Sunday, June 12, 2011

Short film by Allison Moore

“The Little Girl Lost”

William Blake

In futurity

I prophetic see

That the earth from sleep

(Grave the sentence deep)

Shall arise and seek

For her maker meek;

And in the desart wild

Become a garden mild.

* * *

In the southern clime,

Where the summer’s prime

Never fades away,

Lovely Lyca lay.

Seven summers old

Lovely Lyca told;

She had wander’d long

Hearing wild birds’ song.

“Sweet sleep, come to me

Underneath this tree.

Do father, mother weep,

Where can Lyca sleep?

“Lost in desart wild

Is your little child.

How can Lyca sleep

If her mother weep?

“If her heart does ake

Then let Lyca wake;

If my mother sleep,

Lyca shall not weep.

“Frowning, frowning night,

O’er this desart bright

Let thy moon arise

While I close my eyes.”

Sleeping Lyca lay

While the beasts of prey,

Come from caverns deep,

View’d the maid asleep.

The kingly lion stood

And the virgin view’d,

Then he gamboll’d round

O’er the hollow’d ground.

Leopards, tygers, play

Round her as she lay,

While the lion old

Bow’d his mane of gold.

And her bosom lick,

And upon her neck

From his eyes of flame

Ruby tears there came;

While the lioness

Loos’d her slender dress,

And naked they convey’d

To caves the sleeping maid.



“The Little Girl Found”

William Blake

All the night in woe,

Lyca's parents go:

Over vallies deep.

While the desarts weep.

Tired and woe-begone.

Hoarse with making moan:

Arm in arm seven days.

They trac'd the desert ways.

Seven nights they sleep.

Among shadows deep:

And dream they see their child

Starvdd in desart wild.

Pale thro' pathless ways

The fancied image strays.

Famish'd, weeping, weak

With hollow piteous shriek

Rising from unrest,

The trembling woman prest,

With feet of weary woe;

She could no further go.

In his arms he bore.

Her arm'd with sorrow sore:

Till before their way

A couching lion lay.

Turning back was vain,

Soon his heavy mane.

Bore them to the ground;

Then he stalk'd around.

Smelling to his prey,

But their fears allay,

When he licks their hands:

And silent by them stands.

They look upon his eyes

Fill'd with deep surprise:

And wondering behold.

A spirit arm'd in gold.

On his head a crown

On his shoulders down,

Flow'd his golden hair.

Gone was all their care.

Follow me he said,

Weep not for the maid;

In my palace deep.

Lyca lies asleep.

Then they followed,

Where the vision led;

And saw their sleeping child,

Among tygers wild.

To this day they dwell

In a lonely dell

Nor fear the wolvish howl,

Nor the lion's growl.





Sunday, May 1, 2011

Hacked

My email account was hacked again. Apparently a bunch of people from my email address book got a series of emails from me advertising sex pills and other pharmaceuticals. Annoying, embarrassing, and violating. This happened last September when I was in the Bay Area. The only common denominator that I can come up with is checking my email at a WIFI cafe. How sad is that? Last year, I checked my email using a cafe computer and last night I decided to go out to a cafe to enjoy the weather while getting some work done on my computer.
Moral of the story: Beware of WIFI cafes and don't login to your personal accounts while on open networks :(

Saturday, April 30, 2011

4.30.11 2:52am

Definitely the year of music.

Mason Reed at Vintage Enoteca tonight--really great set.

Quote of the night, as Mason and Henry were walking Su and me to the car:

Henry: I so wanted to make out with you.

Su: Awesome!


Really, Su--Awesome!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Foster the People at The Echo

About two weeks ago, I was in my car and for some reason decided to turn on the radio. I almost never listen to the radio, but I think somehow fate was guiding me and I turned on KROQ just in time to catch a new song I had never heard before. It was amazingly addictive, one of those songs that absolutely compels you to move around when you hear it. The song was "Pumped Up Kicks" by Foster the People, and it has a kind of surf-rock feel that makes you want to drive along the coastline in the summer.
As soon as I got home I looked up the band and was ecstatic when I realized that they would be playing a free show at the Echo in Silverlake in a couple of weeks. Well, the show was tonight and it was one of the best shows I have seen. I cannot believe that this band only formed about a year and a half ago because their music has such a polished, layered quality. The lead singer's voice is very unusual but strangely captivating and their energy onstage was contagious.
They announced to the crowd tonight that they are officially in the line up for Coachella this year and I am thinking that it may finally be time for me to make it out to Indio.
Check out pics of the show on my flicker page (http://www.flickr.com/photos/ashleyjberry/) and the video to get a taste of the amazingness that is Foster the People :)

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

My First Real Wave

I finally went to Sunset Beach today after being encouraged by several people and it was amazing! Low tide was at around 2p so Wendy and I got there around 1p and paddled out. It is so peaceful just sitting outside of the break and there's this amazing sense of community as you look around at all the other surfers. I had already decided that my goal for today was to stand up and ride a wave just once since I had yet to do so. I had been out in the water for about 45 minutes or so just getting the rhythm of the waves and occasionally trying to catch one with no success when a stranger paddled by and told me to try catching one a little closer in. Just as he was paddling away, I saw an incoming wave and paddled a little closer into the shoreline, lined myself up for the wave, and paddled. Before I knew it, the wave was coming up behind me and then it happened-I caught it, felt the energy of my board cruising along, and pushed up! I half expected to fall pretty quickly but, to my surprise, I didn't. I rode the wave in until I could see some rocks that I preferred not to surf into and jumped off my board into the water. The feeling was so incredible that if I was on land I definitely would have been jumping up and down. Instead, I paddled back out, beaming, ready to do it again. I caught three more waves and rode them in standing up over the course of the next hour and a half and I could not have asked for anymore. If I wasn't hooked before, I definitely am now.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Acting Class

I have a decently long list of things that I have been saying for a quite a while now that I would like to do and I am slowly but surely working my way through the list. One of these agenda items was to take an acting class. I have been saying that I was going to do this for the past year now, and for various reasons such as work-schedule inconsistency and my general fear of looking stupid, I had not enrolled in a class until this week. I got my work schedule for November a little over a week ago and realized that, every Tuesday evening, I have a perfect block of time open that coincides nicely with an acting class I had been interested in so I took the leap and signed up. Tonight was my first class and it was so much fun! Going in, I was really nervous and thought I was going to feel really awkward and out of place but my classmates are a really fun, easy-going group of people who more or less just want to have fun playing characters every week.
I am especially excited about starting this class right now because they are just moving into a section on character study/ development which is my favorite part of acting. There is just something so enthralling about trying to figure out the psychology of a character and why they do the things they do or how they would react to different situations. We also got homework assignments tonight for next week. The first assignment is to pick a person to study over the next week so we can come in and do an impersonation for our next class. I am still deciding who I should study--maybe someone at work?
The second assignment is to pick a dialect to start studying so we can expand the range of characters we can play. I think I can do a pretty decent British accent and I know the Southern accent well enough to be able to pull that off, so I decided to go with something I have never had much experience with before and chose the Midwestern accent. Now I have to go online and try to find videos of Midwesterners (I think I want to focus on the more northern dialect that you hear in people from Minnesota and North Dakota) so I can listen and practice. Maybe next time you see me I'll be able speak like I am from Fargo :)

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Leftovers

A very large corporation has rented out the Inn that I work at for three nights, and tonight was their first night. They are a very lively, fun group and it is definitely a completely different atmosphere for the Inn. Since they were all arriving at different times today, they had dinner catered in and there was a TON of food. So much so that there were a lot of leftovers including multiple large platters of sandwiches. We do not have room to store all of this food in our refrigerators at the Inn and much of it was being thrown away. At the end of the night, we tried to send sandwiches home with all of the staff members that would take them, but there was still an entire platter of sandwiches left when I was ready to close the Inn and go home for the evening. As I was staring at this giant platter of sandwiches, trying to bring myself to throw them into the trash can, I thought about a group of homeless people that I see almost every night on my way home from work. There is a little section of my drive home where there are usually at least four or five people, sleeping on the sidewalk and in doorways, and every time I drive by them, I think about how hard it must be to live on the street. I decided that, even though a lot of people would say that it is not the safest or smartest thing to do, I would wrap up the tray of sandwiches and take it to them. I closed up the Inn and loaded up my car with my stuff and the tray of sandwiches and drove to the spot that I usually pass. Most of the people there were asleep and I didn't feel quite right about getting out of my car to wake them up to ask if they wanted sandwiches so I kept driving and, in true LA-form, within a block I found another little group of homeless people sitting at a bus station, clearly awake. I pulled up in front of the bus station, rolled down my passenger-side window, and asked the man closest to me if he was hungry. He approached my window, somewhat shyly, and, when I handed him the tray of sandwiches, his whole face lit up. He was older, and didn't seem to have a whole lot of energy, but he told me several times how happy this made him. I wished him a good night and drove away. My apartment was less than a mile from that spot and on the way home I felt so good. I know that I didn't do anything amazing. It was such an easy thing for me to do-I didn't have to invest much time and the sandwiches were free leftovers. I also realize that tonight is just one night among so many that that man, like thousands of others, is struggling through on the street. But I felt like I helped in some little way. It made me happy to know that at least tonight, that man (and hopefully a few other people) will go to sleep with a full stomach.
The thing that frustrates me about this situation is that every day, literally tons of perfectly good food is just thrown away, by restaurants, cafes, and other establishments. It is so hard to understand this in light of the fact that so many people go hungry everyday. It seems like such an easy solution for there to be an organization that goes around and collects leftovers from these places and distributes the food to people who really need it. Unfortunately, most establishments are worried about being sued if their food somehow causes someone to become sick, so they throw it away instead. Here is an article about this issue:
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/28/business/la-fi-lazarus-20100727/2