Tuesday, August 14, 2012

London 2012 Olympics and turning 33



It's been a fantastic 2012 Olympics. Faint memories of the 2008: Fantastic opening: esp the 'giant footprints' fireworks leading up to the stadium for the grand opening.

This 2012: the start was pleasantly surprisingly good! The start from the 'birth' of Thames river, to lead into the stadium, decked in Shakespearean era and folklore, evolution into the industrial age with the forging of the final Olympic ring before being lifted to merge with 4 other rings to form the iconic symbol. Notable acts include Mr Bean with Sir Simon Rattle conducting the London Symphonic Orchestra playing 'Chariots of Fire', the 1980s theme song which became any athlete's anthem. The British humour of introducting Queen with a skit with James Bond leading the Queen onto a helicopter in Buckingham palace with 2 dogs, and the Queen + Bond parachutting into the stadium! The Olympic torch is also very innovative with 200+ individual torches coming together to form a giant caldron. The individual torches were to be given to each participating country after the games. Lastly, Paul McCartney with perhaps the most popular sing-along song, of Hey Jude, to end the opening... 

The sports. Swimming began first, and the legend Phelps didn't seem to be able to do a '2008', but he did became the most be-medalled athlete of all time, so kudos to him. Memory swims include the young Ye Shiwen, a 16 year old beating the OR at the 200m IM, even faster than Lochte's time in the final 50meters in the equivalent event. I was in China over a week and Sun Yang's wines is the 400m and 1500m were replayed a 1000 times and hailed a national hero over and over. Singapore's swimmers were crap though. period.

Athletics: The 'core' of the Olympics, to run faster, jump higher, throw further. It's always great to watch this, without the aid of bicycles, racquets, balls, horses!?, boats etc to distract one from the pure physical form. Notable was the triple jump's record at 18.26m by Jonathan Edwards etched in 1995 or Mike Power's 8.95 in the long jump. The past 2-3 generations of jumpers are NOWHERE near such records. It's utterly amazing! Other notable Athletics events include Liu Xiang's famous first hurdle fall, and I watched it live in China, and the crowd in the restaurant were like 'argh!!' and you know something went really bad. Hours of coverage followed over the next few days, interviewing his coach, family, doctors, fellow chinese sportsmen and so on. Also, for Mo Farah's 5000m and 10000m twin long distance win for GBR, a great celebration for him. Finally, the fastest showman in the world, Usain Bolt. I watched both 100m and 200m live in 2008 but didn't manage to get it, and he deserves every respect, arrogance and all!! Bask in his glory, for we may never see another Bolt in our life time.

Other notable events is how graceful Synchronized swimming and Rhythmic gymnastics can be. It's watching a performance.

The closing was a big Brit-Music concert, notable including Spice girls, Queen and John Lennon literally Singing Imagine. Imagine no countries, living life in peace..

Oh, there's 33 candles on the cake today. Not feeling too well. Thanks to all for the well-wishes.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

2012 Amsterdam Day 2 - A day at the Museums

 A lazy second day, still pretty jet-lagged, went to Foam, a photography museum!

 Ron Galella was on display for paparazzi photography. Erm...what's so good about paparazzi photography that warrants a paid exhibition!??!?! Isn't paparazzi simply snapping wildly at celebrities while being cursed for your 18 generations for intrusion of privacy!?

 No it wasn't that way. Galella was a pioneer, with popularity of 35mm cameras, Galella started 'haunting' certain celebrities, musicians, politicians and the like. I'd imagine one must be superbly thick-skinned, have a lot of patience, and great contacts to get into hotels, restaurants, private locations before other media can get into, to snap personalities in their 'private moment'. Stalking Jacqueline Kennedy with famous court case between them, getting punched by celebrities and suing them successfully, Galella is perhaps the most famous celebrity photographer of them all. I'd say Galella is a photography of history, photographing Mick Jagger, Brigitte Bardot, Andy Warhol, Frank Sinatra, Penelope cruz and more!



"My idea of a good picture is one that's in focus and of a famous person doing something infamous. That's why my favourite photographer is Ron Galella" - Andy Warhol.


 Bump into another exhibition on the way to Vincent Van Gogh's

 Partial sign of the 'I AMsterdam', with lots of local kids/students!

Vincent Van Gogh, so much talent, great aptitude for learning, willing to travel places. Different works showed the different influences of the cities, places, people whom he met. Either backyards, prostitutes, outdoor nature (such as sunflowers!), and all. Possibly a Gay (never mentioned at all in the museum!). Had serious mental issues, shot himself and died two days later. His brother was buried next to him. A tragic story, inspiring European arts for the next hundreds of years. I wonder what kind of photographer would Van Gogh be like if he's living in our era?
It was off to a break, and a superbly good nap at Morgan's, and an equally superlative Chicken Risotto by Marcus! I was craving for chicken rice during day 1 and also in day 2 (yeah..crazy but true), and this made up for it!

A nice to watch Euro cup match! (cos it was during the evening, see the light in the room at 9pm local time!!). Though an boring and ugly win by Spain against Portugal, (with penalties, no less..pui!) It was sweet dreams next of Champagne and Burgundy!!!

2012 Amsterdam: Day 1-2!

It was a pretty last minute trip. Planned with Amsterdam based Morgan, Winefield's Milan and Doris, it was a trip of a lifetime (with planned trip to Champagne and the holy land of wine, Burgundy!) Here after a 12 hour flight from sweltering humidity in Singapore. I touched down at Schipol airport to sunny skies and 'air-con' temperatures, outdoors!

It was off to Morgan's house and with Marcus' help dropped off at Morgan's safely and it was off to meet Marcus' friends and we had a wonderful boat tour around Amsterdam.

This is Amsterhotel, one of the top hotels in Amsterdam, with a lovely canal sided cafe!

Canals are used by many Amsterdamers for work, leisure, and logistics! Here a car at the back of a boat in danger of hitting a bridge!

A certain touristy stop over for a 1 euro toilet break + other touristy stuff such as dutch handiwork and dutch cheeses!

Amsterdam is a city of bicycles, here a GIANT bicycle park spanning three storeys!

A weird installation outside a traditional building, restoration gone wrong?
-
Beautiful houses line the canal, with blue skies and white clouds completing post-card-perfect landscapes!

A street market!!

"You've got be buttoned up"

Land of bicycles, costing 189 euros here..

Erm..can't remember which I ate, some 'disgusting', super sinful sausage made up of animal parts better not known!

Raw salted herring. Almost sashimi-like, I love it! And yes, the 'correct' way to have it is heads-down! We also had lovely French oysters, Perier Noir was my oyster of the day.

Nothing better to wash down all with a Heineken! On tap of course! It was a blur onwards, as jet-lag set on, and I stumbled back to Morgan's, had a nap, and waited for evening, where Morgan came back, and Marcus too, and we met up at Winefields for dinner! It's summer's start and it was a great trip around the Amsterdam city on the scoot of no-fear Milan!

Arriving at "Anna", an up-scale restaurant in the middle of the red-light district, it was finally happening! All of us gathered, (and previously Doris and Milan were in Singapore just two weeks earlier), and we're having dinner 'so soon'! Together with Lotta and Patricia, it was indeed a great toast to begin the evening!

Philipponnat 2003, a little flat and could be more energetic. Pinot noir content not making it elegant enough. Could be in a sleepy phase?

One of the several lovely dishes. One sees 'foam', only in high-class places?

Chave Hermitage Blanche, a little sharp.

1973 Nebbiolo from Renato Raffi, thick wasps of Soya, salt, strong body with brown rims and purplish core. Palette and body are still healthy, though finish and acidity points towards a downward slope. Drink up!

Jean Latour-Labille & Fils, Meursault - Perrierres 2008. Some buttery notes at first, clear acids and strong minerality show it's true pedigree shortly afterwards. Lovely with the fish.

Lamb cooked in three ways.

Bandol, looks like pinot, smells like one too or somewhat a feint grenaches. Definitely a single varietal. Can't tell if it's old/new world at all. Tannins smoothen out fast enough, lively after 45mins, one of the WOTN, intriguing and good.

Perfume of Frangipani, felt like Bali, sniffing through sunshine, road side lushness. Felt more like rip Kabinett than Auslese. Doesn't come across immediately as Riesling too!

What's better than a walk in the Red-Light district after a full dinner? ;)