me

tiny bit of blog



oops i blogged.





My name is Kate. I live in Greenwich Village in New York City and work at an Advertising Agency.

Yum! Asparagus Carbonara - What a brilliant idea! I am loving this recipe concept. I can’t wait to try it.
“What really shocked me about the recipe was the instruction to cut the blanched asparagus lengthwise into thin strips using a vegetable peeler. The asparagus essentially turn into vegetable fettuccine. Then you toss the asparagus strips with the real fettuccine and they swirl together into a colorful mound. It’s a simple but brilliant technique. That’s the beauty of cooking; it really is an endless education.” (via NYT The Moment)

Yum! Asparagus Carbonara - What a brilliant idea! I am loving this recipe concept. I can’t wait to try it.

“What really shocked me about the recipe was the instruction to cut the blanched asparagus lengthwise into thin strips using a vegetable peeler. The asparagus essentially turn into vegetable fettuccine. Then you toss the asparagus strips with the real fettuccine and they swirl together into a colorful mound. It’s a simple but brilliant technique. That’s the beauty of cooking; it really is an endless education.” (via NYT The Moment)

juliaheffernan:
Note: I don’t actually watch GG intravenously.
so true.

juliaheffernan:

Note: I don’t actually watch GG intravenously.

so true.

juliaheffernan:
jimmy neutron hair
hahaha! This is amazing!

juliaheffernan:

jimmy neutron hair

hahaha! This is amazing!

Oh Al. Looking pretty BadAss in here. (via Advertising Age)
Oh Al. Looking pretty BadAss in here. (via Advertising Age)
This is pretty cool. I guess it would only work if you lived by yourself though.
This is pretty cool. I guess it would only work if you lived by yourself though.

EST WTF

jakoblodwick:

The current time is 3:32pm. My iPhone thinks it’s 7:32pm. That has never happened to me with this, or any, phone before.

This actually happened to my iphone a few weeks ago… It was weird but I just restarted and it fixed itself.

pile:  I’m on the Bolt Bus to Boston and it has free wifi and AC power. UPDATE: the wifi works in tunnels and appears to be Sprint (3G maybe?)   hmm  this was about 6 hours ago… still on bolt bus. I think we’ll be taking the train back home. 

pile:

I’m on the Bolt Bus to Boston and it has free wifi and AC power. UPDATE: the wifi works in tunnels and appears to be Sprint (3G maybe?)

 hmm  this was about 6 hours ago… still on bolt bus. I think we’ll be taking the train back home. 

There appears to be a big “To Do” at the Institute of Audio Research.
There appears to be a big “To Do” at the Institute of Audio Research.
dihard:

Recognize that scarf? If you don’t, take one stop on the L train and you’ll see it all over the place. Or maybe you could just watch the news. You’ll likely catch a glimpse of it there.
So how did this turn into this?
Well, the scarves first became a popular fashion trend in the US during the First Palestinian Intifada in the 1980s. Now they’re back and being sold all over – TopShop, on the street on Broadway, and even in Urban Outfitters as the “Anti-War Woven Scarf.” Well, at least until controversy arose & they discontinued it, but then released the all too similar “Fringe Square Scarf.” Hipsters, Spanish leaders, even daughters of presidential candidates are all hip to the style.
So I get it – it’s cute, and is great with cutoffs and a wifebeater. Fold it in half and tie it around your neck so the triangle points down, right? Totes. But do they even know what they’re wearing? Perhaps. But perhaps not, as one NYTimes scarf-wearing interviewee says, “I’m not too up to speed in what’s going on in the Middle East.”
Here’s a bit of history about this great new accessory. It’s a Keffiyeh, and was originally the headwear of Palestinian peasants. It became the symbol of Palestinian nationalism and of class struggle during the 1936 to 1939 Great Arab Revolt against the British Mandate of Palestine when the insurgents forced upper-class Palestinians to wear it to show sympathy with the fighters. Later, in the 1960s when the Palestinian resistance movement began, Yasser Arafat adopted it. It now adorns the heads of the younger generation in the Middle East to show support of the Palestinian cause. The black and white keffiyeh is associated with the Fatah, the largest faction of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), and apparently the red and white keffiyeh is associated with the Hamas. You know, the terrorists? 
But the Keffiyeh stands for many different things for many different people. For some, it stands for Palestinian solidarity, or “taking a stand against the state of Israel’s oppressive and racist policies toward Palestine” - the PLO scarf. For some, it stands for anti-Semitism while promoting terrorist groups. For others, it is an attempt to trivialize the Palestinian cause by making the symbol so ubiquitous that it loses its meaning. For some it is merely a practicality to shade one’s face from the sun and heat in arid desert nations. For others, it is a shemagh, the Anglicized name given to the scarf by British soldiers who wore them during WWII. For others, it’s just a fashion trend, an item of symbolic meaning marketed for the masses. Get your own at Talibanana.com! 
In other news, “the swastika is the new black.”

Diana’s blog is the best.

dihard:

Recognize that scarf? If you don’t, take one stop on the L train and you’ll see it all over the place. Or maybe you could just watch the news. You’ll likely catch a glimpse of it there.

So how did this turn into this?

Well, the scarves first became a popular fashion trend in the US during the First Palestinian Intifada in the 1980s. Now they’re back and being sold all over – TopShop, on the street on Broadway, and even in Urban Outfitters as the “Anti-War Woven Scarf.” Well, at least until controversy arose & they discontinued it, but then released the all too similar “Fringe Square Scarf.” Hipsters, Spanish leaders, even daughters of presidential candidates are all hip to the style.

So I get it – it’s cute, and is great with cutoffs and a wifebeater. Fold it in half and tie it around your neck so the triangle points down, right? Totes. But do they even know what they’re wearing? Perhaps. But perhaps not, as one NYTimes scarf-wearing interviewee says, “I’m not too up to speed in what’s going on in the Middle East.”

Here’s a bit of history about this great new accessory. It’s a Keffiyeh, and was originally the headwear of Palestinian peasants. It became the symbol of Palestinian nationalism and of class struggle during the 1936 to 1939 Great Arab Revolt against the British Mandate of Palestine when the insurgents forced upper-class Palestinians to wear it to show sympathy with the fighters. Later, in the 1960s when the Palestinian resistance movement began, Yasser Arafat adopted it. It now adorns the heads of the younger generation in the Middle East to show support of the Palestinian cause. The black and white keffiyeh is associated with the Fatah, the largest faction of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), and apparently the red and white keffiyeh is associated with the Hamas. You know, the terrorists?

But the Keffiyeh stands for many different things for many different people. For some, it stands for Palestinian solidarity, or “taking a stand against the state of Israel’s oppressive and racist policies toward Palestine” - the PLO scarf. For some, it stands for anti-Semitism while promoting terrorist groups. For others, it is an attempt to trivialize the Palestinian cause by making the symbol so ubiquitous that it loses its meaning. For some it is merely a practicality to shade one’s face from the sun and heat in arid desert nations. For others, it is a shemagh, the Anglicized name given to the scarf by British soldiers who wore them during WWII. For others, it’s just a fashion trend, an item of symbolic meaning marketed for the masses. Get your own at Talibanana.com!

In other news, “the swastika is the new black.”

Diana’s blog is the best.