Matt Brundage

Archive for 2004

Thursday, 21 October 2004

Don’t Super Size Me

In other news, today is the first anniversary of the last time I set foot in a McDonalds restaurant or ate their food! Watching Super Size Me over the summer really cemented my opinion of their food, but I had been a fast food skeptic long before then. I plan on avoiding McDonalds (and the like) indefinitely.

Thursday, 21 October 2004

LBJ

LBJ lighting a smoke Today, while working at the Hirshhorn Museum’s library, I came across a stainless steel shovel — it happened to be the one used by Lyndon Johnson at the museum’s groundbreaking ceremony on 6 Jan 1969! So now I’ve touched a shovel that was briefly used by LBJ.

Tuesday, 5 October 2004

File Under “Necessary Disclaimers”

“I agree with John Kerry, from Thursday night.” —John Edwards

Wednesday, 29 September 2004

Purple Heart

my vast collection of unwanted articles of clothingMe: Hello?

PH: Hi, this is Purple Heart. Is the lady of the house present?

Me: There’s no lady here.

PH: Okay; then I’ll catch you later.

Is it just me or was this Purple Heart employee a bit sexist? I mean, does she think that men are incapable of donating clothes? HA! I have ten large bags of clothes (not to mention four other huge piles and a dozen or so shirts on hangers) in my living room as I write this. Purple Heart just lost out on the mother lode. Serves them right for being sexist ninnies. I’ll just donate it all to Goodwill in spite of them. The nerve to assume that only bored housewives with nothing to do in the early afternoon are the only people capable of putting bags of clothing or unwanted toys out for the Purple Heart truck! Then again, it takes prodding to get the average man to even take out the garbage, so I guess I’m beginning to understand. But still…

Thursday, 16 September 2004

US Naval Frigate 52

Naval Frigate 52 US Naval Frigate 52 slides down the York River, past the George P. Coleman Bridge, just northeast of historic Yorktown, Virginia.

Monday, 30 August 2004

She likes lingerie, but he prefers the sombrero

he prefers the sombrero over lingerie What’s with the Sheryl Crow lyric “She likes lingerie, but he prefers the sombrero“? It seems simple at first, but if you think about it, it’s really vague. Does it mean that she likes lingerie, but he prefers that she wear a sombrero? Should she wear it in addition to the lingerie or instead of said lingerie? In this context, why would the man not prefer lingerie to a sombrero? Is this man Mexican? Or could it mean that he simply prefers wearing a sombrero on his head to wearing women’s underwear? Would this sombrero be worn in the traditional manner, or placed strategically in lieu of underwear?

Isn’t lingerie really just a shopping mall term for underpants? It’s like a man walking up to you and saying, “I like socks” or, “I like shirts.” If said in a certain, absent-minded way, this declaration could no doubt make one feel uncomfortable. The woman’s preference for lingerie, I think, is really just her acclamation that “I’m sexy and I’m in control.” The man, with his preference for a large Mexican hat is in effect saying, “I wear the pants in the family; I’m manly, I’m ethnic, and I’m out of control in my Mexican hat.”

Thursday, 19 August 2004

Bring Out the Best

Hellmann's Mayonnaise Living by yourself means taking forever to finish large containers of condiments. For instance, I am only on my third jar of peanut butter in over 18.7 months (6.2 months per jar). Also, it has been 570 days since I purchased my current jar of mayo and a full 381 days since it expired. Just so long as it isn’t sour or doesn’t have visible bacterial growth, I’m perfectly fine with it.

Wednesday, 9 June 2004

Ronnie’s funeral

My Ronnie Reagan’s funeral procession happened to go directly in front of the Museum of American History — the building I was working at that day. I went outside after work to find that a huge crowd had gathered to pay tribute to the man. It felt like Independence Day — patriotism and American pride filled the air. Everyone had a camera and it was relatively quiet. I watched in awe as the horse-drawn casket passed. People saluted, put their hands over their hearts, smiled, cried, took pictures… I even heard shouts of “I love you, Ronnie!” Personally, I had my hand over my heart and I heard myself sigh.

Servicemen flank Constitution AveFor once, the population was unified; Reagan’s historical and political stature seems to keep rising with every passing year. In hindsight, he was our best president and we were proud to call him our commander in chief.

Tuesday, 1 June 2004

Excerpt from a Bush speech

John F. KerryGeorge W. Bush“Senator Kerry has spent two decades in Congress; he’s built up quite a record. In fact, Senator Kerry has been in Washington long enough to take both sides on just about every issue. He’s been for the Patriot Act and against it; for NAFTA and against it; for the No Child Left Behind Act and against it; for the use of force in Iraq and against funding the liberation of Iraq. My opponent clearly has strong beliefs — they just don’t last very long.”

—George W. Bush [ more on Bush] [ Bush daughters ]

Saturday, 13 March 2004

The old tape

On the way to work in the summer of 2001, I was stopped at a red light, playing “Good Vibrations” on an old dubbed tape. A man pulled up next to me with his windows down. He leaned over and said “that’s a great song” as if he connected with the song more than just superficially. I smiled and told him I agreed.