Yesterday, got very much lost, and ended up at the very much popular British Zoo, waited in line for over an hour, only to realize when I got to the ticket booth that the admission fee was £17, which is like the US Dollar equivalent of my first-borne son. So instead I kept on walking around and being lost.
I finally found my actual destination, the Institute of Contemporary Art. It seems like a pretty brill spot- (Oh, you didn't know? Sorry. "Brill" is short for "Brilliant," which is the most common British compliment) they have concerts almost every week, really interesting movies, and some off-the-wall art exhibits. The one I went to yesterday was called "Cellar Door," (or "Celador") and consisted of three pretty identical black rooms, each with a huge black motion-sensor door that went up and down like in a spaceship from those motion pictures you keep hearing about. Anyway, in each of the rooms hung this bulbous shape, complete with various speakers blasting a very dramatic opera (as opposed to all those undramatic operas). To top it all off, there was a butler guy in a tux who occasionally comes out to serve black champagne. And, at the end, there was a vending machine with candies that supposedly had no taste, thereby allowing the space-aged taster to invent their own. Unfortunately, they cost £1.50 (first-borne daughter) and I didn't get them.
I guess it was supposed to be like a Stanly Kubrick film, like any second the lights would flicker out and I would be killed by some sort of allegory. Twas all very Medulla-esque. Thoroughly pretentious, and even more thoroughly entertaining.
Oh, and I started teaching children this past week, too.
I finally found my actual destination, the Institute of Contemporary Art. It seems like a pretty brill spot- (Oh, you didn't know? Sorry. "Brill" is short for "Brilliant," which is the most common British compliment) they have concerts almost every week, really interesting movies, and some off-the-wall art exhibits. The one I went to yesterday was called "Cellar Door," (or "Celador") and consisted of three pretty identical black rooms, each with a huge black motion-sensor door that went up and down like in a spaceship from those motion pictures you keep hearing about. Anyway, in each of the rooms hung this bulbous shape, complete with various speakers blasting a very dramatic opera (as opposed to all those undramatic operas). To top it all off, there was a butler guy in a tux who occasionally comes out to serve black champagne. And, at the end, there was a vending machine with candies that supposedly had no taste, thereby allowing the space-aged taster to invent their own. Unfortunately, they cost £1.50 (first-borne daughter) and I didn't get them.
I guess it was supposed to be like a Stanly Kubrick film, like any second the lights would flicker out and I would be killed by some sort of allegory. Twas all very Medulla-esque. Thoroughly pretentious, and even more thoroughly entertaining.
Oh, and I started teaching children this past week, too.
3 comments:
HEY! why is your first-borne son worth so much more than your first-borne daughter?! and i thought you were a feminist!
Hey, Lunn doesn't make the rules- He just enforces them.
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