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Sunday, June 7, 2009

It's time to say thank you

Magnet #471 - World War II Memorial

Theme weekend! I was going to use this World War II Memorial magnet for Memorial Day, but this D-Day weekend works just as well, if not better.

This year marks the 5th anniversary of the dedication of the memorial, built to honor the 16 million who served during WWII, the more than 400,000 who died, plus the millions more here at home who helped in the war effort.

It's one of those things where you wonder why it took almost 60 years before a national memorial was built for the WWII veterans. The truth was that there were dozens of local memorials, but nothing on a national level. Then, the right veteran wrote the right letter to the right member of congress, and the rest is history.

And, it's a fascinating history - American Battle Monuments Commission couldn't build the memorial without the funds to build and maintain it in perpetuity. What'd they do? Raise twice as much money as they needed.

They needed someone to help drive the fundraising, what happened? Tom Hanks mentioned the memorial during an awards ceremony and money started flooding in, and he became the national spokesperson, with a couple of commercials telling everyone that it was time to say thank you.

The design itself is as fascinating a story as its history - again one of those stone memorials that say so much. The design of it is quite intricate, from the two pavilions - one for the Atlantic and the Pacific, to the pillars for each state, to the incorporation of the existing rainbow pool, and the Freedom Wall, a field of 4,000 gold stars, representing the 400,000 that were killed. There's also the bronze eagles and wheat, and inscriptions, and bas reliefs, and I could go on and on. Luckily, someone recorded a tour! Whoa.

Dedication weekend 2004 was amazing - it ended up being a four-day Tribute to a Generation, with concerts and ceremonies around town, and presentations and exhibits on the Mall, all culminating in the dedication of the memorial. It's so funny, though I worked on the advertising team for the memorial, I didn't go down to help out with the dedication team.

Instead, my sister and I volunteered for the Smithsonian's reunion weekend, which was even more fabulous than I could ever have thought.

It was the largest gathering of the World War II generation before or since. One particular tent we worked in was the Reunion Hall - it's where all the vets could come in and hang out, sharing stories with each other and with the volunteers. But best of all, they could post notes for men/women in their battalions and fighter groups and bases, or whatever designation they were seeking. Meet me here, are you still alive, would love to talk and catch up - some of the loveliest notes. And watching them reunite with hugs and tears in their eyes after so long was just the best thing - ever. Smithsonian photos are here, but here's a fantastic aerial shot of the ceremony, where you can see all the way back to the stage toward the Capitol.

Still to this day, it's one of the best weekends of my life. It just made you want to thank everyone in uniform everywhere. So thank you.

Later that year, my parents went to visit it, and according to my sister, as my dad (a baby boomer born at the tail end of the war) was walking around, someone came up to him and said very somberly...thank you.
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Saturday, June 6, 2009

Centre of destruction

Magnet #470 - St. Paul's in the Blitz

This week, we've been celebrating June 6th, the 65th anniversary of D-Day, when the allied troops stormed Normandy (fantastic flash preso by the ABMC), the beginning of the end of World War II.

And, though this particular image of St. Paul's in the London Blitz was taken on 29 December 1940, a good five years before the end of the war, it's certainly emblematic of why Normandy had to happen. Though, if you're so inclined, LIFE has a fabulous collection of D-Day and Operation Overlord images.

My parents and I went to Normandy on our Paris trip several years ago, and it was just one of those places that affects you the second you arrive. It was dank and rainy for our trip - very fitting, given all the madness D-Day.

There's the visitors museum, the stunning Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial maintained by the American Battle Monuments Commission, plus being able to see the beach heads, and climb through the same bunkers that our guys had to storm. Simply amazing.

My parents were thrilled to be there...well, actually it was more my dad, who has an affinity for the World War II generation (tomorrow, you'll see how much). He truly awestruck that he was in the exact place where all this history - and such pivotal and dramatic history, at that - took place.

But, if I may take a moment for an aside to save this from being too somber a post on a weekend... How in the heck do I *not* have a Normandy magnet? How? I had thought that it was before I started collecting magnets, it would seem, but it was the same trip as the Rodin museum, the Giverny trip, Versailles, etc. Jeepers. Why don't I have a magnet?

I may have to make one out of something. Stay tuned. I mean, the only explanation I have, is that I just didn't pick one up in any of the gift shops (what??!)

Of course, the three things I remember the most about this day trip outside of the Normandy stuff were:
  1. meeting an American family on the train ride over - from Boone. North Carolina. Who knew people that we knew from Boone.
  2. having croque-monsieurs (yet again) with mom in the small and cozy train station, and
  3. realizing belatedly, while I was in the train station waiting for our train, that we were in the same town as the infamous Bayeux Tapestries. The Bayeux Tapestries, people. The superfamous cloth that outlines the events before and during the 1066 Norman invasion of England. Of course, I remember them for the opening in Kevin Costner's Robin Hood, which looks a little like this supercool animated version of the tapestry, but whatever. The Bayeux Tapestries! Missed. Gah. Again! In a historic place, and missing the most historic part about it! I had Mom almost convinced to let me try and run out to see it...but prudency (is that even a word?) prevailed.


*From BBC correspondent Robin Duff’s war reports of the cathedral surviving the Blitz. “All around the flames were leaping up into the sky. There the cathedral stood, magnificently firm, untouched in the centre of all this destruction.”
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Friday, June 5, 2009

I don't wanna grow up

Magnet#469 - Grown ups are dumb

Yes. Was there anything else to say?

(Other than this was another BEA pin/now magnet that I shall keep forever and ever.)
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Thursday, June 4, 2009

Meek bears, the lot

Magnet #468 - Meek Bears, Shakespeare

So, yeah, I thought I could make it happy month of magnets...

Sorry. Needed something quick because people are a little crazy-making. (It's true, they are.)

And, this was in my handy-dandy photobucket cache of magnet images. (Really, who actually has a cache of images of their own magnets. C'mon.)

And bonus, I'm a little of this mind right now.

From Timon's yelly speech at his not-so-friendly-after-all friends in Shakespeare's Timon of Athens:
Most smiling, smooth, detested parasites,
Courteous destroyers, affable wolves, meek bears,
You fools of fortune, trencher‐friends, time's flies,
Cap‐and‐knee slaves, vapours, and minute‐jacks!

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Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Sleeping giant

Magnet #467 - Disney's Princess Aurora

So, I was thinking that Vicki was right yesterday, when she suggested having happy magnets this month. We'll see how long this Happy Magnets month lasts. Heh. I might not make it past this post.

I picked up this Princess Aurora/Sleeping Beauty magnet - and the other Disney Princesses - as a set from the $1 aisle at Target. Hello, jackpot! I'm only sorry I didn't pick up the Cars set, too! No worries, I'm sparing you a full Disney Princesses week...or rather, I'll be using them sparingly this month. Hahahaha.

Anyway, here's my happy (or, actually more grateful), thought of the day. Every once in a while, I hear or read something that just makes me damned happy that my parents came to America and had me.

All politics aside, you can't deny that we're damned lucky that we don't have a government that's censoring our communications.

Case in point. Today, I read this Britannica blogpost and I learned that my friend at Your Nose Is Quite Big living in China has had her access to all things social networking blocked.

Blocked. Seriously.

She can't Tweet. She can't YouTube. She can't blog on Blogger or Wordpress. She can't upload images to flickr. Dudes. She can't even use Hotmail!

Apparently, they've banned the entire nation (!!!!) from these social networks to help curb any talk about tomorrow's 20th anniversary of Tiananmen Square. Well, I guess they don't call it the Great Firewall of China for nothing.

Still, how frustrating! And how much does it make you appreciate the (mostly) free reign we have here to speak our minds?

Ah, China. Napoleon once called you the sleeping giant, saying something like "Let her sleep, for when she wakes, she will shake the world."

Huh. Uhhh, good morning, I guess.
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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Ducks in disguise

Magnet #466 - Pekkle in Costume

Wanted to use something happy-making in an attempt to make the month of June be the best month ever in 2009.

Sanrio's now retired Pekkle. C'mon. How can you not love this guy.  

He's a lifeguard. Wheeeeet! 

He's a surfer. Hang ten, dude!

He's a pirate! Argh!

I actually have a bigger set of Pekkle with the individual pieces for these costumes on the lower level of my cube at work, so that all the little visiting munchkins can play with him. Kids have a fascinating attraction to magnets - some like to eat them, some like to make funny outfits, and some wonder why Pekkle's pirate outfit doesn't go with the Fuzzy Bear next to the Pekkle set and why Fuzzy Bear's dresses don't work on Pekkle.  Heh.

Anyway, as I was typing this, a supercute news story just came on tv...looks like the news wants something happy to report as well.  Apparently, in Queens, a Momma duck and her flock of ducklings were out for a stroll along a Whitestone Expressway service road...and the little ones fell into the sewer grate!  Oh, noesss!

No worries - the NYPD emergency service guys stopped traffic to fish the nine ducklings out, and they all made it home safely!

Yay! Happy news!

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Monday, June 1, 2009

"Basically the same thing"

Magnet #465 - Myla Jackson

I mentioned this weekend I was at BookExpo America, which brought together publishers and other exhibitors with a passion for books.

I picked up this Myla Jackson author magnet at the Ellora booth, which I've since learned is an romantica/erotica publishing group. (Which I'm not linking to, due to possible NSFW content, but thanks for the swag, folks!)

While at BEA, I ran into an old mentor of mine whom I'd lost contact with and she asked what I was doing now. When I told her that I've completely left publishing [save for occasional editing on the side] and now work in advertising/marketing, she responded with, "Well, it's basically the same thing, isn't it?"

Snap!

There's a business side of me that says yep, publishing is basically just the packaging, marketing and distribution of books.  And the more you support the book/author - or the brand, in some cases - the more successful you'll be. Or rather, the more books you'll sell.  And that's key.  I get that.

But, on the flip side, hello, knife in my heart.  Mind you, I was in romance, so admittedly, it's not like we were producing the next War & Peace over at Loveswept.  But, still, one would like to believe (no matter how naive), that publishers in whatever genre out there, are putting good, quality books out there that touch people and perhaps make a difference somewhere, rather than just packaging and marketing products for people who hopefully see beyond the cover art, the quippy title, or the crafted sales copy.

Eh, one can debate for hours about it, but I will share one drastic difference for me being in romance versus being in advertising/marketing:

Back in those days, I could put this magnet up at work, along with all my hot shirtless boy cover models, without any shame. They were research, they were the actual models from our covers, and dammit, they were just pretty.  Such a different work environment. (Such a different life, actually.)

Anyway, now, the only pretty boys I try to have hanging in my cube area (in obvious places, and aside from the George Clooney area) are work-related, like the cover of our corporate newsletter with the incredibly hot David Beckham biting a Sharpie, and a giant full-page newspaper ad with George hawking Nespresso coffee machines.

Anything more would probably be considered actionable.

I'll say.

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