11-26-2008
Today’s excitement? Played charades with the Wisconsin group. We made fun of one other.
Where I've been, where I'm going, and a dash of what I'm thinking along the way.
11-26-2008
Today’s excitement? Played charades with the Wisconsin group. We made fun of one other.
11-27-2008
To all you Wisconsin citizens reading this, know that your tax dollars are being well spent. Today, the University sprung for a delicious Thanksgiving feast for us all at the Park Café in Regents Park. We had the whole place to ourselves, it was fantastic.
From my understanding, the catering company was scrambling to gather Thanksgiving recipes and trying to figure out how the hell to make these dishes, but truthfully, they nailed it: mouthwatering turkey, perfectly spiced stuffing, candy-like sweet potatoes, mashed potatoes, and even the pumpkin pie chaser with a coffee to settle the tummy. Couldn’t have asked for a better holiday away from home.
Afterward, being the college students we are, we had a Get-tanked-giving started by a beer pong tournament and finishing at the ISH bar.
11-25-2008
Since the first day we moved in on York Terrace East, I could tell lived in a nice area of London. But it took me a few weeks to realize how nice it was. The flats across the street from MTH and to our right and left are millions of pounds.
My first clue was Regents Park. It’s the most beautiful park in London and to have it in your backyard must not come cheaply.
My second clue came from my walk I take just about every day to ISH. In my walk, I always pass by a flat that has it’s lower window lit up as if they are proud to display what disgusts me. A zebra pelt rug laying on the floor ears attached, neck mane draped to one side, and clearly is not an imitation. On the couch next to this unjust death rug is a blanket made of raccoon pelts with the tails decoratively dangling from the edges. This one could very well be a fake, but judging from how much money these people must have, it’s probably not.
Another clue that really solidified my knowledge of where exactly I was living came from two east Londoners. Joe and Ben came to west London just looking for a little night out and ended up running across the ISH bar and the Wisconsin ladies. These guys were awesome though because they didn’t discriminate. They bought just as much alcohol for us guys as they did the girls. Eventually we got around to the topic of where we live and we said, “well, we live here.” Their jaws dropped as they said, “do you realize where you are?” They continued to tell us how Madonna has a flat not far from here and that millionaires are the only ones that call the Regent’s Park area home.
So, am I a millionaire? No, far from it. But the International Students House is subsidized by the government and allows for students to live cheaply where they would otherwise only dream of living. It’s a sweet deal for ISH, because they also house a club in the basement that carries big name acts. So essentially, they have a government subsidized club. Talk about bank.
The last and final clue I have for knowing where I live is the reminder I pass by every day that is written on the size of the International Students House:
And while we are students scraping by here in London, we are living in London. So that statement holds quite a bit of truth.
11-24-2008
Best musicians ever? Is that an over statement? Perhaps, but they are the most soulful musicians ever: Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova. They are the stars of the movie Once. Which if you’ve never seen, get on it. Glen is also the front man of The Frames, an all around solid group out of Ireland.
Glen was like a child on that stage in Royal Albert Hall, not that he was unprofessional in his way, but in the wonderment he had for the space he was in. Watching him pound away on his guitar and passionately yell into his tessitura was like watching Brett Favre playing football. Strange comparison I know, but hear me out. As any Packer fan, or football can for that matter, knows, watching Brett is like watching a kid in the backyard, just loving the game. This was Glen. On stage and loving it.
He started solo….completely solo, without even a sound system. Just him and his beat up acoustic guitar at the front of the stage and filling Royal Albert Hall with “So this is what you’ve waited for.” He was then joined by Marketa for “When your mind’s made up.” Then the rest of the band came out and I was trapped in Swell Season euphoria.
One of the openers came and joined the band playing the fiddle on a few numbers as well. All around, an absolutely fantastic show.
11-21-2008
For now, see Elizabeth’s blog, because it is extremely detailed and I won't be able to match that for while.
and the following picasa albums tell the story via pictures:
http://picasaweb.google.com/Elizabeth.Bertke/Scotland?authkey=hwbgTMzIjLM
http://picasaweb.google.com/shawnmconnelly/Scotland#
11-20-2008
I never want to sit on a bus again. After waking up a bit tipsy still and hopefully throwing in my bag what I needed, I took the National Express 591 from Victoria Station to Edinburgh Scotland. Nine hours, too long to be sitting with a wailing baby two seat up from you. The only reason this was any better than a flight was that we stopped every 3-4 hours for a break. Which was one of the reasons it took so long as well. But it was cheap. Can’t really complain. I made it into Edinburgh right when I thought I would and made it to the hostel where I met up with Elizabeth!
Elizabeth and I met this past summer at a Jimmy Buffet concert. After a little chit-chat we realized we were both going to be in Europe this fall. The following Monday we added each other as Facebook friends and didn’t really communicate again until two weeks ago.
I was on Facebook and saw that she was as well. So I messaged here with this:
“Wanna go to Scotland?” Her reply, “yes.”
The rest we figured out over many emails and Facebook messages. Thanks, Mark Zuckerburg.
So we hugged at the hostel after only ever seeing each other once before in our lives. That night we walked around a windy, cold Edinburgh and made our way to a restaurant that gave discounts to folks staying at the hostel which we were laying our heads that night.
I had the Haggis, a Scottish delight. I had heard of it, but had no idea what it actually was. Our waitress came to our table and highly suggested it. I asked what it was and Liz informed me that it was sheep brains and entrails. In disbelief I said, “Liz, let’s have the waitress tell us, I’m pretty sure she knows.” The waitress replied, “Well that’s pretty much what it is.” But it was also mixed with mash potatoes and gravy and was served in this nifty cake formation so I couldn’t complain. It really was delicious.
We polished off our Stellas and headed back to the hostel for bed. As we had a long day ahead of us on Friday.
11-19-2008
By the end of the night, I had earrings and a plastic princess necklace on, a jar of pickled onions, a huge boxes of jellybeans, chocolate milk duds, Cadbury cream eggs, and a hard bodies calendar. I was smiling ear to ear and was sticky with champagne. Couldn’t have asked for a better night in London. Again, l’m trying the Tarentino thing.
About a month and a half ago, I spent a week at work going through the stations achieves. I was to compile a 30-minute audio sample of the stations best from the past year. This audio sample, along with a on-air schedule, 5-page write up, and an hour of on-air material from a randomly selected hour of their choosing, was sent to the National Radio Academy for a competition. It was a long monotonous week. But a week ago something came of it.
The National Radio Academy called my boss Gabriella and asked her if someone representing Life FM was going to be at their panel discussion and awards ceremony tonight. She assured them there would be, although until that phone call, there wasn’t going to be.
So tonight, Gabriella and I, after looking for the place for about 45 minutes, sat in on the panel discussion the Radio Academy arranged on radio station imaging. It was extremely informative. I love hearing people talk about radio sound and the psychology behind it, because it’s totally what I’m into. So it’s great to hear people who are as nerdily into it as I am. However, these people weren’t nerds. They were hip, professional audio producers who came from all sorts of backgrounds and worked in all different angles of radio. Before the discussion tonight, they were all given an assignment in another panel members job, and the results were extremely interesting.
After the panel discussion came the announcement of the winner of the Radio Academy’s Nations and Regions Award. I have to admit, as they were describing the eligibility requirements of the award, my heart started pumping a little faster. Finally, it came:
“And the winner of the 2008 Nations and Regions Award is, Life FM.”
Gabriella, in a not-so-quiet whisper said, “Oh my God!” and draws the attention of the entire room. The presenter continues, “I believe we have a representative from LifeFM here tonight.”
The award presenter described the station and why we were chosen:
Like all entrants to these awards, Life FM was required to submit an hour of continuous output (specified at random by the Academy), along with a highlights compilation and supporting written submission.
The judges felt that the output they heard demonstrated that it is possible to achieve high level of local awareness without sounding parochial - citing, as the best example of this, a feature called ‘Battle of the Brands’, which pitted local businesses against each other for a chance to win some free advertising: the judges felt that this was an excellent mechanic for building listener loyalty, and very well executed.
The judges were also impressed by the standard of the on air presentation, the station sound, and by the written submission that accompanied the Life FM entry. Significant time had clearly been spent compiling this entry - and it was time well spent. Congratulations!
Gabriella went up to say a few words. She thanked me for gathering the audio and gave props to everyone at the station. We were both ecstatic. Afterward, virtually the entire room of audio producers went to a little pub two doors down and I was able to catch up with some of the panel, as congratulations were being thrown our way from all around the bar. Gabriella even had a few of her friends come out and join us. After socializing and exchanging contact info for a while (in hopes of a possible job lead), that pubs started to feel a little tiny, since it was. So Gabriella, her friends and I headed to a pretty crazy basement club, which turned out to be a haven for homosexual men.
After listening to a big black drag queen sing, she (he?) took onto the little stage two girls and two guys, one of which was me. We passed a wrapped gift down the line in a musical chairs kind of fashion. When the music stopped, whoever was holding it got to unwrap the first layer of paper and keep whatever they unveiled. I just to happen to be the last one. However, I didn’t get off so easy. In order to earn my prize I had to eat a pickled onion out of the person’s mouth who had the present before me. Luckily, this was an attractive woman, so I had no qualms.
Needless to say, I won. That pickled onion taste is still in my mouth, but I won. On top of the prizes mentioned at the beginning of this post, I also got a bottle of champagne which I shook up and opened in a festive manner all over the dance floor which I then shared with my fellow contestants.
I stumbled home down an empty Regent’s street. It was sweet because they were doing some construction / cleaning I was able to walk right down the middle and take pictures of the stars above.
And I saw a designer clothing store for pregnant women, where you can spend a couple hundred pounds on an outfit that you’ll where for 7 months tops!
Upon arriving home, I awoke my roommates and told them of my night, and it was a night indeed. I had to get some sleep for the next day I had a 9 hour journey to Edinburgh, Scotland.
11-18-2008
Being employed at a radio station certainly does have its perks. The best one being free tickets to concerts, shows, movies, whatever. Tonight I was given comp tickets to see Shaolin: Wheel of Life.
It was a unique show. It kind of told the story of the Shaolin monks, a peaceful order of monks who lived in seclusion in China. However, when enemies started invading China, they saw the need to learn combat and defend their country. They imitated their fight styles off of animals: snake, tiger, eagle, and rat.
The cast was made up of boys aged 6-18 and a few older guys to play the part of emperors. The tiny boys were the most impressive. I’m not kidding, literally 6 yeas old and these kids were doing flips of each other, performing intricate fighting sequences, and even doing flips where they used the top of their heads to propel themselves into the next flip.
It was like watching a kung-fu stunt show with a storyline thrown into it. Then once the storyline was complete, there was another 20 minutes of even more crazy stunts: walking on axe blades, breaking bricks with their heads, laying ones body on six sharp spears, you know the usual.
Once the self-mutilation was complete and we began filing out of the theatre, Kallie and I agreed that it was cool to see, but we are both pleased we didn’t have to pay for it.
Work was the same as work could be. My night was as bizarre as bizarre can be.
Kimberly, Aurelia, Chad, and I went to wildest show I have yet to see in London. It’s called La Clique, the circus. We had £10 standing tickets, yet in this intimate little theatre, it was all we needed. Basically, the show is a series of small acts:
The show was absolutely hilarious, stunning, and extremely entertaining. If you are ever in Londontown, swing by the Hippodrome and check it. You will not be disappointed, guarantee.
With only a few weekends left in London, I need to budget my time wisely and hit up what is absolutely essential. From what I had heard, the British museum is one of these such essentials. So today Luke and I gave ourselves a little education and soaked in thousands of years of art.
But first, food was necessary so what better for brunch than a pie from a delicious little Italian place off of Goodge Street.
The museum lived up to it’s reputation, full of priceless artifacts from ancient civilizations like friezes from the Parthenon. I learned today that those actually would have been painted. There was a computer simulation of what the Parthenon would have looked like with these strips of painted sculptures at the base of the roof. There were many scenes throughout the gallery that were either completely or 75% intact. The ruins were actually set up in the gallery approximately as they would have been in the Parthenon, so with the right amount of imagination, I felt like I was there, sandals, tunic, and all.
We even got our feet sandy as we headed back to ancient Egypt via a tour with a lovely volunteer. She told us all about the different dynasties and how the empire evolved with each new pharaoh. While their civilizations were evolving, some of their supposedly ‘new technologies’ didn’t quite work as well as those of old, particularly when it came to burial rituals. A very primitive Egyptian burial was simply a pit dug in the desert sand in which the body was places with whatever objects he or she made need for the afterlife. No sarcophagus, no tomb. Just sand. This preserved the body incredibly well, however, left the body susceptible to tomb raiders and scavenger animals. Hence, why they moved to the sarcophaguses and embalming to attempt to preserve the body for use in the afterlife.
Those with servants even had them killed upon their death, because you wouldn't want to lift a finger in the afterlife. One pharaoh eventually saw the cruelty in this, and since he was god after all, declared that servants could carve a figurine of themselves which would act as their masters servant in the afterlife.
Oh and the key to decoding text of the ancient world, the Rosetta Stone.
The British Museum also rotates some commissioned contemporary art pieces that are displayed amongst the permanent collection. We were lucky enough to see:
Anthony Gormley’s Case for an Angel I
Damien Hirst’s Cornucopia
Ron Mueck’s Mask II
Tim Noble and Sue Webster’s Dark Stuff (various mummified animals, collected on a metal stand with a light projector showing shadow faces)
Marc Quinn’s Siren (Solid gold statue of Kate Moss in a yoga pose)
We felt a lot smarter after leaving the museum, but we didn’t want to feel too pompous. Lucky for us there was a comic book store right across the street! They had some amazing comics, graphic novels, and books. My favorite was the comic of Firefly, a sci-fi/western series that was on Fox for not long enough.
We arrived back at MTH just in time for the guy’s floor party that was being held in the basement. I was really jacked to go because there was rumor that a stipper was going to be there. Truth be told, it was actually kind of lame. They ran out of beer way too fast and the pizza they promised the 40 of us that were there came an two hours late and in the form of four 8inch little pizzas. Certainly not enough to feed a basement full of hungry buzzed guys.
But meh. Got to play some foosball with pantsless little guys, watched the Packers play Chicago, and played cards with some cool guys from all over the world. It was cool having them ask, “where are you from?” Then I’d point to the screen and say, from where this game is being played.
The night ended at ISH bar with great conversation with Deb.
Ended up pulling a late night at work this evening. However, I was determined to not just go back to MTH, so I walked around Westminster. I found a bar. Not just any bar, but a little hip place beneathe a book store. The best part: they served Old Fashions, the local Wisconsin favorite consisting of brandy, bitters, and club soda. However, at £7.50 a glass, I decided just going home would be better on my left hip...that's the pocket that carries my wallet.
Let me preface this with a huge "I told you so." I knew I'd get waaaayyyyy behind eventually, but I never anticipated writing a blog from Nov. 8th on Nov. 25th, but do not fret, I have the memory of a drunken elephant and will not leave out a single detail!
Of course, I always have an excuse for getting so far behind. This time it's the fact that I've been blogging for Life. So do check out those...
Today I educated myself on the going ons of London, both historically and presently. The day started with sprinkles of rain, the picturesque kind that Londoners know so well. Eventually that little sprinkle came fully equipped with some spurts of full out downpours.
Of all the days that London could have used a dry one, today was it, the day of the Lord Mayor's Parade. From my understanding, all the floats, which followed the route below, were put on by organizations that in one way or another receive their funding from the Lord Mayor. Eventually, I'm going to get a video edited and uploaded here but for now suffice it to say that I saw some sweet floats, lots of horses and impressive carriages, and sharp, classy marching bands...and all of them were soaking wet.
Since it was quite a wet one, Chad, Kim and our visiting guests decided to check out the London museum. This step back in time focuses specifically on the London area, from the dawn of man in Western Europe. I learned just about everything I'd need to know about London's history and more than I ever wanted to know about the Great London Fire of 1666.
The most interesting part of this fire was the fact that like any city ablaze, the citizens were gathering whatever they could out of their homes and getting what they could on to boats on the Thames. At this time, many Londoners with a bit of cash had a small ornate piano-like instrument in their home (the name of which escapes me right now) which was rather expensive, however also rather lightweight. So of all the articles in the home that could be saved, music was one of them.
The other coolest part of the museum was the display of medieval foods that two cooks had set out. They were there to field questions and I purchased a cook book from them!