hildy89: (journalist)
hildy89 ([personal profile] hildy89) wrote2007-02-26 12:56 am
Entry tags:

Oscar, oscar!

Oscars are done with and I was mostly pleased with the results. Helen Mirren looked dazzling and thank god Jennifer Hudson took off the ugly shrug inside the auditorium. I didn't like Nicole Kidman's neck bow thingy, no matter what the commentators said. The E! people had their own telestrator like football play by play. If you're going to play a fashionista, Meryl Streep, you'd think you'd look just a little more glam. The men mostly played it safe. I adored the tribute to the struggle of writing and the little choir of Mr. Foleys (What, Wenn fans? You weren't thinking that?), but there were a few too many montages and tributes and etcs. The show really dragged in places.
ext_57083: (Default)

[identity profile] majkia.livejournal.com 2007-02-26 07:42 pm (UTC)(link)
what show? ::blink::

There were VAMPIRES on Dresden Files. What ELSE was nearly as important!!!!!
jordannamorgan: James Cagney. (City Boy)

[personal profile] jordannamorgan 2007-02-27 04:52 am (UTC)(link)
Incidentally, I thought of you and your challenging commutes when I was reading one of my latest "Saint" books, which begins in Washington. Maybe you'll appreciate this line:

He was getting tired of being bumped and shoved by individuals who seemed to get the idea that the "D.C." after Washington meant "disregard courtesy."

[identity profile] hildy.livejournal.com 2007-02-27 05:00 am (UTC)(link)
Obviously the Saint was riding the Metro... when was this written?
jordannamorgan: George Sanders as Simon "The Saint" Templar. (Saint)

[personal profile] jordannamorgan 2007-02-27 05:19 am (UTC)(link)
In 1944. It's very much a wartime story. My review of it is up at [livejournal.com profile] saint_fans.

[identity profile] hildy.livejournal.com 2007-02-27 02:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah. That makes sense then. DC really changed during the wartime era. Everyone converged on the city to work for the gov't. Before it was just a sleepy Southern town. And you can still hear traces of that in the radio broadcasts of the time. When I listened to the D-Day broadcasts awhile back, a news commentator was describing a nearly empty intersection and saying how DC didn't really wake up until 8am! Some things have changed.