Archive for November, 2011

28
Nov
11

A Time I Helped My Mom (RI #4)

Original Date: November 14, 2000

Style: Non-Fiction

Score (1-5): 4/ 88 B

When my mom was sick me and my brother had a big responsibility. Me and my brother had to take care of her.

I had to ansewer the phone for her because she was in bed. I liked it when my dad or grandma called. I would talk to them and then surrender it to my mom.

Then my mom wanted lunch. We ask what she wanted. “I want a chickin pattie with orange juice please” she told us “Okay” we replied. “Thankyou” she called to us as we darted to the freezer. We took out the bag the directions said cook for one minute and forty-five seconds. Then we pourd a glass of orange juice wich was as yellow as three suns. Then we gave the lunch to her. “Thank you” she said. When I was leaving the room I noticed the t.v. remote was on the floor. I gave it to her.

Taking care of my mom was fun. But I’am glad now that my mom is well. Because whos gonna take care of me and my brother!

28
Nov
11

Chicago, IL

It’s no suprise to most people that I want to end up in the Windy City after I graduate, I’ve been talking about it for a while now. However, that doesn’t stop most of them from saying, “What? Why? It’s so cold! Like freeze-to-death, Siberia, blizzard, Eskimo cold!” Adversely, anyone who knows anything about theatre will say, “Excellent choice. Just know that it gets cold. Like freeze-to-death, Siberia, blizzard, Eskimo cold.”

Perhaps I exaggerate.

Perhaps I have eleven toes.

The point of the matter is that Chicago has been calling me a long time and I am bound and determined to heed the call.

First and foremost as an actor, Chicago is tops when it comes to theatres in a city. Of course it is not Broadway, but it boasts theatres like Steppenwolf, the Goodman, and the Second City (with dozens of others) that not only export to New York stages all the time but are friendlier to hardworking actors trying to establish themselves. I’m not going to kid myself into thinking I break into such acclaimed companies right off the bat, but I feel like I would have a better shot in Chicago than anywhere else.

Which brings me to my second point, while working as a young actor, I can’t think of a better cultural scene to immerse myself in. You have to understand that I’m a small town kid and have travelled to a major city (NY and London) all but twice in my life. Since I’ve been in college and in Orlando, I’ve been craving so much more. The first things I’m doing when I move there is to see ballgames at both Wrigley and U.S. Cellular Field, find some blues joints, check out all the museums, etc. Also, when it is cooler I can wear suits and not be sweating my balls off!

Even before I wanted to be an actor the city was always in my life. Every single one of my favorite comedies seemed to be set in and around Chicago (Vacation, The Blues Brothers, Ferris Bueller, Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, Home Alone, Wayne’s World, etc.) One of my biggest early influences as an actor was the Second City and the Saturday Night Live talent it produced (John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd, Chris Farley, etc). So really, I see it as a matter of time until I came around. Oh, and of course my girlfriend is from there! Done. Case closed.

But really what it comes down to is that I need to fly far away from Central Florida (as much as I love it, and I do!) and I think Chicago, IL is just the city I can see myself landing in.

3.5 Essay done!

28
Nov
11

We Soldier On…

Sink back into the Louve and broaden your mind

The winds of fortune will treat you kind.

With whiskey tears and tobacco blues,

You soldier through the valleys and dunes,

Finding the lost while discovering the new.

Thumb in the air, fingers clenched,

With windswept hair and muscles tensed.

What can you do but soldier on, 

Towards the cities and forgotten farms,

To find a friend or lover in your arms.

Many miles lie ahead for the young and weary soul

Who sticks to his guns and goes after what he knows is right. For his path is not the same as we all might expect. The actor, poet, musician, the rambler, the free birds, the bastards of luck and happenstance; these are the soldiers of fortune that hide in the shadows of perseverance and await the glorious day that God will hand them when their time is due.

But what can we do

but soldier on.

11
Nov
11

Prison Grass by Joshua Braff

This is a really great piece of writing I found online courtesy of the Huffington Post.

“PRISON GRASS”

by Joshua Braff

The man being interviewed on TV was a killer, but I knew him because of baseball. In ’07 I’d just become the new center-fielder for the Berkeley Baron’s, an amateur team of ex-college level players. The San Quentin game against the prisoners was optional. It sounded like a story to me. Like skydiving or a swim with sharks. I’d play in center-field of course, where all the, “shivs” or man-made weapons were hidden in the grass, my teammates said. The prisoners would be amongst us, next to us, they were even allowed to shake our hands. It was okay, I was coached, they were cool, grateful, not as intimidating as you’d think. They might even thank you. “Thank me?” BUT: If there was to be a hostage situation, namely, a prisoner takes me in his grasp and say, presses a sliver of bathroom-tile into my windpipe, there’s a NO NEGOTIATING WITH PRISONERS RULE. I had no idea what this meant.

The prisoner on the TV was being interviewed for a film about his life in San Quentin. He told the reporter the only positive was being a San Quentin Giant, a uniformed baseball player on weekends. His hair was white now and cropped close but I remember it brown the day we met. I was standing on second base, having just doubled by hitting a ball that bounced twice between the center and left-fielders before hitting the wall. Second base was right at the very center of this infamous yard. And around me were hundreds, six, seven hundred convicted criminals. Convicted of felonies that would make your eyes tear. Many were tattooed, many muscular, the ages varied greatly, the ethnicities too. Asians, Hispanics, American Indians, African Americans, Caucasians and mixed. Everyone stayed in their own groups, the African Americans to the right of third base, the Hispanics further out near left, the white guys behind our dugout. The Indians were over the fence in center, hitting a huge circular drum. BOOM, BOOM, BOOM. I heard it when we first walked in and throughout the game, a drone of warning amidst the nearby foghorns of San Francisco Bay.

“What is that?” I asked my teammate.

BOOM, BOOM, BOOM.

“Think of it as a welcome,” he said.

A guard checked our IDs, rummaged through our equipment. He then asked the “first-timers” to raise their hands. I was the only one. My teammates laughed, as the NO NEGOTIATING RULE was explained. If I was taken hostage, an armed guard in a tower above the baseball field would fire his weapon at the offending prisoner’s head and hopefully not kill me in the process. Okay? So consider yourself warned. Now go have fun.

The entrance to the prison is quite beautiful. A fountain in the style of Spanish architecture in the center of a courtyard and a sloping driveway to follow. Around the corner the rumble of male voices grew and the drumming got louder. And then we saw them, a sea of men, a concert with no performance, a rally with no speaker, no freedom, no views. Just walls. Captured people. They saw us, these men in their prison blues. They were lifting weights, walking, running, sitting, standing, drumming, BOOM, BOOM, BOOM.

My team in our black uniforms were greeted with some catcalls, Newbies, Cuties, Freebies were yelled and then laughter and I heard some whistles. I thought of my blond hair, my ass in these tight pants. I stood there, on second, watching the prisoners on the bench, my hands on my hips, the brim of my helmet hiding my eyes. The cage around home plate had men all over it. They were hanging on it, leaning on it, smoking, giggling, slapping each other on the back. There were so many people watching this game, betting on it, talking about it, picking their favorite players.

To my left I saw him, the second baseman from the documentary. He was smiling, his crows-feet splayed. I said, “Nice shot earlier,” in reference to his home run. He dipped his head in appreciation and said, “Got a flattened-out-curve that hung for days.” His throwing hand lifted and his open palm was on my back. I patted him too, realizing how many prisoners and guards were watching our exchange. And in the swirl of it all, the drumming, the cheering, the dirt at my feet, I felt a oneness with this man, a criminal with no name. I’d never want to know what he’d done to get in San Quentin. It would only ruin the beauty and importance of the moment. We were ballplayers. That was all we were that day.

The TV interviewer wanted to know “What he’d done,” as the camera flashed his mug-shot from the day he entered the prison in 1964. His hair was down to his shoulders and brown, his eyes were dazed, glassed, “Lost behind the drugs,” he told the reporter. I could have changed the channel. But I didn’t. And in hindsight I sort of knew what was coming.

“I stabbed her,” he said and held up another photograph, a worn Polaroid of a girl, a teenager with long dark hair, parted in the middle. “Her name was Lorraine.”

01
Nov
11

RIP Pokemon

The other day on the drive to Gainesville, my brother and I got to talking about a favorite subject of ours, our old Game Boy Pokemon games and the rosters we assembled. Now for me, as silly as it all sounds, my Red Version was always one of my most valuable possessions. Red and Gold version were practically the only Game Boy games I ever owned and played, not to mention one of the few video games in general.

Therefore, because all this was so important to me, I would never even consider starting over with a new game and erasing all that I had worked to achieve. And what would that be exactly? What were my main goals? Well, after defeating the Elite Four it was not to amass all 151 pokemon (as my brother did), but to train the ones I did have to the nearly impossible level of 100!

And after a decade of playing those two games I was able to achieve, what I felt like, was a pretty good team. From my first pokemon Bulbasaur to Mewtwo, I was able to train eighteen different pokemon to level 100.

Now I say, “Rest In Peace,” because like all great things this story came to an abrupt end the other day. Wishing to reflect on my proud childhood, I turned on my Gold version to discover that the game had restarted itself due to age. I had lost all the pokemon that mattered to me, for my Red was still alive and kicking (ironic, eh?) but I had transferred everybody to Gold for what I thought was safekeeping. Guess I was wrong and at least thirteen years of effort was gone forever.

So now I end with the Hall of Fame in memorial to those who reached the 100 Milestone and to the next generation who were currently in training.

Red Version

Total Time 213:54

Total Pokemon 116

Venusaur*

Gyarados*

Mewtwo

Electabuzz

Kabutops

Raichu

Alakazam

Arbok

Pidgeot

Primeape

Dragonite

Aerodactyl

Blastoise

Charizard

Snorlax

Snorlax

Gold Version

Meganium*

Ho-Oh

Charmeleon (Mr. Ferraro)

Noctowl (Great British Ninja)

Golduck (Mr. Gibbs)

Raticate

Elekid

Starmie

 

 

 

 

 

 




Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.