Sunday/ my Lego house

The Lego Movie that I saw a few weeks ago inspired me to dig up an old Lego set that I had in the closet, and build the house in the instruction booklet that came with it.  So all in all not a very original work of art from me, and I am a long, long way into the ‘+’ of the ‘Age 6+’ on the box.  But so what? – it was fun, a 3D puzzle, and happily there were no blocks missing.

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The Lego house that I built using the ‘Building Bonanza’ set 4886 from 2004. The white picket fence is an American classic. And is that not the reddest roof that a house can have?

Saturday/ t-shirts from Uniqlo

Here are my two shirts I bought at the Uniqlo store in San Francisco.

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Here are my two shirts from Uniqlo. They were only $9.90 each.  Check out the cute Tyrannosaurus tag on the shirt on the right. ‘Rex’ is king in Latin, hence the crown.

 

Friday/ we are the world

I work for a firm (PwC, and it’s actually a network of global PwC firms) that has almost 200,000 employees in 157 countries.  So at Friday’s workshop that I attended – about a new method to help employees grow in their careers – there was a lot of discussion about cultural differences, and that it means to work in the USA for a global consulting services company.   ‘Are we sure the framework and the methods discussed here take into account a multi-cultural workforce?’ was a very good question from the floor.  In a way, with so many different cultures already present in large cities (and in our firm), the answer is yes .. but then again there is still a long way to go even in the USA, to appreciate and be aware of cultural diversity.

A few weeks ago Charles Mudede wrote in an article in the weekly newspaper The Stranger (as advice to new students coming to the city) in ‘How to Adjust to Multicultural Seattle if You’re from a Small Town’ (brace yourself) .. I understand you spent your life in the middle of nowhere. There were cows and chickens and not that many people. And if there were people, they were pretty much the same kind of people. They looked and talked the same way, they had the same religious beliefs, and they ate the same foods in the same way. Life was bleak in the small town. But now you are in a big city that has more diversity than you’ve ever been exposed to. How do you handle this new and colorful state of affairs? What should you do to avoid making a fool of yourself by revealing your provincialism? I’m here to lower a rope down into the dark cultural hole you’re in and pull you up to the light of big-city life. The advice I have to offer will not solve all of your problems, but it will make things a little bit easier.

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I’m making my way back to the Powell St BART station, just a few blocks from the hotel where I stayed. This is the corner of Powell and O’Farrell.
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This horsey with the odd head (big head) is at an interior decoration store on Powell St that was set to open in just a few hours.

Thursday/ Powell Street, San Francisco

I am staying over in downtown San Francisco tonight.  I have to attend a mandatory ‘Talent Transformation’ session hosted by my Firm.  Here are some pictures I took early evening on Powell Street.

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No, it’s not the ’70s. It’s a BART station display board ad for the new Volkswagen Golf. I recognize the Golden Gate Bridge, Coit Tower, and the TransAmerica Building in the picture.
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Here’s the corner of Powell St and O’Farrell St. I love the green art deco building. I’m not sure of its history but I hope it can bear now being a sneaker store!
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Here’s the Powell/ Market St Trolley (taking a break before loading up with passengers). There is a turn-around at Market St : the car turns 360°C and goes right back the way it came.
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Check out the rainbow-colors on the lighted stairs inside the Union Square Uniqlo store. The store has a wide selection of clothes at great prices, and I bought two shirts and a sweater.

Wednesday/ the Golden State Warriors

We had a project team outing last night : attending the IMG_5979 smGolden State Warriors – Los Angeles Clippers basketball game in the Oracle Arena in Oakland.

We went in style : we had a suite with food served up, and we could each have an ice cold beer while watching the game. (Some of us paid more attention than others to the action on the court down below!).   I kept an eye out for Steve Ballmer* making an appearance at the courtside as well, but did not spot him all evening.

*Former Microsoft CEO, and new owner of the LA Clippers team

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Here’s the view from our suite of the basketball court below.   The Warriors won 121-104.

Tuesday/ Republicans win big

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[From vox.com] The Empire State building was lit up tonight to show the Democratic wins (blue) and the Republican ones (red). In most races, and in the end, red won.
Soo .. it was the mid-term* elections here in the USA today.  The Republicans won back control of the Senate, and kept their control of the House.   But Democratic President Obama can veto legislation that comes to his desk.  So if our do-nothing Congress will actually get anything done, remains to be seen.  (I’m not holding my breath).

*Mid-term because it is in the middle of the president’s term.

In my neck of the woods in Seattle, a gun initiative to enforce background checks on all gun sales (also at gun shows) passed.   My property taxes will go up to fund a new pre-kindergarten program, and we will pay 0.1% more sales tax and a $60 car-tab fee to expand the local bus service.  South of us in the state of Oregon, legalized marijuana sales will start in 2015.

Monday/ airplane in disguise

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As I’m settling into my seat on the wing of the Alaskan Airlines 737, I thought : What a strange airplane over there .. is that the Portland Timbers Airline?
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.. but no, it was an Alaskan Airlines 737, wearing a ‘soccer jersey’ of the Portland Timbers soccer team. Mystery solved.  (Photo by Bruce Ely / The Oregonian)

I made it out to San Francisco with my regular Monday morning fly-out.  My airplane still fills up completely, even though there seem to be a lot fewer people in the airport.  The airlines surely reduce the number of flights this time of year. (But I am sure they add flights back onto the schedule for the upcoming Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays).

Sunday/ working weekend

I have that ‘I feel a little robbed’ feeling .. I actually worked all Saturday and all of today. Ironic then, that I ran across this full-page ad from SAP just today (SAP being the very system that makes me work so hard).  So, SAP : Run Simple?  Sounds nice, but is anything today simple anymore?

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Saturday/ Edge of Tomorrow

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Tom Cruise in his battle suit in Edge of Tomorrow.

Our Saturday night flick in the Gary Theater was the futuristic Edge of Tomorrow starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt (she’s British).  We liked the movie .. as someone said ‘It’s a great movie – and I’m not even a Tom Cruise fan’ (I am not, either).   It’s also a war movie – with the United Defense Force (somewhat as dysfunctional, just as the United Nations) against alien invaders called The Mimics.  The Mimics can reset time .. so there are sequences which are played over many times.  Remember Groundhog Day (1993)?  Or Guy Pearce with his amnesia in Memento (2000)?  There’s a little of both those in this movie.

Friday

My dad would have been 80 today.
So maybe that was why I found this eulogy in TIME magazine to a storied newspaper editor called Ben Bradlee – that I did not know of – very touching.
Says the writer (of Ben Bradlee’s charisma) : ‘When he glided through the vast newsroom, faces turned towards him like a field of flowers following the sun.  Impossible to define, this essence had to be felt to be comprehended. It was a palpable something-more-ness – magical, magnetic – as rare as the South China tiger’.  

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