All posts by Ray Ivey

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Moscow, Russian Federation
May 21, 2011 

One of Stalin's "Seven Sisters"
One of Stalin's "Seven Sisters"

Imagine Las Vegas and Beijing having a baby, and that’ll give you a good idea of what Moscow looks like.  It’s massive and rough around the edges with bad drainage and crumbling roads, like Beijing.  But it’s decorated like a theme park, like Vegas.  I swear, when you are looking at the glittering domes of the Kremlin, the ridiculously gaudy and weird St. Basil’s Cathedral, the new-ish and much-hated statue of Peter the Great, or the massive wedding cake of Christ the Redeemer Cathedral, it feels like you are looking at the new Soviet Union-themed casino on the Strip.

One of the heroes of WWII
One of the heroes of WWII

It’s also not a little scary.  When I checked into my hotel, the front desk gave me something they called “temporary registration papers” for me to keep inside my passport, which, they stressed, I needed to have with me at all times.  Yes!  In Moscow you really have to have ‘papers’!  Today I’ll get my official, non-temporary registration.

gold_fountainBut it gets better.  When the concierge was coaching me on my planned use of the subway system, he warned, “Now, whatever, you do, don’t show your papers to fake police.”

Fake police?  Yeah, I feel so much better now.

Some rain delayed my explorations for a few minutes, but happily stopped.  My first task:  Find the Client’s office so there would be no drama on Monday morning.

One of St.  Basil's domes
One of St. Basil's domes

As I began to walk around the city, I was at first predictably intimidated by the fact that everything was not only in a different language, but a different alphabet.  Russian uses the Cyrillic alphabet, which contains some letters that look like and are pronounced similar to their counterparts in English, letters that look like English letters but are pronounced completely differently, letters borrowed from Greek, letters borrowed from Hebrew, and some letters specific to Russian.  It’s quite a jumble.

But I quickly discovered the Great Cyrillic Decoder Ring:  American franchise businesses!  Yep, within a block or two of my walk, I began to see Starbucks, McDonalds, Cinnabon (which I first identified by SMELL, I swear to Rapture Jesus on a Pterodactyl), and others.

See if you can figure out the name of my hotel.    You can do it!  First person to put it into a comment wins!
See if you can figure out the name of my hotel. You can do it! First person to put it into a comment wins!

Let’s look at those names:

Starbucks                            CTAPBAKC

McDonalds                         MAKдOHAлдC

Restaurant                          ресторан

Sbarro                                   CбAPPO

If you just take a breath, you start to see the connections.  Pretty soon I was doing better, which is a good thing, because the subway in Moscow is an adventure.

hamme_and_scicleFirst of all, it’s world famous for its beauty.  Yes, its beauty.  The Soviet government pulled out all the stops, and  many of the stations are like underground Art Deco palaces.

Anyway, it was important for me to get more comfortable with the Cyrillic alphabet so I could figure out where the hell I was going on the subway.  And I’m doing great; I’ve taken several rides (including transfers) and haven’t gotten lost yet.

I walked the entire length of the Arbat,   a historical street that’s now a pedestrian mall.  It was good for people watching but as sightseeing was about on par with the Venice Beach “boardwalk.”

I then walked around the river and went into the spectacular Christ the Redeemer Cathedral, the tallest Orthodox church in the world.  It’s a shame I couldn’t get photos inside, because it’s jaw-dropping.

My Moscow-as-Vegas theory was given more legitimacy when I discovered the insane state of Peter the Great on the river.  It’s less than 20 years old and would be completely at home in front of Treasure Island on the Strip.  It’s on the list of the world’s ugliest statues, and Moscow has already tried to give it way to several other cities (“Thanks, but we’re good, ” said St. Petersburg with a shudder).

There seem to be no black people at all in Moscow.

mcdonaldsOn the other hand, the very Caucasian men and women of the city are extreeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeemly attractive.  Seriously, the women are smokin’ and the men all have an intense, “Must escort my girlfriend back to our flat and then head to the gym” sort of look.

Finally got to Red Square.  St. Basil’s has to be the most insane house of worship I’ve ever seen.  It’s from the 1500s and it’s so unusual that it’s really without precedent in the history of Russian architecture.  I’m going  to try to go in on Saturday morning  before my train.

Also went into Gum, the enormous shopping structure directly across Red Square from the Kremlin.  It’s a beautiful Art Moderne mall full of high end franchise stores.  Gorgeous to walk through.

Then home and collapse!

Some of the Cooler Churches I’ve Been In

  • St. John the Divine, New York
  • Chartres, Chartres, France
  • Notre Dame, Paris, France
  • Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri, carved out of the Baths of Diocletian, Rome
  • St. Peter’s, Rome, duh
  • Christ the Redeemer, Moscow

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 156 user reviews.

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Munich/Dusseldorf/Moscow
May 20, 2011 

Distance Traveled Today:  1600

Total Distance so Far:  12, 077

I'm sorry to leave this beautiful,  gracious city.
I'm sorry to leave this beautiful, gracious city.

It was my last day in the Munich office so I took my pal Christine, the Office Administrator, out for Indian food at lunch.  I told her how, despite my excitement leaving for Russia and my increasing homesickness, I was very sorry to be leaving my beautiful, beloved Munich. I admitted to her how, before I had come to Germany for the first time in 2006 (also to Munich, on an earlier project for this same client), I had been pretty negative about visiting Germany.  “You know, the whole history thing, ” I said.  I then told her how that visit completely changed my opinion of this gorgeous country, which I will now visit at any opportunity. “The difference in how Germany has worked to process the lessons of the War are how Japan has is stark, ” I said.  “Japan has pretty much dealt with it by trying to pretend it didn’t happen.” 

And if you don’t believe me, just try contrasting how Western Europeans feel about Germans today, as opposed to how the Chinese feel about the Japanese.

Germany, on the other hand, has never st

The sun sets on this visit,  but hope to return!
The sun sets on this visit, but hope to return!

opped working hard to get past the horrifying lessons of the Third Reich. 

“It’s still a big problem, ” Christine told me.  “Germans don’t feel entitled to be proud at all.  About anything.  We’re meek and apologetic all the time.  And this has negative consequences when it comes to public policy, particularly in the area of immigration.”  In other words, Germany has gotten the reputation as being the cushiest destination for immigrants, because Germans are afraid to demand any sort of compliance or assimilation from newcomers.

I told her I hoped I’d have many chances to return to Munich.  She wished me well on my Russian adventure, which will start in just a few minutes when boarding starts.

///

I sure hope the fact that I don’t have a return airplane ticket from Russia in my hand turns out to be a problem as I enter Moscow tonight.  Within ten minutes of arriving at the airport, I was asked about this.  I can understand how a closed country like Russia wants to make sure I don’t plan on trying to stay in the country illegally (as IF).  But no one told me I would be required to have proof in writing in my hand to make it through customs or immigration.  The fact is, I don’t  have a return ticket from Moscow.  I’m not leaving Russia from Moscow, and I’m leaving from St. Petersburg, and I’m leaving by bus, not plane, and I don’t yet have bus ticket.  Oops?  Fingers crossed.

///

Note to the security guy with the handsome face and rippling biceps bulging out of his white short-sleeve shirt who performed a special search of all of my photographic equipment:  You may search anything of mine, any time, for any reason.  Consider me at your disposal, bitte und danke.

///

It was a little weird as I got processed through the Passport Check.  I thought of all that work we did in Cleveland, New York and Washington to get my Russia visa.  All those phone calls, all those fees, all those forms, all that worry, all for this tiny little thirty-second moment.  It is unlikely that anyone else will look at the visa stamp again. 

///

The whole night, during the flight and especially after I landed, I had fears that something awful would go wrong and I’d find myself as a character with a (brief) supporting role in some Nelson DeMille thriller.  There would be a problem with my passport.  Or there would be a problem with my visa.  Or the driver who was supposed to be there to pick me up wouldn’t be there, leaving me stranded and ruble-less at 3:00 a.m. in scary Moscow. 

But the passport and visa were fine, and the driver was there waiting for me, thanks.

I got glimpses of both The Kremlin and St. Basil’s during the drive.  Coolness!

The hotel was perfectly fine (there were some pretty iffy reviews of it on TripAdvisor.com, so this was a relief).  Almost 5:00 a.m. before I got to bed.

Ethnic Restaurants I’ve Been to in Munich

  • Chinese
  • Indian
  • Mexican
  • French
  • Italian
  • Israeli
  • German
  • Austrian

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 282 user reviews.

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Munich
May 19, 2011 

Took a very nice walk along the Isar River after work.  They’ve been doing a lot of work on the river, tons of landscaping, beaches, floating walking paths, tunnels, recreation areas, etc.  It’s wildly pleasant.  Everyone’s on their bikes and walking with their families or sweethearts.  The weather was fantastic.

meeting_placeSpeaking of bikes, I wish I could take urban planners from all over the States, jam them into a plane, and take them to Munich to see the enormous benefits a large city receives when it becomes truly friendly to bicycle traffic. 

It’s really a revelation to walk around a city that embraces the bicycle to the degree that Munich does.  Any other city this size in the states would be much more choked with cars than Munich is.  When you get such a high percentage of your population on public transportation and two-wheeled transportation, your automobile traffic simply isn’t as bad. steeples_over_the_trees

///

I think I found a great public meeting place in Munich.  There’s a large fountain in front of one of the old city gates in an area called Karlsplatz (or Stachus).  I was there last night after saying so long to my pal Tex at City Segway Tours, and it seems that every attractive young Municher was there waiting for his/her date.  It would be a great place to snap candids or just people watch.  Incidentally, adjacent to this fountain is the largest-business-volume McDonalds in the world.rainbow_museum

///

I stopped by City Segway tours to say so long to my tour guide Tex.  I had forgotten to write on his floor (it’s a thing), so I composed something nice and suggestive.  “This’ll give your customers something to ask you about, ” I said.

Segway Tours I’ve Done

  • Berlin
  • Minneapolis (Old Mill area)
  • Munich

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 204 user reviews.

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Munich
May 18, 2011 

 

Maybe dubbing it into German would help it?
Maybe dubbing it into German would help it?

I always feel ignorant being monolingual.  Unfortunately, I really think I’m past the age where acquiring new languages comes easy.  The fact is, I’ve always been fascinated by languages without having any talent for them at all.

But when I’m in somewhere as multilingual as Europe I REALLY feel ignant.

When I’m interacting with Europeans, I see two behaviors that amuse me. 

People in service occupations are used to customer walking up and addressing them in any number of tongues.  It’s fun to watch them mentally click on a dropdown list and pick the language they think they’ll need.  They are usually correct, also, for whatever reason.  I assume they always know I’m American because I look like I don’t believe in evolution by natural selection, or something like that.

The subways are empty early on weekend mornings.
The subways are empty early on weekend mornings.

The second reaction is funnier to me.  That’s when I approach them and say, In my best German or French (or Russian), “I’m sorry, I don’t speak _____.”  I then get this look from them.  It’s not an unkind look , really… the thought bubble I imagine I see over their heads reads something like this:

“Okay, don’t scare him.  Speak softly and reassuringly.  Hey, Marcel!  Looks like we’ve got another escapee from the Care Facility for the Victims of Profound Head Injuries.   Ignatz, distract him with something shiny while I pull out my dart gun.  He’s just going to hurt himself out here.  The sooner we can get him back to the home, the better it will be for everyone.”

Frankly, I have trouble even imaginging what it must be like to be able to mentally juggle all those different vocabularies and gramamars and even slang.  I really admire them.

///

Last night my colleagues and I went to a Jewish/Israeli restaurant.  Seriously?  A Jewish restaurant in Munich?  The birth of the Third Reich?  Why not open a nice deli in Damascus?  It boggles the mind.  Why, ifyou were a Jew, would you want to go anywhere NEAR Germany?  For that matter, I’ve never understood why Jewish people bought Mercedes and BMWs, but that’s just me.frieze

Oh, the food at the restaurant?  Meh.

Languages I’d Be Most Interested in Learning If I Was Less Stoopid

  • Italian
  • Latin
  • Arabic

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 165 user reviews.

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Munich
May 17, 2011 

Completely different topic! During the last couple of years, I’ve been very entertained and inspired by a writer named John Scalzi.  He has rapidly growing stature in the science fiction field, but like me he also writes about movies and video games, as well as lots of other types of writing.  His long-running blog, The Whatever, is full of gossipy anecdotes, testimonials and opinions on, among many other things, the writer’s life. john scalzi

I’ve always known what a lazy writer I am.  That, frankly, was a major reason for keeping this travel journal.  Just a test of my writing endurance:  Could I successfully maintain a daily blog for a twelve week period?  I’ve been pleased with the results, mostly, and, inspired by Mr. Scalzi in several different ways, I’m eager to roll my sleeves up and try to earn more of my living by writing.

An area I’m interested in investigating is, duh, travel writing. I enjoy traveling so much, and I clearly like talking about it with my keyboard.  I wonder if I can find some outlets where I can submit some travel writing?

old mans warIt’s important for me to feel inspiration at this moment, because, as this job is winding down and I don’t have much else in the pipeline, I’m starting to feel the creeping “What If I Don’t Get Another Gig For Six Months” dreads.  You might think I’d have a ton of money stockpiled after this assignment, but it’s going to be a surprisingly small amount.  No, it’s not because I’m a crack addict or a shopaholic (anyone who knows my wardrobe knows this isn’t true).  It’s because whever you start working after not working for a while, you’re digging yourself out of a hole for a certain number of paychecks.  In my case, it was a big damn hole.

So the reason I won’t have a year’s worth of dollars ready to take care of me when I return to Los Angeles is that I’ve paid off three of my four credit cards and gotten caught up (to a certain degree) on back taxes.  Not completely caught up, I hasten to add.  But I’ve made good progress.

So I need to keep working, damnit.

I also need to stop depending so utterly on this software training work.  I love doing it, and I enjoy the jobs when they come.  But they are too sporadic these days.  They should be supplemental income, not my only income.  And if I’m not willing (or able?) to get an in-house training job, I need to have a second major source of income.  Perhaps it’s stupid to hope writing could be that source, but still, it’s a goal.  The idea feels right inside my head.  We’ll see.writers-market_medium

Areas I’d Like to Try Writing More On

  • Books (duh)
  • Games (duh)
  • Movies (duh duh)
  • Travel
  • Politics/Gay Rights
  • Politics/Rational Thought vs. Superstition in Public Policy
  • Pets
  • Food
  • Low Carb Living

 

Am I leaving out anything obvious here?

Tommorrow:  Back to Munich stuff!

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 299 user reviews.

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Munich
May 16, 2011 

A Plea for A Little Brevity

Hi, Friend! 

Always great to see you!  You’re looking well.  Why thank you, I’m well, too.

You say you have a problem you think I can help you with?  Terrific.  Please tell me about it.

I see.  I see.  Yes.  I think I understand.  That is indeed A Situation.  And one that I am sure I can help you with.

I believe I understand The Situation.  Thank you for describing it clearly.  Now what shall we do about The Situation?

I see, yes.  You’d like me to take Course of Action in order to help you with The Situation?  Why, I’d be more than happy to help you.  Course of Action is right in my wheelhouse.  You’ve come to the right person to help you with this particular Situation.  Thanks.  I’ll get right on that.  Talk to you later—  what, sorry?

Oh, yes.  That’s right.  You tell me you have a Situation.  Yes, I understand. 

Yes, and you’d like me to take Course of Action.  Yes, that was clear.  I’ve got it.  Thanks again.  Well, I’d better get back to what I was doing…

[Sigh.]  Yes.  Yes.  I promise I heard you the first two times.  You have a Situation.  Got it.  I promise you, I got it the first two times.  Yes.  And you think the only sensible solution is for me to enact Course of Action.  I fully agree with you.  I’ve been agreeing with you for ten minutes.  Yes.  Now if we could just wrap this up . . .

Oh.  My god.  You’re starting back on the loop again.  What is it that I have to do to jar you out of the loop and extricate myself from this increasinly tedious conversation?

Yes.  Course of Action.  I think I am going to set myself on fire now. 

A Situation? Really?  Yes, that is soooo fascinating.  Do you happen to have anything really sharp?

///

Why does this happen?  Why do people not trust that you understand the information the first couple of times they tell it to you?  Why does this converstation take fifteen minutes when it should take two minutes?  That’s thirteen minutes I’ll never get back.

 

 

What should be this:

happy chart

Becomes this ghastly, endless loop:

unhappy chart

Why do people do this?  Do they have all day to talk about this issue? I don’t.  How do we extricate ourselves from these excruciationly attenuated conversations without seeming terribly rude?

If Only There Were Polite Escapes From People Who…

  • …talk in endless loops
  • …tell endless boring stories
  • …tell endlless boring stories about their jobs
  • …make condescending judgmental statements regarding their beliefs in the supernatural
  • …say things like “anyhoo” and “I guess I shouldn’t kid a kidder” and “working hard?  Or hardly working?” or “what can I do you for” or “bassackwards”

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 269 user reviews.

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Munich
May 15, 2011 

A Private Segway Tour of Munich

Yes,  sometimes they really dress like this.
Yes, sometimes they really dress like this.

Again got lucky with a tourguide.  No, not that way, get your mind out of the gutter.  My private Segway tour of Munich was led by none other than Tex of City Segway Tours.  Tex is a very interesting guy, a native German whose parents immigrated to Houston when he was a lad.  He had a completely American upbringing , but at age 18 hesitated when it came time for him to choose which citizenship to keep (the United States doesn’t allow dual citizenship for non-minors).  Something in the back of his mind said, “Your German citizenship will come in handy.  Just wait.”

Turns out he was right, as he later met and fell in love with a German girl and followed her back to his native land where he has lived since 1992.  He still returns to the Lone Star State once a year to ge this duck hunting fix, because there’s way too much red tape and waiting in a crowded country like Germany for native duck hunting to be worth it.

Symbology in sculpture:  The lower lion (on the right) has an open mouth,  it's next to the king's palace.   The upper lion (left) has a closed mouth,  and it's next to the big royal church.   Message:  You can criticize the government,  but when it comes to the Church,  keep your damned mouth shut.
Symbology in sculpture: The lower lion (on the right) has an open mouth, it's next to the king's palace. The upper lion (left) has a closed mouth, and it's next to the big royal church. Message: You can criticize the government, but when it comes to the Church, keep your damned mouth shut.

Like all good tourguides, Tex loves his subject, which in this case was, of course, the beautiful city of Munich.  Munich is the capital of Bavaria, which is sort of the Texas of Germany – rich, conservative, and very very proud of its own identity. 

I managed to get through the entire tour without falling this time, and we saw a lot and did far more daring stunts on the Segways than I did in Berlin, including  a slalom run through a row of pilings, dark tunnels by the river and narrow sidewalk passages.  Tex even helped get me a nice slice of video in the Englischer Garten.

Tex the Magnificent!
Tex the Magnificent!

Favorite Urban Parks

  • Englischer Garten, Munich
  • Central Park, Riverside Park, Madison Square Park, New York
  • Forest Park, Fort Worth
  • Lake Calhoun, Minneapolis

Average Rating: 5 out of 5 based on 183 user reviews.

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Salzburg, Austria
May 14, 2011 

Distance Traveled Today:  145 miles

Distance Traveled So Far:  10, 477

A Trip to Soundofmusicland!!

The hills are alive!
The hills are alive!

Saturday morning.  Excited about my day trip to Salzburg, I hurredly showered and got ready.  As I was dressing, I noticed a sound coming from the windows.  A soft pattering sounds.  Not an upleasing sound, yet on this particular day a decidedly unwelcome sound.  With mounting dread, I pulled up the shade.  Rain!  Bah‼ I realized I hadn’t checked the weather for today.  Maybe it’s just Munich, I said to myself, firing up the laptop.  Nope.  Rain in Salzburg also.  Damnit!

The Fortress
The Fortress

So much for my plan of wearing short and a T shirt.  Trying to minimize my martyr-like sighs, I pulled on jeans, a shirt and my stupid, faithful, huge green trenchcoat that has served me so well on this trip.  I made my soggy way over to the main train station.

Do you recognize this fountain?  HINT:  Not a MALE deer,  but a .  .  .   .?
Do you recognize this fountain? HINT: Not a MALE deer, but a . . . .?

An observation:  European cities don’t have the 24 hour mentality that big American cities have.  People actually close their stores on Sundays, not because of archaic Blue Laws, but because, uh, they don’t want to work on Sundays.  City streets in Europe are very very quiet on weekend mornings.  I was practically alone in the subway on my way over to the main train station where I was to meet my tour.

D'oh!!!  Ray: Me.
D'oh!!! Ray: Me.

It was a small tour group of seven:  A nice young Toronto straight couple in their 20s, a very friendly and uber- gay couple from Vegas, a sinfully handsome young Omani named Abdullah, a German woman who didn’t say ten words the entire day except for fretting over the trail of personal belongings she lost across the city of Salzburg, and your faithful correspondent.alps

Our tourguide was Susan, an eight months pregnant half-German, half-English sweetheart who was moonlighting while in the middle of her three-YEAR paid maternity leave from her regular job.

My new pal Abdullah
My new pal Abdullah

It was a lovely two-hour train ride southeast to Salzburg, city famous for salt (hence its name), Christian Doppler (yes, discover of the eponymous Effect), Mozart, and that little musical film starring who was it again?  Oh, yes, I think it might have been Julie Andrews.  I warned John of Toronto that, due to the campy nature of the tour, that exposure to too many of the day’s projected locations could spontaneously turn him at least temporarily homosexual.  He noted the warning with good humor.

Stupid Rain!

For only three Euro,  you can take a couple of potshots at the town.   It's all in good fun,  and it keeps the population in check.
For only three Euro, you can take a couple of potshots at the town. It's all in good fun, and it keeps the population in check.

When we got there, things were pretty gloomy for the walking tour portion of our day.  I was constantly putting my camera back into its protective plastic bag between shots.  We began to work our way through some of the major locations in the film.  I got a shot at what I call the “Do Re Mi” fountain, the plaza where Maria sings the written-for-the-movie “I Have Confidence, ” and even a shot in the graveyard where th efamily hid from Nazis.  Of course, in the film the graveyard was on a soundstage, but the event evidently actually occurred in this particular graveyard.

Leisl!  Friedrich!  Don't let the Nazis see you!!
Leisl! Friedrich! Don't let the Nazis see you!!

Of course the city has much more to offer than just Sound of Music porno for middle-aged Americans.  It’s a perfectly beautiful place, well worth a visit even if you were utterly indifferent to screen adaptations of Rogers and Hammerstein musicals.

This beautiful statue of Mary is part of a cool optical illusion.   The cherubs who seem to be crowning her are actually on the exterior of the church about 60 yards behind this statue.   You have to stand in the exact spot where this photo was taken to make it look like she's about to have the crown placed on her head.   Those tricksy sculptors!
This beautiful statue of Mary is part of a cool optical illusion. The cherubs who seem to be crowning her are actually on the exterior of the church about 60 yards behind this statue. You have to stand in the exact spot where this photo was taken to make it look like she's about to have the crown placed on her head. Those tricksy sculptors!

Happily, when the walking tour was done and our free time began, the sun came gloriously out and I headed up the funicular to the spectacular hilltop fortress with the other homos.  At the top is where I managed to get my obligatory “Julie spinning on a mountaintop” photo.  I then had a lovely lunch with the Mos, who are named Dave and Sing.

That Wacky Darwin

After a few minutes Abdullah joined us as well.  I’m tempted to say that made us a quartet of queers, but of course I cannot be sure about Abdullah.  For all I know he’s as pure, 100% straight as Ted Haggard.  Abdullah, if you are reading this, I promise you I have no intention to offend, and also I freely admit that my gaydar is notoriously unreliable, particularly when the data is very likely distorted by wishful thinking.  But be that as it may.

I have confidence in Julie!
I have confidence in Julie!

He told me that, while still conservative, Oman isn’t nearly as repressiv e as Saudi Arabia and some other Islamic states.  Many women wear the burka, but it’s entirely voluntary.

Abdullah works in media in Abu Dhabi (which is more liberal than Oman), and has a college degree in, of all things, English Literature.  I asked him who his favorite writers in English were.  He told me he preferred American writers to British writers (booyah) and that he was particularly fond of Huckleberry Finn.  I said, “Believe it or not, that book is still controversial in American schools, ” which amazed him.  I said it was amazing how some controversial books can stay controversial for long periods of time. 

“]”][REJECTED SALZBURG PHOTO LOCATION]
REJECTED SALZBURG PHOTO LOCATION
“Take Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species.  It’s still very controversial in America.”

Abdullah nodded emphatically.  “Oh, yes, it is in my country too.  People don’t like that book.”

“Really?”

This is what they used for the exterior of the Von Trapp villa in the film.   It's smaller than I would have expected.   The magic of the movies,  huh?
This is what they used for the exterior of the Von Trapp villa in the film. It's smaller than I would have expected. The magic of the movies, huh?

“Yes.  We are taught that Adam and Eve were the first people, and they had a child of each color, and that’s how all the races were made.”

I remained calm.  I smiled.

Yes,  as in the Effect
Yes, as in the Effect

“Okay… you do realize that isn’t true, right?”

“I don’t know.  What I told you is simply the story we are taught from the Koran.”  He clearly seemed conflicted on the issue.  And the more he talked, the more I understood that this isn’t a kid who’s wants to refuse to budge from the familiar thinking he grew up with.  He’s done a lot of traveling, and is clearly curious about the world.  We talked about other books and Dave and I insisted that he should consider trying To Kill a Mockingbird, a title he eagerly wrote down.  We told him the story of Truman Capote and Harper Lee, and how many people believe Harper Lee didn’t actually write the book (I am not one of them).main_street

The birthplace.
The birthplace.

This July he’ll be heading to Wyoming, of all places, to do some sort of very fancy internship that he applied to more than once before getting accepted.  He’s a really good guy, and we wished him well in his continuing adventures.

On the train ride back I had a nice long chat with the Toronto couple, who eventually admitted to me that they were evangelical Christians.  This surprised me, simply because I don’t think of Canadians as being that evangelical.  “We’re a very small community in Toronto, ” they said.  They were in the middle of a three week romp across Italy, Germany, France and the UK.

The very McDonalds where Maria took the children in the movie.   Remember how mad Christopher Plummer got?  I loved the song!  "Hurry,  hurry,  Gretl,  hurry,  finish eating your McFlurry...." etc.
The very McDonalds where Maria took the children in the movie. Remember how mad Christopher Plummer got? I loved the song! "Hurry, hurry, Gretl, hurry, finish eating your McFlurry...." etc.

Oh, Please Stop Believin’

A peek at the old city wall
A peek at the old city wall

Speaking of irrational belief, when I got back to Munich and said so long to my fellow tour members, I sat down to grab a quick bite and had to endure, over the loudspeaker, one more rendition of Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’.”  I swear, this song is following me everywhere on this trip.  It needs to stop.  I can think of few songs which are so famous and so beloved and so enduringly popular and yet so vapid and uninteresting.  I sincerely don’t get why people are so fond of that damned song.  I much prefer the soulful “Lights.”  Don’t you?

I was somewhat pleased with my excursion to Salzburg.  It wasn’t a complete success; the weather compromised my photo opportunities.  Also, since this was just a day trip, we couldn’t see some of the most important movie locations, like the gazebo and the palace used for the Von Trapp family villa.  Also, the convent and the place where the family performed were not available for photos.  But still, I got some fun shots, and it’s a perfectly charming, beautiful place.  I’d go back in a musical-comedy heartbeat.the_at_the_ball_under_that_one

Well-Beloved Boring Mediocre Pop Songs

  • “Juke Box Hero, ” Foreigner
  • “Private Dancer, ” Tina Turner
  • “Roxanne, ” The Police
  • “Don’t You Want Me, ” by Human League
  • “Do You Really Want to Hurt Me, ” Culture Club
  • Every Journey hit except for “Lights”
  • Pachelbel’s Canon (a three hundred year old pop song that still torments us)

old_town_from_fortresssteeple_2

Average Rating: 4.5 out of 5 based on 179 user reviews.

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Munich
May 13, 2011 

Escaped Another Friday 13th Unscathed!

Very famous and beloved bathhouse
Very famous and beloved bathhouse

Took a fun walk after work today.  I went past the surfers on the Eisbach and got some pictures, but cleverly forgot to get video, duh!  I’ll go back for that.

You have to wait your turn to surf the Eisbad.
You have to wait your turn to surf the Eisbad.

Then I walked the length of one of Munichs’ four “royal streets” – this one was Ludwigstrasse.  Named for Ludwig the 1st it’s a stately street whith many terrific buildings, the University, and Munich’s most famous piece of public art:  Jonathan Borofsky’s 17 meter tall “Walking Man.”  It’s a stunning piece made of a steel frame with a fiberglass coating.  As simple as its design is, it’s very engaging and appealing.  I think the reason I like it so much is that he’s moving “out of the frame, ” so to speak, one of his arms extending past the grassy area he’s in so that it’s reaching of the pedestrian sidewalk.  My tourgude on Saturday justly referred to him as the Eunuch From Munich.

The Walking Man
The majestic, yet playful, Walking Man

Borofsky is an American artist who is most famous for his “Hammering Man” statues that have been installed in Basel, Dallas, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York, Seattle, Denver, Washington, D.C., Seoul, Frankfurt, and Lillestrøm, Norway.

At the end of my walk I had some decent enchiladas at a popular Mexican cantina.

My Favorite Mexican Restaurants

  • The original Chuy’s on Barton Springs in Austin
  • Las Palapas (any one of them) in San Antonio
  • Maria’s Taco Xpress on Lamar, Austin
  • Lucy’s El Adobe across the street from Paramount, Hollywood
  • Gardens of Taxco on Harper, West Hollywood

Average Rating: 4.6 out of 5 based on 287 user reviews.

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Munich
May 12, 2011 

Munich surfer!
Munich surfer!

For three nights in a row here in Munich, I’ve gone to dinner with colleagues.  Now, don’t get me wrong, I enjoy them and had a great time.  But I can’t get used to the concept that, if I agree to to dinner, I have to realize that there’s nothing else I’ll get to do that night except crawl back to my hotel and go to bed.

Oh, well, it’s not as if I really did have anything important to do back in the hotel room.  But it still takes some getting used to.roof_1

I think the main reason I find it exhausting is that, if I’m still with clients, no matter how congenial things get – and they’ve gotten pretty damn congenial on this trip – I’m still on guard.  I’m still a little bit “at work.”  Meaning I’m not really relaxed.  That’s why I feel a little bit “behind” when I get to my hotel at midnight and I haven’t really had a chance to unwind from the day.

On the other hand, our four hour dinner last night was wonderful.  I had the best schnitzel I’ve had to date.  Ordering schnitzel was a bit of a cop-out, since we were in a noted Bavarian restaurant, and schitzel is of course Austrian, but I’m still glad I ordered it.  Yum.

 

//

young_surferAt lunch we checked out the surfers.  Surfers in Munich?  You betcha.  There’s a small canal called the Eisbach which flows through the central part of the city and then through the massive Englischer Garten.  Right where it enters the park, there’s a natural wave that local surfers have augmented with blocks (or maybe a tree trunk) a bit below the surface.  And on this wave, which is all of 15 meters wide, they take turns surfing!  It’s really something to see.

Complete List of Surfing Movies I’ve Seen

  • Riding Giants (2004)

Average Rating: 4.6 out of 5 based on 292 user reviews.

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