Monday, August 31, 2009

Dreaming of a new job?


I know everyone loves their job, but sometimes you can't help but think there might be something else out there. Thanks to our Oregon Tourism client you have the chance to explore some possibilities. As part of this year's Oregon Bounty celebration, you could win an all-expense paid "cuisinternships" with an Oregon chef, cheesemaker, chocolatier, craft brewer, distiller, rancher, fisherman or winemaker. Apart from a fun week learning the job, they also pay for your hotel and transportation and give you $1000 spending money, which goes a long way in Eastern Oregon.

If you want the inside scoop on any (or all) of these jobs, go to the Oregon Bounty site
where you can see some great videos of all the mentors and you can enter to win.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Inglourious Basterds

"Once upon a time in Nazi occupied France... " so begins Quentin Tarantino's new film Inglourious Basterds (sic). A young Jewish refugee Shosanna Dreyfus (Mélanie Laurent) witnesses the slaughter of her family by Nazi Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz). Narrowly escaping with her life, she plots her revenge several years later when a German war hero quickly takes an interest in her and arranges an illustrious movie premiere at the theater she now runs. With the promise of every major Nazi officer in attendance, the event catches the attention of the "Basterds", a group of Jewish-American guerrilla soldiers led by the ruthless Lt. Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt). As the relentless Nazi hunters advance and the conspiring young girl's plans are set in motion, their paths will cross for a fanciful evening that would have/could have changed history.

I had read mixed reviews on this one. I am a huge Quentin Tarantino fan, so it was likely I would go see Inglourious Basterds anyway, but the review in Newsweek really made me think. They lambasted Tarantino for bringing Jews down to the level of the Nazis, by acting like barbarians - they beat Nazi's heads in with baseball bats and literally scalp their victims. It went on to equate the movie's big finale to the incinerating of Jews in concentration camps. Honestly I don't see it that way. Sure revenge fantasies are fun, but nothing can ever undue the atrocities of the Nazi's and I don't think that is what Tarantino is going for. He has mashed up The Good, The Bad and The Ugly with The Dirty Dozen in a revenge fairy-tale. I don't think you should try to make more of it than that, but clearly many of the critics are.

The truth is this movie is funny and gross and over the top - quintessential Tarantino. I went into it expecting Pitt to be awesome, and he was. Like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels his character Lt. Aldo Raine is a caricature. He is a one-note, quote spewing, army stereotype, "You see, we're in the business of killin' Nazis, and boy, business is boomin'." What I didn't expect was how great Christoph Waltz would be as the "Jew Hunter." He easily glides from chill inspiring to camp. And French actress Mélanie Laurent is the new Tarantino hero. Be warned, this movie is really graphic in some parts and there is reading involved, but I think Tarantino is back and this movie will be nominated for an Academy Award.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Lil Wayne - Tha Carter III

I have a feeling this is going to be a controversial choice, but there is one record that I keep coming back to as the best of the 2000's and that's Lil Wayne's Tha Carter III. Every time one of the songs pops up on the iPod I have to turn it up and usually end up just playing through the entire record.

Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr., began his musical career as one of the Hot Boys, a short-lived all-star group on Cash Money Records in New Orleans. His first solo record, Tha Block Is Hot released in 1999, went double platinum, but things slowed down after that. Instead of releasing records he became a prolific producer of underground mixtapes. He found his footing again in 2004 with Tha Carter and in 2005 Tha Carter, Volume II debuted at number two on Billboard's album chart, it was a critical favorite as well as a strong seller. The mixtapes and the popularity grew. In 2008 Tha Carter III sold over a million records in it's first week and went on to be one of the best selling and critically praised records of the year. Lil Wayne's not for everyone, but give Tha Carter a few listens before you decide.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Chipolte Grill


Today was my first trip to Chipolte Grill. I was accompanied by two veterans, who highly recommended it and helped steer me through the ordering process. The food offerings are very basic: they have burritos, tacos and salads with your choice of beef, chicken or pork. They started out in Austin, Texas and now have restaurants all over the country. Their theme is "Food With Integrity" which they describe as unprocessed, seasonal, family-farmed, sustainable, nutritious, naturally raised, added hormone free, organic, and artisanal. They have a strong commitment to sustainability and giving back, but as the hippies taught us, if the food is not good, all that doesn't matter. The good news is that the food is really tasty. I had the marinated pork burrito bowl, which comes with rice, beans, salsa, cheese and if you like (I don't) sour cream. You can also get the tortilla on the side if you wish.

They are not only forward thinking on their food policies, they are also pretty high tech on their ordering. You can order on-line or you can download the iPhone app and order before you get to the shop. This is a great tool if the place is really busy as you can place your order as you are walking over, cut the line and pay as soon as you get there.

One word of warning, like everything that tastes good, the burritos are pretty high in calories, especially if you load them up with guac. You can check out the Chipolte web site for more info on that and to find a location close to you.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Michelle Wie

Michelle Wie was out at Nike today where she gave a short interview and signed some autographs. She is a very articulate young woman. Quite a bit taller than I thought she would be. We were supposed to have some time to chat with her alone, but unfortunately she took off before we could meet with her. She was really excited about her great play at the Solhiem Cup and was not afraid to brag on herself a little, which was cool. It sounds like she is having a good time at Stanford and doing well. I am bummed we didn't get any pictures or get her to autograph any of the posters we made for her, but hopefully she will be at the next shoot and we can hit her up then.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

P. D. James - Cover Her Face

Seems like I have been getting into a lot of crime novels lately, and there is no one more expert than P. D. James. I have to admit that this is the first book of hers I have read and up until I opened the book I had always assumed P. D. James was a man. James is the author of twenty books, most of which have been filmed or broadcast on television. She spent thirty years in various departments of the British Civil Service, including the Police and Criminal Law Department of Great Britain's Home Office. She was also a magistrate and a governor of the BBC, so she knows her way around the crime world.

Her novel, Cover Her Face, was her first and the first of fourteen to include the investigator and poet Adam Dalgliesh of New Scotland Yard; it was published in 1962. She published the latest Dalgliesh novel, The Private Patient, in 2008 at the age of 88. Along with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie she has been inducted into the International Crime Writing Hall of Fame; she has won many other awards (too many to list here).

The story opens with a dinner party hosted by Mrs. Eleanor Maxie at Martingale. Mrs. Maxie’s son and daughter, Stephen Maxie and Deborah Riscoe, are both at the party. Also present are Dr. Charles Epps, the vicar Bernard Hicks, Miss Alice Liddell, who is the Warden at St. Mary’s Refuge for Girls, and Catherine Bowers, a guest at the estate who happens to be in love with Stephen Maxie. Serving at the party is Sally Jupp, an unwed mother with an infant son hired by Mrs. Maxie at the recommendation of Miss Liddell. Stephen Maxie champions Sally during dinner, and afterwards Deborah Riscoe cryptically predicts that the young servant will cause trouble. During dinner it is also mentioned that the Maxie’s old domestic servant Martha Bultitaft is not very pleased with Sally Jupp. A week later Sally is found dead and of course, everyone in the house is a legitimate suspect. From here Detective Chief Inspector Adam Dalgliesh, deftly lays out the case as we interview each of the suspects and the case builds to a dramatic conclusion.

Clearly James is a master at her work and it is the details and the characters that make this book a page turner. As with all good crime novels, I had developed and dismissed several theories as I read, and was desperate to see how they played out. Beyond being a great crime story, Cover Her Face, is also an interesting trip back in time, when old landed families still held court and servants and women's roles were modernizing in the early 1960's. This is a classic book, that makes me want to explore more of James' novels.

Monday, August 24, 2009

PGA Tour iPhone App

At first I was not sure why the PGA Tour was launching an app when they already have a good mobile site. Now that I have downloaded the app, I am even more unsure. Don't get me wrong, it is a good app, but was far as I can see it does not do anything that the web site doesn't, but it is a little faster. I know this is an initial launch for the 2009 FedEx cup and they will be adding a lot more features for 2010, but so far it is pretty bare bones. You get scoreboard and stats , a run down on all the players, some videos and news updates. It is elegantly designed and very easy to navigate. I look forward to checking out the live tournament feed when the FedEx Cup starts next week. Also, the app has one sponsor, you guessed it - Nike Golf.

To make this work, we had to develop our first mobile web site. If you go to Nike Golf right now on your iPhone you will get nothing, but check back tomorrow and you will see a pretty deep site that offers product and player info, videos and breaking news. I think our team did a really good job given the tight deadline. We are also the first golf company to have a mobile site.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Pho Van



It seems strange, but somehow I have never written a review of one of our go-to restaurants, Pho Van. We have been eating there for several years and the food has always been great. When we first went there it was a simple space out on SE 82nd Ave. A few years back they gave it an overhaul to make it look more like a Vietnamese street fair. I have to be honest and say, we have not branched out very far on the menu, as we always order the "Pho Bo” or Beef Noodle Soup. Flavored with star anise, cardamom, cinnamon, and beef there are half a dozen different meats you can add to your soup, from round steak, to tripe, to my favorite lean brisket. You also get a plate of fresh bean sprouts, Asian basil leaves, sliced jalapenos, and siracha hot sauce and plum-brown hoison sauce to add to your taste. I would recommend starting off with the Gỏi Cuốn (salad rolls) or the Chả Giò (crispy rolls) or both if you are hungry. You can also order a Bia 33 (Vietnam's best beer) or one of the great teas or smoothies. There are several locations now, all in nicer parts of town, but we still prefer to come back to the original.

1919 SE 82nd Ave.
Portland, OR 97216
Sunday - Thursday 10am to 9:30pm
Friday & Saturday 10am to 10pm
503.788.5244

Beaverton Town Square
11651 SW Beaverton Hillsdale Hwy.
Beaverton, OR 97005
Sunday - Saturday 11am to 9pm
503.627.0822

3404 SE Hawthorne Blvd.
Portland, OR 97214
Tuesday - Sunday 11am to 9:30pm, closed Monday
503.230.1474

Silk Vietnamese Restaurant & Bar - Pearl District
1012 NW Glisan St.
Portland, OR 97209
Monday - Saturday (lunch) 11am to 3pm (dinner) 5pm to 10pm, closed Sunday.
503.248.2172

Friday, August 21, 2009

Kins of Leon - Only By The Night

This is going to make me sound old, but this is my favorite Kings of Leon record so far. Many long time fans say it is too commercial, but while it may be more accessible, it is also a beautiful record. The Kings are three brothers and a cousin from Tennessee. Leon is their father who is a pastor. I read an interview with them in Rolling Stone when this record came out and I have to say, they sound like some of the craziest guys you'll ever meet. They are also one of the most promising young bands in America, and I am sure there are many more great records to come. One of the best records of 2008 is a must own.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Worst Website Address Ever


Every time we walk down SE Belmont from our house to our favorite pub, the Hoursebrass, we walk past a place called "A School for Self & Energy Awareness." That is in and of itself a ridiculous name that makes me laugh every time I see it, but here is the kicker, the web address is www.aschoolforselfandenergyawareness.com. It just rolls of the tongue. Another thing I find funny is that this is "a" school for self and energy awareness, not "the" school, suggesting that there may be others. Here are the classes you can take at A School for Self & Energy Awareness:

THE ART OF ENERGY HEALING - This course is an in-depth study on self-healing, but also includes safe and effective skills to transmit healing energy to another person or animal. The next scheduled class begins: Wednesday, September 30, 2009, 12 weeks, 6-8:30pm, $300.

CLAIRVOYANT CLASS - If you have to ask, you probably don't qualify. The Art of Energy Healing is required as a prerequisite to this class. The next scheduled class: Thursday, September 24, 2009, 6-9pm, 6 month, $720.

CLAIRVOYANT CHAKRA READINGSA - deep and effective way to reach matters of the heart, soul and well being. 1 hour reading $90.
I am not one to discount clairvoyance, I am sure there are people that are much more in touch with the world than I am. My question is, why do they have to make the web site so hard to remember?

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Don't Miss the Bus

I love utility, things that have a simple purpose and work right. That is why one of my favorite iPhone apps is PDX Bus. This app gives you schedules for all the buses, MAX and streetcar lines in Portland. So if you are standing at a bus stop thinking, "I wonder when the bus is coming?" all you have to do is punch in the stop number and up pops a schedule of all the upcoming buses. If you take the bus to work everyday, you can bookmark your stop and see how long you have to make it from the house to the bus stop. Three minutes and I need to run, 10 minutes and I'll find something to do around the house for a few more minutes. The great thing is that it is linked to the real-time bus computers, so you can physically track the bus and see where it is on the map, get info about detours, etc. This is a great example of the making the Internet work for regular people. For years a lot of smart people have know there is a ton of info out there, but we have not had an elegant way to grab it and deliver it to people in a usable way. Now anything that has a schedule can be delivered to your iPhone real time.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Yakuza Lounge



We finally made it the Yakuza Lounge last night and Barbara said it best, "I am really mad I have been missing out on this." Located in a trendy strip on NE Killingsworth at 30th, the dining room is open to the kitchen and there is a great patio seating area. It is not your typical Portland Japanese restaurant. It looks very trendy and they have amazing cocktails to start with (the whiskey #2 is a must), but the real star is the food. The Scallop was one of the best things I have eaten in a long time - shredded filo wrapped sea scallop tempura, nori, and creamy spicy sauce. We also enjoyed two of the house rolls, the Spicy Tuna and the Hamachi - minced Hawaiian yellowtail & scallions, bosc pear, avocado, and shaved jalapeno. I can highly recommend both. Surprisingly these three dishes were sufficient and we left with thoughts of a quick return.

Yakuza Lounge
5411 NE 30th Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97211
503-450-0893
www.yakuzalounge.com

Friday, August 14, 2009

The Jam - Snap!

The Jam is one of my all time favorite bands. They never made it big in the US, but they were huge in the UK, outselling the Clash and the Sex Pistols. They started out as a punk band, but like the Clash they showed their intelligence and their political side as they matured. I generally don't like to recommend greatest hits records, but I think this is an exception and really the best way to experience the band. Snap! is a 29-track, double-CD set (along with a triple-disc deluxe edition that adds the live EP — recorded at the band's final concert at Wembley Arena), make sure you don't get the 8-track Compact Snap! The double CD will take you through their entire career with all the hits and some great extras.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Tiger Woods on the Bus

Today I watched Tiger Woods play golf on the bus. Thanks to the PGA Championship application for the iPhone I was able to watch a couple of holes between home and work. Having an iPhone app is nothing new for the major tournaments, the Masters was the first to launch one back in April. It was actually really good, which is surprising given that the folks in Augusta are a little antiquated when it comes to technology. For example, they will not license footage of their tournament for the Internet, so if you make a commercial with Masters footage, you can't put it on your website.

Back to the PGA Championship app. This is the first one that has actually cost money, although it is only $1.99. It has some cool new 3.0 features including push info on five players of your choice, so you can get score updates even if the app is not on. Having lived with it for a day now, I am loving the video features: you can follow a entire round of one marquee group in the morning and one in the afternoon (needless to say Tiger was in the AM group and Phil was in the PM group); and you can watch the action at the par three's. They are also letting you vote on the marquee groups for tomorrow. The leaderboard is a little glitchy and hard to navigate, but it does give you a lot of stats. Adding the players I cared about to the favorites made it easier to deal with. The alerts are actually starting to bug me. I think I may cut them back to just get a notice when my favs are teeing off and when they finish. The hole by hole scoring for five players is too intrusive. Finally, I have to say the full on website is pretty good too. They are streaming the network coverage as well as the video you get on the app. They have a lot more stats and you can also live twitter with the TV commentators. All said, I would recommend this app for the real golf fan.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Horsebrass Pub - Updated 8/15

I must be in a bad mood lately as this is the second negative thing I have to say in two days. Last night, on a whim, I jumped off the bus and got Barbara to meet me at our favorite pub, the Horsebrass. I was really looking forward to a pint of Guinness and a plate of fish and chips. They have the best beer and the best fish and chips in town; I can also recommend the burger, the scotch egg (a boiled egg wrapped in sausage and deep fried), and the Plowman's Plate. I was a little surprised that there were hardly any tables when I walked in, the place was packed. This has been the case ever since the smoking ban passed. This bar was notorious for being one of the smokiest bars in town, and the owner, Don Younger, fought the smoking ban harder than anyone. Now, ironically, his restaurant is doing better than ever.

So we have been here on many a packed night, but the good news is you get that great tasting pint of Guinness and before you know it you are trasported back to Scotland and all the worries of the work-a-day world are gone. Last night things got off to a bad start. I sat down and ordered a Guinness for me and a pint of cider for Barbara, who was on her way down from the house, and the waitress tells me, "I can't get a beer for someone I haven't seen." WTF are you talking about? OK, deep breath. I order my pint and she promises to be back in a minute to clean off the table and take my food order. As the place is packed, I want to get it in quick. About five minutes pass and nothing happens. Finally Barbara gets there and I try to catch the waitress's eye to order a cider, nothing. Meanwhile I am watching beers pile up on the bar and she is taking the wrong beers out to tables, as she has no idea what is what. So every beer she brings back just adds to the confusion. Another 10 minutes go by and still nothing. I have to say, all I need is my beer and I am happy, I don't care how long the food takes. We decide to give her another few minutes, but she still hasn't even moved any of the beers off the bar. Finally, we get up and take off. A really disappointing night. I have to say, I really love that bar, but another night like that and it's off the list.


Update: Good news, we went back on Friday night and everything was back to normal. The regular waitresses were bringing pints of beer and plates of fish and chips in a timely manner and all was right in the world again.


Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Incredible Hulk (2008)

Bruce Banner (Edward Norton) is a scientist working to find a way to use gamma radiation to increase healing time in soldiers. His love interest Betty Ross (Liv Tyler) is also a scientist involved in the project, and her father, General Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross (William Hurt), oversees the project. Upon subjecting himself to a gamma test, Banner transforms into a green-skinned, superhumanly powerful creature. He destroys the lab, injures Betty and Ross and escapes. Unfortunately the monster thing sticks with him and he blows up every time his heart rate goes over 200 bps. Needless to say this makes a normal life a little difficult, and the "Hulk" is pursued around the Americas as a dangerous fugitive as Banner tries to find a cure.

I know this movie has been out for a while, and generally I don't like to use this space to dis stuff, but this is possibly the worst movie I have seen in the 2000's. I got suckered in because Iron Man was not as bad as I thought it would be and the cast in this movie was so amazing. So, this just proves my theory that actors will do anything and they have no barometer for what is good. My god this is the guy from Kiss Of The Spider Woman, playing the hokiest army general there has ever been, and Ed Norton, who is now officially off the "I will watch any movie you are in list." Liv you are forgiven, but I the bar was lower for you, you can do better.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

Wilco rose from the ashes of the seminal roots rockers Uncle Tupelo, who disbanded in 1994. While Jay Farrar, one of the group's two singer/songwriters, went on to form the band Son Volt, his ex-partner Jeff Tweedy established Wilco along with the remaining members of Tupelo's final incarnation. The band has since been through numerous line up changes in what is essentially Tweedy's band. Their fourth album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, which followed the critically acclaimed but slow selling Summerteeth, caused major tensions with their record label. Unwilling to change the album to make it more "commercially viable," Wilco bought the finished studio tapes from Warner/Reprise for a reported $50,000 and left the label altogether. To date it is my favorite and I think the most experimental Wilco record. Being There was a bigger commercial and critical success and hopefully will earn a place in your collection too.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

The Year of Living Biblically by A.J. Jacobs

The Year of Living Biblically answers the question: What if a modern-day American followed every single rule in the Bible as literally as possible. Not just the famous rules – the Ten Commandments and Love Thy Neighbor (though certainly those). But the hundreds of oft-ignored ones: don’t wear clothes of mixed fibers. Grow your beard. Stone adulterers.

And so reads the blurb on the back of the book, but the truth is that A.J. Jacobs does not follow every rule, he can't, and that is what makes the book interesting. Full disclosure, I bought this book because I was hoping to be able to learn more, so I could argue with biblical literalists. I wanted to go off on those people who say, "I believe every word in the Bible." While I still think those people are idiots, I got a lot more than that out of this book. In fact, I have a new respect for the Bible and it's complications.
There are so many large and small questions this book brought up that it is hard to know where to start. There are thousands of rules in the Bible and around 650 that Jewish rabbis still enforce. Most are in the Old Testament. So, one of the first big questions you have to ask is, did Jesus' sacrifice, as the New Testament laid it out, erase the need to follow all the old rules? There are many conservative Christians that believe this is the case. Also, there are moral rules and there are "procedural" rules, and it's not always easy to determine which is which. Not wearing clothes of mixed fibers is a procedural rule, not committing adultery is a moral rule. Some have chosen over the years, to only follow the moral rules and discard the procedural rules. Another interesting issue is whether or not the translation is always right. For example, one of the commandments we all know is, you shall not kill. This is confusing as there are plenty of other places in the bible that killing is clearly approved of, like stoning adulterers. Some have suggested that the commandment was original worded as "you shall not murder." This would make more sense. A further complication, what is adultery? According to the times, it was when a married women had sex with a man. A married man was free to sleep with other non-married women. So should we obey the rule as it was intended then, when women and children were seen as property, or a more modern interpretation? Some on the supreme court would say, you enforce it as the framers intended.

Needless to say the book goes on to delve into many other rules from major to amazingly obscure. Every time Jacobs found a bizarre rule that he was sure he would be the only person in the world to follow, he was able to find a group that was dedicated to following it. You are never alone when it comes to Bible rules. Another fun exercise is trying to figure out why some rules were instated. No one is really sure why there is a ban on pork. There are also a lot of birds you are not supposed to eat, but the scholars disagree on the translations of the animals names, so to be really safe you should go vegetarian.

I'll go back to the book blurb and say, this book is reverent and irreverent at the same time, but you can't read it without thinking about some of these rules and how many of them really make sense and make the world a better place. I still don't literally believe every word in the Bible, but this book made me want to explore it more.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout

I have to admit, I did not understand Elizabeth Strout’s book Olive Kitteridge was a “novel in stories” until I read the NY Times review. I just thought it was strange that there was no real beginning or end and that a couple of the chapters came completely from left field. Now that I understand the structure it makes more sense, but it seems unfortunate that you have to know this to enjoy the book. The presence of Olive Kitteridge, a seventh-grade math teacher and the wife of a pharmacist, links the 13 stories. She is a large, outspoken, lonely and emblematic of the hardscrabble life on the coast of Maine. Several of the stories put Olive at their center, but in a few she makes only a fleeting appearance. The two weakest stories are the ones in which she is merely mentioned. Without her, the book goes adrift, as if it has lost its anchor. Each story is very well written and enjoyable, but as you read on, you do need some context to understand the characters. Olive's son and husband are featured in several stories and as such could be considered main characters, but again there is no real sense of depth with either. I felt there were a half dozen great stories that led to one almost great novel.

Obviously the Pulitzer committee saw genius in this book as the awarded it the 2009 award for fiction.