Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Bobservations

You’d think after eighteen years together, I’d be able to understand Carlos; not so much. This is an actual conversation:

Carlos: “I remember when I was a kid and my mother wanted to take me to the boat show. She told my father he was taking us on Saturday, which was the night my father always saw his mistress, so he wasn’t happy. And he wasn’t happy wearing a suit and tie—”


Bob: “A suit and tie? At a boat show?”


Carlos: “Yes. And he really didn’t want to see the dancers at the boat show.”


Bob: “Dancers? What the hell kinda boat show is that?”


Carlos: “What boat show.”

Bob: “You said your mother wanted to take you to the boat show.”


Carlos: “Not the ‘boat show,’ the Bolshoi! The ballet.”


Bob: “Oy.”


Boat show, Bolshoi. Po-tay-to, Patata.
Sorry, not sorry.

Rider University, a private university in central New Jersey, asked students last spring which fast food franchise they would like to see on campus. The results showed a preference for Chick-fil-A, so in the fall, when the final survey was taken, the university removed the restaurant as an option because Chick-fil-A is “widely perceived to be in opposition to the LGBTQ+ community.”’

Yassssss.
In other great news, the NRA saw its income dip by $55 million last year, after a record-breaking 2016.

Again, sorry, not sorry,
Just to prove gays can be asshats just like straight folk, I give you Bill White and his husband, Bryan Eure. The two were former Clinton supporters who turned tail and ran to the _____ rally on election night when it was clear Hillary was losing. White says:

“I didn’t want to be part of that misery pie; I’m not a wallower in self-pity. I really believe that once that decision is made, you have to get behind your president.”’

The couple has other reasons for justifying their allegiance to _____; they got all kinds of pissy when Chelsea Clinton didn’t recognize them at Ralph Lauren’s Polo Bar in Midtown Manhattan but say Donnie Junior always takes their calls.

Seriously. These two can f**k off.
We haven’t had any snow yet this year in Smallville, but when we do, I’ll know how to measure it.

Just sayin’.
Iowa? Really?

Iowa is granting permits to allow people who are legally or completely blind to be able to buy or carry guns in public because state law does not allow sheriffs to deny an Iowan the right to carry a weapon based on physical ability.

Even better; while Iowa requires training for anyone who is issued a permit to carry a weapon in public, that requirement can be satisfied through an online course that does not include any hands-on instruction or a shooting test.

Seriously, Iowa?
It costs a lot to bed Melanie.

Apparently the bills for Melanie’s day trip—she did not stay the night—to Toronto last year cost the American people $174,000. Add that to the $95,000 it cost to get Melanie a room at the InterContinental Cairo Semiramis, where she stayed for less than half a day at the end of her tour of Africa last month and you can see she’s as bad as that husband of hers when it comes to spending our money.

Melanie’s spokes-tool implied that the “advance team” was responsible for some of the costs, BUT federal expense documents reported separate, additional costs for the advance team that added up to $18,000.

Melanie is a pampered little liar like her Fat Husband; just sayin’.
Your eyes aren’t deceiving you; this is an actual set of floating stairs in a private home. 

Gorgeous, but, yeah, a few glasses of wine later, I’d be falling down those stairs into the cellar and …wait, if it was a wine cellar?

Win win.
Take a good look at the photo. That is every single politician who voted to repeal Obamacare.

And every red X denotes a politician who was voted out of office in November.

See, voting matters.
An ISBL Public Service Announcement:

With the holiday season upon us, those red Salvation Army donation buckets are out again. And while I am only too happy to help when I can, I avoid giving to the Salvation Army because of their, voraciously denied by them, anti-LGBTQ stance.

For example: In 2008, trans woman Jennifer Gale was found dead outside a homeless shelter run by the Salvation Army. The reason she froze to death on the street? The Salvation Army refused to shelter her with the other women due to her genitalia.

In in 2016, the Salvation Army refused to back a Safe Schools initiative, which was meant to combat anti-LGBTI bullying.

Most recently, a gag order was put on Salvation Army employees forbidding them from talking about LGBTI issues.


So instead of donating money or old clothes to the Salvation Army this year, try one of these non-religious, pro-LGBTI charities.


Foundation Beyond Belief

The Ali Forney Center

The Sylvia Rivera Law Project

Housing Works

The Audre Lorde Project

TGI Justice

The Trevor Project

And thank you.
I am not usually attracted to the dirty blond, blue-eyed types, but then along came former football turned model Heath Hutchins and I became a convert. Heath dropped fifty pounds from his college football playing days to become a rather hot model with icy blue eyes.

A real dreamboat, I must say; and now I have another ‘type.’



Wednesday, December 11, 2013

I Love Lucy: The Soundstage

Okay, so I loves me some architecture. 

But I also love movie and TV sets and like to see how they are laid out. So this one, a model of the set from "I Love Lucy" is right up my alley.

The Ricardo apartment--after the birth of Little Ricky--with the nursery off the bedroom, and the stage set fo the Tropicana Nightclub where Ricky worked and Lucy stole the show.

Very cool. Click to emBIGGERate.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

DS7EP9: It's Over!

Thank God.
In lieu of a traditional recap, I'm going to post pictures and tell you what I think.
BTW Danielle won.
Her "show" will be called Shop This Room. Yes, folks, her show will be about shopping, which is especially fitting since this entire season has been one long commercial for Southern California furniture stores, wallpaper outlets and lighting shops.
Let's rip.....
Two of these people have shows on HGTV and two of these people do not. So, how come the have-nots judge? I suggest letting Bromstad--the only DS winner most anyone can name--judge the show, alongside other HGTV designers, like Candice Olson and John Gidding and, well, pick anyone other than Vern Yip and Genevieve Gorder who do not 
have design shows on the network. Isn't that simple enough? Oy!
This is the dining room that Britany will make-over and if ever a space needed a make-over this is it. Seriously, if your dining room looks like a basement alcove on the Island of Misfit Toys, you need more help than a design "star" can give.
This is the finished room, and I like it. I like the orange, but wish there had been more. I don't like the family photos at all, A) because they don't look professional, and Britany has shoved the I'm a professional photographer crap down our throats all season, and, 2) family photos don't belong in a dining room. She gets props for the modern table--the homeowners asked for modern--but she gets dinged for the traditionally dull wallpaper.
Britany's living room, before. Talk about no sense of design at all, these people needed help badly. I mean, haven't they heard of these things called rugs? Lamps? Artwork?
Britany's living room after. She kept telling us she was all about bold deign, but I think she meant dull. It doesn't look like anyone lives in this house. The cameo on the one wall is just plain stupid, especially since it's one of the few pieces of art in the room. The rug is too small. The room is too sparse. What's the deal with the pillows? The homeowners wanted adult and modern; what part of that is in the traditional wainscoting? Where's the console table behind the couch? How does anyone enjoy the window seat when it faces the back of the couch? It's bad. Really bad. Her show was to be called Picture Perfect Spaces and this was a colossal miss.
This is 'the' chair in Britany's room. Doesn't it just scream modern like the homeowner's wanted? And look, another cameo. Another cameo that is so large it hangs down over the badly designed wainscoting. And the teeny tiny table was a definite snooze.
Funny how her clients were less than thrilled with the room, and could only mutter things like 'Awesome' and 'Gosh' in hushed tones. I'm thinking HGTV paid another designer to come in and fix this mess.
For her judging, Vern Yip said, "You really know how to design for TV." Except, Vern, she's not designing for TV, she's designing for people. Asshat. The Goiter praised Britany's increased confidence and then canceled her show. All Bromstad could come up with was, "I liked your homeowner interaction."
Next season, Homeowner Interaction Star!
Danielle's living room, before. A couch in front of the fireplace is never good. I mean, why buy a house with one, if you're gonna shove a red corduroy couch in front of  it; unless the hope was that the couch would catch fire. Sadly, the fireplace does not work. Still, Danielle had a lot to work with, from the architecture of the fireplace, to the beautiful beams, from the windows and the arch into the dining room. However, the place was crammed full of stuff for watching TV and for Mom The Artist to work. It's too much going on for one room.
Danielle's living room, after. Even though the fireplace doesn't work, she was smart to play off the architecture of it, making it a focal point in the room. Sadly, the other focal point--the TV--is set off to the side, so you can't really see it sitting on the sofa, though you might if you sat in that one chair. I loved the bold colors of the walls, used to show off the bold color of Mom The Artist's work, but I didn't get the gray couch with the matchy matchy rug. It brings the sadz into the room.
Plus, her show will be about shopping. Shopping isn't design; it's part of design, but not all of deign. Plus, well, some of her shopping tips.....she told us how could slip-covers are for families with kids and pets. Honey, I learned about slip-covers back int he 1970s when I sat on my Nana's couch with dirty shoes. Slip-covers.Aren't.New. And they aren't design.
Danielle's dining room, before. Not a bad space. Too much stuff laying about. Is it me, or should a lot of these HGTV clients first get on Hoarders? Yard sale, people, yard sale! It's not a bad room, good arches and windows, sad color. And the fluorescent tubes don't help at all unless they'll be preforming a tracheotomy after supper.
Danielle's dining room, after. First off, I love the color; I am obsessed with gray these days. And I do love the trim painted out in white--I know some folks hate to paint over the woodwork, but, well, bite me. 
I like that she was able to create a more sleek workspace for Mom The Artist, but wish it had been able to be 'hidden away' when the dining room was used for dining. Nice job refinishing the homeowner's table, though I don't like the four cheesy chairs with it. The scale seems off. And, seriously, you kept the fluorescent lights? And you got rid of their , albeit sad, fixture, and hung what I would call a 70s porn light in it's place? Yeah, not so much. And a rug would have grounded the whole room and brought in a little more color.
For her judging, Vern Yip said, "You deliver the best possible version of what the client is asking for." In other words, she did her job. High praise indeed, Vern. The Goiter said, "You are an effortless communicator." And, you had to know this was coming: howsabout Effortless Communicator Star? Bromstad, giving what was possibly the only real critique of the show, told Danielle that it's very hard to work with clients who have very taste-specific pieces they want to keep--like Mom The Artist's Orange Period works--but that she managed to truly pull it off.
Which is probably why she won. The best of the not-so-good. Again, high praise.

MY TAKE
End the misery now.
If the show comes back, lose Vern Yip. And let him take the Goiter with him. How is it that the judges for a competition where someone gets a show on HGTV do not have their own shows on HGTV? Seriously.
And make the challenges about design and not shopping. Make the challenges fit into what the winner must do if they should, perchance, win. And congrats to Danielle, I may watch your show just to see where the best place to buy a sofa in Los Angeles is, even though I live 3,000 miles away.
Well, actually, the best advice would be to just stop this mess right here and right now.

What did YOU think?

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

DS7EP3: It's All About The Kardashians


First things first, I do not like the Kardashians. I think they are nothing but a group of famewhores who would sell out themselves, their family, and anyone else--pay attention, Kanye--for a few minutes on a magazine cover. That said, this week's Design Star features famewhoring, momager, Kris Jenner, who tasks the designers with creating new office spaces for the Kardashian Empire. The ten designers will be broken up into teams of two, to complete five rooms: the Reception area, Kris Jenner's office, the Kitchen, the Showroom, er, Whoreroom, and the Konference room--not a misprint, that's how Kris Jenner spelled it.
Jenner tells the designers she's all about black and white and gray--sounds a wee bit Beverly Hills Cop, and by that I mean 80s--and, of course, some glitz and glamour and Old Hollywood elegance. I am fighting off a yawn, but let's forge ahead......

BEX & LUCA--The Showroom
Kris tells them she wants a showroom to feature all the Kardashian products, from shoes and clothes, to nail polish, sex tapes, and tiny vials for cocaine. Luca starts off by saying, "This is my realm, and I do high end stuff." Um, Luca, the words 'high end' and 'stuff' don't go together. Make a note.
Bex starts off by screaming inside her head, "Nooooooooooooooooooo!" But then she tells us that she has this one in the bag because she designs showrooms and, in fact she has her own showroom; well, it's a showroom when you open the garage door and move the car outside.
Seriously though, when you have two designers starting off by saying "I got this" you know how it's going to end.
Luca, of course, because he's as shallow as a Kardashian loves Kris, feeling that he's right where he needs to be, with the "elite." And because he knows all about luxe design, he’ll create a center island upon which showroom goods can be, um, shown.
Bex will create a gallery wall to display some of the Kardashian things that they say they design, but we all know they pay Malaysian women 25-cents to come up with and manufacture. At least that’s what I’ve heard.
Kardashian and elite in the same sentence. Oh god, I love comedy.
Furniture shopping for these two is a waste of time. Their room will have no furniture, save for a couple of bar stools at the island. But HGTV has bills to pay, so it’s To The Stores. And Luca, because he’s elite like the Kardashians, begins looking at all sorts of shiny accessories to put in a room where the focus should be on the Kardashian Label. He just doesn’t get it. He’s so busy trying to be Shopping Star that he’s missing the point.
The next day, Mommy Bex decides Little Luca should stay and help the carpenter and he pouts because, well, he loves to shop. So, he helps for a minute and then stops doing anything unless it benefits him. Oh, and he pouts.
And Bex stumbles upon some hexagonal shelving that she thinks will fit just perfectly in the room, although there has been no discussion of hex shelving. And, well, it turns out awful, and looks stupid and cheesy in a room full of stupid cheese.
And half-finished when Bex comes home from shopping, which sparks a bitch-fight. Luca tells Bex he doesn’t work for her and she counters with, “Well, if you did, I’d fire you!”
He comes back with, “I’d fire you, too.”
And that comeback says more about Luca and his ‘sense’ of design as anything he’s done on the show. And, now he’ll only do his part, like built an island fit only for small toys, and create a one-of-kind piece of art because, as he tells us, he’s a ‘phenomenal’ artist.
I hear ominous drumming.
And I heard a lot of salesman in their Camera Challenge. It was too, ‘Here’s what I have for you today!’
Seriously, the drumming is getting louder.
Entering the showroom, Kris Jenner says, “Oh my god” and called the room a little boutique. I called it clunky and cluttered and kinda last-minute looking.
The hexagonal shelving system was a Group Hate, as was Luca’s phenomenal piece of art and his tiny tiny island.

DANIELLE & HILARI--The Kitchen
Since they are the only all female pairing they'll be given the kitchen. I kid.
I don't. Really.
Kris wants some mirrors in the kitchen, and a table, and a makeup area, and something she calls a PR Closet where they will store things for Kash Kow to autograph and sell, like her soul. Suddenly, it’s three rooms jammed into one and Danielle and Hilari are worried.
But they soldier on, and Danielle decides to stripe the walls—we find out later, from Vern, in the critique, that this was done to make the narrow room look bigger. Might have been nice to hear, oh, I dunno, the designer tell us that? But, there’s shopping to do, and Hilari will be shopping for accessories and the ‘e’ that is missing from her name.
And because these are the two Bling Girls, Danielle finds a glass dining table that is just perfect because it’s shiny, while Hilari finds some glass vases that are just perfect because their shiny.
Is there an echo in here?
But Hilari also finds some wallpaper that looks like ice or diamonds, or something. At any rate, it’s shiny, so it’s a must have. And it does look good, at least until Danielle, who has obviously never wallpapered before, tries to hang it, and it ends up wrinkled and puckered and, well, down it comes. And it leaves the walls ripped and torn and shredded so Hilari comes to the rescue; first with a can of paint, and when that doesn’t work, they hang a curtain in front of it. That’s an old rule of design: when all else fails, hang a curtain over it.
But they scored points from David in their Camera Challenge, although they didn’t show anything about the room. They talked bling and Kardashian, and that’s just boring.
I found their room kinda dull. I know it’s a kitchen and all, but it just seemed lackluster. The stripes were cool and the wallpaper blingy enough, but wallpaper and painted stripes do not a Design Star make.
Kris said “Oh wow” and loved the table and kissed the wallpaper. It’s like a Little Restaurant…next door to a Little Boutique, I guess. Vern called the accessorizing so last minute while The Goiter immediately pointed out the bad wallpaper job, hidden behind the curtain, and said “it doesn’t work.”
She’s.A.Brilliant.Designer. I mean, who else could look at a scabbed, badly painted wall, and declare it wrong? Get this woman her won show! Get her a network of her won! Maybe Oprah's, since she's not using it anymore?
Get me to a sanitarium.

MIKEL & BRITANY--The Conference Room
Kris wants a big table, with big chairs for Kim's big ass. And mirrors, because she likes shiny things. In fact, she tells each and every designer she wants a mirror in the room. And some shiny things to play with as well.
So, Britany decides to create a textured checkerboard mirror effect, because why reflect one Kardashian when you can reflect eighty or so? Amirite?
Mikel will pick a wallpaper and find an appropriate conference table.
Shopping. And Mikel finds a very cool white lacquer table, but it isn’t long enough for Kardashian Asses, so, well, he buys two. Problem solved!
During their Camera Challenge3, David Bromstad tells them they are too scripted and lack chemistry. I thought they seemed a little stiff, but, well, other designers on the network are much worse.
The Goiter, anyone?
In the Conference room, Kris switched it up, and said, “Oh wow” instead of “Oh my god” though she also threw in an “Oh my goodness.”
 She is a member of Mensa, I hear.
I didn’t like the mirror, it looked too dated to me, but I loved Mikel’s huge table. Vern agreed with me about the table—he’s a smart little man—but also loved the mirror—the man is a moron. The Goiter said the room had “the basic building blocks.”
WTF does that even mean.

KRIS & MEIRA--Reception
And the reception is decidedly chilly. While Kris wants a WOW! Factor, she wants mirrors and glam and chic and sofas and family pictures. And, apparently because they spell their names alike, Designer Kris begins talking and talking and talking and not allowing Meira to speak.
Of course she’s not happy, and she whines and complains and moans and calls him “unprofessional” and, I think she said, “inmature” until Designer Kris offers a non-apology-apology just to make her shut up.
I am not liking Designer Kris. And I’m not fond of Whiny Meira either.
After the spat, where Designer Kris tells us that Meira is simply jealous of his fabulous communication with Client Kris, they decide that he’ll do wallpaper, and she’ll do the family photo wall.
For the Camera Challenge, Kris decides he’ll run it, and then, ‘toss’ it to Meira. And, gosh darnit, she wanted to run it. So, this segment isn’t about the room or the design, it’s about these two not being able to even communicate. Everything Designer Kris says—and that girl loves the sound of her voice—Meira takes the wrong way. Finally, Meira heads down a hallway to an empty room where she cries to some unseen HGTV person. And, during their Camera Challenge, their onscreen moments are like two separate shows, with the two of them barely even looking at each other.
Like I said, it’s a chilly reception.
Touring the room, Bob—that’s me—felt the room was too cluttered. The already small room doesn’t seem inviting because there’s too much there. And, while I liked Designer Kris’ wallpaper, Meira’s Family Photo wall seemed like something from the 80s; it was like the waiting room at Denver Carrington on Dynasty. I kept looking to see Krystal’s picture up there and….whoa, Krystal? Krystal Kardashian? Yikes.
Anyway, Kris Jenner said, “Oh my god” when she came in the room and she loved the wallpaper and the pictures. Yawn.
Vern was “blown away”: by the sleek professionalism while Genevieve Gorder said, “It’s a delight.”
WTF does that even mean?

MANLEY & RACHEL--Kris Jenner's Office
Tasked with Kris' office, Manley instantly turns surfer dude, valley boy, and worries that if like Kris Jenner doesn't like what they are like doing they could like be ousted.
I used to like Stanley. Now, well, great guns, but nothing upstairs.
Kris tells them she wants a distinctive desk, some mirrors and Old Hollywood glamour. Not a word about functionality because, well, these are Kardashians and all they care about is how things seem.
Manley opts to build what he calls a “waterfall” desk, and create a mirror--A mirror? What a novel idea—that looks like a diamond tennis bracelet because Mrs. Jenner will love it. Rachel tries to ride the mirrored coattail because, so far, she has no design in the room to show the judges. They don’t show it, but I think Manley was like, No, dude, you can’t like do that cuz like it’s my like thing.
Their first stop is at a furniture store—linger on the store’s name—where they find a red cherry lacquered console that screams glitz and glam and Hollywood and Kardashian. It’s a must have and will utterly make the room. Don’t forget.
The next day, while shopping, Rachel comes upon these puke, er, puce green sofas and decides they are what’s needed to bring the Hollywood glam. A mini-fight ensues, where Manley worries about the cherry red console and the puke green couches: ‘It’s like it’s like Christmas.’
He thinks they’re doomed, but the couches are In and the cherry console is Out!
During their Camera Challenge, Rachel points out the arches she had built over the windows and how she’ll frame them with lush draperies. I don’t see lush and Old Hollywood, I see an old Taco Bell; the arches scream Spanish, not Hollywood.
Manley is better this time, though he still seems as wooden as his desk. And the little studs he created out of cut pieces of wood and spray p-painted silver for the tennis bracelet, look like little cut pieces of wood spray-painted silver.
But Kris loved it; it’s shiny. And, while she’d never have picked puke green couches, she does love them, too. We didn’t hear from Vern or The Goiter—thank the goddess—but I thought the wallpaper was too busy for the space and the arched windows looked really dated. The whole office is sleek and modern and these windows just looked Bad Hacienda.

THE CRITIQUE
Vern begins by saying that in “Seven seasons of Design Star I’ve never seen a better set of rooms.”
Well, that explains everything.
The Fighting Receptionists, Designer Kris and Meira, are given the one safe slot and exit the building. He holds the door for and apologizes because she wanted to hold the door for him.
Vern loved Manley’s “performance” onscreen—which I found wooden and cheesy and kinda creepy….Mrs. Jenner—and Kris Jenner again praised the couches. Vern loved that mirror with the silver-painted wooden pieces and Gorder loved the desk.
For Danielle and Hilari the big hits were paper and paint, except the spot where paper came off and paint didn’t work, so a curtain was brought in. The Goiter hated the closet for some reason, I scarcely listen to her, and Vern called the accessories sad. Ow.
For Britany and Mikel, Genevieve Gorder called their onscreen patter too scripted. Seriously? These shows are all about scripted. I mean, if someone doesn’t have their hand shoved up The Goiter’s ass and making her move her mouth while they speak for her I will be shocked.
And then she says, “Let’s take a look at the befores and afters of your room.” A phrase she said about four completely unscripted times. Gosh, I loathe her. Who is she schtupping to be on TV?
But they all loved the table and the mirror and….well….yawn.
Bex and Luca get called out for hex shelving and a bad piece of art and a tiny island. Luca gets called out for being too much like a used car salesmen. But, hey, he’s an elite used car salesman.
In the end, Manley gets the win.
And Luca gets the boot and, on his way out, blames Bex for his failures. But he scores a mini victory because Bex also gets the boot, although she takes responsibility for their bad room.
MY TAKE
It's still less design and more shopping, but when you have so much product placement in a show, you know where it’s headed. Each and every store was given a shot of their signage, or it was mentioned. And when Bromstad showed up for the Camera Challenge the one lingering shot was of the front end of the Volvo he rode in on.
Seriously, it's just an hour-long commercial interspersed with a few shopping trips, some fights, and a mishap or seven,
Manley wins, though I don’t know why. His tennis bracelet was sad, and the wallpaper bad and his camera time was, I can’t explain, but it creeped me out. I think Mikel and Britany had the best space and one of them should have taken top honors. I'd give it to Mikel because that mirror of Britany's annoyed me.
However, I’m am thrilled Luca was given the boot because he should have gone last week with his bulb chandelier and ego-driven graffiti. But I didn’t think Bex needed to go, because that spot belonged to Hilari or Danielle for that war-torn wallpaper half-wall.
So, there you have it.
What did you think?


Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Trailers: They're Not Just For White Trash Any More*

Ah, trailers! Makes me think of moonshine and old cars on cinder blocks. A dozen children in dirty diapers playing on a rusty tractor.
But this ain't your Granpappy's trailer.
This trailer, while from the 1960s, has been redecorated in 2011 in the style of the 1960s. Seriously, I half expect Goldie Hawn to paint graffiti on her body and dance in a bikini on the table.
This home is made of metal and plastic, and loaded with flashy colors crammed into just 200 or so square feet.
It ain't big, y'all, but it's got style!
I was gonna post it on Architecture Wednesday, until I realized this is less architecture than car-chitecture.





* And don't get your panties in a bunch; it was a joke. A joke I can deliver because when I was born my family lived in a trailer. So there!


source