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Tag Archives: fun

If You Love Wallace & Gromit

18 Saturday Oct 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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fun, movies, web video

Hanna has claimed–entirely appropriately–the finder’s credit for first spotting this rather indescribable artifact of 1960s British television on a Dr. Who episode [Update: Hanna says it’s “The Sea Devils”]–and later coming across a blog post (I’m sorry! I’ve misplaced the link), which led us to this adorable-yet-strange British stop-motion animated series called The Clangers.

This two-series show (which ran from 1968-1972) is made up of ten-minute episodes featuring the Clangers, a race of small pink knitted aliens, and a cast of characters including the Soup Dragon, the Iron Chicken, the Hoots, the (terrifying) Froglets, and the Music Note Trees.

Here is the episode called “The Treasure”:

While the complete series is only available from the UK on Region 2 DVDs, you can view a number of episodes on YouTube:

The Intruder.

Music.

The Pipe Organ.

The Visitor.

And Hanna’s favorite, The Iron Chicken.

They make great study-break or bedtime viewing. Just the thing by which to nod off over a mug of whiskey-laced hot chocolate with vanilla marshmallows.

Portland Sunday

13 Monday Oct 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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fun, maine, outdoors, travel

Portland, Maine, that is (clearing up any confusion for you West Coasters). Hanna and I rented a Zipcar today and drove up to Portland (three states in two hours!) to meet her parents for the morning and early afternoon. We started at the local Starbucks — oxymoronic as that may sound — and rambled around through the bookstore, L.L. Bean outlet, and various shops before picnicking down by the ocean.


While eating lunch, we chanced to see a small steam train which ran on a narrow-gauge track along the harbor! And we also enjoyed a bit of casual leaf-spotting; Boston’s trees turn color but we’re often not outside in the middle of a sunny day to enjoy them!

Fruitlands Museum Visit

06 Monday Oct 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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fun, history, outdoors, photos

For my history class, we had to choose a public history site connected to the transcendentalist movement to visit and report on; my friend Laura and I chose Fruitlands, the site of the short-lived (eight-month) utopian experiment undertaken by Bronson Alcott, his long-suffering wife and children, and a British friend Charles Lane. Below are the pictures I took on the museum grounds and at the apple orchard we stopped at on the way home. (The third individual evident in the pictures is Laura’s roommate Ashley).

To see a larger slide show with captions, click here.

Sondheim’s Assassins

31 Thursday Jul 2008

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boston, fun

Went to see Sondheim’s Assassins last night with a colleague from work and a group of her former roommates at the Boston Center for the Arts. I’d heard bits and pieces of the show over the years, but as is often the case with musicals didn’t have a full grasp of the story until sitting down to watch it end to end. And even now I’m not sure I fully understand it. Like most Sondheim musicals, it’s a musical-cum-dark-comedy, composed largely of vignettes in which presidential assassins and would-be presidential assassins hold forth on their disillusionment and idealism. Bookended in the play by John Wilkes Booth (Lincoln) and Lee Harvey Oswald (Kennedy), and ranging freely through time, it showed me how woefully behind I am in my knowledge of presidential assassination attempts . . . but I enjoyed it in a dark sort of way.

(image nicked from the Boston Globe).

Weird Web Widgets

16 Wednesday Jul 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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arts and culture, books, fun, technology

My friend and MHS colleague Jeremy recently pointed me toward this fun site on the ‘net that generates word clouds from quotations that you supply. For example, here is the text of Rosalind’s epilogue to As You Like It, likes 1-19, thrown into Wordle:

(click on the image to view larger)

Here is one Jeremy did with the Declaration of Independence, in honor of the 4th of July:

have fun wordling!

Summer at the Movies

16 Wednesday Jul 2008

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boston, fun, movies

I’ve obviously been delinquent posting to the FFLA this past month. I’m enjoying being able to come home from work at the end of the day and not turn on my computer if I don’t want to. Instead of being on the computer 24/7, Hanna and I have done a lot of walking, cooking, sleeping, ice-cream eating, and movie-watching. In particular, this seems to be the summer for vintage movies. Hanna got a series of vintage science fiction films from the 1950s for her birthday, and this past week we discovered such little-known classics as Warning From Space, a 1956 Japanese film about aliens shaped like starfish who land in Tokyo and The Wasp Woman (1959), about a cosmetics magnate whose quest for eternal youth goes horribly wrong.

One of the advantages of being in a big city is cinemas that play classic movies, foreign films, and documentaries. In the last month, I’ve been able to see Out of Africa at the Coolidge Corner Theater just up the street from our apartment, and on the 4th of July weekend the “final cut” of Bladerunner at the Brattle Theater in Cambridge. Last night, I returned to the Brattle with my friend Natalie to see All About Eve, the 1950 Bette Davis film in which Davis plays a stage actress, Margo Channing, who is stalked by a young fan (Eve, played by Anne Baxter) who ingratiates herself into Channing’s life and eventually starts to take it over. It’s a truly creepy movie.

I had also forgotten how openly it wrestles with the question of Women Who Have Careers and whether or not such careers are compatible with romance. Davis’s character has a loving and sexually active relationship with her director, a man several years her junior, whom she ends up marrying in the course of the film. He loves her in no small part because she’s strong-willed, talented, and independent. At one point he rejects Eve’s advances without a second thought because “I’m in love with Margo.” And yet the film still finds it necessarily to give Margo a midlife crisis in which she wonders how she can possibly be “feminine” if she isn’t a housewife.

Oh, and Marilyn Monroe makes a very early appearance as someone’s “dumb blond” dinner date with a vaguely foreign accent and several of the funniest lines in the film!

This weekend, the weather’s supposed to be hot and sticky; we’re going to escape the apartment on Saturday night by attending an open-air production of As You Like It which is being performed free on the Boston Common. As You Like It, being one of Shakespeare’s romantic comedies, has all the usual chaos of inconvenient love, exile, disguise, cavorting about in the wood, and reconciliation and marriage at the end. In short, good summer fare.

When I’m done with the last paper . . .

02 Friday May 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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books, fun, movies

This weekend, I’m working away on one final history paper on mid-twentieth century feminist historians and Native American women’s history–if you’re interested in details, check back in a month when I have more perspective! But in the part of my brain not preoccupied with academic writing, I’m happily assembling the beginnings of a summer reading/viewing list. At the top are . . .

  • Rapture Ready!: Adventures in the Parallel Universe of Christian Pop Culture, by Daniel Radosh. I don’t know what it says about me that at the end of term, what sounds most appealing to me is to pick up a rollicking bit of journalism that allows me to laugh at the “parallel universe” of Christian fundamentalist evangelicals . . . but this one’s at the top of my list.
  • My latest issue of the journal Radical Teacher, which just arrived in the mail this evening, is the first of a year-long subscription I picked up with Christmas money, and I look forward to perusing it. Ms. also has a new issue out I haven’t had a chance to look at.
  • Tasha Alexander’s latest mystery featuring you widow Emily Ashton, Fatal Waltz, is out in bookstores and I’m looking forward to a bit of historical-mystery-romance escapism if I do say so myself.
  • He’s a Stud, She’s a Slut, and 49 Other Double Standards Every Woman Should Know, Jessica Valenti’s latest, is unlikely to have anything terribly mind-blowing, but I’m looking forward to it nonetheless–when someone offers you astute feminist analysis in a book that doesn’t require note-taking to make sense of it, why not spend an afternoon enjoying yourself?
  • My friend Joseph gave me Anne Fadiman’s collection of essays, At Large and At Small, at Christmastime and I’m ashamed to say I haven’t yet found time to read it.
  • Plus, I still have the last four episodes of Torchwood, season one, waiting to be watched, and Hanna reports that Prince Caspian is opening in the weekend of Simmons’ graduation.

So I’m sure I will have no trouble filling my leisure time . . .

I have a few other more substantive post ideas that I hope to work on after my brain recovers–check back in a couple of weeks.

Whither the Witches?

13 Thursday Mar 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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fun, photos, travel

This being Spring Break, as previously mentioned, Hanna and I took one entire day off to frivol. We took the commuter train up to Salem and wandered around town, visiting the Peabody Essex Museum, admiring gravestones in the Old Burying Point Cemetery, and tarrying a while at a coffee shop with the most comfortable chairs ever invented (or at least they felt that way). We did not feel much of a need to visit the Witch Dungeon, the Witch History Museum, the Witches Cottage, although we did pass by the Witch Trials Memorial on our way down to the shore :).

Here are some pictures.

Introducing Minerva

23 Saturday Feb 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

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blogging, feminism, fun, history, photos, simmons


Straight from the awesomely talented hands of my brother Brian comes the Future Feminist Librarian-Activist patron goddess, Minerva (or, as I affectionately call her, “Minnie”).

Minerva was, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the Roman goddess of “handicrafts, the professions, the arts, and . . . war.” I thought this was a good combination for those of us seeking to put scholarly interests to work in a real-world, politically aware, context.

Sartorially, she owes her style to the American suffragists, with a nod to the European bluestockings of a slightly earlier area. I like to imagine she will be watching me sharply from behind those spectacles, making sure I remember what I came here to school to learn, and briskly challenging me to do something meaningful with my education on the other end.

Please join me in giving her a warm and respectful welcome.

In which I have fun, not all political

24 Thursday Jan 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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fun, photos, travel

Contrary to popular belief expressed in some circles, I do actually know how to enjoy myself outside of feminist politics. This weekend visiting friends in New York City, in addition to making a pilgrimage to Judy Chicago’s The Dinner Party, dropping in at bluestockings radical bookstore, attending a lecture on women’s literary societies in the early republic, and seeing The Business of Being Born on the big screen, I took part in the following non-political activities:

  • I visited the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens.
  • I visited St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
  • I visited the New York Public Library, where I got to see the original scroll of “On the Road” and other papers from Jack Kerouac’s personal papers, newly open to the public.
  • I learned how to drink scotch.
  • I played (and lost) a game of Super Scrabble.
  • I watched a documentary, a Parker Posey film, and an episode of Big Love.
  • I helped prepare a gourmet meal, including chocolate bread pudding with “naughty whisky sauce” . . . yum yum!

You can check out the photos at picasa or watch a small version of the slide show below:

Now it’s back to the academic realm . . . my first history class convenes in 3 1/2 hours.

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"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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