Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2024

New to View: Familiarity Breeds Content

Cardigan: So, Kohl's; Tee and jeans: Sonoma, Kohl's

Bag: Betsey Johnson, Amazon

Hair clips: So, Kohl's

Shoes: Cherish, Zulily


Bag: INC, Macy's

Hat: Amazon

Shoes: Jessica Simpson, DSW; Socks: Xhilaration, Target

Dress: Nine West, Kohl's


Bag: Delia's, Dolls Kill

Sweater: Poof, Marshalls; Top: LC Lauren Conrad, Kohl's

Medallion necklace: Banana Republic; Pendant: Nine West, Kohl's; Sunglasses: Party City

Headband: LC Lauren Conrad, Kohl's

They say that familiarity breeds contempt, and maybe with most things that's true.  Like people who start out as fun but end up shredding your nerves into razor-thin cheddar.  But when it comes to other things, putting the same-old on repeat is a comfort.  Which is one of the reasons I wore my Easter hat again.  And also why I love reruns.

Whether I'm testing my glucose, walking in place, or editing pics, it's reassuring to have The Golden Girls, Friends, or The Office humming in the background.  Partly because I already know what's going to happen.  Partly because no matter how complicated a fix Rose, Ross, or Michael get into, in the end, they make it through okay.  But also, paradoxically, because every time I see an old episode, I learn something new.

It's funny how something as "dumb" as TV can give you much-needed perspective.  

Kind of like how a ridiculous hat can help keep your head on straight.  

Thursday, May 25, 2023

Six-String Fling or Lifelong Thing?: Lights, Camera, Attraction!

Christina Lauren's Roomies is so much fun.  And not just because it reminds me of that Friends episode when Phoebe announces that she and Mike are moving in together and Monica says something like "Roomie?  Don't you mean groomie?".  But because it's about following your heart and your art, even when both get you into trouble.

Aspiring novelist Holland Bakker never dreams that taking the subway to stalk listen to Calvin McLoughlin play guitar will upend her life.  But when Calvin unexpectedly does her a favor, she does him two in return.  The first is to get him a job on Broadway.  The second is to marry him.  Why the rush to the altar or, in this case, city hall?  It seems that the Irish Calvin is in dire need of that classic romcom accessory, namely a green card.

What follows is flirty and funny, sexy and sweet.  As Holland and Calvin muddle through their marriage of convenience, Holland learns a lot about herself.  After an unrelenting bout of writer's block, she's even inspired to write again.  Also, part of the appeal of this story for is me is that I picture it taking place in the '80s.  In my mind, Holland has a perm, and Calvin has a modified mullet.  Also, they both wear acid-washed jeans.   

Hitting all the high notes -- and hijinks -- Roomies is a romance so crazy it might just work.

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Thriller Chiller: Don't Take That Tone With Me


Remember that episode of Friends when Joey's reading Little Women and Beth gets sick and Joey gets scared and has to put the book in the freezer?  Well, that's what I had to do with Lucy Foley's The Guest List.  Not that I really wedged it between a DiGiorno and a mess hall-sized bag of broccoli.  But I did stop reading it a third of the way in, much to the consternation of my book club besties.  (Hi, Mom!  Hi, Sis!)  Why?  Because its tone made me nervous.  

Now, I've read more than my share of murder mysteries.  But they're always either dignified and distant, like Agatha Christie, or hilarious and homespun, like all those cozies, that I barely notice anyone's bit the big one.  In other words, their tone is lighthearted.  You know.  Sunny.  Funny.  And sometimes accompanied by recipes.  And that little light is all that I need to go on to find out whodunit.  Yet a story that's shadowed through and through, with characters as damaged as their murky dismal surroundings (even my "serious" descriptions are "silly," Rainbow Brite's Murky Dismal being as cartoonish a villain as they come), plunges me into an abyss of black-out blinds.  And for a spirited sunseeker such as myself, that's a bad place to be.  

That said, my mom and sister weren't really surprised that I dropped Ms. Foley like a bad habit.  They know I don't do well with darkness and were very understanding.  Being in a book club is funny like that, even with -- especially with -- people you know really well.  The titles we choose say a lot about us and what we want and need from books.

And I know what I'll need when it's my turn to pick is something with a colorful cover. 

Saturday, September 24, 2022

High School Rules and Fools: An Education

It's no surprise that I was drawn to Elyssa Friedland's latest novel, The Most Likely Club, a where-are-they-now look at four friends who graduated high school in 1997.  After all, I was in the class of 2000.  And never quite got over not being voted best dressed (or best anything) senior year.  I even wrote an article for the school newspaper about the ridiculousness of senior superlatives, saying what next, props for the student who can stuff the most hoagies in his mouth? (High school me was a bit of a wiseass.)  

Anyway, although The Most Likely Club's Melissa, Priya, Tara, and Suki did receive such recognition (Most Likely to Win the White House, Cure Cancer, Open a Michelin-Starred Restaurant, and Join the Forbs 400, respectively), at forty-three, they're disappointed that none of it has come to fruition.  (Well, one has, but with a hefty price tag.)  Their twenty-fifth reunion, chaired by not-United-States-but-PTA-president Melissa, brings them back into each other's lives.  As they alternately reminisce and lament, they learn things about each other -- and themselves -- that they never knew.  And somewhere between the tears and tequila, they realize what's truly important.  

The Most Likely Club has all the feels.  Nerds in shining armor, girl power (yes, you can have one with the other!), suspense, humor, and a generous helping of '90s pop culture references (Friends!  Fiona Apple!  Chokers!).  It even has a well-placed Easter egg about Friedland's previous book, Last Summer at the Golden HotelBut best of all, it shines a light on how high school dreams and pressures sometimes set unrealistic expectations.  I can't imagine any woman not connecting with it on some level.  

Light-hearted and fun yet layered and real, The Most Likely Club would make a great movie (are you listening, Hollywood?).  

But for now it'll have to settle for being da bomb.  Or, you know, most likely to be read in one sitting.  

Friday, June 4, 2021

Friends Forever, Ending Never: Once More on the Orange Couch

Last week, HBO Max finally dropped the Friends reunion, and people went crazy.  And why not?  Friends is the sitcom of sitcoms and the biggest hit of the '90s.  It's the show that made "The Rachel" a household hairdo and launched a decade of Must See TV, the show that introduced the world to Ugly Naked Guy and reintroduced it to Tom Selleck.  Even when it ended after ten seasons (a time I'll never forget, as it coincided with me packing up my last college dorm), it went on to charm new fans for generations.  Because no matter how many times you hear Phoebe sing "Smelly Cat" or hear Joey say "How you doin'?" or watch the "they don't know that we know that they know" prank about Monica and Chandler's not-so-secret romance, it holds up.  This is because it's so funny and because the stars have such great chemistry.  But it's also because it tells us so much of the six characters' backstories that they begin to seem like real people.  Whether you're laughing at Monica and Rachel in their '80s prom dresses or the idea of a teenage Phoebe stealing Ross's Geology Rocks backpack, you get to know them all so well that you feel like you grew up with them too.  So knowing that the reruns are always, well, there for you, especially after a hard day (you know, the kind where you're still in bed at ten but work began at eight) is comforting.  Just ask David Beckham, who Zooms into the reunion to reveal that he streams the show when he's sad or stressed, or any of the fans from around the globe who chime in to share that they feel a little less alone when hanging out with Rachel, Ross, Monica, Chandler, Phoebe, and Joey.  I can relate.  Early on during the quarantine, I re-watched the entire series, and it was like seeing one incredibly long and hilarious and bittersweet movie -- to which I already knew most of the words.  

As you probably know, the reunion special, which was an unscripted nostalgic look back at the sitcom, marked the first time in seventeen years that Jennifer Aniston, David Schwimmer, Courteney Cox, Matthew Perry, Lisa Kudrow, and Matt LeBlanc came together to talk about the show.  Hosted by James Corden, the event featured the famous orange Central Perk couch front and center on a big, sparkly stage.  What it didn't have was inside info or jaw-dropping reveals.  Not that I, or other fans who read Kelsey Miller's I'll Be There for You: The One about Friends, needed them.  We already knew that Cox was originally slated to play Rachel, that Perry had to get out of an alien airport sitcom to sign on, and that creators Marta Kauffman and David Crane based the premise of the show on their own experiences as twentysometings in The Big Apple, dubbing Friends as "that time in your life when your friends are your family."  Sure, there was one "gotcha" to which I and presumably other fans weren't privy, but it wasn't anything that anyone worth her pop culture salt -- or pop psychology prowess -- couldn't have figured out.  One thing I did learn was that Schwimmer hated working with Marcel the monkey.  Apparently, in between takes, the animal handlers would feed Marcel grub worms, and then Marcel would touch David with his worm gut-grimed fingers.  Um, ew; I think we can all agree that every penny of Schwimmer's paycheck was well earned!  

I heard that lots of people were disappointed that the reunion wasn't a scripted where-are-they-now? episode.  And although I have to admit that that would've been cool, deep down, I was relieved it didn't happen.   A reboot or even a one-off episode would've spoiled the hard-won happiness of America's best buds in the name of keeping it going.  And most fans, despite what they say, don't want that.  Just look at what happened to Carrie and Big, not to mention Miranda and Steve, in the first Sex and the City movie.  Broken hearts and tears all around!  Sure, they resolved it all in the end, then tried to obliterate the mess by upping the fun factor in the second cinematic feature.  But those movies diminished the feel-good magic of that final episode where Carrie asks Big, in a perfect bookend to episode one, if he's ever been in love, and this time he says "Abso-bleeping-lutely."  In other words, most of us want to remember the Friends the way they were in the finale, with Ross trying to leave a message for Rachel just as she walks through the door and says, "I got off the plane."  We don't need -- or want -- to see them squabbling over kids and bills in a two-story colonial in Connecticut.      

Nevertheless, James Corden asked each of the actors where they thought their characters would be in a parallel Friends universe (because you have to give the people some of what they [think] they want).  I liked Lisa Kudrow's answer best.  She sees Phoebe and Mike (Paul Rudd) in -- but of course! -- Connecticut, raising a couple of kids.  And Phoebe, knowing all too well what it's like to be different, becomes an advocate for other out-there kids who struggle.    

Still, for many of us, the sacred six remain firmly planted in '90s New York City, wearing baby tees and sweater vests, doing what they do best.  You know.  Chandler escaping Janice (Maggie Wheeler) by hopping a plane to Yemen.  Joey relaying a tale about tossing a girl's prosthetic leg into the fire.  Phoebe giving birth to her brother's (Giovanni Ribisi's) triplets.  Monica getting a hickey from Hootie and the Blowfish.  Ross being forced to go on sabbatical after Hulking out over a sandwich.  Rachel being a bridesmaid in Mindy and Barry's wedding. Screwing up but surviving to laugh another day in that quirky, purple Central Park apartment, they'll be Friends forever in our hearts -- and, thankfully, in syndication.  And the reunion provided a sweet reminder.  

As Chandler would say, could a show BE any better?

Saturday, April 3, 2021

Twice in a Blue Moon: Oh, Spunky

Flannel: So, Kohl's; Skirt: Mudd, Kohl's; Boots: Betsey Johnson, Macy's; Bag: Delia's

Tee: Self Esteem, Macy's


Calling all '80s babies: The Punky Brewster reboot has landed on Peacock!  Although to be fair, Penelope "Punky" Brewster herself, a.k.a. Soleil Moon Frye, says that it's not so much a reboot as it is a continuation.  (I recently saw her on Kimmel and thought, hey, where have I heard that voice recently?  Oh yeah, from a rerun of Friends where that pint-sized brunette beat up on Joey!).  Because in the Peacock spin-off, America's favorite foster kid is all grown up with four kids of her own.  Two are adopted, and one is a foster kid who's a mini Punky, rocking the same scruffy-cute style, only with a blue hair streak and a beanie standing in for the vest.  Izzy is streetwise yet sensitive, a lost little girl in need of a home.  And in the tradition of Punky's own foster father Henry, Punky and her musician ex-husband Travis (Freddie Prinze Jr.) are just the good Samaritans to take her in.  Also like Henry, Punky's a photographer and even lives in his -- now much more colorful -- apartment.  With her bubbly, no-holds-barred approach to life, she's a rock star at tackling parenting issues including gender identity, dating, and drugs.  Travis, the actual rock star, is less talented.  When their daughter's boyfriend denies ownership of a joint on the grounds that he has asthma, Travis quippily reminds him that they make edibles too.  SPOILER ALERT!  The joint turns out to be Travis's, an allegedly forgotten relic from his partying days.    

Still, as much as I'm enjoying this revival about the ragamuffin turned sweetheart, the original series aired when I was too young to remember much of it (not that that stopped me from having the doll, purple vest and all).  So I delved even deeper into Peacock's plumage and watched the first three episodes of Punky 1.0 to find out how Punky and Henry came to be.  The opening shot of Chicago's bleak cityscape emblazoned by the words Punky Brewster in wobbly Crayola letters (so symbolic!) jogged my memory, but Henry's struggle to first accept Punky and then go through the system to become her foster parent might as well have been brand-new.  So I soaked it all in, along with the '80s era screen quality and music.  Although I initially found them to be kind of cheesy, both quickly won me over, eclipsing a story that could've easily been a soulless after-school special to reveal a tale with a bittersweet heart.  Style-wise, it was fun to watch too, what with Punky and pal Cherie's "sophisticated lady" photo shoot, not to mention the social worker's prim pastels warring with Punky's rumpled rainbow.  Same goes for the reboot -- er, continuation -- which features thirty-six-year-old Punky in tie dye, rocker chic tees, and, of course, denim vests.  What's more, her daughter is an aspiring fashion designer who's always whipping up eclectic looks.        

So I was inspired by both shows', ahem, punky and playful palettes to curate this outfit.  The pink flannel, daisy-print baby tee, and granny square bag are part girly '90s, part boho, whereas the ripped denim and (admittedly pink floral) combat boots (Private Punky, reporting for duty!) give it a smidgen of edge.  (True, there's no vest.  But never fear; you can find one back in time here.)  I topped it all off with my new Gummy Bear Flair Necklace, which is a bit of a black rainbow, its juicy bright bears and baubles lighting up the midnight beads and cameo.  It reminds me of another '80s classic TV show, namely the animated Adventures of the Gummi Bears

Speaking of cameos, it would be rad if one of the bears visited Punky.      

Provided, of course, that Travis doesn't get confused and eat him.

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

A Shot in the Arm to Ward Off All Harm: Vaccination Jubilation



This past Sunday, the husband and I got shot up full of Pfizer while Gloria Estefan's "Conga" played in the background.  Or, as the husband likes to put it, we got our "Fauci ouchies."  Because I'm not the only one in this duo who uses humor to combat tribulation.

When I first heard about the vaccine rollout in January, I thought, good, finally.  But also, somewhat perversely, that was fast.  Because I felt a little uneasy.  What if this miracle drug made me sprout a third eye or something?  It turned out that the husband felt the same, so we decided to wait to get it.  I rationalized this decision by reminding myself that only people older than sixty-five were supposed to be getting it at this point anyway.  But then, these last couple of weeks, I suddenly felt like we should get it as soon as possible.  Maybe it was the reports of the new, more serious strains.  Or even just the fear that they'd run out of vaccines.  Probably it was both.  But mostly it was my gut telling me that the husband's luck couldn't hold up forever.      

As you know, I've been working from home since last March and have ventured out of the house only a handful of times to visit my parents, plus once to the office to fix my computer.  The husband, on the other hand, has been working out in the world every day.  He's a painter, which means that he's in and out of people's homes.  This drove me crazy, especially when the pandemic first started.  I tried to convince him to go on hiatus, but he was concerned that his business would dry up and never recover.  Then a few months in, I was like, he's being careful, it's fine, we haven't caught it yet.  Because I couldn't be angry and scared all the time and had to make some sort of peace with it.

So, a couple of weekends ago when I announced that I was starting to look into vaccination scheduling, he was surprised -- but not really.  Deep down, we both knew that he was the one warier of the actual vaccine, whereas I was the one warier of rejoining civilization.  Getting vaccinated would bring me one step closer to saying see ya to the recluse life to which I'd grown so accustomed, and that made me anxious.  Still, my fear of contracting the coronavirus was bigger, and I wanted that shot.  The husband knew that.  So he agreed to get vaccinated, for me.  I thought that was very heroic and romantic and, at the end of the day, just plain kind.    

At first, I was overwhelmed by the scheduling logistics.  I didn't even know if we'd get appointments, and on the first try, we didn't.  By the second time I'd learned more about the ins and outs of the system and was able to secure us back-to-back slots for the following Sunday, bright and early, at the Atlantic City Convention Center.  I felt like I'd won the lottery, or at the very least, Air Supply tickets.  When Sunday rolled around, I was so glad that the husband and I were climbing into my Honda together.  We always go to the dentist, dermatologist, and optometrist as a pair.  Why should the vaccination of the century be any different?

I'm happy to report that the whole process ran like a well-oiled machine.  (My car, not so much.  After barely being driven for a year, it now sounds kind of clunky.  But, as Chandler Bing would say, one ridiculous problem at a time.)  The Atlantic City mega site is run by the National Guard, and they, along with the nurses, were so efficient and upbeat, which helped to make it all seem more normal.  As did the selfie station on the way out.  Its bright colors and snappy sayings really brought the carnival flair, befitting a vaccination site located in a city once known as America's Playground.

So, yeah.  One down, one to go.

My only regret is that I didn't wear a snazzier mask.

Also, that I never got to see Air Supply.

Sunday, March 7, 2021

Rival Goes West: Shape Shifter Drifter

Sweater: Nine West, Kohl's

Long necklaces: So, Kohl's; Belt: Belt is Cool, Amazon

Skirt: So, Kohl's

Skirt: Wild Fable, Target

Bag: Apt. 9, Kohl's

Shape Escape Necklace

Sweater: Nine West, Kohl's

Clockwise: B Fabulous; So, Kohl's; Mixit, JCPenney; Mixit, JCPeneny; Cloud Nine, Ocean City; Delia's

Sweater: Nine West, Kohl's

Clips: Wild Fable, Target

Jeans: L'Amour by Nanette Lepore for JCPenney

Shoes: Betsey Johnson, Macy's

Top to bottom: Amrita Singh, Zulily; Mixit, JCPenney

Luv Betsey, Bocov's

This Shape Escape Necklace is the anchor of the unlikely elements of this post, namely Nine West, citrus, and Fievel.  For one thing, the necklace is teamed with one of three Nine West sweaters.  For another, it appears with a bowl of oranges.  As for the Fievel bit, you'll just have to wait.


First, Nine West.  I've long been an admirer of the beloved brand, picking up pieces over the years in places like Marshalls, ROSS, and Burlington Coat Factory, and sometimes, if on sale, Macy's.  I still remember this Nine West purple suede pouch purse that I got from Macy's back in high school.  I wish I still had it, along with my shiny purple bow purse from Delia's and my sometimes-lilac-sometimes-lavender Coolwear blouse from Macy's that changed in the light.  (Obvi, the takeaway here is that I need to keep a tighter grip on my Grimace gear.)  But back to our Nine West quest.  I was delighted when, a couple of years ago, the brand landed at Kohl's.  I stocked up on tops, skirts, shoes, and even a bag, many of which you've seen.  And along the way, I began wondering about the significance of the Nine West name.  I was pretty sure that it was a place, perhaps even a magical one.  Phoebe Buffay once said that about White Plains, NY, the birthplace of her and Rachel's new apothecary table.  So I turned to that old guru Google and found out that Nine West is the address, namely 9 West 57th St., New York, New York, where the fashion label got its start.  And I was as disappointed as Phoebe when she found out that her supposedly one-of-a-kind flea market table had been mass-produced by Pottery Barn.  Still, deep down I think I already knew that NYC was involved, even if I did insist, for some dubious reason, on believing that the West meant Wyoming or Utah. 

Now, about those oranges. This isn't my first foray into the orange orchard, although it is the first time I used fresh produce as props.  The husband's mom very generously sent us a huge crate of oranges and grapefruits for Christmas, making this staging possible.  Also, it helped ward off scurvy.

And that brings us to Fievel, that feisty cartoon mouse who, much like the American settlers, fought his way through adversity to enjoy the promised land of the West in the early '90s.  (The mouse arrived in the early '90s.  The setters made it here long before that unless you're counting the cast of Friends).  Which just goes to show that things can change when you least expect them to -- or when you most expect them to, in the case of the Nine West thing.  But wherever you roam, whether it be White Plains, Wyoming, or somewhere out there that exists only in your mind, I hope that you always feel like you're home.

And that you never have to compete with a rodent.  Or, worse yet, kill a rodent you love.

Thursday, December 3, 2020

Reformed Rocker Shocker: One for the Record Books

So, I just read Juliet, Naked.  I watched the movie first, back before I knew that it was a novel written by Nick Hornby, who also wrote High Fidelity, which was also a book unbeknownst to me.  But enough navel gazing; Juliet, Naked is a delight!  Funny, self-deprecating, and all of those other British things that make you want to wield a teacup.  Here's the skinny:  

Annie and Duncan live in Gooleness, a seaside town populated by geriatrics, and have been together for fifteen years.  Duncan is obsessed with a washed-up, allegedly reclusive American rocker named Tucker Crowe and runs a website dedicated to him.  Annie is sick of Duncan's Tucker obsession.  One day, Duncan receives a never-before-released raw cut of Tucker's most famous album, "Juliet," (hereafter referred to as "Juliet, Naked"), and Annie opens it first, listens to it, and hates it.  Duncan is indignant, all but calling Annie a philistine, and posts a cloying review.  Annie retaliates by writing and posting a scathing review of her own.  Then wonder of wonders, Tucker writes back, beginning the most bizarre love triangle since Little Shop of Horrors.

Before Annie and Tucker know it, they're in an email relationship.  Spilling their guts and having a trans-Atlantic emotional affair or whatever.  Annie is thirty-nine and suddenly depressed about being childless.  Tucker is a sad dad with five kids from four different mothers.  He lets his fans think he's morphed into an angry backwoodsman even though he looks like an accountant.  Tucker is also disgusted by the mythology surrounding his exodus from the music scene, and Annie, well, Annie's just lonely.  Meanwhile, Duncan (What kind of name is that anyway?  It makes me think of one-hit-wonder Duncan Sheik or that dude from Hamlet or, yes, even Duncan Hines) shacks up with a fellow professor, a red herring of a plot device stalling his inevitable shock upon finding out that his ex-ladylove and his hero -- no, make that man crush -- are now pen pals.  

But, as usual, I'm getting ahead of myself.  Let's pause to peruse some of my favorite parts, shall we?

Duncan on reading Annie's review:

"She was better than him in everything but judgment -- the only thing that mattered in the end, but still.  She wrote well, with fluency and humor, and she was persuasive, if you hadn't actually heard the music, and she was likeable.  He tended to be strident and bullying and smark-alecky, even he could see that.  This wasn't what she was supposed to be good at.  Where did that leave him?" (68)

Poor Duncan.  His woman has dared to defy him about his most favorite thing, wittily and winsomely, on the Internet for all to read.  And I love it.  These days, I can't help reading through a feminist lens.  Even though I wrote my college thesis on why Lady Audley was an opportunist as opposed to a victim and used to side with Ross when he said that he and Rachel were on a break.  I guess facing forty has dropped some hard truths on me.  

And now for Tucker's first impression of Gooleness, which amuses me for obvious reasons:

"If he translated some of the ethnic foods into Americans' favorites and swapped a few of the bookies for casinos, he'd be at one of the trashier resorts in New Jersey.  Every now and again, one of Jackson's school friends got dragged off to a seaside town like this, either because the kid's parents had misremembered a vacation from their youth, or because they had failed to spot the romanticism and poetic license in Bruce Springsteen's early albums." (324)

Ah, Jersey.  Always a punching bag.  Or, more to the point, a trash bag.  

Now back to our analysis.

Juliet, Naked isn't just about the -- in this case, incredibly ironic -- ebb and flow of romantic relationships.  It's about art and what it means once artists release it to the world.  For instance, it's hilarious, intrusive, and a little concerning that Duncan and his fellow Crowologists (yes, that's what they call themselves) go to such lengths to research (okay, stalk) Tucker and theorize what he's been up to.  They've put him on such a pedestal that he's no longer a person, and they're willing to worship his worst work.  That said, they're also passionate, and it's their passion that's kept Tucker and his music relevant.  So it's up to Annie to choose between the fanatic and the source of the fanaticism, or, rather, the satellite and the sun.  Duncan's a drip, no question.  But he's a drip who stands for something.  And artist or not, Tucker's got his problems, and not all of them are the sexy kind worthy of lighters.  Annie's ultimate decision says a lot about what she wants out of life and what she's willing to do to get it.

Sounds like girl power hour to me.  

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

The Perks of Being a Peasant

Top: Arizona Jeans, JCPenney

It seems like peasant tops and dresses are always in style.  Anytime anyone so much as thinks festival, boho, or Anthropologie sale rack, there they are, the ties of their wholesomely flattering drawstring necklines flowing as freely as if they'd just come from Woodstock or the compost pile of a community garden.  The popularity of the peasant aesthetic is a no-brainer.  Still, by all accounts, a peasant isn't a great thing to be. 

Dresses: Planet Gold, Macy's

Brainy or not, I fell for these farmer's daughter chic pieces priced for the proletariat (or what passes for the proletariat these days, the world having moved on from having one burlap sack per household).  I think each dress was less than fifteen dollars, although the promiscuity of my bargain hunting conquests prevents me from saying for sure.  I ordered them from the juniors section of Macy's, which gave me a thrill now that I've semi-graduated to the grown-up lady clothes known as misses.  That name's a bit insulting, don't you think?  As if a woman of a certain age with slightly more sophisticated tastes and generous proportions must be married or else.  And, by the same token, as if a svelte young thing couldn't and shouldn't be shopping for china.  So presumptuous!  Let crop top-clad coeds play house and fifty-five-year-olds troll for tail in sensible tweeds if they want to.

And yes, this time tail means men.  

Which reminds me of that Friends episode where Phoebe's dating two guys at once but complains that it's more like working in the field than playing the field.  Weirdly, this goes against what I just said about the supposed fun of stalking man meat.  But it also brings us back to the peasant thing, which is somehow both personified by and blown up by one Ms. Buffay.  

So thanks, Phoebe.  Even if you're not a peasant and your field is a park in the middle of the world's biggest city.  Your simple ways underscore wisdom, the kind best communicated through a song about a cat that reeks.  Regina Phalange has nothing on you, and not just because you married Paul Rudd.  

Princess Consuela Banana Hammock, however, is another story. 

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Brie TV


Every Hot Dog Has its Play Necklace

Top: Wet Seal
Skirt (a dress!): Modcloth
Shoes: Chase & Chloe, Zulily
Bag: Nordstrom
Belt: Marshalls 



Sweater: Wild Fable, Target
Skirt: Amazon
Shoes: Chase & Chloe, Zulily
Bag: City Streets, J. C. Penney's
Scarf: A. C. Moore
Sunglasses: Target
Gnome: Target



Dress: Candie's, Kohl's
Top: Vylette, Kohl's
Shoes: Worthington, J. C. Penney's
Bag: Lily Bloom, J. C. Penney's
Belt: Belt is Cool, Amazon
Red bangle: B Fabulous
Yellow bangle: Silver Linings
Lime bracelet: Cloud Nine
Purple bracelet: Etsy

Um, Brie TV?!  Yeah, Brie, that fancy cheese baked with honey and candied walnuts and other gourmet gooeyness.  As opposed to something more basic and chemical-choked.  Like spray cheese.  But we'll get to that.  

If you're thinking that there's something different about these pictures, then you're right:

Outfit #1

I used the Windows photo editor to draw on the dress, which is something I've never done.  The peplum got lost in the light, and I thought, I have a fix for that!  One tangerine line later, and this ruffle was ready to rumba.  

Outfit #2

The off thing here is the gnome.  The outfit needed something else.  Why not let that something be a small man dressed in pastels?  

Outfit #3

This one doesn't have anything weird going on.  But it does boast the only brand-new piece in this post, namely the lime turtleneck.  

Which is no small thing.  Because new clothes mean good times.  

If there's a baby shower you don't want to go to or a test you don't want to take, then wearing something fresh off the rack makes you feel better.  Or, at the very least, distracts you by giving you something cool to look at.  "The Big Bang Theory's" Penny said it best: "You know, sometimes when I'm feeling all stressed out about something, I go out and buy a cute top or a fun skirt, and I have a whole new outlook on life."  Of course, then Sheldon said, "Don't you eventually realize you're the same stressed-out person in a cute top or a fun skirt?", forcing Penny to deadpan, "Yeah, that's when I buy shoes."  

Oh, Sheldon.

I've said it before, and I'll say it again: TV has so much to teach us.  On the cheeseboard of life lessons -- for yes, there is a cheeseboard -- it's the aforementioned and beloved Brie.  

See?  I told you we'd get there.  

A couple of weeks ago, I heard this golden nugget (or maybe I should say artisanal cheese curd) on "Single Parents."  Miggy (Jake Choi) starts temping at Angie's (Leighton Meester's) office and, to Angie's horror, likes it.

Angie: "What about the small talk?"

Miggy: "I love it!  Small talk is the busy work of conversation."

Busy work and small talk appeal to Miggy because he doesn't have to think about them.  They're so empty that they're effortless, and that, of course, is the joke.  But Angie has no time for such nonsense.  To her, weather chitchat is a tedious pretense requiring energy better spent on emailing exes.  The takeaway?  Some people are not people people.  

Even soap operas have wisdom.  Take "One Life to Live."  Despite being a show that I've never watched, it has a name that all but bludgeons us with a reminder of how precious time is.  Not unlike "Days of Our Lives" (I missed this one too; I was a "Guiding Light" fan).  Everything I know about "Days" I know from "Friends."  Specifically, that it made Joey spout off a deep thought after watching it for his audition.  It was something about how the characters on the soap are living the days of their lives while he and the rest of the Central Perkers are living the days of their lives.  Anything that makes Joey think about something other than sex and sandwiches is worth its weight in cliffhangers.

Not so smug are we now, Learning Channel?