Categories
Personal

I Actually Won Something!

Me: We’re going to need a babysitter for Thursday night

Matt: How come?

Me: We’re going to a wine reception…

Matt: Why? (mmmm….wiiinne)

Me: …and then to a special preview screening of a new film…

Matt: Ooookaaay (have I forgotten an anniversary or a birthday?)

Me: …followed by a Q & A with the stars of the film.

Matt: Wow…that’ll be…interesting (weird foreign film festival alert!)…what film is it? (wincing)

Me: Hot Fuzz!

Cue lots of excited dancing up and down and girly squealing…and that was just Matt.

Yes, I finally won something! I entered a text competition in the Metro paper last week and yesterday evening I was sitting on the DART going home when I got a call to say I’d won two tickets to see a special screening of Hot Fuzz. Matt and I are huge fans of Shaun Of The Dead and had already marked their new film as one of the few that we would have to include in our ration of nights out this year. I’ll be smiling all day.

Categories
Eve Illustration

Old MacDonald 2: Pig

pig

Another of MacDonald’s farm residents especially for Eve.

Categories
Blogging Ireland

Voting Ends Tonight!

What do you mean you haven’t voted yet?? OK, I admit it, I’ve left it to the last minute too. Tonight at 11:59 pm the voting will close for the Irish Blog Awards long list, so get yourselves over to the voting page and get your nominations in.

*cough*…especially if you’re nominating me…*ahem*

PS: Just remember, one vote is all a blog needs in the appropriate categories is all that’s needed for this stage of the proceedings, no spamming necessary!

Categories
Animation

The Man Who Planted Trees

A comment left by Kris here led me to go looking for this film and I’m not sure if it’s the one Kris was asking about but I can’t think of any others that fit the description. It’s “The Man Who Planted Trees” a Canadian film by Frédéric Back from 1987. It won the Academy Award for Best Animated film and is widely considered to be one of the best short films ever created.

Thanks for reminding me of it Kris, even if it’s not the one you meant, I’ve not seen it in years! If I’ve got the wrong one let me know.

Link to Google Video page in case the embedded one doesn’t work.

Categories
Personal

Telenovelas

Those of you who know me in real life most likely already know that I spent a couple of years in my early twenties living in Mexico City. When I landed there at the age of 21 the full extent of my Spanish was the few words I’d picked up while watching Sesame Street as a child. So I knew that if I was ever to find myself crawling through a desert while in this huge city, I would be able to tell anyone I met that I wanted “Agua!” but that would be about it.

Almost straight away we (there were six of us) began our intensive Spanish lessons in the Berlitz language school. We attended these classes for four hours every weekday for about six months and I have to say that they were the best language classes I’ve ever had. I remember thinking that if Irish and French were taught using this method in Irish schools (no writing letters to imaginary pen friends and definitely no Peig Sayers!) I might have had a chance of actually learning those languages too.

Well, I say that the Berlitz classes were the best classes ever, in fact there was another method that I employed while living in Mexico that really helped me in getting to grips with Spanish. When we finally bought ourselves a small television after we’d been there almost a year I discovered the Mexican telenovela. I never persuaded any of my American roommates just how brilliant they were nor did they swallow my excuse that I was watching them for educational purposes.

The telenovela is often described as being a Latin-American or Spanish soap opera but really they’re not the same thing. They don’t usually run for more than a year so they’re more like a televised version of the old-fashioned serialised novels that Victorian newspapers used to do. The stories are always the same…beautiful girl from a wealthy family falls for caring, handsome but poor, and therefore unsuitable, cobbler/butcher/firefighter/circus performer or a variation on that theme and the main ingredient is plenty of melodrama…lots of evil step-mothers to slap young feisty heroines across the face. I loved them and would peer through the snowy reception straining to understand what on earth they were talking about. Plus they really did help me learn Spanish as it is spoken by everyday people…even if my vocabulary was a little unusual.

Well, the wonders of YouTube allowed me to have a little stroll down memory lane. So here’s a few of the best that I found and I hope you enjoy them. I mean…how could you not?

This last one is the original Colombian telenovela version of Ugly Betty which was brought to the US by Salma Hayek, obviously another telenovela fan: