|
|
|
|
Saturday
When in Rome, do as Audrey does
Audrey and I were strolling by the Basilica San Lorenzo the other day when she abruptly stopped, turned and insisted I pause to have a look.
"Aren't these shoes marvellous?" she said, gazing in the men's store window. "Wouldn't it be fun if you tried them on tomorrow?"
"Fun might be stretching the boundaries of the word," I replied.
Ah, Italia. Home of Michelangelo, da Vinci, Brunelleschi.
And Gucci, Versace and Armani.
Yes, in modern Italy, sleek handbags, finely tailored suits and eye-catching shoes compete with Renaissance masterworks for the curious traveller's attention.
And for every 15th-century mural or finely chiselled marble sculpture there is at least one shop window displaying lacy lingerie, silk ties or leather coats. No wonder James Bond feels at home in Italy, gamely speeding under Venetian bridges without even wrinkling his Cardinale slacks.
Though not aggressively unfashionable, the IO spent more time under the Tuscan sun admiring frescoes than footwear. The ever-stylish Audrey, however, is a veritable Siren of foreign fashionistas. And so on occasion I found myself in her company, not comparing the brushwork of Botticelli and Michelangelo but gauging the fit of handsome wool coats.
The wares are undeniably fine. But a touch pricey in the posh boutiques. After all, does one really need to plunk down enough euros for an Armani tie to buy 20 County ales at one of the more inviting Elgin Street pubs?
Walking back to the hotel, we passed a clutch of market-stall street vendors selling less expensive yet still desirable bags, belts and scarves. In fact I picked up three fetching Italian silk ties bearing a respectable fashion-house label for a grand total of a mere 20 euros.
Take that, Mr. Versace.
Guest Posting from Zoom
After some angst and developing stress symptoms, Our first Meta Contest Winner Zoom writes:
Dear ESIs,
I am pleased to submit my guest post to you, and I thank you for your patience. It helped that Aggie pointed out it could be short.
My post consists of a single link: Click here
I trust this satisfies my contractual obligations to the ESIs.
I wish you all the best with your future contests, which I will watch from a safe distance.
Sincerely,
Zoom
Wednesday
Google Poem: Fifteen Potential Books
- I want to write a book about America. Because I love America
- I want to write a book about how date night is great for your marriage
- I want to write a book about the series on the Word program, that would give a history on each antique
- I want to write a book about my experiences with clients who have been healed through massage
- I want to write a book about my life to help girls out there that have been raped or been under sexual pressure
- I want to write a book about her!
- I want to write a book about the struggle I have gone through in the last 8 years trying to get businesses and ideas off the ground
- I want to write a book about Multiple Sclerosis and its effects on the average person.
- I want to write a book about teaching children about death and dying. It will be a book that parents and children can read together
- I want to write a book about my life, not that my life is that meaningful, but there have been 32 bizarre incidents that have happened...
- I want to write a book about my experiences - life before diagnosis, the hell of hospital treatment, life after etc.
- I’ve been busy researching a book I want to write - a book about a poor woman living around 1910
- ...when I got called by the "Today" show, I thought well, it's now or never if I want to write a book about the hobo journey
- I want to write a book about what it was like to be a slave
- I want to write a book about everything I don’t remember.
[*]
Aggie's perfect storm
It has become overwhelmingly needful to metablog our own Essex girl.
Evidence suggests Aggie has found that the road to new-age enlightenment is no easy thing, strewn as it is with a perfect storm of pitfalls. And bad hair days. Not to mention bent-to-broken metaphors. Poor thing is now so confused, she's laying off drinking and trying to reinvent herself as a common craft blogger...
What are the ethics, here? Aggie is one of us. I mean, I love her, and she is, like Mary Poppins, Practically Perfect in Every Way. Uh, but she remains in place as our next-best Muse. Better yet, she's not here to defend herself... and we need material. No honour among metabloggers. 'Nuff said.
Anyway, I was at Bank & Slater yesterday, nose to the ground, sniffin' opportunity, when I chanced to look up. And was struck with awe. I mean, the signage at this one corner has Aggie's enlightenment covered: martini lounge named for her favorite yoga position, strong coffee options, a hair salon to repair the unfortunate mullet experiment, and a relaxing day spa. The salon's name? Perfection. Nothing better than that.
And what about that constant, soothing flow of large American cars, huh?
Truly, when one seeks satori, the devil is in the distractions. Crafting? Aggie, we barely recognize you! Just ignore the proven fact that when anyone in a dysfunctional group tries to change for the better, other members will pressure her to return to old, familiar patterns, so they can avoid confronting their own dysfunctions. Instead, think about this, Ags: Lotus Martini Lounge!
Monday
The Meta Contest Winner
As was mentioned in the minutes of our last Emergency Meeting, the Elgin Street Irregulars met last week and selected a winner from among the entries to the Meta Contest.
We made a list and checked it twice with thorough discussion of the merits of each entry.
Tiana: choose a location in the city and people need to determine that place via your excruciatingly obscure clues and photos.
Lovely idea for a contest, we're good at excruciatingly obscure, but...A. & J.: Show off hidden gems of Ottawa. Nothing touristy, easily visible and it has to be in the downtown core. Something that only the locals would know about. A real hidden gem.
- maybe not so good at clues and photos.
Lovely idea for a contest, but...Ted: I think you need to recruit a new regular to save your blog.
- It would be a fair amount of work; and
- We want to keep our gems hidden; look at how the Usual Spot has been wrecked by popularity.
A new recruit might indeed save our blog. It could be like Rock Star: Supernova or the Search for the Next [Pussycat] Doll and the contestants could be given tasks that would generate blog postings for weeks and weeks (example: This week we want a photo-shopped image including elements from a 60s TV show and Stéphane Dion's shadow cabinet), but...Harmony: I was thinking of hidden gems too. But I know a couple that aren't exactly in the core (though not outside the green belt either!). Could we expand it to include a larger area?
- We're probably not ready for a new member[*]; and
- We don't really want to be like Rock Star: Supernova; we'd rather be like the Ed Sullivan Show.
Sorry. We're the Elgin Street Irregulars. We are not suburban people.zoom: [Entry #1] ... how about a treasure hunt? You hide something wonderful somewhere in the city and offer a series of daily clues (photographic and/or textual) to its whereabouts. The Citizen did this decades ago - they hid a gold bar...
A lovely idea for a contest, but...zoom: [Entry #2] You could even have a pre-contest contest in which people could enter their suggestions for prizes.
- We haven't got a gold bar to give away; and
- It's been done.
Congratulations Zoom! This is the perfect suggestion for our next contest because it:
- Is easy;
- Lets us stall a while longer before coming up with a real contest; and
- Perfectly captures the self-referential nature of this blog.
A big thank you to all entrants. We regret that there could only be one winner. None of you are losers. (Except in the sense that you did not win, and therefore technically, you lost.)
Details on the Meta-Prize Contest will be posted on the weekend.