This week was filled with oddities, and hopefully not too many endings. Even if every new beginning is some other beginning’s end.
Earlier this week I had an article published on American Daily Press, a brand new resource for news and opinion. I like flexing my journalism muscles there and try to keep the op-eds I submit to a minimum. My article is on the corruption going on in the world of film reviews and how to combat, or at least mitigate, its effect. I hope you’ll check it out, and while you’re there read a few more articles.
I’ve also got a new fiction piece in the works.
The other day my mom was watching Hallmark Christmas movies (because that’s what they’re showing now), and it got me to thinking about a story I started four years ago. So I dug it up and found it’s better than I remembered. Since then I’ve added a few thousand words, though I don’t know if I can have it done in time to share this year. Still, it’s coming easily to me. Maybe we’ll have a Christmas story miracle this year.
Note: it’s not a Hallmark movie. It’s more in the vein of Die Hard.
And I could use the income. My phone isn’t reliably charging and needs replacing, my Fitbit isn’t speaking to my phone, and this week my trusty old Ford Escape started acting up. Wednesday I drove it into town just fine. But I almost didn’t make it home. Hopefully it’s an easy fix, but if it’s not I’ll probably just sell it for parts. It’s just as well that I’m a starving artist, because I see the Ford dealership has my dream truck on the lot, and I don’t need a dream truck.
Or do I?
Yesterday we went to the secondhand store in town. It’s been about six weeks since our last visit, and they’ve really expanded. Where they used to only have a handful of DVDs, now they’ve got shelves. I’m seriously thinking about canceling Netflix, Hulu, et. al. and drawing from my own, ever-expanding, physical media collection. At the store I found the first two seasons of Twin Peaks super-duper cheap. And that’s not even available on any of my streaming subscriptions.
Something about this time of year makes me want to revisit the show.
Back when I worked at Meijer the Thanksgiving to Christmas time was one of my favorite times. There wasn’t much holidaying at home, but at least there things were different. Special. Still, dealing with the rush of people and putting away all those returns was stressful. I’d come home after 10pm frayed and frazzled. Before I could even think of going to bed I needed to unwind.
For some reason, I started watching Twin Peaks at night.
Like everyone else did in the early 90s, once I found out who killed Laura Palmer and why, I lost interest. Still, I like the vibe. Maybe this will be the year I go back to that place of weird and sometimes demonic people. And if that gets to be too much, there’s always Psych season five (see: Dual Spires).
You know that’s right.