6.27.2006

Dazed and Confused

Well, after 5 days, I'm finally starting to feel settled in Denver. It's still a bit disconcerting to be living in a furnished sublet. I feel like I have to be on my best behavior since it's someone else's stuff (although given the state this place was in when I arrived, I don't think that's much of a worry), and despite being completely unpacked, I still don't feel like I live here yet. My life for the past few days has been a blur of wandering around downtown, searching maps to find nearby stores for cleaning supplies and things I forgot, trying to learn the ropes at work, and catching World Cup highlights whenever I can. All of this is made more difficult by the fact that I'm heavily jet-lagged due to the switch to Mountain Time. I keep nodding off around 9:30, and I wake up at the crack of dawn every morning raring to go. I did finally start to catch up a little this afternoon when I came home from work and grabbed a quick nap by the rooftop pool.

Overall, the decision to move out here seems to be a good one. Once I get comfortable at work, I think it's going to be a great spot for me, and the city itself has been nothing but amazing so far. The weather's been fantastic, and it just smells clean and healthy here, a welcome change after downtown Indy's ever-changing assortment of unpleasant scents. That said, there are some things I miss about the Circle City. Most of them will fade soon, but as long as AB is still there, I'll always be thinking about Indy.

Meanwhile, I'll try to find ways to amuse myself out here. With the holiday weekend coming up, there should be plenty of chances for fun. The Rapids apparently put on a great fireworks show every year, although the fact that they're matching up against the Revolution may not produce many fireworks of the goal-scoring variety, as neither team has been finding the back of the net too often lately. Thankfully, I'll have World Cup matches to keep my thirst for soccer sated. There's also a little movie coming out on Wednesday that I want to check out; haven't seen much publicity for it, but I think it's based on an old comic book. And in true competitive fashion, Marvel has cleverly timed the release of the teaser trailer for Spider-Man 3 to steal a little bit of DC's Superman thunder. Looks like, as rumored, Venom and Sandman will be the baddies this time. Hopefully, it stays truer to the quality of the first two movies and doesn't go the way of X-Men.

I'd talk about the US's early exit from the World Cup, but I'm still too annoyed to think coherently. I don't think Bruce Arena should be fired unless they have a better candidate lined up (too bad Guus Hiddink's not available), but I do think some new ideas would be a good thing for that coaching staff. Obviously, there were plenty of cracks in the dam, and when the pressure was on, they all burst. Mostly, what I learned from this World Cup is that the Yanks aren't anywhere near as good as they (or their fans) would like to think, and Clint Dempsey is the only US player who showed up. I'm guessing at least a few Euro clubs took notice.

6.20.2006

Road Trip

So, after spending my last few days of work feeling like a graduating senior, I continued that analogy and did what every kid headed on to the next phase of their life does... ignored all my responsibilities and took off on a road trip. In this case, AB and I headed down to meet my brothers and their girlfriends at the Bonnaroo Festival in Manchester, TN. We arrived Thursday night around 8pm and left Sunday around 7pm, and in that amount of time saw at least part of the performances by all of these artists: Andrew Bird, Ben Folds, Nickel Creek, Oysterhead, Death Cab for Cutie, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers (who brought out Stevie Nicks for a couple of songs), My Morning Jacket, Rusted Root, Beck, Radiohead, Abigail Washburn (with Béla Fleck), Soulive, Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, Son Volt, Matisyahu, and Béla Fleck again. I also managed to see the US-Italy travesty... I mean, game, on Saturday in a tent with 850 people. Highlights for me were Andrew Bird, Nickel Creek, and seeing Béla perform 3 times on Sunday. The lowlight was getting some kind of flu/food poisoning thing that took me out of commission for most of Saturday, including having to leave Radiohead's show about halfway through because I felt so crappy. To understate enormously, that sucked. Otherwise, the weather was hot, dry, and dusty, but I had a really good time. That many bands in three days is pretty amazing. I figured my tolerance for live music would run short pretty quickly, but it never did. Lots of good energy there, both in the crowd and coming from the bands. Also, lots and lots of hippies. Check out some photos from throughout the festival.

Now back to real life. Three days of packing, then I'm off to Denver.
SOUNDS
Song of the Traveling Daughter, Abigail Washburn
The Sparrow Quartet EP, Abigail Washburn
Get Behind Me Satan, The White Stripes
Thelonious Monk With John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk With John Coltrane

6.13.2006

The Break-Up

Ugh.

Expect changes to the lineup for Saturday. If the US play like this against Italy, they deserve to be packing their bags and heading home. Qualifying's only half the battle, guys. You have to actually show up and play. Now go out there on Saturday and show us the team every US Soccer fan was expecting to see, not the pale imitations who played in their place on Monday. Just win.

SOUNDS
Lost: Original Television Soundtrack, Michael Giacchino

6.11.2006

The Center of the World

As you may have heard, the World Cup has started, and it's been a perfect distraction as I've been trying to pack up my apartment. It's been a highly entertaining Cup so far—the games have been a lot more wide-open than I remember from past tournaments. Teams have been very willing to continue to attack and look for a second goal instead of cynically sitting back to try to protect a one-goal lead. Then again, the Italians haven't played yet. Adding to the excitement is the fact that there's also been some unexpected heroes, such as 37-year-old Trinidadian goalkeeper Shaka Hislop (getting mobbed by his teammates above) who only got the call after the regular keeper injured himself in warmups. Hislop responded by making 7 saves and shutting out a highly-regarded Swedish squad.

The Cup always provides some interesting matchups. Obviously, my heart goes the way of the USA, but I generally have a few favorites beyond the Yanks (this year it's England, the Netherlands, and the Ivory Coast), and I usually pick a team to root for in each first-round match. But every once in a while, I'm presented with a pairing where I wish it was possible for both teams to lose. Case in point: today's game between Mexico (hated regional rival) and Iran (well, plenty of reasons to cheer against them). I guess a Mexico win is a good thing, because it brings more respect to the CONCACAF qualifying region (which also includes the US), but it goes against everything I believe in as a soccer fan to ever want the Mexicans to win. I would assume they'll have a fairly easy match with Angola (who the US beat 1-0 in a pre-Cup friendly last week), but hopefully Portugal spanks the Mexicans hard.

But really, all of this is just a way to pass time until the most important game of the first-round: the US v. the Czech Republic, being shown live tomorrow at 11:55 a.m on ESPN2. Needless to say, I'll be taking a long lunch. Not for eating, of course. Not sure my extremely nervous stomach could handle food right now.
IMAGES
Battlestar Galactica: Season 1, Disc 5
Battlestar Galactica: Season 2, Disc 1
Battlestar Galactica: Season 2, Disc 2