first, I love Overheardinnewyork. Second I am completely unsurprised that someone would say that in Chelsea.
Right on. To both items.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
first, I love Overheardinnewyork. Second I am completely unsurprised that someone would say that in Chelsea.
Right on. To both items.
Hil made me really want waffles. And the conversation last night made me really want coffee. And now I want a big huge brunch, and the first order of business that I have today is to go to the grocery store, so I should probably eat before then, huh?
I could easily walk over to Starbucks and get a coffee this morning. And maybe a cinnamon twist, and then walk over to the grocery store. Unless someone feels like getting together for a big brunch-closer-to-lunch?
My friend and her father did Joy to the World for the bridal dance. It was really cool, and different from the usual.
Happy Birthday Anne!
Consuela, have fun in the Land of the Long White Cloud!
What about YMCA? Another obligatory wedding atrocity of my youth.
ATROCITY???? I love that song, and the dance.
Of course, since I fully intend to do the macarena at my putative wedding, it's possible I've just admitted myself right out of the arena of reason.
The Electric Slide makes me smile fondly, but from a distance, since I've never actually had the pleasure of being on the dance floor for it.
I need to go reheat last night's Thai snapper. That was some good shit. But teaching two classes, taking one, and then talking trash for an hour -- really tiring. I wish I could call someone to reheat my food and bring it to me.
We had a band instead of a DJ, in large part to avoid the Obligatory Wedding Songs. Looking back, a DJ with strict instructions and no schtick might have been a better choice, but oh well.
The Hora is a Jewish dance. (Well, I think that, if you want to be really technical about it, it's an Israeli dance.) The song it's usually danced to is Hava Nagila.
edit: although, now that I've done a bit of googling, it looks like the Hora is also the name of an ancient Greek dance that's still danced in Romania
edit again: and a bit more googling tells me that the Israeli hora was influenced by dances brought by Romanian Jews, who were probably influenced by the Romanian hora, which was probably based on that Greek hora.
I went to a Palestenian cultural thing with a friend of mine in college and they did a dance called (iirc) a dubke. I asked him why the hell they were doing the hora.
have the best time 'suela!
happy birthday anne!
The thing about those cheesy dances is (in a lot of crowds) they really do get everyone up on the dance floor -- at least all the women -- from grandma to little kids. At my aunts' wedding, the 13-year old was teaching all the rest of us all the dances, and it was hilarious.