Friday, December 19, 2008
Fragile Flower
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Crap-Lists
For example, the dismal season of the Chiefs illustrated by their pathetic last-minute loss on Sunday has already been surpassed by several other things. Early this morning, Sally barfed. I said, "Crap!"...therefore, Dog Puke went to the top of my list, but was then surpassed by Fitted Sheets. Is there a class on how to fold fitted sheets? And to those who can successfully fold a fitted sheet - are you born with that knowledge? Is there an underground network of professional fitted sheet folders? Please, will someone help me out here?
The fitted sheet folding (or should I say, wadding and stuffing into the general sheet-storing area) was then surpassed by Chickens Who Lay Their Eggs In The Middle Of The Coop. There are EIGHT nice comfy nest boxes right at the access door, but now twice this week one hen has seen fit to lay her egg in the middle of the floor, just out of my reach, so I have to get a garden hoe from the garage and roll it to me. It's that or else risk mashing my face into chicken poo while I reach for it.
But then, Chickens Who Lay Their Eggs In The Middle Of The Coop was replaced by Christmas Stress, which has been making it's rounds on the Crap-list. I have a feeling this may stay at or near the top for a while, and yet every year it seems unavoidable that I must experience this phenomenon for a good week before Christmas. "Do I have enough gifts? Wow we're spending too much money...how are we going to get everywhere we need to be?" And more of that mental voice constantly beating at the inside of my skull. So, to keep that Christmas Stress at bay, here's a classic Christmas song to remind us all of one of the important things Christmas is about - family! :)
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Sunday, December 07, 2008
Christmas Quiz
Depends on how much time I have, and the degree of difficulty in wrapping the present.
2. Real tree or Artificial?
Artificial…less mess, less trouble, less fire hazard.
3. When do you put up the tree?
Well into December...mine just went up. None of this before Thanksgiving nonsense at The Homestead.
4. When do you take the tree down?
ASAP...a pet peeve of mine is seeing trees up in people's houses in February.
5. Do you like eggnog?
Yep, in small dabs. I really like eggnog shakes from Sonic.
6. Favorite gift received as a child?
I'm not sure...but I remember getting LOTS of awesome gifts. Bike, fishing poles, stuffed animals, games...we had (and still have) great Christmases.
7. Hardest person to buy for?
Mom and Dad.
8. Easiest person to buy for?
Hubby.
9. Do you have a nativity scene?
Maybe if I had a place to put it, and if I found the right one. Like the one Mom has where all the participants are bears.
10. Mail or email Christmas cards?
Mail.
11. Worst Christmas gift you ever received?
Probably the infamous slip I recieved when I was little, which I didn't pay any attention to because there were toys to play with. My apparent lack of appreciation caused the givers to switch to just giving me money from then on.
12. When do you start shopping for Christmas?
Throughout the year, if I find an item that screams someone's name. If not, after Thanskgiving.
13. Have you ever recycled a Christmas present?
Pretty sure not...if it doesn't work for me, I try to exchange it.
14. Favorite thing to eat at Christmas?
Pumpkin pie and Mom's peanut clusters.
15. Lights on the tree?
YES, lots of colored lights. White lights may be "elegant", but so very boring.
16. Favorite Christmas song?
"O Holy Night", and "Merry Christmas From the Family" by Montgomery Gentry. It's a classic.
17. Go out for Christmas or stay at home?
Depends greatly on family activites and who can be where at what time. It used to be a lot simplier.
18. Can you name all of Santa's reindeer's?
Only if I sing the song.
19. Angel on the tree top or a star?
Angel. We have quite a tradition in my parent's house that goes back years - the siblings fighting about who got to put the angel on the tree, followed by days of one of us always dragging a stool to the tree, and taking the angel off and putting it back on just to lay claim on putting the angel on the tree last. Mom finally fixed the issue by writing the name of the sibling who's turn it was to put the angel with the year inside the angel. This made any further taking off and replacing of the angel moot after the original placing, because it was in writing.
I hope if I ever become a mother, I have half as much genius.
20. Open the presents Christmas Eve or morning?
Christmas morning! What's up with the Eve thing? That's when Santa comes.
21. Most annoying thing about this time of the year?
Commercialism that sucks the spirit out of Christmas.
22. Favorite ornament theme or color?
Fishing, of course - our tree is covered with bobbers, old lures, flies, and fishing-related ornaments.
23. Favorite for Christmas dinner?
Skip the other stuff and just go for the pie.
24 What do you want for Christmas this year?
What I REALLY want is to just to be successful in choosing gifts for everyone on my list, and that everyone enjoys them.
Thursday, December 04, 2008
Crikey!
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Christmas Here We Come
Friday, November 21, 2008
Happy Thanksgiving
There are many, many things to be Thankful for this Thanksgiving. I'm thankful for so many things that it's impossible to list them, but I'll try to list a few: God, hubby, family (both my born-with and married-into ones), home, pets, living in a free country (at least for the moment), and just being blessed with what we need. In a time where it seems everyone is grumbling about the economy, it's a good time to remember that things aren't THAT bad. We can still buy food and clothing. I see people every day still buying luxury items. Jobs are still being advertised in the paper. While the news media is doing it's best to look at the negatives and make us believe that we're really suffering, this is an excellent time to reflect on how lucky we really are, and to think about times in our country's past when things really WERE that bad. There may be rougher times to come, but for now I still go into Walmart and see shopping carts full of Hot Pockets, steaks, frozen pizzas, pastries, specialty coffees, and ice cream. I see the clothing stores full of shoppers still buying expensive clothes and shoes. People are still cramming into movie theaters and buying large cokes and mega popcorns. But like any time in any economy, now is a good time to think of others who maybe ARE in dire straits and need a helping hand - these are not the people buying Pop Tarts and Fruit Roll-Ups and yet still grumbling about how "bad things are", but those who may have lost a job and could really use a donation to the local food pantry. Just a few extra items could really help a family genuinely in need.
I am also very thankful for folks who have a sense of humor, and who post pointless videos like this for us all to enjoy. Smile, and have a HAPPY THANKSGIVING.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Skill or Luck? I Say Both.
Still, it's been a big boost to my confidence. I've been hunting a few more times since Sunday, but with no results. I've seen deer every time I've been out, but now I don't feel quite so desperate to get meat in the freezer and am a little more patient. Still, we'd like to get at least one more to have a good meat supply.
Aside from harvesting big deer (and substitute teaching, which after this week has me wondering if I REALLY want kids), I've been working on my fiddle. I had a GREAT fiddle-day this week, making lots of progress and having loads of fun in the process.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Ten Points of Happiness
If you're in any way offended by a deceased deer (no matter how impressive), you might want to skip this post.
As most of you probably know, modern gun season in Arkansas opened a couple weeks ago. To bring any newer readers up to speed, I'm still a pretty new deer hunter. I introduced hubby to fly fishing (and created a monster), and he in turn introduced me to hunting (in the process creating his own monster). I've never really had a problem with hunting, but just never participated. While always a lover of the outdoors, I always considered fishing the more "sophisticated" sport, using highly honed skill and the powers of keen observation to entice a wily and obviously intelligent fish into biting an artifical bait, while I admittedly saw hunting as something necessary for conservation, but an activity any old schmuck could do (mostly big guys with bigger egos and even bigger trucks) by donning camo, grabbing a gun, and sitting in a tree waiting for some poor critter to happen by. I ardently believed in hunter's rights, but didn't have much respect for the sport.
My opinons have drastically changed. Not only was I a hypocrite for my views on hunting while being an egotistical fisherman, but I had it all wrong. After trying hunting for myself, I found that hunting can be HARD. It does take a large amount of skill, know-how, and a huge dose of patience. But once you have tasted success, it leaves you feeling incredibly self-sufficient and confident, with a healthier respect and intense love for nature (which many self-proclaimed hard-core environmentalists will never have or understand). Not to mention the DELICIOUS results. Putting my own food on the table gives me a feeling of confidence that's hard to describe...like I can accomplish anything, and I can survive anything.
Well, despite the fact that I had beginner's luck on my first day of my first deer season with the 8-point buck two years ago, it's been rough going since. I was totally skunked last year, and this year things were looking to go the same direction. I had started to get concerned, since we've been out of deer meat for weeks, and frankly - I'm getting a little tired of pork. It seemed the harder I hunted, with or without hubby, the worse my luck was getting.
Until early Sunday morning...
Yes, that is one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, TEN points on that 'thar buck. Hubby stayed in bed for a much-needed rest, so I went out to the farthest tree stand from the house. One of my first solo trips out hunting on my own. I was actually looking to fill my doe tag, but after spending two solid hours with the only results being a very entertaining titmouse that was determined he wanted to perch on my stand (but he did not want me there), I gave up and climbed down. I decided to walk the perimeter of our property on the way back to the house, when I encountered this bruiser. In my short career as a deer hunter, this is the biggest buck I've seen, and when I was all of a sudden face-to-face with this guy I nearly had a coronary. I was informed that what I experienced was indeed a case of intense "Buck Fever." Long story short, I was luckily able to pull my wits together enough to focus on the task. Looking through heavy brush I had to take a neck shot, and the buck dropped instantly like a sack of bricks.
While deer hunting for me will still be much more about getting meat in the freezer than getting a trophy, it does feel pretty awesome to have an actual Big Buck under my belt. Even though my buck wasn't a "Buckzilla", it's big enough that I can now swagger around with the biggest ego-toting-big-truck-driving rednecks in the area. Yay me!
Saturday, November 15, 2008
I did quickly remember that I am in my 30's and was in no danger of tardiness.
In an abrupt change of subject, has anyone else found themselves barraged by Christmas music way before they're ready? I was in Goody's the other day browsing through pants, and I was highly distracted from my task by loud strains of "Have A Holly Jolly Christmas." I swear, every year it's worse. Come on, people...at LEAST wait until after Thanksgiving!
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Busy Weekend
Results of the weekend - one bagged doe to fill one of our doe tags, and Brazilian rider Guilhermie Marchi is the 2008 PBR Champ.
Then, as soon as we got back, it was Fiddle Day! I finally feel I'm making good progress on my fiddle. I now have the sides glued together, and my last task was to add the "double lines", which add not only more support, but add more surface area for glueing on the front and back. On my next Fiddle Day I'll be cutting out the front and back and starting to whittle them to shape. The pic is from the first stages of my fiddle. I started with the side strips - three different length strips for each side, all sanded down to the same thickness and width, then soaked in hot water to make them pliable. (The water is cloudy because of all the red color that seeped out of the cherry wood strips). Once the strips were bendy enough, and the irons hot, the irons (using numerous potholders) are clamped into a vise, and each strip bent on the appropriate hot iron and clamped into a wooden fiddle-shaped pattern.
I feel very confident I'm not only going to finish this fiddle, but finish it in good time. In talking to Violet, I've found out there are a lot more of her fiddle-making students who have given up halfway through than have actually finished making a fiddle, for reasons such as lack of time, lack of interest, or lack of skill. I'm determined to make the time, I know I have the interest, and as far as skill - I'm just being extremely careful, and trying to not get in a hurry. On top of that, I'm pretty confident around a saw and a carving knife. So, my hopes are high, and so are Violet's. She's already given me wood to make a second fiddle with, and best of all, my OWN set of side-bending irons made by a blacksmith at Silver Dollar City. They were actually made for a woman in California who had high aspirations to make a fiddle, but gave up before she started and sent them back to Violet.
As far as fiddle playing, I'm progressing there, too, though not quite as fast. Of course the harder the songs get, the longer it takes to learn them.
I've now added:
Lost Indian
Arkansas Traveler (needs more practice)
Black-eyed Susie
Rose Nell
Down Yonder (in progress)
If I get confident enough, I *might* post a video. But don't hold your breath.
Friday, November 07, 2008
That's No Bull
The PBR finals could not have come at a better time. I've been a fan forever, but this is the first year I've ever been able to regularly watch events and the PBR finals. Ask the hubby - I've been glued to every second that's been televised, and last night was the best night yet. Watch this ride by J.B. Mauney - holy moly...does he have velcro on his britches, or what? I guess I'll have to start rooting for him, even if he does wear a helmet.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
We Did It.
We have now elected a president with no experience, who spent more on a campaign than any other president with untracable funds, with radical friends, endorsed by enemies of the U.S., and who has questionable ethics on top of Marxist views. Becuase this is still a free country, I can express these views. But for how long?
To keep our freedom, we have to fight. Loss of personal freedoms can sneak up nearly un-noticed, all in the name of "our best interests." I, for one, do not need a Nanny State to take care of me. Our country was founded on the principles of self-reliance, personal freedom, and making our own choices. I'm afraid we have traded these in for a Nanny. I greet this day with much worry and a heavy heart.
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Monday, October 27, 2008
Booking It, Part II
What was the last book you bought? Brsinger, by Christopher Paolini
Name a book you have read MORE than once.
Oh my...I have several. Watership Down by Richard Adams, The Stand by Stephen King.
Has a book ever fundamentally changed the way you see life?
If yes, what was it? Yes, The Memory Keeper's Daughter by Kim Edwards, and most of Barbara Kingsolver's books.
How do you choose a book? eg. by cover design and summary, recommendations or reviews. Mostly personal recommendations, though every once in a while a review will catch my eye. And I'm also a sucker for a good cover, though I try not to let that sway me.
Do you prefer Fiction or Non-Fiction?
Definately fiction...it's my escape from real life for a while, though I did recently enjoy reading Last Child in the Woods; Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv and Doc Susie; The Tue Story of a Country Physician in the Colorado Rockies by Virginia Cornell.
What’s more important in a novel - beautiful writing or a gripping plot?
Both are important...cruddy writing can ruin the best plot, and beautiful writing can't make up for a cruddy plot. But, I'd rather have mediocre writing with a good plot than nothing.
Most loved/memorable character (character/book):
Hazel in Watership Down, Harry, Ron, and Hermione in the Harry Potter series, Stu Redman in The Stand, Rosie the elephant in Water for Elephants.
Which book or books can be found on your nightstand at the moment?
Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith
What was the last book you’ve read, and when was it?
Just finished Brsinger, by Christopher Paolini...third in a series which I mistakenly THOUGHT was wrapping up with this book...*sigh*...and Cold Sassy Tree by Olive Ann Burns, which ALSO has a sequel.
Have you ever given up on a book half way in?
I'm ashamed to say I have a couple of times...a book has to be REALLY bad for me to quit, but it still kills me. I've read a few that were as tedious as trying to swim through mud.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Monday, October 20, 2008
Never Ignore Intuition
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Crafty
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Lardin' and Nuttin'
On what I dubbed "lard day", I stood staring at three large frozen-turkey sized lumps of ground fat wrapped in plastic, wondering if I should proceed, or just feed it to the dogs. I decided to be adventurous and at least give it a try. I dug out my biggest dutch oven, put it on the grill over hot coals, added a bit of water and a big lump of fat, and waited. And waited. Stirred a bit. Waited. I quickly came to the conclusion that this project was going to cost a fortune in charcoal, plus the wind was blowing stuff into the pot, and I was incessently pestered by over-interested dogs and cats. So, against my better judgement, I moved the whole operation indoors to the stove. Eventually the fat melted and started to cook down, and after a few hours I started to see brown "cracklins" and the liquid turned clear, so according to all my information, it was done cooking. I felt like Ma Ingalls straining out the cracklings, but I'm pretty sure she did not strain her lard into GladWare. After a few hours of cooling in the fridge, I had honest-to-goodness lard!
Monday, October 13, 2008
I Think...Therefore, I Blog
But, contrarary to "Anonymous", as they so corageously identified themselves so I can't address them by name, I do think before I blog. And let me respond. The video is scary not because Louis Farrikhan endorses Obama - that's a given. Never did I imply that Obama is responsible for who endorses him - that's not the scary part. The scary part to me is what is said...that Obama is referred to as "The Messiah", and basically that he's going to be bringing about the kind of change that a radical Islamist can get behind. THAT is scary. Period.
That being said, I happen to think our choices for president this term are both a couple of boobs. The choice to me is who will bring the least amount of government boobery and jackassery to the country, who can keep us as a country safe, who is best for our troops (and I have several vested personal interests in this issue), and who tromps the least on our personal liberties. I do not want to one day find ourselves prancing around wearing berets and calling ourselves Socialist New France, or worse. There is LOT more I am tempted to say, but I will refrain.
If you anyone is offended by my blog, then don't read it. It's that simple. For everyone else, I look forward to very soon getting back on the track of blogging about fiddle playing and making, pets, husbands, hobbies, and just general amusing life observations.
Friday, October 10, 2008
Be Afraid...
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/?pageId=77539
I'm very scared for our country lately. America is at a crossroads - we can either submit to governmental control over every part of our lives and become a socialist state, or we can remember the great country our ancestors fought for, and take our country back. Throw off the apathy, and let freedom ring.
Thursday, October 09, 2008
Ozark Sasquatch?
Blue Man: If you have had a sighting of an unusual large animal walking on two legs, you are not by yourself, over 70 sightings reported in Missouri. If you contact us, your identification can be kept confidential. Any age of story accepted. 417-***-**** .
Hey, if he can cut the coyote population back down to a semi-resonable level, he's welcome in my back yard.
Thursday, October 02, 2008
Aaaand...I'm back. Again.
First, I'd like to thank everyone for your thoughts and sympathy and cards concerning Sam. I really appreciate it, even though some made me get teary. The sympathy card from the vet's office made me bawl...it had that story "Rainbow Bridge" printed on the front. Ugh. It's been a weird nearly two weeks without the old guy around the house...almost startling not to see him on his usual perches. I even find myself automatically going to clean hair off the furniture or floor, but there's no hair...which kind of saddened me at first, but I have to admit, it's nice to be able to sit down in dark pants. And a bright spot, I walk into the laundry room and automatically screw up my face in anticipation of fragrance eau de litterbox, and instead I just smell dryer sheet. That's actually pretty pleasant. If there's one thing Sam could do, it's leave a stinky litterbox - and his favorite thing to do was to wait until it was freshly cleaned with new litter. Once about eight years ago, I was sound asleep one night and awoke to the most AWFUL stench, and when I got up to investigate I found a nice fresh "bomb" in the clean litterbox. That cat had crapped and woken me up from ACROSS the house. As I was very grumpily scooping out the box at 2:00 a.m., Sam watched with what I swear was a proudly bemused expression. "Heh...yep, I pooped." All in all, the hair and poop were worth the companionship, and I do miss him.
Fall has definately started to fall down around our ears...it's downright chilly at night, and while the days are still pretty warm, the sunlight has changed to it's fall sharpness and the leaves are thinning and starting to turn. And yesterday on my way to town, instead of admiring the scenery, I was absorbed in the annual autumn tradition of dodging tarantulas crossing the road in search of a mate. (Why did the tarantula cross the road? To get some booty!) I don't know why I bother trying to avoid them, as other drivers seem to swerve out of their way to smash the poor things. People. Maybe a few I've spared have actually made it safely across.
Over the last week and a half, I've been engaged in several projects. Work on my fiddle continues, but very slowly. I will be VERY surprised if I have the fiddle made in the next year, but maybe things will go faster than I think. It's very tedious work, made even more tedious by the fact that my teacher is legally blind, and on top of that hardship one of the other students is a very know-it-all yankee who seems unable to shut his mouth. I figure this first one will be rough to get through, and IF I successfully make this one and decide to make another, the process will get easier.
This is my fiddle front. Violet was saving this beautiful piece of sassafras for her use, but insisted I take it instead. The only drawback is that it's obviously not wide enough for a fiddle front, so I had to saw it in half and glue it together. Fortunately, the wood is so nice that once the board was sanded, I couldn't even tell where the glued joint was. So, envision if you will, a fiddle with this sassafras front, cherry sides, and a cherry back. And I already decided on black walnut fingerboard and tailpiece, but those will likely be long in the future.
Gotta go for now...stay tuned! I promise to get back on the blogging track, and I have more pics to add!
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
A Sad Day
I don't want to be overly dramatic, but I felt like someone hit me in the head with a hammer. Life without Sam? Hard to imagine, since I've had him since college - basically my whole independent (and sometimes non-independent) adult life, Sam was there. Mom and Dad presented me with Sam, a white fluffy kitten, when I came home from college one summer. He'd been abandoned, then rescued by Dad and Tye. He lived with me in a trailer, a house, another trailer, an apartment, a house, another house, another house, another house, and here. That is, if I'm not missing any - nine different locations. And there were always those times he lived with Mom and Dad temporarily. Sam was there when I was lonely, when I couldn't figure out what to do with my life, and when I had to make a big decision...one big fluffy constant through life's most confusing time.
I guess that's why the news just hit me so hard. Sam had transcended the "just a pet" status to being a long-term fixture in my life.
Not that I didn't know this would one day happen...every time I get a new pet, in the back of my mind is the little voice saying that it's inevitable that I will have to endure it's death. But I still take on the responsibility, even knowing that somewhere down the road will come emotional difficulty. But pet-lovers everywhere know that the joy pets bring is well worth the pain their deaths come with. However, even though Sam was "older" and eating "senior cat" food, I still very much expected him to be around another 5-7+ years.
I rushed back to the vet's office to meet with the vet. Doc said we could possibly re-start his kidneys if I wanted, but it would be very temporary, and essentially for my benefit only. I declined...I didn't want him to suffer any more, especially not on my account. After getting to hold and pet him and hear him purr, I gave the go-ahead and it was over really quick. I then made a hasty and slightly blubbering retreat from the office, and headed back to fiddle lessons. I didn't want to go home just yet. Marden picked up "the body" on his way home, and later we buried him under the Mulberry tree in the front yard.
I've never had such a hard time losing a pet. I keep expecting Sam to saunter through the room, flicking his tail, meowing for fresh water or a treat. Or, like the pic, looking VERY grumpy after a bath. I know time will heal, and there is a certain charm to living life without having to scoop the litterbox, picking hair off everything, cleaning up hairballs, cleaning up barf because Sam decided to yet again sample the house plants, constantly changing out water bowls because he had a strange habit of putting his food in his water, poking at it with a paw, staring at it, then walking away - and eventually meowing for fresh water, and a myriad of other chores that come with having a house cat. I don't think we'll get another house cat...at least not anytime soon.
But I'm very thankful for having Sam in my life, and having the pleasure of sharing a house with such a good cat. So long pal.
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Another hobby...
So this is my fiddle. Or will possibly be...both are cherry wood, the one on the left wild cherry, on the right is domestic cherry. At least that's what I was told. I MUCH prefer the color and grain of the darker one on the right, but in getting it planed (thanks Brian!), and taking off the paint that coated both sides, a huge knothole was revealed. I'm going to have to consult Violet on how much of a problem this will cause. I assume it will be significant, and I'll be better off going with the lighter piece.
Friday, September 19, 2008
AAARRG!!!
Monday, September 15, 2008
"If You're Gonna Be Bad...
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Hollywood...just shut it.
How insulting can you be? Even if you're not for McCain/Palin, this is absolutely ridiculous. I can't believe he's serious. Sexism in America is alive and well, if you don't fit the mold of what certain groups think a modern woman should be.
Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Fiddle Me Happy
My plan of learning one song a week may be a little over-ambitious. Arkansas Traveler is a doozie, but I'm getting it. Still, it may take me another week to really get it down. I'm pretty sure while practicing today my fingers tangled into a knot, but luckily I got them undone.
Has anyone seen that Snickers commercial where the Hawaiian sings Greensleeves, and then they all join in? Heh. 'Tis a silly commercial. I like it.
Monday, September 01, 2008
This 'n That
Despite my flightiness of deciding on a favorite season, fall does bring some great things to look forward to, such as Chiefs football, pumpkin pie, pretty and crunchy leaves, cooler weather, pumpkin pie, sweatpants, hunting season, pumpkin pie, woodsmoke, impending holidays, and pumpkin pie. Those are just a few I can think of at the moment.
You might notice the new area I added, which will keep my faithful readers current on my team, the Chiefs. I should say "our team", as Marden is now a convert. Let us hold faith that preseason play was a good indicator that they will rise from the stinky ashes of last year's season victorious, or at least not complete losers which last year had me tempted to take drastic measures. I almost...*gasp*...scraped the Chiefs sticker off of the back of my car window. But I'm nothing if not loyal, and my sticker is still proudly displayed.
I'm really looking forward to football season, if for nothing else to have something decent to watch on TV. Lately, I've been absolutely disgusted with television, in particular the news. I wonder if all the people who scoffed at the idea that the media, especially the networks, lean to the left politically are now no longer doubters. Lately, the leanings have been no longer slight leanings but absolutely blatant, and it makes my blood pressure rise. I usually refrain from talking politics on my blog, as I know other's opinions differ from my own, but I can't keep quiet anymore. If you're watching the networks, it's "All Hail Emperor Obama, our savior and messiah", but anything Republican is reported in a negative light. On NBC I just watched Matt Lauer interview a McCain spokeswoman. He worked and hinted and suggested to try to make her say that McCain made a bad choice in a running mate, and maybe he used bad judgement. He was completely negative and wearing his opinion on his sleeve. Unbiased reporter my foot.
What ever your political leanings, any American should be upset at media bias.
It's not only annoying, but downright wrong, and it negatively influences anyone who may be undecided and who only (and unwisely) gets their information from network news. As for me - my TV watching has become limited to two episodes of "The Waltons" in the morning after catching the local news. A responsible voter shouldn't rely on the media for information - find the facts for yourself, and make a decision based on real facts - not someone's opinion being shoved down your throat.
Well, enough of that. It looks from radar that Gustav is still very much together and headed our way with some blessed rain. Looks like we'll get buckets of it, though!