Just once I wish luxury product weblog Luxist would post something I could afford, but then it wouldn’t be fulfilling its mission (unless I magically became super rich). This pretty glass sink caught my eye. I don’t think those raised basin sinks that are all the designer rage nowadays are practical, but this one has LEDs that change color according to the water temperature. There are currently five sinks in the company’s “chromatherapy” product line. And did you know that the color yellow is “hopeful and digestive?” Lucky for the bananas.
The NY Times pieces together the ideal Connecticut Main Street (or often more appropriately termed “town center”) and ends up with a list of the state’s interesting places to eat and shop. I’ve only been to two of them though, Stew Leonard’s (often) and Pepe’s Pizza (once, which was enough to get friends loyal to Sally’s riled up).
Archie McPhee isn’t the founder of Archie McPhee’s. Founder Mark Pahlow named the store after his wife’s great uncle. As a child, Pahlow sold firecrackers to neighborhood kids at a 9,900% profit. He grew up and sold plastic aliens, acquired at the Pic ‘n Save, to ritzy stores in Beverly Hills. Eventually his interest in peddling plastic novelties grew into Archie McPhee’s and, more profitably perhaps, Accoutrements, the company that creates all those novelties. There’s a booming market for the little amusements and there are 1.5 million Devil Duckies out there to prove it.
Pet strollers. Yes, pet strollers.
Just the other day I was commenting to someone on how prevalent Saabs are in New England whereas Subarus are plentiful in the Pacific NW. Now GM has melded a Swedish facade onto a Japanese frame in an odd blending that the NY Times termed the “Saab-aru”. The Saab 9-2X is essentially a Subaru Impreza wagon. The front was restyled to look like a Saab but there’s no mistaking that rear window treatment for anything but a Subaru. Of course the retooling of models for different brands is nothing new for the automobile industry, but remaking a Subaru into a Saab feels strange. And no, they didn’t move the ignition switch down between the seats. Another Saab-aru is in the works. Subaru’s first SUV, the B9X, will be introduced at the Detroit Auto Show in January and a Saab version is underway.
Random Observations from a sleep-deprived mind
- There is no Food Network before 9:30am. Just infomercials.
- If you check online papers in the middle of the night and then again in the morning (thinking, oh it’s a new day!), don’t expect any new content — it’s only been a few hours!
- Our family now qualifies for the 3 person carpool lane, giving us faster access to our highway exit. Sweet!
- Babies may have to learn how to talk but they don’t have to learn how to giggle and laugh.
- I find a certain irony in seeing a parent drive their kid door to door to collect pledges for a walkathon. Then again, maybe it’s a tactic to save their little feet for the big event. (But it’s not like our driveways are very far apart here!)
- A baby can’t tell you why he’s crying but at least he can’t talk back at you yet.
- Reading while sleep-deprived is so much fun. You see a word like “carpet” and you think “oh so people are keeping cars as pets now, eh!???” and then you think “I’m such an idiot. Of course they mean that there are now cars designed for pets.”
- You know that movie theater song that goes something like “Let’s go out to the lobby, let’s go out to the lobby, let’s go out to the lobby, and get ourselves a snack.” Well, it’s the same tune as “The bear went over the mountain.” This is something our baby would have already learned — if only he understood English.
- When your husband claims the baby can play “rock, paper, scissors” just smile and nod. Do not argue that the baby is actually playing “rock, rock, rock” or at best “rock, paper, rock.”
“Hairspray” was a movie. Now it’s a Broadway musical. And it’s going to be a movie again. Since the original movie wasn’t a musical, and Hollywood loves remakes anyway, the musical is going to be a movie, slated for 2005. Other musicals are running after the success of “Chicago” with producers anxiously waiting to see how this month’s release of “Phantom of the Opera” will fare. “The Producers,” like “Hairspray” has gone from movie to Broadway and is going to movie again. Upcoming in the good old-fashioned stage-to-screen bloodline are “Rent” and “Sweeney Todd” with others twinkling around in the rumor mill. Someone call me when they get around to “Pippin.”
Food stylist JoAnne Naganawa received her home economics degree from the University of Washington while her daughter was in high school. Now she arranges edible plates for magazine and catalog photo shoots. Taking pictures of food may seem easy, after all your subjects aren’t usually moving or temperamental, but Naganawa says that three usable shots a day is considered good. The bright lights cause food to wilt and she always has extras on hand for accidents or improved arrangements. She uses powdered sugar mixed with canned frosting to simulate ice cream, but refuses to use inedible ingredients.
This year’s Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree hails from Suffern, New York and weighs in at 9 tons. At the top of the 71 foot Norway Spruce sits a brand new Swarovski crystal star which is no lightweight either at 550 pounds.
Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “Cinderella” (with the lovely Julie Andrews) was created for television and broadcast live in color except in the Pacific time zone where they got the black and white kinescope recording instead. It hasn’t been shown again since that 1957 event which attracted a huge audience. Two remakes were created, one in 1965 with Lesley Ann Warren and another in 1997 with Brandy. PBS’ Great Performances is dusting off the original kinescope and airing it in early December with Ms. Andrews hosting. A DVD is also being released in the same timeframe. New York City Opera’s recent stage production of “Cinderella” dragged in John Epperson, better known as “Lypsinka,” to play the stepmother.
