Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Dogsitting


Don't get me wrong, I'm not a cat hater, but I love this picture! Got it as a forward. Don't you just wish you could sit on people's heads a lot of the time? I have this feeling most of the time at work.



(I'm sure no cats were harmed in the making of this photo.)

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

To be or not to be born again

While watching Carson Daly a few days ago, I watched an interview for a very interesting guest, Brian "Head" Welch, the ex-guitarist for metal band Korn. Apparently, Welch had become a born-again Christian at a low point in his life (his conversion moment happened while he was in a hotel room high on crystal meth). Since then he's gone public about his experience and written a book about it that is a NYT bestseller.

I wanted to do a little more research on him so I googled him and this Web page of people's biographies popped up, a list of notable names who have claimed to be born-again Christians. The list included some famous religious names, but also included its fair share of serial killers, former porn stars, troubled athletes, and, quite amusingly, former Prince proteges.

It's easy to be cynical of those folks who find God when they have to curry favor with the public (see: Michael Vick and Paris Hilton) or emphasize that they have faith when their integrity is questioned (see any politician) or who claim to have had a born-again experience to convince others that they are no longer evil (see: pretty much any murderer up for parole). And really, why shouldn't we all question conversions of convenience?

Regardless of what people think, however, at the end of the day it's only God who truly knows whose spiritual changes are true and who is doing it to further his/her own causes; after all, Jesus reached out to tax collectors, thieves, prostitutes, and lepers, healed them, befriended them and called for transformed lives. And it's definitely true that people don't often turn to religion until something shakes up their world or until they find themselves at the bottom of a spiritual and emotional ditch, waiting for someone to pull them out. People who have everything going for them often don't think they need God.

Anyway, back to Welch. I saw a few of his interviews from CNN and other TV newscasts on YouTube, and after he became a Christian he quit drugs cold turkey and left the band after hearing his young daughter singing sexually suggestive Korn lyrics. For every religious conservative who is exposed for having a secret life that mirrors the lives of those they condemn, there is a story like Welch's that, in my opinion, really tells the Gospel story. I just wish there were more of them out there like that.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Crouching v@$#!, hidden p@#!$


If I were not a proper (not so) young lady, I would have replaced the symbols with the words for the male and female naughty bits. That's the nickname I've given Ang Lee's movie "Lust, Caution," the NC-17 espionage love story about a young resistance fighter who seduces a government official in Japan-occupied China in order to help set up his assasination.

Maybe I've become jaded with art-house movies, but I actually didn't think it was so bad. I mean, the sex scenes probably did warrant the NC-17 rating. It's kind of like seeing a live demonstration of kama sutra stuff--I was impressed with the lead actress' flexibility. And Tony Leung does flash some brain and was probably painfully strapped down at some point if indeed those scenes are only simulated sex (a disclaimer at the end of the credits claims it was). But the reviews made it seem as if the actors are naked for half the movie. That's certainly not so. The entire first half of the movie is just buildup to the first sex scene.

Overall, the movie was good unless you can't sit still in a theater for more than two hours. That junk was loooong—almost 2 hrs and 40 minutes. For my personal taste, though, I don't know if it's something I would have chosen to pay a full ticket for (I got tix to a free screening). The thing that made this particular screening worth it was that Ang Lee was there doing a Q&A. I managed to snap this pic before heading out of the theater.