Monthly Archives:

March 2017

Spring Has Sprung!

Hip hip hooray!!! The season of hope is at hand at last! We wait all year for this to arrive, and we’ve got a few weeks of cold weather to get things in shape for warmer weather. (Hopefully that means my stomach too.) As for the arrival of the season, let’s celebrate with a quick look back at this day in years past.

2016 was as wintry as ever, despite some red witch hazel.

In 2015, I was cuffed on the first day of spring.

Shirtless furry guys warmed the first day of spring in 2014.

In 2013, the music for the day was ‘Appalachian Spring’.

As always, it’s a mixed bag.

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Last Winter Week Recap

Sick of the winter yet? Well, this is your week, as we officially begin the spring season today. The weather usually doesn’t follow until a few weeks later, but I’ll hold out hope. Considering we just got two feet of snow in one fell swoop, I’m not banking on an easy ride just yet. On with this recap of the last week of winter 2017. Bye Felicia.

It began with a basketball memory. (Yes, I have one.)

Harry Judd is furry, fit and fine.

Biggest snow job of the year.

Tempest in a teacup.

Semi.

Uplifting.

Sexy shirtless gingers for St. Patrick’s Day.

The day I turned into Woman Woman.

Fry it on me.

My upcoming reunion with, and at, ‘Sunset Boulevard’.

Like a muse to me

Simon Dunn got naked… and sizzled.

Hunks of the Day included Sam Asghari, Luke Evans, Anatoly Goncharov, Kevin Sessums, Asger Skovgaard and in honor of my upcoming ‘Sunset Boulevard’ return, Michael Xavier.

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#KimptonLove at #musehotelny

There’s nothing I like better than staying in a hotel, and there’s no better hotel in which to stay than a Kimpton. This coming weekend I’ll be trying out their Muse Hotel in New York while returning to ‘Sunset Boulevard’. The only other New York Kimpton hotel I’ve tried was 70 Park Avenue – and it was delightful (back when it was under Kimpton ownership – it has since shifted to new management). I’ve enjoyed their properties in Washington, DC and San Francisco, CA however, so I’m not sure why I don’t try their NY locations more often.

From the animal-print robes to the proliferation of those ‘Raid the Mini-bar’ credits offered by their Karma Rewards program (it’s free to join, and more than worth it if you spend any time in a Kimpton), they have a way of making their guests feel like part of a big happy family (especially during their happy wine hours). It’s a sense of community and camaraderie missing from so many major hotel chains, and part of the Kimpton charm that keeps me coming back for more.

Far more important than those touches of whimsy and delight, this is a company that cares about its clients. That care is evident and genuine in ways small and large, from a simple note of welcome to a concern for their guest’s well-being. (It can also be found in a Tweet on their very engaging Twitter account.)

As for the Muse, it will be calling my name this weekend. The bar/restaurant on premises (NIOS) looks intriguing – and with our notoriously fickle weather it’s nice having a safe haven close to a home-away-from-home. I’m also scoping out hotels for an upcoming Broadway trip with my Mom, and if the Muse proves a worthy home base for a Broadway excursion, we may be making a repeat reservation come May.

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A Sunset Reunion (Or How To Stay Friends With An Old Crush)

A pleasantly oft-forgotten footnote in the saga of my 1996 crush is its connection to ‘Sunset Boulevard’. I won’t rehash everything that went on in those embarrassing days of the mid-to-late nineties, when every date held the promise of a life together, and every guy who was unfortunate enough to cross my path was subject to obsession. It’s all there in the Madonna Timelines for ‘I Want You’ and ‘You’ll See’ and ‘You Must Love Me’. Hell, repercussions were still being felt in ‘Don’t Cry For Me Argen-freakin-tina’. My track record of romantic tumbles and fumbles speaks for itself, but in the last stages of my crush during the waning days of 1996, there is a story in the parting gift I gave to the hapless gentleman who had struck my fancy at the time.

In one of our early conversations, he’d indicated that he loved Broadway musicals – the bigger and more blockbuster the better. (He’d so extolled the virtues of a performance of ‘Miss Saigon’ that I dragged my parents to it. The same went for ‘The Who’s Tommy’ – and neither impressed me all that much.) When it became clear that he wanted nothing to do with me romantically, I made a last-ditch effort to maintain at least a shred of friendship, and gifted him the double-CD soundtrack to ‘Sunset Boulevard’, which was still playing on Broadway. I didn’t exactly feel like I was Norma Desmond to his Joe Gillis, but comparisons and costumes will be made and we’ll leave it at that.

On one of my last days at Brandeis University (by the grace of God I was graduating early and wouldn’t need to endure another semester of shame) I stopped by the mailroom to send out the package. I was too shy to give it to him in person. As I walked out a corner entrance of Usdan, I ran into him. Knowing what I’d just done, and that he would receive a ridiculous double-CD in a day or two, I felt even more flustered and foolish. We made some awkward small-talk and then I quickly left. Yet instead of leaving things alone, I went back to my place and ordered two front-row tickets to ‘Sunset Boulevard’, which was then starring Elaine Paige. How could he say no to front-row tickets to a big Broadway show? (Don’t judge me.) The logistics of meeting up in New York City could be worked out in the future, but I was certain he would go.

A few days later the tickets arrived. I’d finished out my time at college and was living in Boston, and though we exchanged a letter or two (and I’d put him on my official mailing list) we didn’t really have any contact. I wasn’t quite ready to call and ask him to the show, though that was my vague plan. What’s the worst that could happen? (A question I’d asked and then received answer after disastrous answer, time and time again.) For whatever reason, I let weeks pass without getting in touch with him. I was still mailing him the postcards and letters and all those silly things I sent out to my friends at the time, but he had gone silent, and I had gotten the message.

On a solo trip to Savannah a few weeks later, I was beginning the long trek North again when I pulled over for some breakfast and a USA Today. In the Life section was a small blurb about ‘Sunset Boulevard’: it was closing a few days before the date for which I had front-row tickets. The final crushing blow to whatever vain fantasy I had, I sat at the wheel of my car, stunned and on the verge of tears. It was small consolation that he would not know about this sad final play for his affection. We would not see each other for the next five years, after which Suzie and I ran into him at Madonna’s Drowned World Tour in Boston. Since then, and mostly through the ease of social media, we’ve reconnected and forged a friendship. Those who make a mark on us in the flush of youth seem to have greater pull and power than those we meet later on. It’s the essence of youth to lend import to such things.

When ‘Sunset Boulevard’ was announced to be returning to Broadway, he joked that we should see it together. I called his bluff and said I was game if he was, and next week we’ll convene at the Palace Theater, in the front row, for Glenn Close’s turn as Norma Desmond, two decades later.

Not only will this mark a reunion with Ms. Close (whom I had the great fortune of seeing near the end of her original run) but a reunion with the guy who unwittingly played such a formative part of my college experience. In the years since our ill-fated ‘Sunset’ non-date, we’ve each gotten married, purchased homes, and he and his husband had a son. We’re worlds beyond 1996, but we’ve stayed in touch and have forged one of the most unique friendships I’ve been able to maintain. It’s not quite as if we’ve never said good-bye, because I bid adieu to my youth a while back, but we’ve found new ways to dream.

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Fry Some, Eat One

Mom and Dad gifted us with a deep-fryer this past Christmas, and during this week’s snowstorm I finally had an opportunity to try it out. I’ve been frying things over the years, to mostly disastrous results. I never used a thermometer to check the temperature, so it was either too cold or way too hot. The trick, from what I read, is to make sure that food items get cooked quickly enough to get a crunchy exterior, while not taking in too much oil. That largely happens when you have the temperature and the timing correct. (I can still remember the night I almost burned the Boston condo down trying my hand at fried chicken. I thought the trickiest part would be the paper bag shake, but it was really how to navigate the spattering oil and thick smoke that had the smoke detector exhausted by the time it was all over. The worst part was that the chicken, even with its perfect buttermilk dressing, was burnt on the outside and bloody on the inside.)

The deep fryer fixed all those flaws, maintaining its temperature and still staying spatter-free. The potatoes I’d cut up went in and started bubbling like you see on the cooking shows, and after a few minutes they came out perfectly golden (or as Gram liked to say, good and brown). It was a rare culinary success, and I hurriedly sprinkled them with sea salt before they cooled. Served with an aioli and ketchup, they were reminiscent of the fries I’ve had at Five Guys, so I’d say I pulled it off. Next adventure: fried artichoke hearts. Wish me luck.

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How I Became Wonder Woman

As is often the case, it was the costume that called to me first: red, white and blue, with fabulous accents of sparkling gold. Stars played a big part in the pattern, including red ones on a golden crown and bullet-proof cuffs. Red boots and a gold lasso rounded out the wonder of the whole thing. This was Wonder Woman, as portrayed by Lynda Carter in the 70’s television series, and she was my idol.

In the first of many diva homages, I set about to become this wonderful creature. I wanted her power, her charisma, and her intelligence. I also wanted to emulate her way of getting out of every difficult situation using truth and smarts, in addition to physical prowess. At the time, I didn’t see that – all I saw, and all I wanted, was the costume. That was also the only thing I could really approximate, so I set about to see if I could come up with something to recreate her magic.

It began with the star-spangled satin extra-short shorts. With a background of blue, and stars of white, I contemplated the Underoos they made for girls, but was disappointed that the pattern was only on the front – the back was plain white. Luckily for me, a pair of Batman Underoos that I already owned were blue on the front and back, AND they had a waistband of yellow that could double as her golden belt. The lack of stars was the only problem, but it was easily solved by using a sheet of golden star stickers, the kind that some teachers put on their students’ tests if they were done well. The eagle-emblazoned halter/bustier was more difficult to conjure, and I had to settle on drawing an abstract bird on a red t-shirt and calling it close enough. For the bulletproof cuffs and that headband, I drew red stars on yellow construction paper, cutting out the shapes that would result in those power-generating talismans.

If it sounds utterly ridiculous, I’m sure it looked just as silly. But back then, and through to this very day, it wasn’t about perfectly recreating a look. It was about the journey to get there, and the obstacles that required strategy and cleverness to conquer. I couldn’t go online and buy a costume already assembled – I needed to conjure the wonder of this woman through imaginative facsimile. When I finally did, and when I looked at myself in the mirror, I saw a superhero. I felt the power coursing through me, and it came from the inside out. The neighbors may have laughed, and my family may have looked the other way, but I felt empowered and proud. From construction paper and stickers and underwear, I made myself into Wonder Woman. All I needed was a cause and a purpose.

All this reminiscing was brought on by the new ‘Wonder Woman’ movie trailer that premiered a couple of days ago. It’s a marvelous tease, filled with gorgeous island scenes and dramatic war passages. My friend Skip says it’s all about that musical motif, the one that shows up so chillingly in electric guitar form at the end of the clip. I agree. Well, that and a shirtless Chris Pine. Definitely a step-up from Lyle Waggoner.

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Somewhere That’s Green

That where seems a far way off, and a long time away.

Everything out of my window is white with snow, or gray with dirt and salt.

Green feels like a memory, one that I wish would return to present reality.

And so I conjure the past with a picture.

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Luck of the Ginger

Happy St. Patrick’s Day! May the luck of the Irish be with you! I got all the luck (and eloquence) I needed when I kissed the Blarney Stone a couple of decades ago, so anything else is just Irish gravy at this point. It wouldn’t be a proper holiday without a representation of gingers, and these red-headed gents look to heat up your frigid shamrocks and Irish tweed.

We must begin with the fine form of perennial favorite Seth Fornea, whose Instagram account is regularly on fire thanks to butt-baring shots like these. Mr. Fornea is ever-ready with a seductive smile and amiable spirit – the perfect charm to this day of luck.

Daniel Newman may be best known for ‘The Walking Dead’, but I prefer to think of him as The Sexy Red, thanks in part to nearly-naked romps like this. Greg Rutherford had this grandly gratuitous post, exposing his ass much as it is here.

Steve DiCosta gave good (red) head in his Hunk of the Day feature.

For his turn as HOD, Christian Kruse gave innocence tinged with scarlet.

Bryce Eilenberg is, simply put, a ginger dream. Lastly, lest we leave out royalty, the most revered ginger of the post may very well be Prince Harry, even if rumor has it that he’s off the market. (He was never in my market anyway.)

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When Parents Find Out You’re Gay

I’ll tell my own version of that some other day, as it has no place in the light and frothy mid-day post. Instead, here’s an uplifting video of other folks who find out what their Dads thought of them coming out. It was originally uploaded for Father’s Day, but we need a little levity before June, so take a look.

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Semi (Precious)

They appear on the cover of Madonna’s ‘Like A Prayer’ album – a string of beads to go with the hippie vibe she was recreating with the patchouli-scented midriff-baring denim invitation to ‘take you there.’ I searched high and low for a piece of jewelry that came close to the vision she so delicately teased. I could replicate the rings and the open pair of jeans, but the tassels of beads were not to be found anywhere.

Taking matters into my own hands, I decided I’d have to make my own version, and set about collecting the beads and chains and tiny pliers to make it all happen. A self-taught crash-course in jewelry-making resulted in a piece of which I could be proud, and it remains a favorite to this day.

It’s a bit too delicate for real use outside of photos, so I may return to the work and fortify the flimsier chain sections with something stronger. I like a statement piece, and an open-ended necklace always has a lot to say.

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Tranquil Tempest in a Teacup

A relaxing herbal tea formed the moment of quiet in a day full of quiet moments.

It tasted of spring, and dried flowers, and herbs awakening to a new season.

It was warm and delicate, rustic yet elegant.

An antidote to the snow that fell so relentlessly.

The garden distilled into a wire capsule, spreading its aromas and tastes into the steaming water.

As pretty to drink with the eyes as it was to drink with the mouth.

An afternoon glimpse of tranquility.

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Snow Comment

Yeah, we got some snow.

For the first time in my sixteen-year career, the governor closed state offices for non-essential workers.

(Yeah, I’m non-essential.)

Then when New York City and the coast didn’t get as much as anticipated, everyone breathed a sigh of relief, while those of us in the Capital District got pounded with more and more white stuff. The more that people called the storm a bust on social media, the more snow seemed to fall in Albany. In fact, as of this writing it’s still snowing here. There’s about two feet of snow on the ground now, and counting.

I took advantage of the day off to try out our new deep fryer (I made frites!) and do some cleaning for a special guest this weekend (and a dinner party tomorrow). I also read a bit, tucked into a nook of the conversation couch that looked out into the dim white blanket outside.

Andy took the photos you see here, saving me even the trouble of heading out to snap a few pics. All in all, it was a very good day.

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Harry Judd: Fit & Fine

With an exuberant video kick-off to promote his new fitness book, Harry Judd is all verve and energy, and the embodiment of the active and healthy lifestyle he espouses. ‘Get Fit, Get Happy’ is a mantra and a way of life, and if I’m going to follow fitness advice from anyone, it’s going to come from someone who looks like this. And especially someone who looks like this naked. Bonus link for those who want more action: underwear GIFS here.

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The Boys Playing Basketball

It was the first warm day of the year. So early and unexpected was it, there were still patches of dirty snow on the ground. In my bedroom, the window over the garage was cracked open for the first time. A few splinters of old paint fluttered to the ground below as I broke the winter seal. I breathed in the spring air, even if it wasn’t technically spring yet. It was coming, and after a winter of confinement it was more than welcome.

Lying on my bed and daydreaming, I envisioned summer days, pool romps, and the freedom from cold and ice. I happily thought of the freedom from school. Summer vacation felt like an eternity then – but also an eternity away. It was a Saturday or Sunday, and the weekend was small solace when juxtaposed with the idea of summer – indomitable, endless, sun-swaddled summer. Still, the sun was shining, the day was young, and I luxuriated in the solitude of a ‘Crazy For You’ moment – those brushes with the sublime that you can only ever have when you’re by yourself. Wishing… for something. Hoping for more. Finding a way.

In the distance, the sound of something approaching. I heard the dull thuds of rubber on cement, of footsteps, of voices and shouts and laughter. Even then, my senses pricked up in agitated fashion; the possibility of a social encounter left me instantly on guard. I didn’t like my solitary revelries to be interrupted or intruded upon. Safe in my bedroom, however, I felt relatively removed from any forced interactions. It was the closest thing I had to an ivory tower, and I embraced the notion of being a captive as much as I embraced the isolation. We didn’t have terms for social anxiety then, not for twelve-year-old boys at least.

I saw a flash of rust out of the corner of my eye. Unsure of whether a squirrel was crossing the garage roof, or a robin alighting on the barren hawthorne outside the window, I moved closer and suddenly a basketball rose in the air right below my vantage point. Word had already gotten out, in one short day, that my brother had a basketball hoop. Not only that, but also the tantalizing fact that it was substantially shorter than the regulation basketball hoops, allowing the older boys of the neighborhood to slam dunk a shot if they had enough momentum and height going. For this reason, it was an instant hit, and a dangerous magnet according to my parents. The boys had but a few hours before my Dad came home from work and put it to a fast, and loud, end. But for now they were there, in my driveway, drawn by my brother and the possibility of acting out basketball slam dunk glory.

I was separate and apart, but still connected by proximity and secrecy. It was characteristic of so many of my childhood encounters. (The first sentence I ever uttered according to a baby book kept by my Mom was, “I like to watch.” There is a telling lack of participation in that, the first shy steps of a boy who felt safer standing on the outside than venturing in.) Still, it was a thrill to hear it all happening right below me, particularly when the only noise the house typically heard was my brother and myself, and the occasional shouts of our parents having to quiet us down. The boys playing basketball were suddenly a welcome diversion.

I listened to their screams and exultations, how they supported one another and sparred, and the way they grunted and exhaled from all their exertions. It wasn’t a sexual attraction, I wasn’t quite old enough for that yet, but it was close. It was the first spark of realizing I liked boys better than girls. Yes, I liked to watch. Yes, I liked to watch men.

I moved surreptitiously to the only other spot affording a broader view: the attic. It was a storage space back then – unheated and dusty, with corners of cobwebs and only two small windows on each end letting the light in. Yet one of the windows looked out over a wider swath of the driveway, and my watching eyes could observe without danger of being discovered.

I saw my brother sitting on the side of the driveway and talking to someone, I saw a boy (and a friend) I knew from school, and I saw a couple of neighbors I knew by sight but not name. I watched the way they came together in the common goal of sport, and the way they seemed to shirk off any social uneasiness. How I envied them their easy camaraderie, how I longed for it as much as its simple nature confounded and repelled me.

In the dust of the space, as the afternoon sun slanted through from the other side of the room, where childhood stuffed animals roamed and Christmas decorations smelled faintly of pine, I felt an ache and a wish to belong – to anything… to anyone. Somehow I felt destined to do this for the rest of my life – to systematically move myself further and further away from human connection, from the possibility of being hurt or embraced – whether by a carelessly-shot basketball or something more probing like the heart-piercing pricks of love.

Slowly and carefully, I opened the window. I wanted to hear them. It was no longer enough to watch. Though part of me had moved further away from the boys, part of me was reaching out to get closer. It was the beginning of a lifelong battle.

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Late Monday Morning Fun

Your daily dose of cute can be found right here, with this clip of a bunny herding sheep.

Not one of the greatest clips, but you get the idea.

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