29 March 2011

Noooo

I just read that the next season of Mad Men won't be returning until 2012! Something about contract and advertising negotiations between AMC and creator Matthew Weiner. I don't know if I can wait that long! I need some Don Draper in my life. I guess I'll just have to re-watch all four seasons while we wait! In the meantime, here are some images from AMC's site.

A Nutty Brunette

image via Vanity Fair

A few days late...but I read Taylor herself planned to be late to her own funeral! This was so much more than a beautiful woman with a love addiction. Watching the clips of interviews that have been played in the recent days, I've realized that Dame Elizabeth Taylor was bold and quite hilarious!

28 March 2011

Um...

A warning to all you vegans out there: Do not look below! I have a weird habit of following wedding blogs (don't ask), and have been following this catering blog for a while. My jaw dropped when I saw this photo...(how amazing is this!?)
image via Heirloom LA

13 March 2011

Levain-like


Sunday evenings call for cookies...don't you think? This evening, I decided to try a Levain Bakery inspired cookie recipe.  Levain's is a bakery on the upper west side of Manhattan. Their cookies are HUGE and AMAZING! The recipe was pretty easy and kind of interesting (I've never shredded butter for a cookie recipe before!). They're not quite as AMAZING as the original, but hit the spot nonetheless!


recipe via vanilla kitchen





 

06 March 2011

My Two (or three) Cents

image via LIFE

I would like to keep this space as politically neutral as possible. However, I feel it is necessary to write a few words about an issue that concerns me...Education.


Over the last few weeks I've watched the teachers in Wisconsin and listened to the talking heads from the various news networks. What concerns me most is not that teachers (nation-wide) are being asked to sacrifice. I'm concerned most about (one) the way teachers are being portrayed and (two) the idea of privatization of the public school system.


When did it become appropriate to vilify teachers? The teachers I know (colleagues, family and friends) are not the bad guys. The teachers I know do not leave school at 2:45 to go shopping at Loehmann's (Fox News?).  The teachers I know not only stay at school for hours after their students leave, they bring home piles of papers to grade or lessons to plan or books to research. Yes, teachers do "work" ten months of the year. But, guess what? Teachers aren't paid for those two months off. And, guess what else? Many teachers spend those two months (the same two months they're not being paid) working to prepare for the next school year. Some teachers spend days or weeks preparing their classrooms. Others spend days or weeks at conferences or creating new lessons. Are there lazy teachers? Of course. Are there lazy bankers? Of course. Are there lazy doctors? Of course. You see, these are the exceptions. 


It has been said before, but it deserves to be said again...teaching is not easy and most teachers did not become teachers for the time off. The teachers I know became teachers because they loved to learn and sincerely wanted to make a difference. It horrifies me to hear otherwise.


Now, on to this idea that the public school system is so damaged it needs to be privatized. As any other person, I would agree that there are some (ok, many) problems with public education today. I don't know what the answers are, but I do know that privatization is not one of them. Public education is essential to our democracy. In the United States, a student (regardless of gender, race, religion, language or citizenship) may walk into a public school classroom and learn. Without this equal access, we lose a fundamental component to our democratic process...the educated voter. Public school cannot be privatized. In doing so, we take away a big part of what makes this country so great.


Obviously, there is more to be said about this issue. I'll stop before I get carried away. My hope is that teachers and students will not lose their voices during these difficult economic and political times. Times in which many of us are too quick to find suitable scapegoats for our problems.