastle:
And people just doing something odd - It looks pretty cold for the posers of this piece:
I just recently learned from a colleague about the trend for wedding parties to break out into an impromptu rendition of Michael Jackson's
Which brings me to another form, and my favourite Flash Mob performance - The Big Freeze in Paris. Please take the 5 minutes to watch it - The music isn't bad either. This is the official video by the way, and it's just amazing to see people's reactions to the freeze, including the Police and the many tourists. And some of the poses being held for 5 mins are incredible...
What moves me in this piece is the stillness, and to be fair, appreciating those still moments in life, in our ever hectic lives, is not the easiest of things to do... How often do any of us just sit, still our minds, and properly reflect for more than five minutes?
Do we allow ourselves the thinking time we deserve, when we are busy with our children, our animals, and our understandable and ever-present cares and our woes? Ought we not to occasionally stop to smell the flowers, and not just photograph them, for example?
Braja recently posted on silence and its strength, so I will not replicate that here, but it is important to note that:
'The benefits of silence and an empty mind are well known: less stress, clearer thinking - Studies have even pointed to a strengthened immune system and better heart health. Silence is something to welcome. It's nurturing and refreshing. It offers a unique feeling of peace'. (Source: allspiritfitness.com)
So, do look out for Flash Mob - There is a website - Google it if you want to take part, and you could be alerted by text message to the one nearest you, and you could be the next Flash Mob Ninja, or Still As A Statue I see!
Tuesday, 13 January 2009
Five Question MeMe
These questions were kindly put to me, do you call this a MeMe?, by the lovely and charming Saz who blogs as Fat, frumpy and fifty! I know she's lying, as she's none of those, although her hips apparently tell another tale!
Thank you for being so kind and gentle with me, Saz!
1. Why do you blog?
As the late, great, Wilde and often wonderful Oscar once said, "I never travel without my diary. One should always have something sensational to read on the train".
I wish I could feel like that about my blog; I wish I had that interesting a life!
In all honesty, I joined the Blogging World initially to be able to comment on others' interesting blogs, then I felt I might be able to give it a go myself. I thought it would give me something pleasant and creative to do while I am off work with a slipped disc, and it has!
For a while there I felt (and was told by GJ) that my brain was becoming addled, owing to not using it much, other than trawling through the Internet and watching (some, not all!) daytime TV!
2. If you could live anywhere in the world for one month where would that be? Why?
Above all, I love Paris - My spiritual home:- The walks, even the convoluted Metro, the charming cafes, good food and drink and the sometimes bizarre pavement life and entertainment!
But it is a city, and therefore busy, so at this very moment I would choose a month in Bayahibe in the Caribbean. My back problem seriously began to trouble me in May last year, (although I have had issues with it for over twenty years, cue the violins, someone?),
So, we went 'the whole hog'
in the summer, knowing I couldn't do our usual, self-catering, trot around the European pavements, hopping on and off trains, kind of hols, and we booked, three weeks before flying, an 'affordable luxury', all inclusive package, (so it really, honestly, turned out no more expensive than a fortnight's self catering in the Mediterranean), in Bayahibe.

It really does look like this, no camera filters necessary, and it was an idyllic break enjoyed by us all... The hotel was wonderful, the staff were excellent, friendly and beautiful, the beach was white, the sea was velvety, salty and clear, the light was fantastic, the wildlife and fish were interesting, (cheeky birds and little lizards, oh and don't forget the chickens, had the run of the 'open plan' hotel), and it was not crowded out with unruly tourists!
My main bugbear in life is yer archetypal Chavtastic Englishman abroad...
No offence meant!
So, a month there with GJ and Griz, so they could sail the little catamarans each day, and I could read, swim and just 'be' under a reeded palapa, would set me up jerst fine!

3. If you were invited to a birthday party and asked to give the birthday girl/guy one book you love, which would it be? Why?
My favourite book is Jane Eyre,
~(Yes, I know that that's the BBC DVD, not the novel), by Charlotte Bronte
, and I try to read it once each year...
I also love Persuasion by Jane Austen
.
However, seeing how most men might react to such a gift in the following way:
,
I would have to temper my choice to the perhaps more unisex, Flaubert's 'Madame Bovary.'
Flaubert's novel concerns many of the kind of issues that still trouble us today: Thanks to Wiki: The novel focuses on a doctor's wife, Emma Bovary, who has adulterous affairs and lives beyond her means in order to escape the banalities and emptiness of provincial life. Though the basic plot is rather simple, even archetypal, the novel's true art lies in its details and hidden patterns. Flaubert was a notorious perfectionist about his writing and claimed to always be searching for le mot juste (the right word).
4. Tell me two interesting things about yourself that may surprise me.
1. My inner self is a 'Rock Chick', who went off on a world tour with the band, instead of to College, got tattoos (Ok, I have none, but there's still time...)
, and led a debauched but interesting and ultimately redemptive, life, viz Pamela des Barres,
who's now very respectable, a retailer of clothes and jew-jaws, and even a woman of the cloth, and she is one of my 'friends' on Myspace! 
In all actuality, I look as if I have just trawled up from North Shields Fish Quay, where I gut fish for a living!

2. I seem to be quite good at life coaching,
one of my friends told me recently - He was about to leave his girlfriend because of some imagined infidelity that he wasn't able to broach with her. In reality, he was afraid of being hurt, having been in that place before and it was easier to 'cut and run', although he hadn't perceived it as that... He asked me to lunch to help him talk things over...
Outcome: They are getting married this year, and I wish them every, every happiness, I love him to bits for his bravery, but he trots around the office looking like love's young dream, so I have to keep reaching for the bucket! (Seriously, I did say that I wanted to be thanked in his speech, but he wasn't too keen!)

5. Describe to me your DREAM meal , company & setting and reasons.
Anything vegetarian, any Mr Darcy,
me, Eighteenth/Nineteenth Century setting - Do I need to state my reasons?
Nah, seriously, how impossibly cliched is that, so it would be Steak Frites for the GJ and Griz, Mushroom Omelette for me, (I is a girl of simple tastes, plus it's sometimes difficult to get vegetarian variety a Paris, but that doesn't put me off), French Biere ou un pichet de Vin Rouge, La Fregate restaurant, 30, Avenue Ledru Rollin, Paris - Failing that the Jules Verne Restaurant at the top of the Eiffel Tower - I've never been!
Reasons: Family is Family and I eat horribly untidily!
Seriously, Fat, Frumpy and Fifty, that was so much fun to do, and yet still took me ages - I loved doing it, thank you so much - If anyone else fancies a go at this - Five Questions of my choice lark - just leave a comment and I shall make it so!
Bless you!
Thank you for being so kind and gentle with me, Saz!
1. Why do you blog?
I wish I could feel like that about my blog; I wish I had that interesting a life!
In all honesty, I joined the Blogging World initially to be able to comment on others' interesting blogs, then I felt I might be able to give it a go myself. I thought it would give me something pleasant and creative to do while I am off work with a slipped disc, and it has!
For a while there I felt (and was told by GJ) that my brain was becoming addled, owing to not using it much, other than trawling through the Internet and watching (some, not all!) daytime TV!
2. If you could live anywhere in the world for one month where would that be? Why?
Above all, I love Paris - My spiritual home:- The walks, even the convoluted Metro, the charming cafes, good food and drink and the sometimes bizarre pavement life and entertainment!
But it is a city, and therefore busy, so at this very moment I would choose a month in Bayahibe in the Caribbean. My back problem seriously began to trouble me in May last year, (although I have had issues with it for over twenty years, cue the violins, someone?),
So, we went 'the whole hog'
It really does look like this, no camera filters necessary, and it was an idyllic break enjoyed by us all... The hotel was wonderful, the staff were excellent, friendly and beautiful, the beach was white, the sea was velvety, salty and clear, the light was fantastic, the wildlife and fish were interesting, (cheeky birds and little lizards, oh and don't forget the chickens, had the run of the 'open plan' hotel), and it was not crowded out with unruly tourists!
My main bugbear in life is yer archetypal Chavtastic Englishman abroad...
So, a month there with GJ and Griz, so they could sail the little catamarans each day, and I could read, swim and just 'be' under a reeded palapa, would set me up jerst fine!
3. If you were invited to a birthday party and asked to give the birthday girl/guy one book you love, which would it be? Why?
My favourite book is Jane Eyre,
I also love Persuasion by Jane Austen
However, seeing how most men might react to such a gift in the following way:
I would have to temper my choice to the perhaps more unisex, Flaubert's 'Madame Bovary.'
Flaubert's novel concerns many of the kind of issues that still trouble us today: Thanks to Wiki: The novel focuses on a doctor's wife, Emma Bovary, who has adulterous affairs and lives beyond her means in order to escape the banalities and emptiness of provincial life. Though the basic plot is rather simple, even archetypal, the novel's true art lies in its details and hidden patterns. Flaubert was a notorious perfectionist about his writing and claimed to always be searching for le mot juste (the right word).
4. Tell me two interesting things about yourself that may surprise me.
1. My inner self is a 'Rock Chick', who went off on a world tour with the band, instead of to College, got tattoos (Ok, I have none, but there's still time...)
In all actuality, I look as if I have just trawled up from North Shields Fish Quay, where I gut fish for a living!
2. I seem to be quite good at life coaching,
Outcome: They are getting married this year, and I wish them every, every happiness, I love him to bits for his bravery, but he trots around the office looking like love's young dream, so I have to keep reaching for the bucket! (Seriously, I did say that I wanted to be thanked in his speech, but he wasn't too keen!)
5. Describe to me your DREAM meal , company & setting and reasons.
Anything vegetarian, any Mr Darcy,
Nah, seriously, how impossibly cliched is that, so it would be Steak Frites for the GJ and Griz, Mushroom Omelette for me, (I is a girl of simple tastes, plus it's sometimes difficult to get vegetarian variety a Paris, but that doesn't put me off), French Biere ou un pichet de Vin Rouge, La Fregate restaurant, 30, Avenue Ledru Rollin, Paris - Failing that the Jules Verne Restaurant at the top of the Eiffel Tower - I've never been!
Seriously, Fat, Frumpy and Fifty, that was so much fun to do, and yet still took me ages - I loved doing it, thank you so much - If anyone else fancies a go at this - Five Questions of my choice lark - just leave a comment and I shall make it so!
Bless you!
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