vovat: (Bowser)

Since we were married on Leap Day, Beth and I celebrated our anniversary on the first of this month, and went to the orchid show at the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx.

The orchid part was all indoors, much of it in a simulated tropical environment. I can say I didn't know that much about orchids, but there are a lot of different kinds, in many different colors.

Also in the conservatory was a cactus that looked like a bunch of snakes, although snakes usually aren't that scary.

The rest of the garden was, not surprisingly, pretty chilly, and not a lot was blooming. We did, however, take a tram ride around the place. I also thought that this rock looked like it would have an item inside or under it.

Maybe if Link were there. The NYBG is bigger than the one in Brooklyn, but not as big as Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania. It contains the last vestige of the forest that once covered much of the area. Afterwards, we went to eat at the Olive Garden. The last few times I've been there, I've gotten rigatoni with five-cheese marinara sauce and sausage.

This past weekend was the Monster-Mania Convention in Cherry Hill, and while we were on the way there, we stopped at a kitschy candy store called Rocket Fizz.

Maybe this woman made her family disappear.
Tavie had taken some pictures there, and Beth found out that there was one in Marlton.

There's a lot of interesting stuff, including the kind of potato chips my teacher gave out in elementary school and a bunch of socks with brand logos, including Diet Coke, Bubble Yum, Swedish Fish, and Froot Loops.

None of those were anything I felt strongly enough about to want to wear on my feet, although I do drink a fair amount of Diet Coke, and I used to eat Swedish Fish in high school and college. They also had a lot of weird themed sodas, including a Monkees banana nut flavor that we bought, as well as tributes to Ritchie Valens, Rowdy Roddy Piper, and...Fidel Castro?

Beth also picked up a Zagnut bar, Jimmie Stix, and some Dutch licorice cats for her mom. I ended up getting a blueberry muffin Kit Kat, a little Pac-Man machine with some kind of candy that I haven't checked out yet, and a deck of Wizard of Oz playing cards with no candy involved at all. I had a pack of cards like those before, except with those it was just one picture on the backs, and here it looks like there are other images from the movies on the card faces.

I did notice a few items that appeared to be pro-Trump, although they had stuff that made fun of him as well. I remember, a few years ago, passing a souvenir shop in Manhattan that had both MAGA and Black Lives Matter hats. I guess that's what you could call mercenary merchandising.

As for the convention itself, I've noticed a gradual decline in the number and length of events that are free with admission, like question-and-answer panels and film introductions by people involved with them. There are still a few, though. The first one on Saturday was with Amie Donald, who played the titular robot girl in M3GAN, but didn't do the voice.

She has a New Zealand accent, and I'm not sure how well that would have worked for the character. Then came Adrienne Barbeau, followed by Brooke Smith, the woman who rubbed the lotion on her skin in Silence of the Lambs.
There were two bigger panels in the evening, the first featuring final girls from the Friday the 13th series, with Adrienne King, Amy Steel, Kimberly Beck, and Melanie Kinnaman.

And the one for the Terrifier films had several people on the production side as well as the actors.

Before it started, Leah Voysey sang the relentlessly catchy Clown Cafe song, with Elliott Fullam accompanying her on guitar.

David Howard Thornton, who played Art the Clown, did a pantomime of killing someone.

I also bought some Mario-related pictures from Dallas Pritchard of Studio 327.


On Sunday night, we got home in time for Beth to watch the Oscars, while I sort of half-watched them. As usual, I hadn't seen most of the movies that had been nominated for anything. We did see Elvis and Tar, and Turning Red was in the animated category. I do think I should probably see Everything Everywhere All at Once, and I'm sure I'll see Black Panther: Wakanda Forever at some point, although I'm behind on the Marvel movies. From the online comments I've seen about the ceremony, yeah, a fat suit probably shouldn't be winning any makeup awards; a commercial for The Little Mermaid during the broadcast is weird, but the whole thing is kind of a commercial anyway, so whatever; and Warner Bros. taking credit for movies they bought the rights to but didn't make seems rather similar to Elon Musk paying to call himself the founder of Tesla. I have no issue with Florence Pugh's outfit, though.

I guess I think she's just generally cute, though. It's weird how Janelle Monae's dress looked red on stage, but pretty bright orange elsewhere.

It stands out a lot more when the orangeness is obvious. And speaking of unusual colors, I have to give props to The Rock.


I haven't gone to the movies that much recently, but Beth was talking about wanting to see Scream 6, and there's the Mario movie coming up. From what I've seen in the trailers, it almost looks like they're throwing in too many references, although we don't know that everything there will be included, or will be particularly important even if it is. I guess it's just kind of weird to me because, from what I understand, it's loosely an adaptation of the original Super Mario Bros., yet they're including stuff that wasn't introduced into the series until decades after that. Then again, I'm pretty sure that, even if the movie is really successful, they're not going to make one based on each and every Mario game. I mostly like the designs, although Peach's head and eyes look kind of disproportionate to the rest of her.

I guess it's not the first time she's been depicted with a strangely large head for her body, though.

I have an ultrasound coming up on Thursday, and the cats have to go to the vet on Friday. And I'm not entirely sure how we're going to work out our summer plans, since Beth and I both have things we want to do in California in July, but in different parts of the month. For now, here's a picture of Reagan as a bat.
vovat: (Polychrome)

Beth, her Uncle John, and I went to the Philadelphia Flower Show on Friday. It was our first time going, and it was different from usual this year as it was mostly outside in FDR Park instead of at the convention center. And Beth and I no longer live in the Philadelphia area, although our families still do. I didn't really expect so many shops, but I guess there's no reason there shouldn't have been. They were selling some pretty cool stuff. I'm less keen on the corporate sponsorship, but that might have been necessary to fund the event. Stuff was spread out throughout the park, and one building had recently developed plants and dioramas of a sort that incorporated a lot of plants.

Another area, the Enchanted Forest, had fantastic creatures and scenes made largely out of plant material.

I particularly liked this troll-like entity. I didn't get a picture of the sign, so I don't remember what the official name was.

And there was a tent full of butterflies, where before going in they gave us Q-Tips with sugar water. There were so many people going through that I suspect most of them were already full, so we didn't attract any hungry butterflies. No, we attracted the horny butterflies. There were these two mating ones that landed on Beth and climbed up her blouse and over her head.

Uncle John nudged them with his Q-Tip, and they fluttered over to me instead.

After the show, we ate at Ruby Tuesday. I'm not actually sure about the mask rules for restaurants now; I still try to wear one until I actually get food, but it doesn't seem like most other diners are bothering with that. This was in New Jersey, and I know the rules are different everywhere. I've never liked wearing a mask; it's uncomfortable and an extra thing to worry about. But at the same time I don't trust my own judgment when it comes to medical issues. It's annoying that so much of that is left up to politicians pandering to people who think they know better than pathologists. I've seen articles about public gatherings in New York City basically going back to how they were before the pandemic, yet at the same time you still have to wear a mask on the subway. A little consistency might be nice. I've grown to dislike the term "reopening," both because a lot of stuff never actually closed, and because I've come to think of that as Trumpian rhetoric, the Republican suggestion that the best way to keep small businesses alive was to keep them open with the virus going around rather than to just give them financial assistance while it was too dangerous to operate normally. I kind of liked having an excuse to stay home. I just wish this excuse didn't also lead to a bunch of deaths.

I'm now working in the office every other weekday, and trying to practice guitar and play Animal Crossing every day, at least when I can. I'm still taking guitar lessons once a week, although the schedule is complicated somewhat by work. We've gotten up to power chords in the book I'm working from. I've been trying to branch out a bit into other music, but when only the chords are shown, I'm never really sure what rhythm to play. With my teacher's help and some easy guitar notation on the They Might Be Giants Wiki, I have the beginning of "Ana Ng" written out. I've worked a little on the Monkees' "Listen to the Band," but while most of it is pretty simple chords, there are a few barre chords, and I can't quite manage to get the proper sound out of those. 

June 2025

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