Friday, August 30, 2013

August Favorites


Jesse McCartney - Back Together: The 9th grade girl that lingers inside me won't let this one go.

Ryan O'Shaughnessy - No Name: Ryan finished 5th during the 6th season of Britain's Got Talent and this is the original song he auditioned with. It's gorgeous.

Conor Maynard - Vegas Girl: Ignore the incredibly awkward music video and just dance instead.

Bastille - Pompeii: This should have been a "song of the summer" contender.

The Band Perry - Done: We all have someone we'd sing this to in our heads.

The Piano Guys - Begin Again: You can't really go wrong with the cello/piano combo.





SYTYCD - Top 8: I loved the concept of All Stars also as choreographers. It's amazing how much talent has run through that show. My two favorite numbers of the night:






The Newsroom - Red Team III: I really don't care what the critics continue to say about this show- I love it. The ep's promo:


It also had the best last two seconds of an show I've seen in a while, delivered perfectly by Jane Fonda.


Pretty Little Liars - Now You See Me, Now You Don't: Ahh, PLL. We meet again. You've become my favorite guilty pleasure no matter how many loose ends you leave dangling. The summer finale was full of #WorldWarA ridiculousness with the biggest reveal that (spoilers) Ezra is A!...or one of the A's...or on the A team...or was just following the girls trying to keep them safe? See what I mean about dangling ends? So many questions; about 99.4% of them unanswered.

My favorite thing the internets have given us so far concerning this episode:






HISHE (How It Should Have Ended) - Pacific Rim


New York City Ballet - Dancing Peter Martins' Swan Lake


Jasmine Meakin - "Talk Dirty" choreo


John Green - Why Are American Health Care Costs So High? (High five for the nerdfighter readers! Anyone out there? Anyone??)


NBC Sports - An American Coach in London















One of the top songs this summer that's been asking for it so badly.

Lies told via top notch graphic design.








Chic Graphique's Customized Laptop Sleeve - I'm a sucker when it comes to monograms. Mine is en route now:

L'Oreal BB Cream - Evidently there's a whole wealth of things you can put on your face that I didn't even know about. (What the heck is primer, amirite?) BB Cream is like all that good stuff combined. This is my first to every try (so I don't claim to be an expert) but I pretty much love it. Lightweight, non-greasy, and (best of all) CHEAP. 

Vera Bradley's Laptop Backpack - Since I'd been slugging around the same one for over five years, I decided to use my Vera birthday coupon this year on a new backpack. The laptop compartment is super handy and I of course know it's great quality.




What did I miss??

To many new September favorites!




Friday, August 23, 2013

Baylor Proud

So yesterday was Baylor University's official move in day, better known as the 24 hour period where every Baylor alum wishes for just a few hours that they were 18 again, had no idea what was going to happen to their life, and just got to watch all the pretty frat men carry their plastic tubs of t-shirts and nike shorts into a cramped, but homey dorm room.

Now I promise that I am extremely excited for East 15 and London, but that doesn't change the fact that Baylor produces some powerful nostalgia. I could go on and on about all the different branches of my Baylor family tree:

 

All of these organizations (along with daily campus life) gave me wonderful memories to last a life time. I could probably write a top five hundred list, but I'll spare you (kinda). Here are my top five Baylor memories:


Fun fact you may not know: Baylor is home to the oldest homecoming celebration in the country. Our homecoming game day parade also takes top prize for being the biggest of its kind. My senior year was our 100th Homecoming Celebration (big deal alert). Sororities and fraternities teamed up to produce some crazy awesome floats, Bruiser led the whole thing on a Segway, and Student Foundation members got to ride our bikes in one huge mass in the middle of the parade, throwing candy as we went. Waking up at 3 a.m. to ride a bike across downtown Waco in the dark was totally worth it when you turned that corner and saw thousands upon thousands of alum and current students lining your way through the heart of campus. In an effort to not get too choked up (easy thing for me to do) I focused hard on my candy throwing and almost ran over a little girl dressed as a Baylor cheerleader. I gave her like a handful of kit kats, so I think we're even.



Sing is one of those things that's so difficult to explain to non-bears. To put it in perspective, the production as a whole is usually touted as the second biggest off-Broadway production in the US. Did you hear me? Yes, I just said that. Just over 10% of our student body participates in a four hour performance cut up into seven minute themed routines put on by frats, sororities, and independent clubs. Each group has their own backdrop, set pieces, and props that they have two minutes to get onstage prior and two minutes to get offstage after. Go over and you're docked points- oh that's right, did I mention it's a competition? Judges are different every night and for the past few years have included Corbin Bleu. After six performances the top eight groups advance on to Pigskin Review which is a part of our aforementioned Homecoming weekend. 

I loved Sing the two years I was able to participate (theatre conflicts) but my favorite was senior year. Alpha Chi's act was "Whatever the Weather" and I got to sing a classic. Ryan Brinson took that far left picture of me and it is one of my all time faves- I'm right in the middle of belting out, "It's gonna start rainin' MENNNNN!" You can't imagine how fun it is to sing your heart out with that silly line to thousands of people each night and have them whoop and cheer you on.



It's almost impossible to pick my favorite mainstage experience at Baylor Theatre, but Drowsy edges out all the others for several reasons. It was the "University Premiere" (meaning we were the first college given the rights to perform to the show) and it's fun to say I was the first 22-year-old Mrs. Tottendale. Plus, look at my costume. In the whole first number I was singing about my "fancy dress" and man was that thing fun to wear. Drowsy was also my last big show at Baylor and my senior musical, so it will always pull at my heartstrings when I think about it. 

The small picture in the middle is part of one of the best Baylor Theatre traditions. All our dressing rooms are lined with makeup counters that have drawers underneath where we list all the shows we were cast in. At Senior Wills (another tradition) we hand down our specific drawer to a deserving underclassman.



Talk about changing your whole life perspective in less than a month. I was a part of the theatre department's very first abroad experience in the summer of 2008. We spent two weeks in class prior to the trip and then immersed ourselves in Paris, London, and Stratford-upon-Avon. It's impossible for me to pick one favorite moment, but doing a sic 'em on Shakespeare's front porch (bottom left) is pretty up there. This trip was also my first time in London and I got hooked fast. I always knew that city had more in store for me. :)

When people ask me what my favorite moment of theatre that I've ever experienced is, I have this trip to thank for my answer. We studied The Taming of the Shrew pretty in-depth beforehand, because we knew we were going to see the show at the Comédie-Française. About two of us spoke French. I could say "Hello", "Pardon me", "Please", and "I'm sorry, I'm an American." 

Being a modern woman, I've never really cared for Taming. It always put me off how Kate just crumbles at the end and gives up her strength to Petruchio. Obviously, I had just never seen the right production. Or maybe I should just see shows I don't understand in French, because in this case I got the meaning crystal clear. Kate's big speech at the end was used almost as a manipulative tool and by the end she had Petruchio literally baying at her feet. She didn't lose any power or self-worth. It was fantastic and one of those (overused word alert) transcendent moments of theatre. It didn't matter that the text of the play was originally in Early Modern English, translated into French, and performed for a contemporary English speaking audience. The production communicated everything it needed to even with all those hurdles. Experiences like that will make you fall in love with an art form real quick.



I was lucky enough to get to participate in one of the weekly hangout shows that Mental Floss video puts on every week to discuss my mascoting experience for Baylor. I come in around the 10:15 mark-


In the video I get to tell my absolute favorite mascot story- meeting Art Briles as Bruiser. Getting to be the symbol of your University is one of the coolest things ever. I did sic 'ems right next to REAL bears. I hugged RGIII several times- he just didn't know it was me. I helped kids get over their fear of anthropomorphized forest creatures. I got to lead all of Floyd Casey stadium in a sic 'em after a football victory. That's the kind of stuff you'll never forget.


Well, there you have it. A not very short at all top five list. If you made it the whole way through- snaps for you (sorority girl forever at heart). I'll always love BU with all my heart, but reminiscing now is a good thing. It's urging me forward, not weighing me down in the past. A Baylor trip down memory lane just makes me more excited for when I'll have a new memory lane to walk down... this time in London.

To flinging my green and gold afar,


Monday, August 5, 2013

#327

A few days ago I packed up the last of my things and moved out of Riverhill #327 for good. I instagrammed as much of my journey as I figured my few followers could take.


When I think about becoming an "adult" (still cringe when I say that) I'll think about 327. And when I think about what made DFW a home to me, I'll think about it too- how the only time I ever used my dining room table was to play Settlers of Catan with my home group. When Cory fell asleep while watching the opening ceremonies. Having girls' nights where we swore we were going to watch Mean Girls, but just wound up talking for six hours instead. Adopting a cat that thinks he's a dog and looks like a goat. You know, basic growing up things.



No matter how excited you are to get to the next place, leaving a home with such wonderful memories is a little depressing. I'm still in a bit of a melancholy funk, but that honestly could also be because I've been doing too much hate watching of Pretty Little Liars recently. That show enrages me. I'm at the beginning of Season 3 right now and here are some of my many questions:
  • How is Ezra Fitz not in jail?
  • Why do these girls keep leaving their phones/computers/zip drives that contain vital information on them out as a free for all for anyone to come along and pick up and ruin their cases/lives once again? And has anyone ever heard of a PASSWORD? Anyone besides Caleb?
  • Does this school system begin their day at like 11:00 am? Do they have half hour long passing periods? Where was that school when I was growing up?
  • How is Ezra Fitz not in jail?
  • What kind of high school has a "daddy-daughter" dance?
  • No one owns an iPhone? You drive a Lexus. Come on now.
  • Does Aria own a mirror? (see below)
(Nemos only belong on your shirt if it also says Disney World on it somewhere.)

  • Parents? What parents? Oh, no it's totally cool to just come home at like nine p.m. and leave again at 11 on a school night at age 16. "Where are you going?" "Out." "Oh, ok. That's a completely acceptable response from someone who's been legally allowed to drive for a hot two minutes."
  • Why is half of Toby Cavanaugh's screen time just spent with him staring intimidatingly at someone?
  • Why was ANYONE friends with Alison to begin with?
  • How did Jason transform from this guy to this guy?

I checked imdb. The first actor had nothing better to do.
  • How is. Ezra Fitz. Not. In. Jail.

I like this post because it proves I'm definitely not a full-fledged adult yet. Why? Because I just spent half my time talking about Pretty Little Liars.

To young adulthood!