Monday 23 June 2008

Bar None Show

Bar None is a variety show written, directed , produced and performed by the legal community of Dallas and all the money raised goes towards a scholarship at the SMU Dedman School of Law. I finally gave in and agreed to be a part of the show. Luckily once you audition they have to cast you and that was really good for me for me due to my distinct lack of acting, singing and dancing ability!  The rehearsal schedule was an intense 5 week period. But it was so much fun and I really did enjoy myself.  It was such a joy to be part of such a fun and talented group of people (yes they are mainly lawyers/legal types and yes they are fun and talented!) To be able to perform was also such a buzz and I am now addicted to the applause! And it is all in aid of a such good cause, I am so so so glad I was persuaded into it! Jigna

Jazzed up in New Orleans - May 2008

I cannot believe it was the weekend of May 24th 2008 that Wooley and I were in New Orleans, I have emailed everyone photos, if I did not include you in the email and you would like to check them out, let me know and I will forward them to you! 

Anyway we had a great time! My good friend Michelle as always gave us some great tips and as a result we had the best time in the best spots in New Orleans! 

We flew in on the Friday evening and our hotel was great as they have a free happy hour with snacks, so we partook of the free booze and made our way to the French Quarter. Bourbon street is the party street and it was crazy manic! Imagine Leicester Square then add the freedom to walk around with drinks, so you can actually buy drinks "to go" in the bar........add live music, heat and humidity you may have a clue....a little like 6th street in Austin (for Dhara and Deepa!).

I had the best BBQ oysters and a Cat 5 hurricane (like a Long Island Iced Tea) at a great place called the Red Fish Grill, we then went to this great pizza place and then walked over to Frenchman street where we went to this great jazz club called "Snug Harbor" (yes that's how they spell harbour in the USA) and as per Michelle luckily I had reserved two tickets, and we saw Ellis Marsails a jazz legend in such an intimate great venue it was so great! We met some lovely girls from Boston who were so funny, they told us not to judge the rest of America on our experiences in Dallas, with smiles on their faces of course :)

We loved Snug Harbor so much we went back on Sunday night and heard this fantastic young girl, Sahsha Masakowski, who, comes from an amazingly talented family her Dad and brother joined her on stage at one point! 

We did go to another jazz restaurant another night, where we heard a New Orleans style jazz band which was really fun and there were some amazing swing dancers who were so much fun too, the manager of the place was from the UK, from Nottingham, she has been in New Orleans for over 20 years! We did not get a discount though :(

We loved New Orleans, the tourist areas were unaffected by the floods back in 2005 (as the touristy areas are the old parts of town and back then they did not build on flood plains!) We walked a lot (in the heat and humidity) that really is the only way to check out the French Quarter and the Garden District. We also had a few cooling rides on the St Charles streetcar. We enjoyed some great Cajun food and yummy drinks. I had a great Pimms cocktails at the Napoleon House bar, where apparently some folk hatched a plot to liberate Napoleon from his exile, but before the plan got off the ground Napoleon died! I also managed to try some shrimp jambalaya. We joined some informative walking tours. Including one of the Garden District, where I sweated so much and nearly passed out from heat exhaustion! We walked around the St Louis No 1 cemetery and saw Lafayette cemetery, the guides were all locals and had some great insights!

We also went on a coach tour of the areas of the city affected by Hurricane Katrina. We did spend some time considering whether we should go on the tour, as we wondered if it was in bad taste? But we decided to do it otherwise we would not have learnt as much as we did. We flew in and spent all our time in the old parts of the town and so if we had not taken the tour, we would have missed out on all of that. The guide was a local and had some interesting insights. It really is shocking to see the devastated neighbourhoods that are still so abandoned after nearly 3 years, you just cant imagine this is the USA. The guide pointed out that even if someone took the little money the federal government gives you to rebuild, the insurance premiums have shot up and there are no neighbours, no grocery stores, only 60 of the 120 schools have reopened and so what are you coming back to? I spoke to a colleague at work who was hired by the Legal Aid of North West Texas to help out Katrina victims in Dallas, (many people  arrived in Dallas from New Orleans after Katrina) and she said that the town planners, architects etc could not decide how to rebuild or if they should at all in the flood plains and so the government decided not to decide. So they decided to wait a few years and if not enough people returned to certain areas they will demolish the whole area, so you could rebuild and invest and get told a few years later that not enough people moved back and then what would you do?! It really is tragic!

Having said that, New Orleans is such a great historic city the music the history, the culture etc is all so unique that I know it is a city with an amazing vitality that will survive. Jigna





Sunday 1 June 2008

Why Harry Potter is great...

.......and so, to kick off the why ( _ ) is great, who better then Mr Potter?

I love the Harry Potter books. J K Rowling is a imaginative and thoughtful author, who writes with great care and attention to the smallest detail, and therein lies the success of her creation. The adventures of the boy wizard are pure magic: his story is one of laughter, yet there is real sadness, its a story of hope in spite of fear, the importance of friendships and the value of courage. Cheesy as it is, love, and the ability to love, are core.

I can reread all seven of the Harry Potter novels quite happily time and time again. If I had to pick a favourite it would be a tough choice between The Deathly Hallows and The Prisoner of Azkaban.

In terms of children's literature, I do believe that anything which encourages children to read is good: there is so much pleasure to be found in a good book, and far too many people never experience that pleasure. Encouraging and valuing reading for pleasure from a young age is so so important. That the stories of Harry Potter appeal to old and young alike are testament to their brilliance. The Harry Potter novels are indeed a literary phenomena - that they are also a publishing phenomena is, in my view, a by product of this.

why ( _ ) is great......

This is a new feature to our blog. Every once in a while, me (Dhara), Jigs and Roops will post under the heading why ( _ ) is great....paying homage to the great things in life - music, books, films, food - those that we choose to revisit time and time again, whether its always listening to favourite songs or albums, watching films or TV shows over and over or re-reading a book.....

Whilst there are many things the three of us all agree on and like, there are of course those inexplicable things that we just don't get about each other too, so i hope that this will make for a fun feature!