Home Blog Page 492

Helen Oyeyemi on Why Writing is Like “Inner Space Travel”

0


Helen Oyeyemi

Photos by Tereza Linhartova.

This is First Draft, in which our favorite writers get to the bottom of their own craft. From preferred writing drinks to whether or not you really need to carry a notebook, we find out all the ways they beat writer’s block and do the work. Before curling up with Peaces, Helen Oyeyemi’s new novel about two lovers who embark on a mysterious train voyage, discover all the elements that helped her get it done. 

———

JULIANA UKIOMOGBE: Describe your ideal writing atmosphere. What gets you in the mood?

HELEN OYEYEMI: I tend to write in bed, so lots of pillows are just the thing. I’d also want to get an appropriate playlist going (but played through loudspeakers, not headphones).

UKIOMOGBE: Do you eat or drink while you write?

OYEYEMI: Tea. So much tea! Matcha, mint tea, and kombucha. There’s nothing quite like celebrating chapter completion with kombucha sipped from a champagne glass.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you keep a notebook or journal?

OYEYEMI: I do. It’s full of sentences—sometimes paragraphs—for things I want to write soon. Snippets to be linked later. And when I come across lines in books and articles that I really want to keep thinking about, I add them into the mix. When I look back at the notes from previous years and see when new thoughts were introduced it feels like a more accurate snapshot of what was going on at the time than a diary entry would be.

UKIOMOGBE: What’s your favorite quote?

OYEYEMI: For now let’s say it’s this, from Ezra Pound’s translation of Li Bai’s Exile’s Lettter:

…and if you ask how I regret that parting?

It is like the flowers falling at spring’s end,

Confused, whirled in a tangle.

What is the use of talking! And there is no end of talking—

There is no end of things in the heart.

UKIOMOGBE: Whose writing do you always return to?

OYEYEMI: There’s something about the Song of Songs that keeps me coming back for more. And it’s the same story with the Book of Job. For a long time, I thought a person was either inclined Song of Song-wards or Book of Job-wards (temperamentally, I mean). In my teens, I was Team Job, and in my twenties, I was Team Songs; in my thirties, I’ve resigned myself to the fact that I  go both ways. But of course, the greater question is, who wrote those books?

UKIOMOGBE: What books did you read as a kid/teen? Have your thoughts about the writers changed?

OYEYEMI: I think a few of the books I loved back then, and still love, managed to find their way to me at exactly the right age to grow with me. The Chronicles of Narnia and The Catcher in the Rye, for instance. I can picture those books presenting themselves to a person’s imagination too early or too late.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you read while you’re in the process of writing? Which writers inform your current work the most?

OYEYEMI: When I’m in the daily writing phase of a book I get a bit too intense about influence to read very much, and I’ll usually watch films and TV if there’s still time any time left at the end of the writing day before falling asleep. If there are any writers that Peaces is trying to have a bit of back and forth with, Can Xue is one (particularly her novels Love In The New Millennium and The Last Lover) and Carl Jung is another.

UKIOMOGBE: How many drafts of one piece do you typically write?

OYEYEMI: One, but it’s quite a mission to get it into a state where I could even think of it as a draft.

UKIOMOGBE: What would the title of your memoir be?

OYEYEMI: In Czech, I think it would have to be Kolemjdouci. (In English, Passerby.)

UKIOMOGBE: Who’s your favorite screenwriter?

OYEYEMI: Eight years into K-drama addiction—and having watched K-dramas that feature characters who are K-drama writers—I’m beginning to understand that the big writing name attached to any project often collaborates with co-writers. So when I say I love a Kim Eun-sook drama or a Hong Sisters drama, it seems I’m under the spell of a number of writers allied to a particular sensibility. If it’s the Hong Sisters, I’m guaranteed to have cried all the tears I have in my body by the final episode of the story. Crying whilst laughing: the soul equivalent of being tickled with aggressive delicacy. I’d recommend Hotel Del Luna—I think it’s still on Netflix. With a Kim Eun-sook, the aesthetic and emotional terrain is quite different… more billows of steam and stretches of black ice. I thought I couldn’t love any TV show more than I loved Kim Eun Sook’s Goblin, and then last year she came back with The King: Eternal Monarch. I think that one’s still on Netflix too.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you consider writing to be a spiritual practice?

OYEYEMI: At times, writing puts an interesting sort of strain on the senses that can be similar to some spiritual activity, but personally I feel it’s more akin to inner space travel than finding a way out of the existing framework.

UKIOMOGBE: Which writers would you choose to have dinner with, living or dead?

OYEYEMI: In my current mood, I’d ask Emily Dickinson, Christine Chia, Kelly Link, Zdeněk Jirotka, Mariana Enriquez, Sara Gran, Wislawa Symborska, Ali Smith, Heather O’Neill, Catherine Chung, Olga Tokarczuk, and Marina Endicott. Remarkable tableside chat aside, I also somehow have a notion that between us—plus friends and friends of friends we’d all call in—we’d work out how to give Covid-19 such a good scare that it realizes it should never have even dreamed of starting anything.

UKIOMOGBE: Can great writing save the world?

OYEYEMI: Great writing does so many indescribably essential things. However, I feel like our relationship with that which is written is disturbing enough that awarding words the power to save the world also means awarding them the power to destroy the world. So I’d strongly prefer trying every conceivable non-violent method of saving the world before attempting the great writing route. That wasn’t an answer, was it? I suppose the short answer would be that I don’t know if writing really can acquire superpower status, and I’m very okay with never finding out.



Fresh is Not Always Best

0


Randy Rucker arrives at River Twice eight hours before dinner service, immediately heading downstairs to inspect the restaurant’s walk-in. He, along with his sous chef and right-hand man, Kevin McWilliams, inspect all of the meat, fish and produce as they store it for what it could be used in that night’s menu, or for dishes which very well may be served months or even a year or more later. At this truly unique restaurant, Rucker and McWilliams focus on an evolving menu which changes from night to night, week to week, as their philosophy of utilization feeds their creativity and allows them to make menu changes when needed.

“In my world, you have to really get into your product,” he says. “You have to smell it. You have to taste it. You have to get all up in it. How is it today? Is it different from yesterday? Has it fermented a little more than it had yesterday? Is it ready to go?”

“Fresh isn’t always best,” he exclaims, as he breaks down what can be done with certain foods as they age.

“When aging beef, flavor profiles increase. Textures change. Foods need to breathe. You have to allow it to become what it can be. People talk about catching and eating fresh fish, but sometimes it’s an organ from a tuna that was caught six months ago that will taste the best. Food has its ‘ready meter.’ It tells you when it’s ready. With our steelhead trout (sourced from Green-Walk Trout Hatchery in Bangor, PA), we don’t do anything special at all except age it. We hang it for 12-14 days. Water is then able to evaporate and the concentration of flavor happens. Enzymes break down. This process makes it easier to work with. Fermentation creates flavors, while aging allows flavors to come naturally. It brings the magical elements that nature provides. Mother Nature will do it for you if you just get the hell out of the way.”

Randy Rucker’s resume speaks for itself. After attending culinary school at Johnson & Wales, he manned the kitchen at a number of Texas restaurants, earning James Beard nominations for his work at Bootsie’s in Tomball, as well as the Rainbow Lodge in Houston. After spending time in Martha’s Vineyard and other parts of New England, Rucker, along with his wife, Amanda, opened River Twice in Philadelphia’s Passyunk Square in October of 2019, where they were met with immediate high praise. River Twice is known for serving modern American cuisine, but most nights, you may not know what to call it.  There are Japanese touches to so many dishes, including hand rolls filled with fresh uni. There’s a southern flare, speaking to how Rucker grew up and where he cut his teeth in the restaurant industry. If you ate at River Twice once a month for a full year, you’ll likely consume more than 50 completely different dishes.

But it was more than just culinary school that led Rucker to where he is now. He learned preservation techniques from his mother and dug into the ground as a kid. He credits his peers with teaching him more cooking processes than he could ever learn in culinary school. “The more people know about things, the better we all are” he said.

His philosophy and approach to sourcing and cooking has helped Rucker to utilize food in ways most people wouldn’t even know to be possible. He smokes and breaks down country ham and turns it into XO sauce, which can be used as gravy on his bread dumplings or pork chops, for instance. Rather than throwing out fish scales, he uses them to clarify stocks. River Twice also cures, smokes and dries scallop abductors to use in their country ham XO. They cure their own ham, bacon, guanciale, and other forms of charcuterie. They save the roe stacks from fish and cure them to make forms of bottarga. They utilize old gnarly aged cheese rings to culture fresh cream to churn into butter. They dry age ducks, as well as whole primal cuts of beef. They utilize fluke and tuna bones for dashi after smoking and drying.

“The country ham XO is a prime example of what we do. All the products used in it are sourced locally. The sauce itself is fundamentally rooted in Chinese tradition but by using ingredients from the Mid-Atlantic it becomes something new. Utilization is the key to success in the kitchen. And patience is a culinary virtue.”

“This menu started years ago,” Rucker said, glancing at the menu he served the previous day. “We make everything so that it’s uniquely ours. We don’t have recipes, we have formulas. We work backwards. We source first, and figure it out later.”

The word ‘later’ might mean six months or a year down the road. And for those who have the pleasure of enjoying Rucker’s food, they will probably agree — fresh is definitely not always best.

River Twice, located at 1601 E. Passyunk Ave, highlights local, pristine ingredients and produce-driven dishes on their constantly changing menu. Learn more by visiting http://rivertwicerestaurant.com.



Jenu Goodu | Full Kannada Movie | Devaraj, Umashri, Shruti

0

Jenu Goodu | Full Kannada Movie | Devaraj, Umashri, Shruti

Download The ‘Lehren App’:

The story is about the influence of bad parenting on young Leelavathi’s mind. Film delves into the sequences of events that follows. The film is a family drama.

23 Mother’s Day Gifts for the Glam Mom

0


We love these products, and we hope you do too. E! has affiliate relationships, so we may get a small share of the revenue from your purchases. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!.

Is your mom your style icon? Does she always look put-together? Does she love to pamper herself with luxurious beauty treatments? Does she usually opt for silky soft, plush fabrics?  If your mom is a fan of everything glam, we have some gift ideas from jewelry to skincare tools to that will be right up her alley… that you’ll probably end up “borrowing.” 

So whether you’re shopping for your mom, the mother of your children, hinting for gifts you want to receive, or anything else Mother’s Day-related, check them out our picks below to make May 9 extra glitzy.

Musicbox – Three Phases (Album Sampler) Coming 15/12/13 – Lydian Label

4


Now available in all good digital stores! Lydian Label are exited to bring you the first full-length album by the inventive instrumental duo – Musicbox.

Three Phases is the product of a long-standing collaboration between fellow composers and friends, Todd Baker and Aaron ‘Laszlo’ Wheeler. The duo have been producing original music together for 10 years, whilst individually building highly successful careers as composers in the TV and Games industries.

For the two multi-instrumentalists, the Musicbox project has been a platform for experimentation, rooted in their passion for engaging harmony, groove and sonic textures. The Musicbox style and approach share clear similarities with Aaron’s established Laszlo sound – particularly 2011’s Radial Nerve. Though in addition to the characteristic melodic hooks and hybrid electronic production style, the duo also explore a more conceptual, often minimalist approach to both composition and production.

Todd and Aaron showcase their respective talents on guitar and piano, often using unconventional techniques, such as the plucked piano and guitar harmonics of Portals, as well as more traditionally arranged duets, most evident in the gentle melody of the opening track End Phase. Intricately produced tracks like November and Kalimba Concept blend electronic production details with a multitude of sampled acoustic instruments.

The duo form part of the upcoming live act: The Lydian Collective, who will be performing arrangements from Three Phases both in the studio and on the road soon!

Simply Delicious Food Tricks, Egg Recipes And Breakfast You'll Want To Try

2


TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 Cloud egg
00:15 Shrimp fried egg
00:45 Rainbow egg yolk dumplings
01:31 Jelly salted eggs
01:55 Homemade pasta
03:24 No pan fried egg

We advise adult supervision and care at all times.

This video is made for entertainment purposes. We do not make any warranties about the completeness, safety and reliability. Any action you take upon the information on this video is strictly at your own risk, and we will not be liable for any damages or losses. It is the viewer’s responsibility to use judgment, care and precautions if one plans to replicate.

The following video might feature activity performed by our actors within controlled environment- please use judgment, care, and precaution if you plan to replicate.

All product and company names shown in the video are trademarks™️ or registered®️ trademarks of their respective holders. Use of them does not imply any affiliation with or endorsement by them.

—————————————————————————————-

5-Minute Crafts:

Facebook:

Instagram:

Twitter:

5-Minute Crafts GIRLY:

5-Minute Crafts PLAY:

The Bright Side of Youtube:

For more videos and articles visit:

Music by Epidemic Sound:

Chad TV Show on TBS: Season One Viewer Votes – canceled + renewed TV shows

0


Chad TV show on TBS: canceled or renewed for season 2?

(TBS)

Can this new kid become popular in the first season of the Chad TV show on TBS? As we all know, the Nielsen ratings typically play a big role in determining whether a TV show like Chad is cancelled or renewed for season two. Unfortunately, most of us do not live in Nielsen households. Because many viewers feel frustrated when their viewing habits and opinions aren’t considered, we invite you to rate all of the first season episodes of Chad here.

A TBS single-camera comedy, the Chad TV show is created by writer/executive producer and showrunner Nasim Pedrad. The Iranian-American actress also stars in the title role. Co-starring are Ella Mika, Saba Homayoon, Paul Chahidi, Jake Ryan, and Alexa Loo. The story follows a 14-year-old pubescent Persian boy named Chad (Pedrad) as he navigates his first year of high school. His mission, like many high schoolers, is to become popular. Chad’s friendships and sanity are pushed to the limits as he uses every tactic at his disposal to befriend the cool kids, while enduring the new dating life of his mother (Homayoon) and reconciling with his cultural identity.

What do you think? Which season one episodes of the Chad TV series do you rate as wonderful, terrible, or somewhere between? Do you think that Chad should be cancelled or renewed for a second season on TBS? Don’t forget to vote, and share your thoughts, below.

I'm Scared – Duffy ♪

4


I’m Scared – By Duffy

Rockferry [2008]

Lyrics –

The blank pages of my diary,
That I haven’t touched since you left me,
The closed blinds in my home,
See no light or day,
Dust gathers on my stereo,
Cause I can’t bare to hear the radio,
The piano sits in a shaded space,
With a picture of your face,

I’m scared to face another day,
Coz’ the fear in me just won’t go away,
In an instance,
You were gone,
And now I’m scared…..

Coffee stains on your favourite book,
Remind me of you so I can’t take a look,
The magazines you left on the floor,
You won’t need them anymore,
A towel left hanging on the wall,
No sign of wet footsteps in the hall,
There’s no smell of your sweet cologne,
I’m lying here alone,

I’m scared to face another day,
Coz’ the fear in me just won’t go away,
In an instance,
You were gone,
And now I’m scared…..

I’m scared to face another day,
Coz’ the fear in me just won’t go away,
In an instance,
You were gone,
And now I’m scared…..

In an instance you were gone,
I’m scared…..

Amy Winehouse – Live at Porchester Hall [2007]

3


Tracklist:

00:00:25 Know you know
00:03:16 Tears dry on their own
00:07:05 You know I’m no good
00:11:22 Just friends
00:15:09 He can only hold her (That thing)
00:18:21 I heard love is blind
00:21:42 Rehab
00:26:37 Take the box
00:30:30 Some unholy war
00:34:40 Back to black
00:38:34 Valerie
00:42:10 Addicted
00:45:10 Me & Mr Jones
00:48:14 Monkey Man

McFarlane DC Figures, Plus Spawn, Witcher & More!

0


CS Unboxed: McFarlane DC Figures, Plus Spawn, Witcher & More!

McFarlane Toys has provided ComingSoon.net with the chance to unbox their February through March lineup of new toys, including many DC Comics figures just in time to celebrate the release of Zack Snyder’s Justice League! Check out our figure unboxing in the gallery below, along with buy links for each toy!

RELATED: CS Unboxed: McFarlane Toys’ New Batman Figure Line!

McFarlane April 2021

Click links below to purchase!

DC MULTIVERSE 7″ FIGURES – RED SON SUPERMAN

DC MULTIVERSE 7″ FIGURES – DEATH METAL BATMAN

DC MULTIVERSE 7″ FIGURES – THE DROWNED

DC MULTIVERSE 7″ FIGURES – DAMIEN WAYNE ROBIN

DC BUILD-A 7″ FIGURES WV3 – LAST KNIGHT ON EARTH – BRUCE WAYNE

DC BUILD-A 7″ FIGURES WV3 – LAST KNIGHT ON EARTH – WONDER WOMAN

DC BUILD-A 7″ FIGURES WV3 – LAST KNIGHT ON EARTH – SCARECROW

DC BUILD-A 7″ FIGURES WV3 – LAST KNIGHT ON EARTH – OMEGA

WITCHER GAMING 7IN FIGURES 1 – GERALT OF RIVIA – GOLD LABEL SERIES

SPAWN 7″ FIGURES – MANDARIN SPAWN – GOLD LABEL SERIES

WITCHER GAMING 7IN FIGURES WV1 – GERALT OF RIVIA

WITCHER GAMING 12″ FIGURES – GERALT OF RIVIA

DC MULTIVERSE VEHICLES – BATMAN DEATH METAL BATCYCLE

RELATED: CS Video: Zack Snyder on Introducing The New Gods in Justice League!

Zack Snyder’s Justice League reportedly cost around $70 million in order to properly finish the editing and visual effects of the director’s original vision, as well as additional photography. The original post-production crew also returned along with cast members to record additional dialogue for the cut.

With his faith in humanity restored following the sacrifice of Superman, Justice League centers on Bruce Wayne as he uses this emotional fuel to band together with Diana Prince to build a team of heroes — Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg and The Flash — to prepare to stand together against the world-destroying threat of Steppenwolf and his maniacal master Darkseid.

The new cut of the film is based on a screenplay by Chris Terrio from an original story by Terrio, Snyder and Will Beall, and features as cast led by Ben Affleck as Bruce Wayne/Batman, Gal Gadot as Diana Prince/Wonder Woman, Jason Momoa as Arthur Curry/Aquaman, Ezra Miller as Barry Allen/The Flash, Ray Fisher as Victor Stone/Cyborg and Henry Cavill as Clark Kent/Superman. Also included in the ensemble roster is Willem Dafoe as Nuidis Vulko, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth, Diane Lane as Martha Kent, Connie Nielsen as Queen Hippolyta, J.K. Simmons as Commissioner Jim Gordon, Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Ciarán Hinds as Steppenwolf and Ray Porter as Darkseid.

Released in November 2017, the film earned mixed reviews from critics and audiences alike, praising the action and performances from Gadot and Miller while criticizing every other aspect of the film, namely the inconsistent tone that many fault Joss Whedon (The Avengers) for after taking over directorial duties from Snyder. With a large budget of $300 million and a break-even point of $750 million, the film is considered a box office bomb having grossed only $658 million.



Popular articles