Sunday, February 25, 2007

A Weekend Guide to Palm Springs

I spent the weekend in Palm Springs. In my nine years of living in SoCal, I had never been to Palm Springs. I only had a vague picture of the place in my head, of gold courses and palm trees (duh) and hot springs (duh). But it turned out not to be entirely how I had imagined it. There were palm trees, planted unnaturally in the California desert. There were hotel resorts that said "spa". But I actually didn't see any golf courses (I think you have to drive to them somewhere), and I was surprised to see the mountains right there, just bam! In your face. The weather was dry, nice and warm enough for a tank top during the day but not blazing hot, and quite cold at night. The downtown area was nice and laid back, with a retro old hollywood feel complete with its own star walk of fame. The main street was lined with restaurants, souvenir shops, and several icecream shops. And yes, there were quite a few senior citizens. William and I ended up playing a game while sitting outside in the sun and waiting for our food at a cafe/bar/coffee place (I know, it's redundant, but that's what it said). The rule was simple. We look towards different ends of the street and whoever spots anyone younger/same age as us first, wins. This game lasted for at least 10 minutes, and this is a busy street with constant traffic.

Aside from counting the number of people under 30 years old, we went to a little town west of Palm Springs called Cabazon to check out the outlet. I'm always hearing about this place from my friends who visit from Japan, and I was finally able to see it with my own eyes. It looked huge, but in the end it was not that much. I guess I was not in the right mood for it either. It was pretty funny to walk into Gucci and Prada with a 1 gallon jug of water and a ziploc bag filled with grapes. I did get one thing that I am very happy about from the outlet though. The pot. Yes, the one I had been dreaming about for a while, and already wrote about in this blog. There was actually a Le Creuset outlet store, so of course I had to go. After considering all the colors, I decided on a classic cherry red. Besides, they were having a sale where everything red got an additional 20% off. I ended up paying $128 for a 5.5 quart round French Oven. It doesn't get much better than this.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Low VS High tech

Spent the day looking through magazines and drawing. I felt like I was going through a slump, not being able to draw very well. I switched from a mechanical pencil to a pencil to a pen, then back to a pencil and finally my trusted Pentel R.S.V.P. ballpoint pen. It worked. I really love that pen.

Yesterday we made a plan to go hiking this morning at 9am, but that didn't happen due to staying up kind of late. William got himself an iPod yesterday, and we spent the night trying to get his newly downloaded iTunes to recognize it. It just wouldn't show up, and my years of experience with iTunes and the now vintage iPod mini was practically useless on a PC. But luckily after a good night's rest, William was able to figure it out. He now has the 5th Generation iPod with video and everything. Mine is a mini, which they don't even make any more. I think they made two generations, then decided that the mini was not mini enough. I'm jealous but I am looking to the future which is the iPhone. Well, I don't know if I'll really get it right away but my phone IS ancient (black and green screen). It's so hard to keep up with technology. I'll be happy as long as they keep making my pen.

Friday, February 16, 2007

What's all this then?


Where does the line "'Allo, 'allo 'allo. What's all this then?" come from???
One day William busted it out with this crazy voice (British accent, according to him). The way he said it bothered me and made me laugh at the same time, and when I asked him what the hell it was, he simply said "It's what British people say." I didn't believe him. Who says that?
But then today he told me that he heard it on "Futurama" as well as on "Class of 3000" (both are cartoons by the way). So I had to google it.
I was shocked to see the results.
However, I could not find the origin of this line. Is it a reference to something? Or is this what British people really say?