dr_phil_physics: (dr-mrs-phil-xmas09)
The End of the World is Coming

No, not that Mayan calendar nonsense. You do understand that just as our calendar ends on December 31st, you just roll over to a new calendar, right?

In this case I'm talking about the imminent winter storm. Oh look, The Weather Channel is naming them now. Welcome to Winter Storm Draco. It's been nearly 300 days since we had any appreciable snow -- and while there are blizzard conditions in some places, West Michigan isn't expected to get more than a few inches.

But that's for Friday. Here on Thursday it was just wet. Lots and lots of wet. Cold and raining.

A Day Trip to Chicago

Mrs. Dr. Phil ventured off to see Pat and Will and meet Emma (from New Zealand by way of Siem Reap). We could've driven, but it's a lot of driving, and well, the rain with threat of snow at the time we had to make plans. The day trip via Amtrak gives you about five hours plus on the ground. Given that I'd slow them down, and if I didn't have my vehicle, I doubt we'd all fit in their car, I dropped Debbie off at the Holland Amtrak station in the cold rain and dark.

Then I drove around to the Paragon bank parking lot and maneuvered the Bravada so that I could briefly open a window and keep the Nikon D1X and lens dry. It turned out to be pretty challenging to get pictures. At ISO 800 and shooting wide open at 55mm f5.6, I was running long shutter speeds. Then the autofocus was getting confused by the large rain drops, so I had to go to manual focus. And the bright headlights and side ditch lights of the locomotive threatened to mess up the exposures, so I switch to Manual mode. If it wasn't for the outstanding Vibration Reduction of the 18-55mm f3.5-5.6G VR DX AF-Nikkor, I doubt I'd have gotten anything this good.


Ten minutes before train time and I was struck by the bright red color of the berries on this tree out my front windshield lit up by my headlights. 1/8th of a second exposure. (Click on photo for larger.)


Amtrak's Pere Marquette coming into Holland MI from Grand Rapids. By 8:29am EST I got the exposure up to 1/30th of a second. (Click on photo for larger.)


I had the longer 70-300mm lens, but it isn't VR, so I never put it on. This stuff is a lot easier to shoot in the summertime. (Click on photo for larger.)


Former Amtrak EMD F40PH locomotive, turned into a cab control baggage car (known as a "cabbage"). The actual locomotive is a GE P40DC pushing on the rear of the train. With the train in the station, the front fouls the grade crossing at 8th Street and so the gates and lights continue running until after the train leaves. I wanted to move to a different angle, but forgot that when the lights were flashing, the idiots dive out of 8th Street and carom through the slalom curves of the Paragon bank parking lot I was in like they were running some damned Grand Prix race. So I managed to turn the Bravada around and shoot out of the driver's window instead of the passenger window, but didn't get a chance to do the wide angle shot I'd planned. (Click on photo for larger.)


Before the Amtrak train left, I could see a headlight in the distant siding. I thought it was the CSX freight that often runs either before or after the Pere Marquette, but it turned out to be some local switching run. (Click on photo for larger.)

Pictures Or It Didn't Happen

As for Mrs. Dr. Phil's trip, she had a great time and it sounds like they spent hours having lunch at the Russian Tea Time before wandering by the Land's End store in Sears so she could look for a new winter jacket.


Pat, Mrs. Dr. Phil, Will and Emma at Sears in Chicago, taken by a helpful salesperson. (Click on photo for larger.)

No pictures of the arrival of the evening train on account of darkness. On the other hand, the rain had stopped, which made the rendezvous all much easier. (grin)

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (chicago-stuffed-pizza)
Sunday Paper

Article in the Grand Rapids Press about a new restaurant in Holland -- right on 8th Street in downtown -- called Crust54. Always looking for new restaurants, but they had me at the words "Chicago Deep Dish Pizza". Especially as the photograph looked more like a stuffed pizza than just deep dish. After the loss of Joe Chicago's and Stromboli's (DW), we were down two pizza places, including the one which made a proper Chicago stuffed pizza. (sigh)

Stock photo from Crust54's website.

Wednesday Errands

So I had to hit Holland before 5pm on an errand this afternoon -- perfect for ordering a pizza to pick up for our dinner. Medium (12"), Chicago stuffed, sausage, mushrooms, green peppers and black olives. Couldn't get a parking spot, so I sort of double-parked and called them back and they brought it out to me. Nice service. (grin)

Oh my. Yum.

A good Chicago stuffed pizza is dense anyway, but this one is also firm. The sauce wasn't loose or watery. The ingredients had some real composition to them -- the sausage and the lovely serious black olives especially -- and a serious and tasty crust.

We will definitely be back for more. They also claim to do New York pizza, which has its own merits. If they channel New York as well as they channel Chicago, that could be pretty great.

Ah, pizza. And relief at no longer being abandoned. (double-stuffed-grin)

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (Default)
New Restaurant in Standale

After the rash of closings and the fire I've noted earlier (DW), it's nice to find out about a new local place, down the road in Standale. The Crooked Goose is the second restaurant in the Grand Rapids area with this outfit, their Twisted Rooster is over by Celebration North and is always packed. The Crooked Goose website is just a placeholder, but they have a blog.
Meritage Hospitality Group is one of the nation's premiere restaurant operators, overseeing 86 Wendy's restaurants along with our uniquely pioneered dining concepts- Twisted Rooster & Crooked Goose.
This ain't no Wendy's, I assure you. Fun place. Packed and on a Thursday night yet. Their specialty seems to be big burgers and exotic grilled cheese sandwiches -- available with a cup of Campbell's Tomato Soup -- but that's not what we had.

We started with a cheesy crab and tortilla appetizer. Then I had the Michigan Fried Bologna Sandwich -- Ebels Bologna (Falmouth, MI), Pan Fried with Melted Swiss Cheese, Maple Mustard Slaw, Crisp Fried Onions & Mrs. Dogs Mustard on a Sesame Seed Bun with Sweet Pickle Potato Salad.

This is from their website.

What's a fried bologna sandwich? Well, if you fry a thin slice of bologna in a pan, you'll get these crispy little half domes. But if you cut a thick slice of bologna from a real deli bologna, say ½" to ¾", it makes a really nice cooked meat for BBQ. We used to do this a lot in the summer when I was growing up and I've done it every now and then myself.
The Old Family Fried Bologna BBQ Sauce

molasses
with enough cider vinegar so it will brush
squirt of yellow mustard

Yup -- that's it.

Note: Cut the bologna slices in half, so when grilled, the 
expanding meat will have room to spread on the cut edge.  
Baste all around and keep flipping.

It's Taken Us Three Years Or So...

... since we first noticed that there was a mobile BBQ stand / food truck in Allendale during the summer. It parks next to a party store and ice cream joint, just north of M-45 on 68th Avenue. So we finally decided that if it was still here, then they couldn't have killed all their customers, because Allendale just ain't that large.

Saturday the end of June we pulled up around 5pm and found that they were down to three pulled pork sandwiches and cleared out of everything else. Since we had our own pulled pork BBQ either just made or about to be made, we passed. But we did have them reserve a full rack of ribs for the next day -- and my they were good.


Mrs. Dr. Phil at Ed 'n Pat's Smokehouse BBQ food truck, finding out they were pretty much cleared out on 30 June 2012. (Click on photo for larger.)

So when Mrs. Dr. Phil's stepmother Pat came by this weekend, we got three half chickens from the shack -- we got two great meals out of 'em. Very pleased with this local operation. Much prefer their sauce than Bono's, the Southern style BBQ place that went out of business and became the Mexican restaurant that burned down. And they cook their meat beautifully.

The Rest Of The Visit

We also went to one of our favorites -- Pereddies in Holland MI. For once, we passed on both appetizers and desserts. I had my usual lasagna with meatballs. As for dessert, we had blueberry rhubarb crisp at home. For that, I was willing to give up key lime pie. (grin) And of course we did Sunday brunch at Grand Coney in Allendale. Managed to get in after barely waiting a few minutes for a table!


Pat and Mrs. Dr. Phil. (Click on photo for larger.)


As long as I had the Nikon D1 out and Pat was there, I had her snap a picture of us -- I rarely show up in pictures, because I'm on the other side of the lens. (grin) Aren't we a cute couple? (Click on photo for larger.)

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (big-mac-meal)
We Love Food

And one of our favorite restaurants is Butch's Drydock in Holland MI. Especially as they do special wine pairings dinners from time to time. Tonight was the latest. 7pm.

Now, several years ago they did a special dinner during Tulip Time, and realizing that streets would be barricaded and parking lost due to one of the Tulip Time parades going on at the same time, they arranged to have valet parking and put the cars in the neighboring closed lot. It was brilliant and such a pleasant evening. The servers who did the valet work had a ball, too.

Since this week is (a) Tulip Time and (b) Mrs. Dr. Phil is in Nicaragua, I thought it'd be nice to have a special dinner at one of my favorite restaurants. But given my leg, I knew I couldn't hike far -- especially after dinner (grin) -- and did my research. No parade was listed for tonight. I figured it'd be crowded, though, and arrived "early".

Instead I drove straight into...

The Hell Hole That Is Holland At Tulip Time

Stupid. Stupid. Stupid. When I emailed my reservation to Butch, I raised the issue of parking and he made a passing reference to klompen dancers and I didn't bite, thinking generically and not A Bloody Big Event With Thousands of Tourons Clogging Every Pore in the Concrete.

8th Street barricaded two blocks from Butch's, which also means all that street parking is lost. Now I know a few tricks around Holland, so I dove down to 10th and cut up through a bank drive-thru to 9th -- the lot behind Butch's is full. I looped around several times, missed a couple of spaces because others were hunting, too.

Eventually, well after the 7pm start time and forty-five minutes of hunting, I gave up. Headed to a drive-thru away from the madness -- McDonalds on 8th was jammed so I hit B.K. on 16th -- in anticipation of maybe catching a movie, but I was in between start times for anything I wanted to see.

So while Butch's Special Dinner guests were dining on...
Appetizer:
citrus mango scallop ceviche
LangeTwins Generations Viognier 2010

Soup:
duck with wild mushrooms and parisian vegetables
LangeTwins Generations Pinot Noir 2010

Salad:
pancetta, fried haricot verts, sweet peppers, pecorino cheese and honey balsamic dressing
LangeTwins Reserve Chardonnay 2010

Entrée:
sautéed twin tournedos of beef with crimini mushroom demi-glace accompanied with gorgonzola rosemary au gratin potatoes and grilled aparagus
LangeTwins Midnight Reserve 2008

Dessert:
chocolate lava cake with raspberry sauce
LangeTwins Estate Zinfandel 2009
... after two hours of driving and fifty-five miles of gasoline, I got a cheeseburger.

Yeah, it's a first world non-problem, but I'm still pretty pissed about it. Two dinners, same problems -- you already know how to solve the problem and you don't do it the second time? Yeah, I got within fifty feet or so of a table, but I couldn't exactly leave a Bravada smack in the middle of a parking lot blocking the turnaround. Or at least I'm not the asshole who would. So after looking forward to a really fine meal and learning some more things about wine -- I don't even drink, just taste or cook with alcohol -- yeah, it's a huge letdown.

Sorry, Butch: Total institutional memory failure.

Dr. Phil

Holland Again

Friday, 12 August 2011 13:29
dr_phil_physics: (potus)
For The Second Time...

... in just over a year, President Obama came to the heart of conservative Michigan and visited a new technology battery plant in Holland, Michigan on Thursday. Holland has two advanced battery plants, and Michigan has several others, so it's a promising direction as hybrid and all-electric vehicles become part of the practical mix on our roads.

Rather than motorcade across West Michigan, the President traveled by helicopter from Air Force One at the Gerald R. Ford Kent County International Airport in Grand Rapids to the small Tulip City Airport in Holland -- and right next door to Johnson Controls.

Pundits will no doubt talk about the closed invite list -- as if that doesn't happen at Presidential events. Or that Republican lawmakers weren't there -- some weren't invited, others declined. Or that he brought up the divisiveness in Washington -- as if that hasn't been the two-ton bloated hippo crowding the room for the last month. Even when interviewed on the local NPR station, the Holland mayor couldn't bring himself to mention the evil word "stimulus", even though that's why his city has been spotlighted twice in thirteen months by the White House. Sigh.


President Barack Obama shakes hands with plant manager Shelly Maciejewski after speaking at the Johnson Controls-Saft Meadowbrook facility in Holland Thursday. In center of photo is Joe Dalum, president of Odyne Systems in Waukesha, WI.(Cory Morse | The Grand Rapids Press)

Because it's all about the jobs, isn't it?

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (us-flag-48)
E-Mail Adverts Can Work

Ten days ago, one of favorite restaurants -- Butch's Drydock in Holland MI -- sent out one of their email fliers. It explained that they were changing their summer menu, removing the salmon tartare appetizer and the pork entree, replacing them with a pair of lamb lollipops and a grilled half rack of lamb with blueberry coulis and risotto, respectively. Why point this out? (a) Dangling lamb dishes in front of Mrs. Dr. Phil is a sure way to require a trip to Holland and (b) it was Mrs. Dr. Phil's birthday this past week, so a trip to Butch's was already in order. (grin)

Perhaps it was the pleasant summer weekend weather, warm but not brutal. Or the fact that the West Michigan economy is in better shape this summer than in 2010. Maybe it's just one last enjoyable swansong before the conservative caucus in Congress derails the U.S. and world economies by either bringing on the default in order to "punish" the President of the United States or shredding every last bit of dignity, respect and Christian charity from the budget to reward the rich, wealthy and corporate with tax breaks they neither deserve nor shown they can use previous windfalls to create any jobs. (ahem)

But the place was packed. Couldn't even get a reservation until 7:15pm. And though we asked for the dining room when we made the reservation, we ended up at table 12. Which actually turned out to be kindof fun. No, not the heavy wooden chairs and white tablecloths. But tucked in the boundary between the lunch and dinner sides of the restaurant, we could hear all the happy diners and imbibers in the "noisy" room and out on the deck, yet sequestered just enough not to be in the middle of the hubbub and still able to carry on a normal conversation. (grin)

And yes, the food was fabulous and the service excellent as always. Butch recognized us and briefly said hello and I complimented him on having a full house. He said it was hectic and frantic for the staff and kitchen, but that all his guests seemed to be having a great time, so he was pretty happy. I later told our server to let him know that his email advertising "worked", since we'd come in specially for the lamb.

Actually, we had: Pan-fried falafel rounds with tahini sauce and fresh tzatziki sauce. Mrs. Dr. Phil had the half rack of lamb, rare. I had the Gorgonzola Caesar salad -- Fresh romaine lettuce with shaved asiago, roasted yellow tomatoes, and toasted pine nuts; served with housemade gorgonzola caesar dressing -- and the Portabella and spinach filled manicotti with a grilled zucchini marinara sauce and focaccia crostini. Dessert was an Irish chocolate biscuit/cake, incredibly dense and took some effort to break apart with a fork, but well worth it, and paired that with a blueberry/raspberry parfait. Mmmmm...

And Then...

We'd originally thought to go see Captain America and then dinner, but the showtimes were inconvenient. It was just after 9pm when we got back to the Bravada, and I remembered that there was a 9-something show. So we bopped down to the Holland 7 theatre and sure enough, there was a 9:40pm 2D showing -- just what we wanted.

Captain America: The First Avenger 2D [PG-13]
Holland 7 Theatre #2, 9:40pm, 2×$8.75

The opening of Captain America is not in World War II, where the majority of the movie takes place, but in modern times and with a scene out of the beginning of The Thing from Another World. Sigh. Sorry, I'm a sucker for wrapper stories. No wonder I put flashbacks in my writing.

This is a big movie, with big sets worthy of James Bond extravaganzas, but much more realistic and workmanlike. These are places where Things happen. Big Things. But it would all be for naught if we didn't have a cast to hold it up. And do we have a cast. Tommy Lee Jones chews up the scenery as he is wont to do. Hugo Weaving -- Guten morgan, Herr Anderson -- is "their" evil German genius, the Red Skull, except he is really working for himself. And that's not good. Cue the Wagnerian music. Stanley Tucci is wonderfully understated as "our" German genius scientist, who will transform the new guy into Captain America. Have a drink. Howard Stark, Tony Stark's dad, is our home grown genius -- I love all the 1940s electronics prominently featuring their Stark Enterprises logo. The new guy makes a good Captain America. Competent. But Hayley Atwell is stunning in WW II era hair, makeup and that trim British women's officer uniform. And competent as well.

But we don't make it easy for Captain America to become, well, Captain America. All he wants to do is get into the Army and serve his country. But all he has is spunk. And heart. And a few clever smarts. After he becomes Captain America, his secret is almost immediately revealed. Rather than use him as a super solider, Captain America becomes a war bonds salesman. Until he takes on the Nazi, er the Hydra, superweapons himself and frees a bunch of Allied soldiers, including his best friend. Then he's on an anti-Hydra campaign, with some of his new friends, who have more than a passing resemblance to the ensemble cast from Hogan's Heroes.

BTW, the local reviewer mentioned that the new guy's face was placed on the weakling's body, and that in the 3D version, his face seems to hover in front of the head -- not a good 3D implementation. Which is why we specifically went for the 2D version.

I have some issues with the superweapons and some of their stylings. It never made sense to me in Star Trek that a phaser blast could vaporize the perfect outline of a person without any collateral damage -- and such weapons still don't make sense. And Hydra's storm troopers are as bad as the Imperial storm troopers in Star Wars, there may be a lot of the faceless warriors, but they go down easy. Still, this is escapist summer fare, and it didn't bother me all that much, once you buy into the battery of the gods and the "unobtainium" that C.A.'s shield is made of.

Unless you aren't up on either current Marvel movie projects or comic book lore, then it's no secret that this a setup to next summer's The Avengers. So it's no surprise that Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury shows up at the end. But it's fun.

At the end of the credits, I assumed we'd get a Dr. Phil Special, as there'd been important teaser clues at the end of the most recent Hulk and Iron Man movies. (grin) And not only was I right, there's a full blown trailer for May of 2012... (big grin)

Now... my question is... after seeing this movie... who is Tony Stark's mother? Hmmm? (questioning-grin) Yeah, yeah, I know that Wikipedia says his mom is Maria Stark, but if I were writing things, I'd update that part. (double-evil-grin)

Highly Recommended

Other Trailers: I passed on the whole Smurf phenomenon growing up. Frankly, most of what I know about the Smurfs comes from the marvelous skewering they go on several episodes of Robot Chicken. I may not pay money to see this movie, but dammit it looks entertaining. As does the next installment of Mission: Impossible. Though Tom Cruise's star may have fallen, he had to be in this one -- the fourth? But... I am surprised that this particular trailer hasn't been pulled in view of the Norway bomber/massacre. And I have a friend who has already objected to any version of John Carter of Mars where Dejah Thoris wears anything substantial, but that's Disney for you. On the other hand, JCM has Willem Dafoe in it. I think the release date is in March 2012.

Next weekend? Cowboys & Aliens. Yee-haw!

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (santa-fe-pa-1)
Plan C

Mrs. Dr. Phil took a day trip to Chicago to visit with a grade school classmate before they go back to Germany. Chicago is just on the other side of Lake Michigan, but getting there is another problem. There are two ferries which cross the lake, but one goes to Milwaukee and the other much further north in Wisconsin. (I'd love it if there was a direct ferry to Chicago.) I don't remember what Plan A was, but Plan B was to drive Mrs. Dr. Phil to Michigan City IN and take the South Shore electric train to/from Chicago -- particularly handy because that line also serves the Illinois Central/Metra line to Hyde Park. Then I pointed out that she could take the Amtrak train from Holland in the morning and the South Shore coming back, and we wouldn't have to get up nearly so early, so that became Plan C.


Spectacular weather for the 8:20am EDT arrival of the Pere Marquette, making its first stop in Holland after starting in Grand Rapids. Heavily funded by the State of Michigan, the Pere Marquette not only gets Superliner coaches, it gets a lot of passengers. Lots of people crowding the platform and the parking lot looked full. So I dropped Mrs. Dr. Phil off and then circled back to the lot to sit and wait to photograph the train.

A Strange Visitor

But what's this hanging on the end of the train? A private dome car?

A former Burlington Route stainless steel streamliner dome car, Silver Splendor.

Turned out it was being used by some group -- they were loading on a bunch of coolers and looked to be ready to make a party out of it.

The platform at Holland isn't all that long, so after they boarded the Amtrak passengers, they pulled ahead, blocking 8th Street, and then boarded the private dome car. There's a guy who's a regular railfan and sometime stringer for the local newspapers that I've met before at the Holland station -- and he was really surprised that the grapevine hadn't alerted anyone about the CB&Q dome car. (grin)

And Later That Night

There are two Michigan City IN South Shore stations -- and I've never been to either one. Or ridden the South Shore for that matter, despite all the years I was in Chicagoland. However, the Caroll Avenue station not only had many more parking spaces, it was closer to the freeway, so we decided to rendezvous there. Mrs. Dr. Phil's train was scheduled to arrive at 11:05pm CDT. Google Maps pegged the drive from Allendale at 119 miles and 2 hours 16 minutes. So I left around 9:30pm EDT and with stops for gas and slowdowns for all manners of construction, I arrived in Michigan City just after some rain about 20-25 minutes to spare.

The South Shore has always struck me as a very practical little railroad. The parking lots for 200+ cars are stuffed around a series of crossing railroad tracks and late at night on a Saturday were surprisingly full.


I turned the flash off to get this arriving blurred shot -- the guy in the reflective safety vest is from the car shops down the track. The four-car train was split in two and he took the back half to park overnight, while the remaining two cars went on to South Bend. He said they run over 80% on time, with a ±4 minute window, and they were right on the outside edge.

Anyway, Mrs. Dr. Phil had a lovely time. Amtrak was delayed twice on the way to Chicago -- once to wait for a long coal train to pass on the hill south of St. Joseph MI and once for the inevitable delays at the complex interlocking at Porter IN -- getting in about an hour late. So by the time she got home, she joked she was already running on about Plan G. (grin)

Just past midnight Eastern and it was still near 80°F and muggy. Got home around 2:30am. Nice to see some trains. (double-track-grin)

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (potus)
It Was Just A Little Over A Month Ago...

... that the President of the United States visited Kalamazoo.

A Holland MI First

Now it has been announced that the President will be in Holland MI on Thursday 15 July 2010. LG is putting together a new lithium ion battery plant that will bring something like 400 new jobs to the area. An interesting aside is that this will be the first time a Democratic President will be in Holland.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (freezing-rose)
The Fall Which Is October

They were touting the weather the other day, when it got up to the upper 60s near 70°F, as this year's Indian Summer. Some Indian Summer -- I expect 80s, 90s (was personally betting on near 100°F just because the actual summer never got that warm -- grin).

And it's been raining. Days of rain. Cold rainy days.

Went out driving to do errands in Holland and took 48th Avenue down to Chicago Drive. Wanted to see if the "flats", black earth onion fields by Chicago Drive, were back open. The spring flooding had closed roads for a long time due to washouts. Well, there was a sign which said Water Over Road and the onion fields were busy pumping out gushes of yellow water into the drainage ditches, but no water on the road.

Heading southwest on Chicago Drive was another matter. Years ago they expanded Chicago Drive, then part of M-21, now being relabeled M-121, going from two lanes to divided four lanes. But the westbound lanes were left as the original road, which roughly followed the contours of the land -- and much lower than the built-up flat roads used for the eastbound side.

Somewhere around 72nd Avenue, a cop was parked on the left shoulder, lights flashing, and there were more Water Over Road signs. This time there was water pouring across the highway. Cars were going through barely slowing down and kicking up huge spray. I slowed down, put on the flashers and 4WD, and still probably took it too fast. Lots of spray, but no damage. In town there were several places of partial flooding and standing water -- and fields flooding. Where we live is higher ground, but Holland is definitely in a flooding belt.

I wonder if the Dutch immigrants who settled in Holland MI chose it because it was full of flooded lowlands like their homeland.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (what-if-winslet)
A Lovely Meal

Sunday was the last such day of the week that Butch's in downtown Holland MI was open for the summer -- since Ottawa County changed its Sunday liquor laws. It's a wonderful place to eat, and we can't afford to go there enough. (grin) Fried calamari in corn meal, creamy gorgonzola salad, Mrs. Dr. Phil had the halibut with fettucini and feta and Greek olives, I had a lovely butter soft medium rare fillet with a blackberry sauce and garlic gorgonzola mashed potatoes -- and we shared a some sort of lovely chocolate chocolate slice of cake. With a candle. (big-grin) And free. (bigger-grin)

But before that...

The Time Traveler's Wife [PG-13]
Holland 7 Theatre #6, 4:10pm, 2×$5.75.

There was only one other couple in the smallish theatre. We sat in the last row, where there was a loveseat for two roughly nearly the centerline. Comfortable enough for 107 minutes.

We both read the book early in 2005. Best-seller, the question was whether it was SF/F or not -- i.e., the question being raised by non-SF/F fans who didn't want to be caught dead liking something which might be spec fic. This is not your usual time travel tale. Henry doesn't need an H.G. Wells style machine -- he just travels between times. Can't control it, but seems to gravitate to the same places and people over and over.

One of the things we really liked about the book was the necessity of each scene listing how old Henry and Claire are. Things are non-linear and very complicated. Yeah, Dr. Phil aka Mr. Multiple-POV-and-Ping-Pong-Timelines likes that sort of thing. I'd have put the crib notes in the corner of the screen.

Not wild about casting the two main leads. I swear they wanted Eric Bana because he can grow a 5 o'clock shadow like mad. Apparently the film was delayed some time because they needed to do some second unit shoots, but Eric had to outgrow his shaved head from the Star Trek reboot. You'd think they could've done makeup. And I'm not convinced with Rachel McAdams. Claire in the book was a serious redhead, and Claire as a kid had red hair. Ron Livingston (ABC's Defying Gravity) sure is having a good year -- though his character Gomez is having a tough enough time dealing with the reality of the film.

Also not wild about the dematerializing special effect. It felt very fake and unrealistic and slow to me. On the other hand, they did a nice job with the daughter Alba, using two sisters to portray ages 4-5 and 9-10. Compression of the story line and characters, necessary with taking a novel to a movie, eliminated a lot of the edge. In particular Claire's family should've been nastier and Henry's troubles much, much worse. A number of difficult situations were omitted. Also the library special collections in the movie is just anonymous Chicago and not the Newberry, which means something to those who know libraries. (grin) And they've streamlined Alba's story. Perhaps it was time, though the movie was only 107 minutes and they could've made it longer, but I suspect they got too obsessed with making it a PG-13 rating. There's already the slightly creepy aspect of an older Henry and a child Claire meeting in secret all the time. Author Audrey Niffenegger managed to thread that needle pretty well in the book, and The Time Traveler's Wife Lite version of the movie does similarly.

And I'm pissed that they didn't include the final meeting from the book. I, for one, would've made it an after-the-credits Dr. Phil Special. But that's me.

Still, you might think from the above that we hated it, but we didn't. We were suspicious of the movie, based on the trailer, wondering if they could do the story justice. And they did good enough. I mean, read the book and you'll probably enjoy the movie. Read the book second and you'll probably see what I meant by all the edginess being smoothed over.

Recommended

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (freezing-rose)
Friday's Adventures

Storms were forecast for Friday morning, but as one TV station said the rains would come later than expected, another said earlier. Earlier was right. About 3am there was a BRILLIANT flash of lightning just as I looked out the window. Lights flickered a couple of times but we didn't lose power. Such wasn't the case in Kalamazoo, where the traffic lights were dark at Drake and West Main -- major intersection, no cops. Yet everyone behaved themselves. Such was not the story in the next two lights, where most of the drivers seemed to forget that a dead traffic light is to be legally treated as a four-way stop. Geesh.

Odd that apartment complexes without power look dead in daylight. Can't explain it. Campus had power.

Those traffic lights were still out after 5pm, though people followed the rules at the smaller dead lights and they had two cops directing rush hour traffic at Drake and West Main. Evening rains mostly held off until I pulled into the garage at home.

Into The Night

Friday night we watched WOOD-TV8 go into "Storm Team 8" mode as a series of heavy volume thunderstorms trained across a swath of West Michigan just south of us, from Holland and east. 5-8 inches of rain, 60-70mph gusts, and the storms hitting the same places over and over again. It was described as a once-in-a-century storm, but of course June 2008 hit Holland MI hard, too, and in a very similar way. Yeah, it was the second year in a row that kayaks paddled in downtown Holland.

Leading Into Saturday

Of course we had to make a run from West Michigan to Chicago and back again on Saturday. Blue skies don't fool me. Given the flooding and reported road closures last night, I figured there was no point in taking US-31 through Holland to I-196. Holland is just too low and too prone to flooding -- who knew the settlers took their namesake so seriously? Likewise I didn't want to take 68th Avenue to 72nd to Chicago Drive to Byron Road, because it meant driving through the low-lying black dirt onion fields. Figured the roads would be closed.

So we drove all the way east into Standale and took Wilson down to I-196. From the freeway we saw numerous farmer's fields flooded with brown water. US-31 northbound into Holland was closed off by the police, vindicating my decisions. And Holy Crap! Batman, taking I-196 over the Kalamazoo River was one giant high brown lake. Never seen the water that high there before.

Coming home? No problems on US-31 back through Holland and home at 2am.

A Bashed Bash

Over at the Ionia Fairgrounds, the 17th annual B93 Bash had to break up on Saturday as the Grand River came flooding up. They tried pouring gravel on the access road, but they lost the South Parking lot and hundreds of cars had to be abandoned to the flooding. They won't get in there until Wednesday to see the damage level. Red Cross housed a bunch of people in a local school. Not a good weekend to be a country music fan.

Wonder About The Morning

Sunday night the weather people were explaining that three tornadoes hit West Michigan during the storm, one in Allegan County and two in Kalamazoo County. We'll see how messy the driving is tomorrow -- and whether they've got those lights running again. (grin)

But it's all only once in a century.

Dr. Phil

Yum Diner Food

Wednesday, 10 June 2009 22:24
dr_phil_physics: (Default)
Ah, Summer Dining Out

As we move from Spring into June, it's a lot easier to get out and about. Once the Hope Summer Rep Theatre season begins, we'll pop out to eat before every show. Last Wednesday, with Mrs. Dr. Phil on sabbatical and me off for the day, we went to the Sam's Joint in Coopersville. It's a local chain of ribs places, but they're a lot of fun and often packed to the gills. This week we were going to have leftover turkey burgers, but around 5pm I got the latest e-mail from Butch's, one of our favorite restaurants in Holland.

First, Rewind To LAST Week:
Diner Food!
Wednesday, June 3, 5pm-900pm


We're coming clean, during Tulip Time we made about four runs out to the food stands every day. We know how that sounds, the headline kind of reads like this: "Haut Dining Restaurant Staffers Caught Consuming Dutch Fat Balls" in addition to the incredulous stares of our clients, we lost two servers and a host to heart disease, and blew our paychecks on cotton candy and corn dogs. Still, we've been dreaming about the carts returning, what can we say, we're suckers for delicious! Last week Chef Adam hatched a plan, why not just make diner foods here at Butch's? That way we can control the trans-fat and it won't look so bad to our clients if we're eating onion rings. So this week we're passing on the pasta and presenting our first Diner Night! The offerings this evening will be:

* Crabby Patties: Crab Cake Burger with a Red Pepper Dressing
* Lobster Lassies: Lobster Corndogs with Chili Lime Mustard

Each will be served with your choice of Beer Battered Onion Rings with Chipotle Ketchup or Portobello Mushroom Fries with Stone Ground Mustard Aioli and are 15 dollars.
Also for dessert we're offering:

* a Lemon Meringue Ice Cream Pie
* Strawberry, Vanilla and Chocolate Milkshakes.

So we're cooking corndogs at Butch's, bet you thought you'd seen it all. At least our corndogs are wearing bowties and cummerbunds. We look forward to seeing you tonight!

Amusing, but we had a "date" with Sam's Joint and Mrs. Dr. Phil had a taste for ribs.

And Now Today:
Diner Night
Wednesday, June 10, 5-9pm


Another dose of sublime-yet-artery-clogging, sweet-and-savory-at-the-same-time diner dinners! Tonight's midwestern haut comfort cuisine selections will be:

* Meatloaf Sandwich ---$12
Housemade Meatloaf served Open-Face on Country French, served with Garlic Mashed Potatoes and House Gravy

* Lobster Mac ---$12
Lobster Claw Meat in a Smoked Gouda and Cheddar Alfredo with Elbow Macaroni

* Patty Melt ---$9
Hamburger Grilled to Your Liking served on Grilled Pumpernickel and topped with Swiss Cheese and Caramelized Onions

* Fries ---$6
Spicy Sweet Potato Fries served with Caramel Sauce

* Milk Shakes ---$5
Strawberry, Vanilla or Chocolate

We have it on good authority that the fries are revelatory and the Meatloaf Sandwich is a safely guarded Chef Adam secret. Still, you may not be ready to commit to a food-coma this evening, in which case may we suggest the Oberon Salad! The vinaigrette is amazing and well complemented with orange slices! With the deck open and summer nearing full swing, Butch's is the right choice for sloughing off that mid-week slouch.

Cheers,
Butch's
44 East 8th Street | Holland | MI | 49423
www.butchs.net

They had me at lobster mac & cheese. I love macaroni and cheese -- all kinds. I've actually had a lobster mac & cheese, I believe it was at Shula's in the Troy Marriott at the 2007 ConFusion. But this is Butch's... So not to surprising, having forwarded this e-mail to Mrs. Dr. Phil, that when she came back upstairs from doing some sabbatical work, she was all for driving to Holland. Good choice!

After an asparagus and goat cheese salad, plus their Gorgonzola Caesar salad, Mrs. Dr. Phil ordered the mac, plus an order of the fries and I ordered the meatloaf. I think Mrs. Dr. Phil was looking forward to the patty melt, arguing that her meatloaf is superb (which it is), but there are already lots of places we go that I can order a great hamburger or patty melt. But how often do you get fine dining meatloaf?

One thing we both appreciated, was that having seen a lot of cooking and cooking competition shows, that the meatloaf and mashed potatoes looked like meatloaf and mashed potatoes, even if the ingredients and flavors weren't the same-old, same-old. And the lobster mac & cheese? Definitely looked like macaroni and cheese. It even, dare I say it, tasted great with ketchup. (grin) And a nice dry red wine. (double-grin)

OMG!

Currently watching the premiere of Top Chef Masters on Bravo. And they having four serious real chefs competing for one slot in the championship round -- and they're having to cook in real dorm rooms at Pomona College, with only a microwave, a toaster over and a hot plate. And Chef Hubert is making seafood macaroni and cheese.

This is excellent. Perfect end to a fine restaurant diner evening.

Dr. Phil

Analog Sighting

Friday, 6 March 2009 02:01
dr_phil_physics: (May09-Analog)
Look At What I Found

Thursday afternoon, about 3:30pm EST, Barnes & Noble in Holland MI. I could see they had copies of Analog -- the title stuck out of the second tier shelf -- but I didn't know what the May 2009 cover looked like. Apparently it looks a lot like these:


And look -- one of the copies happens to have opened to reveal "The Brother On The Shelf" by Philip Edward Kaldon.

As You Can See... It Starts On Page 77

But with the May 2009 Analog on bookstore shelves, you can buy your own. Just don't try the Barnes & Noble in Holland MI -- they're out right now.

My First Real Fan Letter

Lots of people have wished me well with this or that publication. And I've gotten a number of congratulations with the publication of the May 2009 Analog and my story. But today when I checked the email over at my website http://dr-phil-physics.com I discovered my first real fan mail:
Dear Dr. Kaldon,

I enjoyed your story in the latest Analog. Enough so that I bought Tangle Girls, where I enjoyed Under Suspicion rather more. I also quite liked Le Grand Bazar and will happily order ASIM 38/39 as they are available.

Wow. Someone read my story in Analog, found my website, ordered another anthology, Tangle Girls with my story "Under Suspicion". I've generated a sale!

And no, I'm not being sarcastic here. This is both amusing and exciting to me. Because it happens to writers -- and I'm getting established as a SF writer, plain and simple. But it gets better, because my fan also had a question about my 29th century universe which I happily answered.

Yeah, people are beginning to read Dr. Phil. Okay, now I'm chuffed.

Dr. Phil

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