Wednesday, November 26, 2008

DWTS week 10 (finale; part two)

First Place:

Brooke Burke and Derek Hough. Viennese Waltz. Score for dance: 30/30 Total score for the two nights dances: 88/90

Second Place:

Warren Sapp and Kym Johnson. Hustle. Score for dance: 27/30 Total score for the two nights dances: 80/90

Third Place:

Lance Bass and Lacey Schwimmer. Jitterbug. Score for dance: 28/30 Total score for the two nights dances: 81/90

DWTS week 10 (finale: part one)

Last night, all three couples danced a Samba to the same song at the same time. First they re-showed some dances. After the couples danced the Samba they did the Freestyle.

Scores and Thoughts:

Lance Bass and Lacey Schwimmer. Re-showed the Tango and the Mambo. Samba. I liked their tricks. Their part was good. Score for dance: 26/30 Freestyle. They did a hip hop routine. I thought it was okay but didn't really care for it. Score for dance: 27/30 Total score for dance: 53/60

Brooke Burke and Derek Hough. Re-showed the Quickstep and the Paso Doble. Samba. She had good extensions. I liked it. But she did mess up a few times. Score for dance: 28/30 Freestyle. Wow. Some of those lifts I wouldn't trust anyone to do with me. Like the one where Brooke is upside down while Derek is spinning. Crazy! They did great. Score for dance: 30/30 Total score for dance: 58/60

Warren Sapp and Kym Johnson. Re-showed the Viennese Waltz and the Paso Doble. Samba. He did good. Score for dance: 25/30 Freestyle. Score for dance: 28/30 Total score for dance: 53/60

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

more than one deer


Color

On Saturday I did something daring. I colored my hair. My cousin, Angie, owns a salon and she offered to color it. Normally, I go to my mom for a haircut but she doesn't do color. So I went to Angie, who specializes in color. lol. The only thing I requested was that my hair be kept long. Other than that I let Angie do whatever she pleased.

This what I look like before.



And this what I look like after.


Angie put highlights of auburn, blonde, and dark brown in my hair. That day she straightened it too. I might have to buy a straightener. It make for a good change.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Writing Mood

I am in a writing mood but don't know what to write about. ...

{Insert some writing here. Krysta is drawing a blank. lol.}

Hitman


So I finished David Foster's biography two days after I received it but I am just now getting around to reviewing it. I loved this book. It was simple and great to read. You can definitely tell while reading the book that David is not a writer. He knows music not words. It is such an easy read and that's one of the reasons why I loved it. I really loved it because I got to hear David's versions of how his artist's got discovered (i.e. Celine Dion, Josh Groban, Michael Buble, William Joseph). And I found out some new things that I had never known about David. For instance, he never takes elevators because he does not like them. He has elevator claustrophobia. lol. Seriously! It has caused some problems for him like missing interviews and "friendly" hotels upgrading his room to the twenty-third floor. David has (or had; he started losing it when he turn 50) perfect pitch. He discovered it when he was four and started piano lessons shortly after that. No wonder he is so amazing. lol. And a couple of other random facts I found out was that he can drive a bus and fly a plane. He's a pilot! I knew he like planes but I didn't know he could actually fly one. lol. Something else I didn't realize was that he has six sisters and no brothers and he has five daughters and no sons. He is surrounded by females.

And on a somewhat related note: David Foster was on Dr. Phil this week talking about the book and the DVD/CD and his life. I watched the show last night. And I fell in love with David even more. He is so funny. I love it when David plays the piano. He is just so fluid and amazing. I can't take my eyes off of him. Natalie Cole and Seal were there as well. And I really want to buy Seal's new CD now. I listened to it last week and seeing him sing again really reiterated the want to buy it. lol.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

DWTS week 9 (results show)


The couple that got voted off last night was Cody Linley and Julianne Hough. I was thinking either he or Warren would go home and next week the other ones are going home. It's kind of sad that Julianne came back just in time to dance one more dance with Cody.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Cuteness


DWTS week 9

Lance Bass and Lacey Schwimmer. Their first dance is a Mambo. I love their outfits. Best ones all season. And to add to that they did a wonderful Mambo. I loved it. Lacey's choreography is great. Score for dance: 28/30 Their second dance was the Jitterbug. Lance was kicking so hard that his shoe came off during the dance. I think that would be really weird dancing with one shoe going really fast and doing lifts. But he never skipped a beat. It was great. At the end of the dance you could tell he was embarrassed. But they both thought it was hilarious. The dance was good. I was crazy about the outfits. They should have gone with a more traditional colored sailor theme. And the red and blue was not working for me in Lacey's outfit. Score for dance: 29/30 Total score for dance: 57/60

Brooke Burke and Derek Hough. Their first dance was the Jive. I thought it was too scattered. They tried to put too much into the dance therefore getting nothing to work right. Score for dance: 21/30 Their second dance is the Salsa. Brooke's outfit was hideous. It would have been a little better if it was a mini skirt instead of the pants. But still, I did not like it at all. And her hair matched her outfit. Just so odd. But enough about the outfit choice, thoughts on the dance. It was good. Score for dance: 28/30 Total score for dance: 49/60

Cody Linley and Julianne Hough. Their first dance is the Paso Doble. I liked their army outfits. Cody looks good in a uniform. lol. But I didn't think the music and the dance actually called for the outfits. It didn't really fit. That aside, I did like the dance. Score for dance: 22/30 Their second dance is a Salsa. They did some dangerous lifts, I thought. Cody almost dropped Julianne on one of them. But he caught her just in time and it didn't look too bad either. I liked the dance. It was good. Score for dance: 24/30 Total score for dance: 46/60

Warren Sapp and Kym Johnson. Their first dance is the Mambo. Honestly, I don't remember much about this dance so I must not have liked it. lol. Sad. I know. Score for dance: 24/30 Their second dance was the Jitterbug. Their out fits are awful. It's too much too focus on. Not my favorite at all. The dance was good. Score for dance: 25/30 Total score for dance: 49/60

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

DWTS week 8 (results show)

I loved this result show.

Brad Paisley was the special guest. The first song he sang was Ticks. Lacey Schwimmer and her brother, Benjie, danced great. It was fun with all those lifts in there.

This week the Macy's Stars of Dance performance was the dance that got voted upon by the fans via Internet. It was a jive to Great Balls of Fire. I loved the outfits. Those were ones I voted for. The dance was performed by Julianne and Derek Hough. I thought it was great that a sister and brother were dancing. They could do lifts and flips that I wouldn't be comfortable with someone I didn't trust. Here is the performance.




Brad Paisley's second song was off of his new CD, Play. There were three couples dancing, Maks and Karina (who are dating), Alec and Edyta (who are married), and two other people I don't remember. Maks looks so odd with his head shaved. I loved the curls!

The couple going home is Maurice Greene and Cheryl Burke.

DWTS week 8

On Monday the couples danced two dances. Here are my thoughts and the scores.

Lance Bass and Lacey Schwimmer. First dance, foxtrot. It classy and fun at the same time. I liked it. Score for dance: 28/30 Second dance, samba. I was not to crazy about the outfits. Lance's solo was very boyish. I didn't think it fit with the dance very well. Score for dance: 24/30 Total score for dances: 50/60

Brooke Burke and Derek Hough. First dance, tango. Brooke looked gorgeous in that red dress. I loved the choreography. I thought it was really great. Score for dance: 28/30 Second dance, mambo. I liked this dance too. It flowed together and looked like a lot of fun. Brooke's solo, at the beginning, was really fun to watch. Her footwork was great. I wasn't to fond of the wig. Score for dance: 27/30 Total score for dances: 55/60

Maurice Greene and Cheryl Burke. First dance, quick step. I am tired of the burgundy. Is it just me or have they worn that color a lot this season. The dance was good. Score for dance: 24/30 Second dance, paso doble. I thought it was great that they sat down and looked at last weeks team dance, in which Maurice did the paso doble. That helped them to get their posture right. Maurice's solo didn't have dancing in it. He just flipped a cape around amazingly fast. Score for dance: 24/30 Total score for dances: 48/60

Cody Linley and Julianne Hough. First dance, foxtrot. I liked it. It was a very grown-up dance for Cody. Beautiful. Score for dance: 24/30 Second dance, mambo. I liked the dance but thought it sort of chaotic. It didn't flow together well. Cody's solo was egotistical ... that might be too strong of a word. Score for dance: 24/30 Total score for dances: 48/60

Warren Sapp and Kym Johnson. First dance, tango. I love Kym's dress. It looked fabulous on her. I loved their dance. It was classy and elegant. Warren's footwork was great. Score for dance: 28/30 Second dance, jive. I thought is was a lot of fun. Warren's solo fit right in with the dance but still had his style. It was great. Score for dance: 26/30 Total score for dances: 54/60

Thursday, November 06, 2008

post script

I watched American Masters last night. It was about Annie Leibovitz, a photographer. This program might have saved my life. And I am serious about that. My life was in a downward spiral to who knows where. This program and Annie have motivated me to follow my dreams. It has inspired me to buy that camera I have been wanting and take pictures of anything and everything. So instead of moving out I am buying myself an early Christmas present.

Disney Dreams Portrait Series by Annie Leibovitz

Roger Federer as King Arthur

Rachel Weisz as Snow White

Beyoncé as Alice, Oliver Platt as the Mad Hatter, and Lyle Lovett as the March Hare

Jennifer Lopez as Jasmine and Marc Anthony as Aladdin

Julie Andrews as Blue Fairy and Abigail Breslin as the apprentice

Scarlett Johansson as Cinderella

Jessica Biel as Pocahontas

David Beckham as Prince Phillip

Gisele Bundchen as Wendy Darling, Mikhail Baryshnikov as Peter Pan, and Tina Fey as Tinker Bell

Julianne Moore as Ariel and Michael Phelps as a merman

Whoopi Goldberg as The Genie

Annie Leibovitz: Life Through A Lens


Born in 1949 in Waterbury, Connecticut, Annie Leibovitz enrolled in the San Francisco Art Institute intent on studying painting. It was not until she traveled to Japan with her mother the summer after her sophomore year that she discovered her interest in taking photographs. When she returned to San Francisco that fall, she began taking night classes in photography. Time spent on a kibbutz in Israel allowed her to hone her skills further.

In 1970 Leibovitz approached Jann Wenner, founding editor of Rolling Stone, which he’d recently launched and was operating out of San Francisco. Impressed with her portfolio, Wenner gave Leibovitz her first assignment: shoot John Lennon. Leibovitz’s black-and-white portrait of the shaggy-looking Beatle graced the cover of the January 21, 1971 issue. Two years later she was named Rolling Stone chief photographer.

When the magazine began printing in color in 1974, Leibovitz followed suit. “In school, I wasn’t taught anything about lighting, and I was only taught black-and-white,” she told ARTnews in 1992. “So I had to learn color myself.” Among her subjects from that period are Bob Dylan, Bob Marley, and Patti Smith. Leibovitz also served as the official photographer for the Rolling Stones’ 1975 world tour. While on the road with the band she produced her iconic black-and-white portraits of Keith Richards and Mick Jagger, shirtless and gritty.

In 1980 Rolling Stone sent Leibovitz to photograph John Lennon and Yoko Ono, who had recently released their album “Double Fantasy.” For the portrait Leibovitz imagined that the two would pose together nude. Lennon disrobed, but Ono refused to take off her pants. Leibovitz “was kinda disappointed,” according to Rolling Stone, and so she told Ono to leave her clothes on. “We took one Polaroid,” said Leibovitz, “and the three of us knew it was profound right away.” The resulting portrait shows Lennon nude and curled around a fully clothed Ono. Several hours later, Lennon was shot dead in front of his apartment. The photograph ran on the cover of the Rolling Stone Lennon commemorative issue. In 2005 the American Society of Magazine Editors named it the best magazine cover from the past 40 years.

Annie Leibovitz: Photographs, the photographer’s first book, was published in 1983. The same year Leibovitz joined Vanity Fair and was made the magazine’s first contributing photographer. At Vanity Fair she became known for her wildly lit, staged, and provocative portraits of celebrities. Most famous among them are Whoopi Goldberg submerged in a bath of milk and Demi Moore naked and holding her pregnant belly. (The cover showing Moore — which then-editor Tina Brown initially balked at running — was named second best cover from the past 40 years.) Since then Leibovitz has photographed celebrities ranging from Brad Pitt to Mikhail Baryshnikov. She’s shot Ellen DeGeneres, the George W. Bush cabinet, Michael Moore, Madeleine Albright, and Bill Clinton. She’s shot Scarlett Johannson and Keira Knightley nude, with Tom Ford in a suit; Nicole Kidman in ball gown and spotlights; and, recently, the world’s long-awaited first glimpse of Suri Cruise, along with parents Tom and Katie. Her portraits have appeared in Vogue, The New York Times Magazine, and The New Yorker, and in ad campaigns for American Express, the Gap, and the Milk Board.

Among other honors, Leibovitz has been made a Commandeur des Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government and has been designated a living legend by the Library of Congress. Her first museum show, Photographs: Annie Leibovitz 1970-1990, took place in 1991 at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. and toured internationally for six years. At the time she was only the second living portraitist — and the only woman — to be featured in an exhibition by the institution.

Leibovitz met Susan Sontag in 1989 while photographing the writer for her book AIDS and its Metaphors. “I remember going out to dinner with her and just sweating through my clothes because I thought I couldn’t talk to her,” Leibovitz said in an interview with The New York Times late last year. Sontag told her, “You’re good, but you could be better.” Though the two kept separate apartments, their relationship lasted until Sontag’s death in late 2004.

Sontag’s influence on Leibovitz was profound. In 1993 Leibovitz traveled to Sarajevo during the war in the Balkans, a trip that she admits she would not have taken without Sontag’s input. Among her work from that trip is Sarajevo, Fallen Bicycle of Teenage Boy Just Killed by a Sniper, a black-and-white photo of a bicycle collapsed on blood-smeared pavement. Sontag, who wrote the accompanying essay, also first conceived of Leibovitz’s book Women (1999). The book includes images of famous people along with those not well known. Celebrities like Susan Sarandon and Diane Sawyer share space with miners, soldiers in basic training, and Las Vegas showgirls in and out of costume.

Leibovitz’s most recent book, A Photographer’s Life: 1990-2005, includes her trademark celebrity portraits. But it also features personal photographs from Leibovitz’s life: her parents, siblings, children, nieces and nephews, and Sontag. Leibovitz, who has called the collection “a memoir in photographs,” was spurred to assemble it by the deaths of Sontag and her father, only weeks apart. The book even includes photos of Leibovitz herself, like the one that shows her nude and eight months pregnant, à la Demi Moore. That picture was taken in 2001, shortly before Leibovitz gave birth to daughter Sarah. Daughters Susan and Samuelle, named in honor of Susan and Leibovitz’s father, were born to a surrogate in 2005.

Leibovitz composed these personal photographs with materials that she used when she was first starting out in the ’70s: a 35-millimeter camera, black-and-white Tri X film. “I don’t have two lives,” she writes in the book’s introduction. “This is one life, and the personal pictures and the assignment work are all part of it.” Still, she told the Times, this book is the “most intimate, it tells the best story, and I care about it.”

–Rachel Somerstein

Rachel Somerstein is a writer who lives in New York.

DWTS week 7 (results show)


Susan Lucci and Tony Dovolani went home. I am going to miss seeing Tony every week but it was their time to leave the competition.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

DWTS week 7

Lance Bass and Lacey Schwimmer. Rumba. Bare foot. Score for dance: 25/30

Brooke Burke and Derek Hough. Foxtrot. Score for dance: 30/30

Maurice Greene and Cheryl Burke. Cha cha cha. Score for dance: 25/30

Cody Linley and Julianne Hough. Viennese Waltz. Score for dance: 22/30

Susan Lucci and Tony Dovolani. Paso Doble. Score for dance: 24/30

Warren Sapp and Kym Johnson. Foxtrot. Score for dance: 21/30


Team dances: Cha cha cha vs. Paso doble (scores added to individual dancers' scores)

Team Cha cha cha is Lance Bass, Cody Linley, and Susan Lucci (and their respective pro partners). Score for dance: 20/30

Team Paso doble is Warren Sapp, Maurice Greene, and Brooke Burke (and their respective pro partners). Score for dance: 29/30


I totally forgot what day it was so I didn't vote. I really hope that Tony stays but I have had the same feeling for the past couple weeks about them. They are going home tonight. Sad! *tear* Now who do I vote for?

Random music questions

Go to the music player of your choice and put it on shuffle. Say the following questions aloud and press play. Use the song titles as your answers.

*Note: I used Rhapsody's David Foster channel to do this quiz. I love David Foster!*


1. How does the world see me? "Love Theme From St. Elmo's Fire" by David Foster.

2. Will I have a happy life? "Smooth Criminal" by Michael Jackson.

3. What do my friends really think of me? "My Love" by Justin Timberlake featuring T.I.

4. Do people secretly lust after me? "Hangin' Tough" by New Kids On The Block.

5. How can I make myself happy? "Praying For Time" by George Michael.

6. What should I do with my life? "Let's Make Love" by Faith Hill and Tim McGraw.

7. Why should life be full of so much pain? "Te Aviso, Te Anucio (Tango)" by Shakira.

8. How can I maximise my pleasure during sex? "(I Got That) Boom Boom" by Britney Spears.

9. Will I ever have children? "Waiting For You" by Seal.

10. Will I die happy? "Don't Be Cruel" Missy Elliott featuring Monica and Beenie Man.

11. What is some good advice for me? "Greatest Love Of All" by Whitney Houston.

12. What is happiness? "Gone" by 'NSYNC.

13. What is my favourite fetish? "Jumpin', Jumpin'" by Destiny's Child.

14. How will I be remembered? "Kitty Kat" by Beyoncé.

15. What is my best memory? "Where Is The Love?" by Black Eyed Peas.

16. What is my theme song? "How Am I Supposed To Live Without You" by Michael Bolton.

17. What do I look for in a partner? "Ritmo y Romance (Rhythm and Romance)" by Kenny G.

18. What is my day going to be like? "Blame It On The Boogie" by The Jacksons.

19. What one thing could I not live without? "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" by Jessica Simpson.

20. How's my love life? "Up The Ladder To The Roof" by The Supremes.

21. How am I feeling today? "Lost" by Manudo.

22. How far will I get in life? "Hey Bulldog" by The Beatles.

23. What is the story of my life? "On And On" by Stephen Bishop.

24. What is the best thing about me? "Surfin' U.S.A." by The Beach Boys.

25. What is the worst thing about me? "The Sweet Escape" by Gwen Stefani.

26. How is my life going? "Open Your Heart" by Madonna.

27. What will be the hardest part of my life? "Mi Reflejo (My Reflection)" by Christina Aguilera.

28. What will this year be all about? "Miss Independent" by Kelly Clarkson.

29. What should I be doing instead of this? "Someday" Mariah Carey.

30. Will I fall in love? "Words Get In The Way" Gloria Estefan.

Monday, November 03, 2008

Change

I am so tired. I think the time change messed me up. I couldn't sleep from one to three in the morning on Saturday. I have no idea why. I watched TV. I don't remember what I watched. One show was CSI: Miami. I remember that one. I can't think ... there was a reason for writing today ... more than the following at least. Grr! I can't remember.

This weekend something happened that really made me want to move out of my parent's house. I have decided to look for my own place to live. Somewhere I can have pets because I am getting a dog when things settle down. For my own sanity I need to move out. I haven't started looking at any places yet but I will. I was thinking of looking online first and just trying to figure out what my price range would be. I expect to not have much of my paycheck left over every month but I am okay with that. I'll keep you updated.