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Category Archives: Media
Building Confidence In the Kitchen
Have you ever wanted to be able to cook without thinking about it? Do you have trouble piecing together a meal from the contents of your refrigerator? Do you feel that you don’t understand the basics of cooking or even some rudimentary skills like chopping, dicing or julienning? Well, that’s how I always felt about cooking – I was great at following a recipe (to the letter), but could not improvise anything. I also did not know much about basic kitchen skills.
Then I read “Kitchen Counter Cooking School” by Kathleen Flinn. This book is not a how-to book but rather a chronicle of how a professionally trained chef (Flinn is a graduate of Paris’ Le Cordon Bleu) took nine culinary novices and transformed them into perfectly serviceable cooks. Flinn’s journey is prompted by a random encounter with a woman loading processed food into her supermarket cart. After talking to the woman, Flinn finds out that the woman buys the processed food because they are “easy” and “always come out right.” It was this lack of knowledge and confidence that sparked Flinn to create a series of classes which would take ordinary folks and teach them to become more than proficient in the kitchen.
Posted in Book, Cooking, Media
Tagged Book, cooking, how to cook, kathleen flinn, kitchen counter cooking school
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Movie Review: Book of Eli
Book of Eli – DVD | Book of Eli – BluRay
To me, this story was a mix between Mad Max, Robin Hood, and an American Western. IMDB.com describes this movie as “A post-apocalyptic tale, in which a lone man fights his way across America in order to protect a sacred book that holds the secrets to saving humankind.” I would agree with that description. It centers around a nomadic wanderer named Eli (played by Denzel Washington) roaming the post-apocalyptic country side while working his way West. He stumbles upon a small town – or at least what serves as a town in this desolate world – that is run by the evil but somehow likeable Carnegie (played by Gary Oldman). Carnegie is in search of a book – a special book that he thinks will allow him to rule the world – and is constantly sending road crews out to find it.
Posted in Media, Movie
Tagged Book of Eli, Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman, IMDB, Mad Max, Mila Kunis, post-apocalyptic, Robin Hood, Western
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The Book with Tattered Pages

Steven King’s “The Stand” is one of those books that I can read over and over and over again. In fact, I have read it probably half a dozen times now and I believe it’s due for another read. I don’t know if it’s the battle between good and evil that gets me or just the fact that it’s a damn good story, but the book is a mainstay in my library and always seems to get circulated back into my “Must Read” list every few years.
What book could you read over and over again?
HE SAID: Remakes (via He said and she said)
I have been thinking about this movie for the last few days and was going to write an article about it. I’m glad I didn’t because it would probably have been this article – VERBATIM! My real question is: How do you call it Karate Kid when he’s learning Kung-Fu?!?
Posted in Media, Movie
Tagged aston kucher, batman, bud selig, elisabeth shue, entertainment, hollywood, jackie chan, karate kid, Michael Bay, movies, Nicolas Cage, personal, Ralph Macchio, rant, Red Dawn, The Goonies, The Outsiders
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Move Review: The Island (2005)
| Ewan McGregor | Lincoln Six Echo/Tom Lincoln |
| Scarlett Johansson | Jordan Two Delta/Sarah Jordan |
| Djimon Hounsou | Albert Laurent |
| Sean Bean | Merrick |
| Steve Buscemi | McCord |
| Michael Clarke Duncan | Starkweather |
Plot Outline: A man (Ewan McGregor) goes on the run after he discovers that he is actually a “harvested being”, and is being kept along with others in a utopian facility.
I had extreme trepidation when starting this movie as A) it’s a bit sci-fi for my taste and B) it didn’t exactly bowl over theater-goers. I must admit that I was pleasantly suprised with the overall movie. It was a captivating story that seemed far-fetched, but not out of the realm of scientifically possible. The story was told in a well-thought-out manner with the story line developing quite nicely. Some parts were predictable and some were over the top, but overall a solid movie.
Posted in Media, Movie
Tagged Djimon Hounsou, Ewan McGregor, Michael Clarke Duncan, Scarlett Johansson, science fiction, Sean Bean, Steve Buscemi
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Riviera : Broken Sounds from Chicago, IL
Riviera : Broken Sounds from Chicago, IL
It’s funny the things you run into on the net. The other day, I was digging through my CD collection and came across a CD that I had burned for me a few years ago. It was my old college roommate’s first studio effort with his band – Sugar Maple Voodoo. The CD was titled Jibe. Anyway, I went and ‘googled’ them on the web and found this page – MixedWire: News. It had all of SMV’s first album studio stuff as well as their long-lost, never fully publicized studio album on it. Interesting. Anyway, long story short, I found my old roommate through Friendster and got to talk to him. Come to find out, he’s out in Chicago, he’s married, and he’s playing with this band Riviera. I bought their new CD At The End Of The American Century… on iTunes. It was a $10 investment in his future. How could I not… Not bad stuff. You can hear the Wilco influence, but there’s also flairs of everything from Tom Petty to The Grateful Dead to the Stones. Interesting stuff. If you like the alt-country/rock type music, then you’d probably like it.
Posted in Media, Music
Tagged Chicago, Grateful Dead, IL, iTunes, Jibe, NYC, Riviera, Rolling Stones, Sugar Maple Voodoo, Tom Petty, Wilco
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