Saturday, December 5, 2009

BwBB (Born with the Boom Bap) by Germanate08

BwBB (Born with the Boom Bap)  by  Germanate08




So the semester is almost over, this coming week is finals week and I don't have too much going on so I'm starting to relax a little. Sue on the other hand is hip deep in student papers, but good thing she luuuuuvs reading student papers or she might be kind of annoyed at the moment. Here you can see a little of what I've been working on, some of my design projects and final prints for photography and Saracat helping me with my philosophy homework. It's been fun and I'm looking forward to diving into next semester, but first: a nice relaxing winter break!

I seem to have a new song done every time I post one of these blogs, and the more I think about it, it's probably the main reason I post them (just kidding, sort of). So check out new tune BwBB when you get a chance. I kind of like www.Soundcloud.com, as my new go-to music posting sight but I still post on MySpace, Garageband and others.

We're settling nicely into our new house. The break will provide us more opportunity to do some of the work we need to do on the place and to at least put away some of the piles of crap that have been sitting upstairs waiting for a home. We even had our first party, thrown for members of the latin and greek class that Sue attends every other Saturday at Eighth Day Books a
block or so down the road. Hanging out with that wacky bunch has made me want to study latin or greek or both with them, but I must stay focused.

Pigs! Pigs pigs pigs! Guinea, that is! That's right, we have ourselves some new pigs, names: Kirk and Spock. They are youngins but getting big and fat quickly. Sue is in love. Sara is terrified.

We hope that you all had a great Thanksgiving and we're sorry we didn't get to see more of you over the holiday. We did manage to visit New York for a whirlwind few days to attend Sue's friends Mary and Greg's wedding. We even got into the city to check out the awesome Tim Burton
exhibit at the MOMA. Normally I would never go to an event like that on the day after
Thanksgiving or any other special touristy day of the year, so standing shoulder to shoulder with a million other museum goers and shuffling like cattle through the exhibit detracted slightly from the experience, but it's a great show (open through April 26, so go see it if you haven't yet!). The wedding was very nice, the reception held at Lands End in Sayville, right on the water, beautiful setting. Sorry, I forgot my camera so
I don't have any images but we had fun and thanks to TJ and
Shannon for hanging with us and letting us stay at their place. As always, one of the most exciting things we did while we were in New York was eat: gyros, bagels, pizza, sushi, soulfood, we covered most of it. I wanted to eat at a Puerto Rican restaurant that I liked on 51st and 9th but it's gone now. Apparently all the Boricua have left New York and been replaced by Dominicans. Oh well, same food
basically. Now I just need to re-calibrate my internal GPS to
take me to all the DR restaurants.

Hope everyone is having a wonderful holiday season with friends and family and that we'll get a chance to see you soon!

Saturday, October 31, 2009


The cat is packed and ready to go. Go where you ask? Hmmmm? Oh did I not mention..? Did I neglect to tell you..? Sue and I now own a friggin house! If you can't believe it, I double dog can't believe it. I thought I'd be living upstairs or downstairs from total strangers my entire life but here we are, an entire dwelling to ourselves...crazy! I've posted a few pics on my Flickr page, but not many. Better to check out the virtual tour I put together of our new home above or here on my YouTube channel.

The house is located in College Hill one of the oldest and most desirable neighborhoods in Wichita. It's full of big beautiful old homes just a couple miles east of downtown and a short
five minute commute from Newman. We knew that old houses meant more repairs but we managed to find a place that's been pretty well taken care of. The biggest problem is that it needs a new paint job desperately and we're hoping we won't have to replace any of the siding once we've peeled away the old paint, but we will see and we brought the price down low enough that we think it will be worth it. It's a 1930's bungalow, two stories
and a half basement which isn't finished but is sealed and dry and contains the washer and
dryer that the sellers very nicely left for us! There are three bedrooms and two baths and a breakfast nook. The backyard is small, taken up mostly by the fairly new two car garage the sellers had built but it's good to have the garage too and Sue is already planning out her
extraordinary medieval herb garden and other landscaping projects. We've been told by several people how nice our neighbors on both sides are so we're looking forward to meeting them. A couple blocks away is a small but nice park and a public pool. We live on English St, a fitting address for the professor and it's a lovely red brick cobblestone street. The pics show the sellers furniture, so it's considerably more empty at this moment.

We've just started moving all our stuff over one car load at a time but luckily we still have the apartment for two more weeks so we don't have to move everything over at once. We don't have much furniture to fill it yet but hopefully that will change soon and then we are open for visitors! (Hint hint)

The house buying process went remarkably smooth and quick compared to most people's experiences on the coasts from what we've heard. The benefits of a relatively stable housing market. But it was still a stressful experience since neither of us had much experience with a purchase like this. But it all worked out alright.

What else has happened...the house buying experience has made me forget pretty much everything else going on in our lives. Oh yeah,
the semester has been going well. We're both busy but making it work. I won't mention any names but someone you know may in fact be getting straight A's in all his classes. I know, he must be, like, crazy smart. Anyway, a couple weeks ago we went back to KC to visit the greatest haunted houses ever with Sue's colleague in the English dept, Bryan, who organizes this trip for the students and anyone else
interested every Halloween season. Those boys (or girls) know how to put together a scary haunted house. I mentioned them last year but this year we went to two different places, one modeled after Poe, the other after classic horror movies. The setting, one of KC's derelict industrial districts full of big broken down warehouses, is half the fun and you get more boo for your buck then any haunted houses I've been to. The late night drive back, arriving in Wichita at 4 or 5 in morning, was brutal, but it was a good time.

Anyway, that really is pretty much all that has been going on for the last couple weeks, so I'll sign off now but we hope to see or hear from you all soon. I'm not posting the address on this blog but I have included it in the e-mail reminder to you all. Be well and talk to you soon!

Monday, September 28, 2009


It's been a long time since I've updated this here blog but that's what student life will do to you. Too many frat-parties and all night wii golf marathons to keep up with. When you go back to school, you simply have to spend a little more time upside-down with a spigot of stale Bud going up yer nose. Themz the rules, I didn't write 'em.

Anyhow, we hope you all are doing well, keepin on keepin on and whatnot. We've been pretty busy now that school has started up again. I have my share of work to do now that I have a full time schedule and I'm still trying to work as many hours as I can on top of it. Personally, I'm
having a blast, though. Friends U canceled my Mandarin class (the bastards) but I slipped into a computer graphics class instead, which does advance my major, so it's all good. But it feels great to be working out the ol' noggin, dusting off the cobwebs, learning how to text without Teach seeing, even though he/she isn't an idiot and it's obvious anyway. As for Sue, judging by the weight of the bag 'o crap (student's papers, same thing, ooooooh) that we lug back and forth from school everyday, has her hands full as usual. She reads, she mutters obscenities, she gives up and bakes something, gives them all a B - , the usual. But we're good and thinking about y'all.

Oh! Before I go on: new tune, new video, check them out please please please. Watch the new vid for my track My Thang here or above. This blog doesn't allow for wide screen format though, so if you want to see it in all its pirated glory, you gotta go to YouTube. Also! Go to any of the following pages (Myspace, Garageband, Soundcloud)to hear a brand spanking new tune, Around Again, and if you don't feel like dancing, then nod your head politely for a few seconds before you go back to check out
whether your Farmville corn crop is ready for harvest.

We were happy to have a visitor late this summer when our good buddy Erika (one of the super-duper photography team at our wedding, to some of you), came to stay a weekend with us. We got to take her around to Final Friday and a Maxfield Parish exhibit that happened to be at the WAM (Wichita Art Museum) during her
stay. We showed her the sights and, by the time she flew home, she was exhausted from the sheer crushing weight of all the fun she'd had.

A million years ago, before classes started, Sue and I got to enjoy one of the local camp sites when we drove a half hour east to El Dorado lake and
park. The lake, (like pretty much all lakes in Kansas) is man-made, created by the Army Corp of Engineers and the half submerged dead trees that dot the water make for an interesting view. We had fun but learned how difficult tent camping can be on the plains.
It took some searching before we found a spot where our tent wouldn't be flattened by the
relentless winds and even then, the sound of the wind through the trees was roughly equivalent to sleeping on the shoulder of the Brooklyn
Queens Expressway, just
without the honking and bad words. I'm sure the sound must be pleasant to a Kansan, but to me, lying in our little flimsy tent, it sounded something like eight hours of the world coming to an end with just a thin
sheet of nylon between us and the apocalypse. For Sue it was slightly worse, since she picked the windward side of our abode and was attacked by the tent wall pretty much all night. We didn't sleep a whole lot but it was a fun experience and the park and nearby town are very nice.

A couple weekends ago, Sue and I made it back to the Kansas State Fair! Yes, it's that time again and we were there bright and early. Sue had volunteered to work the Newman booth for a morning shift but we both received free entry and some (deep fried) eats on Newman, sweet! However, we were horrified to realize that, after a year of thinking about it, regretting not having it when we were there last year, and impatiently waiting for the fair to come around again so we could finally try it, the Hot Beef Sunday had been discontinued! Noooooo! Sue was especially broken up about it, drowning her sorrows in a couple helpings of deep fried bacon but we assume it wasn't the same.



Last weekend Sue and volunteered to work a big Newman fundraising event called the Party on the Ponderosa. One of the wealthy local families, the Stecklines (whom the art gallery at Newman is named after) held the big western-themed hootnanny (spelling? anyone?) at their ranch outside of town. On display were a collection of genuine frontier era covered wagons, an auction, live
music and fireworks. Sister Charlotte (real-life Newman nun) even got into the act during a western themed shoot out skit and blew up a
building with a tommy gun. No joke. You had to be there.

Anyway, I will only briefly imply that Sue and I may be looking for a house, and we may have made some progress on a particular
house that we want, but that's all I'm saying! You don't want to jinx it do ya? You'll just have to wait for the next update to find out if anything amazing and wonderful has happened in our lives. Wish us luck!


Sunday, July 26, 2009


So, after 10 flights in 9 weeks Sue and I are home and recovering for the near future. Not that we didn't greatly enjoy our Guatemalan adventure and our visit to the northeast, but no human should fly that much. I think we're both enjoying some relative downtime for the remainder of this summer. Sara was happy to see that we'd returned from Guate and did her best to keep me from leaving for New York. But in the end, I'm 190 lbs and she's 7 lbs, I can take her. Even the vacant field next to our complex celebrated our return by rolling itself up into a bunch of marshmallows. I don't know what these things are called officially, so I'm going with marshmallows. 

Before I progress any further I must wish a very Happy Anniversary
to mi amor. One year has flown by and the dust has barely settled but we're still enjoying ourselves. Here's to many more. 


Last week, Sue flew to NY and drove down to Pennsylvania to visit Nan and Pop for a few days.
Covering more ground by splitting up, I stayed in Manhattan for 
a few days and hung out with some of my friends.
Thursday I went with a couple buddies to a free show as part of the all-summer River to River Fest. This show was at East River Park, featuring Man Man. These were the same lovable
nutjobs we'd first discovered at the Austin City Limits fest last year: crazy, spastic, carnival sideshow wackiness! Finished the evening with dinner at the famous Katz's Deli for some pastrami on rye, mmmm. 

Saturday was an especially full and crazy day. I 
spent the day in Coney Island at the annual Siren 
Music Fest, a cool, free music festival known for breaking 
new, up and coming bands as well as offering stage time for older more popular underground acts. I missed the headliners this year, Built to Spill and Spankrock, because I had to leave early, but it was a fun day and some of the bands I did catch 
were pretty cool. I did get to see a little tiny
bit of the Raveonettes who play 
reverb drenched 60's B-movie style rock. Usually it is ass-hot there among the concrete and metal and complete lack of greenery or shade, but this year it was pleasantly a little-tiny-bit-slightly-slightly-slightly cooler. Good times. It was a little sad to see CI for the first time without Astroland. The developers
brought in carnies to fill the space with rides and games but it wasn't the same. Who knows what 
the place will look like next year. At least the Cyclone, Wonderwheel and some of the other big landmarks are still there. 

That night, I met up with Sue in Manhattan fresh from Pennsylvania and we found a number of her
gang at the VNV Nation show at Nokia Theatre in Times Square. 
 We arrived late but the show
 went long, VNV giving the 
enthusiastic crowd four encores. 
My white sneakers were the only non-black garments I spotted in the house that night, serving conveniently as a 
homing beacon in the event Sue and I got separated. VNV had their afterparty at Crash Mansion downtown on Bowery and we all made our way to it, despite the challenge of hailing a friggin' cab in Times Square (usually they are called Yellow Cabs, but 
under this circumstance, it's appropriate to call them by their local name Friggin' Cabs.) Sue and I got back my hotel at four in the morning, just like the good ol' days. We felt bad for the others though, who had to depend on the Long Island Railroad to get home. 

As usual, we failed to find time to see all the people we wanted to, but we did get to see some people we didn't see last time and for those we missed, we'll try again next time. We hung out with my mom 
and got to enjoy the sand a little near her place in Long Beach. Finally, no visit to NY would be complete with out downing a plate of pasta about twice the size of my head. Oh that and the bag of
bagels we smuggled back on the plane. 

Hope everyone is having a pleasant summer, especially those in NY who have had one of the wettest seasons in recent memory. We at least brought you one week of nice weather from Kansas, hope you get some more before the seasons over.