Friday, June 30, 2006
Superman Returns
I should be in bed right now and I'm going to regret it tomorrow morning when S-Boogie wakes me at 7:30, but I couldn't go to bed without blogging about Superman Returns. Foxy and I saw it this afternoon, and I was blown away. And not just because the volume in the theater was turned up ridiculously high--the movie is amazing on a lot of levels. The action sequences and SFX are incredible. To quote the tagline to the 1978 version of Superman, you will believe a man can fly. Sure, Superman does lots of cool stuff, but nothing as cool as flying, and the flying scenes are... wow.
At any rate, my favorite part of the movie is not the flying or the action or Kevin Spacey's superb performance as Lex Luthor or even Brandon Routh in tights. My favorite part is the love story. I like fiction that represents love in a way I find realistic and responsible, and Superman Returns does just that. I won't give too much away, but there's a weird sort of love triangle that results from the fact that Superman has been gone for five years and has come back unexpectedly, and all three parties involved in the triangle act realistically, responsibly, and maturely--like adults, not teenagers, which is how adults in most romantic movies tend to act. In the real world, or at least in any part of the real world that involves any kind of lasting happiness, love is not some raging passionate force that takes complete control of you, but rather it is a raging passionate force that takes complete control of you, balanced by rational decisions of whom and how to love. All three parties in the love triangle in Superman Returns portray both sides of this equation: the passion and the ration (which would be more clever if "ration" meant what I want it to mean here). I've long been a fan of Superman, but now Bryan Singer has made me a fan of Lois Lane.
Wednesday, June 28, 2006
The Posts I Haven't Been Writing
- What I like about my new job (#1: on the first day they let me ring the bell in the tower)
- Fobsvithe on how I feel about obedience as a principle of spiritual growth (and why the earring thing is about earrings, regardless of what anyone says, and why moving to the front of the congregation when the speaker asks you to is not a moral issue)
- A post inviting people to accompany me and Foxy to Superman Returns tomorrow (Thursday) at 12:30 at Riverwoods.
- A post inviting people to join me and Foxy at a free Michael Franti & Spearhead concert in Salt Lake next Thursday.
- A post about how three different sets of people expect me to be in three different places come September, and I'm not sure which to choose (though one set, the one that expects me to be teaching at UVSC, just needs to be informed that I won't be there)
- How I can breathe now that I'm taking steroids.
- How I was ashamed to learn Monday that I have periodontal disease from not flossing regularly but pleased to learn that I have no cavities from brushing regularly.
- How I'm wondering if having a family life [with the new and improved family and the second job to support them] means I won't have time to have a social life, and how that would be a sucky sacrifice to make but there's no question about whether I'd make it.
- How, despite the fact that I feel tired lately and have basically no free time and I miss my friends, I feel happy because it's good to be Foxy J's husband and S-Boogie and Little Dude's dad.
Friday, June 23, 2006
More Deep Thoughts With Master Fob
As I was in the bathroom just now, Little Dude sleeping snugly in the sling/pouch thingee that hangs over my tummy, it occurred to me: "Now I know why men don't get pregnant. It's hard to aim when you can't see what you're doing."
Friday, June 09, 2006
Reasons Why It's Petty and Ridiculous of Me to Feel My Thunder Has Been Stolen
- Daniel and Jay are cool guys. They are way more articulate than I would be on film, and they are way more involved in gay Mormon issues. I know it's important to them to get people thinking and talking about what it means to be gay and Mormon, and hopefully them being on Nightline will forward that cause.
- Even though I'm sure that when Nightline initially expressed interest in interviewing me and Foxy J, they thought it would be a great idea to interview a real life "Brokeback marriage" (an inaccurate term in several ways), in reality we wouldn't have been very interesting. It would have gone something like this:
- Nightline: What's it like being gay, Mormon, and married?
- Master Fob: Hm. It's, well, it's pretty much like being straight, Mormon, and married. Not much is different about our lives. We're happy. No one persecutes us, no one hates us, no one tells us we're doing the wrong thing. Despite my paranoia, I've never experienced any judging from gays or Mormons. People are pretty happy to let us be. I mean, sure, I'm annoyed by some of the Church's policies and actions toward homosexuals, but it's not like any of that really affects me.
- Foxy J: I like Fobby. We're happy.
- Master Fob: Isn't our baby cute?
- Crickets: Chirp.
- Daniel and Jay are much more representative than Foxy and I, I think, of the conflict of being gay and Mormon.
- What if, while they were interviewing us, Foxy's placenta had ruptured? That would have been embarrassing.
Friday, June 02, 2006
Bi-
Starting some time next week, I will be a bilibrarian. I'm quite happy about this turn of events.
The two libraries I'll be working at are very different. One tends to be more elitist in its philosophy, purchasing not what is popular but that which is determined to be of high quality and lasting value (however they determine that). The other tends to be more populist, purchasing items that the public wants and avoiding other items that, while considered high quality, might be offensive to the general public (however they determine that). I, personally, fall somewhere between these two philosophies. I believe a public library has a duty to provide the public with what they want, but at the same time I feel that catering to the majority's (in this case conservative Mormon) values can easily alienate the minority, who should also have a voice in what their public library should be. I think it will be interesting for me to work at both libraries and figure out the best way to balance these conflicting views of librarianship.
I'm also excited because my new library job, like my current library job, pays $6/hr more than any of the other options I was looking at. Life is good.
The two libraries I'll be working at are very different. One tends to be more elitist in its philosophy, purchasing not what is popular but that which is determined to be of high quality and lasting value (however they determine that). The other tends to be more populist, purchasing items that the public wants and avoiding other items that, while considered high quality, might be offensive to the general public (however they determine that). I, personally, fall somewhere between these two philosophies. I believe a public library has a duty to provide the public with what they want, but at the same time I feel that catering to the majority's (in this case conservative Mormon) values can easily alienate the minority, who should also have a voice in what their public library should be. I think it will be interesting for me to work at both libraries and figure out the best way to balance these conflicting views of librarianship.
I'm also excited because my new library job, like my current library job, pays $6/hr more than any of the other options I was looking at. Life is good.
Thursday, June 01, 2006
Day (and Night) One with Baby Fob at Home in the Fobcave
The nice thing about the second baby is that we've been through this all before so we have a better idea of what we're doing and a clearer view of the light at the end of the tunnel. As Little Dude (aka LD, the newborn formerly known as Baby Fob) alternated between eating for two minutes, sleeping for five, and screeching at us until four o'clock in the morning, it was reassuring to remember that this does not last more than a few months at most. And this specific this won't last more than a couple weeks, as nothing with infants lasts more than a couple weeks before growing into something else.
The frustrating thing about the second baby is that we've already been through all this before and we've gotten past it so it seems a little silly to go through it all again. We're almost (speaking optimistically) past the diaper phase with S-Boogie, and now we're starting all over again. Sigh.
The temporary consolation is that he's quite cute, and the more lasting consolation is that he's a human being--and a potentially wonderful human being at that--and human beings simply don't come into the world without somebody having to endure sleepless nights and dirty diapers. In the end it'll be worth it.
The frustrating thing about the second baby is that we've already been through all this before and we've gotten past it so it seems a little silly to go through it all again. We're almost (speaking optimistically) past the diaper phase with S-Boogie, and now we're starting all over again. Sigh.
The temporary consolation is that he's quite cute, and the more lasting consolation is that he's a human being--and a potentially wonderful human being at that--and human beings simply don't come into the world without somebody having to endure sleepless nights and dirty diapers. In the end it'll be worth it.