Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Treasure at Your Feet

Aloha & Welcome to Waikiki







"If the doors of perception were cleansed 
everything would appear to man as it is,
infinite."

                                             William Blake




"Keep your eyes open to your mercies.
The man who forgets to be thankful 
has fallen asleep in life."


Robert Louis Stevenson






"One sees great things from the valley,
only small things from the peak."


G. K. Chesterton




"When you look into an abyss,
the abyss also looks into you."
 
Friedrich Nietzsche











"A point of view can be a dangerous luxury
when substituted for insight and understanding. "

Marshall McLuhan






"A moment's insight 
is sometimes worth a life's experience."

Oliver Wendell Holmes


   ><}}(°> 
Some long to own
something,
some wish to be
something.
 I enjoy seeing,
thinking,
learning,
knowing,
& wondering.
I enjoy interacting
with 
Y O U.
Thanks so much for visiting!
       comment? Yes Please!   cloudia 

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Pastry of Thinkers

A  L  O  H  A !






 "Judge each day
not by the harvest you reap
but by the seeds you plant."

Robert Louis Stevenson










"I am following Nature without being able to grasp her,
I perhaps owe having become a painter
to flowers. "

Claude Monet



See the Star of David?

"God writes the gospel not in the bible alone, 
but on trees, and flowers, and clouds, and stars."

Martin Luther
 









"Keep your fears to yourself,
but share your courage 
with others."

Robert Louis Stevenson













"Certainly, travel is more than the seeing of sights;
 it is a change that goes on,
deep and permanent,
in the ideas of living."

Miriam Beard











"A warm smile
is the universal language of kindness."

William Arthur Ward
 



><}}(°>
 
 
What do philosophers
prefer to eat 
for breakfast?


Thanks for swinging by,

leave a comment-

    warmly, cloudia


Saturday, May 21, 2011

How 2 Write

Aloha, Friend!


  "Father of modern surfing."
was the REAL deal!

"Just take your time - wave comes.
Let the other guys go, catch another one."

Duke


Nice looking scoot-




"Good artists borrow,
great artists steal."

Picasso





 -Things are not always
what they appear to be.


"Mirrors should think longer 
before they reflect."

Jean Cocteau


 ><}}(°>
Once I asked my psychology professor:
"Where do hypotheses come from."
How do scientists decide 
what to try to prove/disprove? 
She was wise and admitted to me
that such 'inspirations'
remain a wonderful unknown.
There are lots of people
who will tell you
'how to write.'
Some of them,
in his worthy 
give excellent, 
very useful advice. 
 But where do ideas come from?
What is worth writing about?
Why should a reader care?
It is said that Robert Louis Stevenson,
 when he needed money, 
would ask his 'Brownies'
for a new story plot
which they always supplied to him
while he slept.
  "And for the Little People, what shall I say
they are but just my Brownies, God bless them!
who do one-half my work for me while I am fast asleep,
and in all human likelihood, do the rest for me as well,
when I am wide awake and fondly suppose I do it for myself."

Robert Louis Stevenson


Now I'm going to share MY method.
I do not sit before a blank screen.
By the time I sit down to 'write'
I have an idea and notes;
I know what I am going to write about
even though it often takes me on a journey,
a path,
I knew not of
beforehand.
If you came to my desk
you would see stacks of magazines
full of highlighting and folded-over pages.

You would also see lots of notes on paper.

When I walk, when I meditate, 
when I watch TV,
I always keep paper and a writing tool
near.

The best ideas arise
"out of the blue."
So I capture those wild ideas.

When it is time to write a blog post,
(if there is no topic on my mind)
I sit with all my notes,
and quotes looking for an idea
that is ripe & ready;
an idea that speaks to me.


The thing that interests me
is ready to play that day.

A two-sentence idea
will be 'dead' one day
and birth a great post the next!

Then you learn to write,
by writing.
And by reading.

And by reading books like Charles' .

It can take years to develop a voice.
Don't make the rookie mistake of trying to 
'sound smart'
or to write like someone else.

(Actually, copying writers who speak to you
is a useful exercise - but your work
will ultimately be
your own,
or it will be something less than
Writing.)
"You do not really understand something
unless you can explain it to your grandmother."
 
 Albert Einstein

My novel was an idea that wouldn't leave me alone.
I HAD to write it!
But HOW??!!

I thought about it for a long, long time.
Something would come into my mind and I'd think:
"This will be in the book."
And I'd write it in a notebook.

One day, looking at those notebooks
I read a piece that seemed to be a place to start.
I wrote a chapter from that rich raw material.



Then it seemed that the second chapter should
'flash back'
to how the protagonist got to that place.

I had no outline of chapters;
I confess that I wrote them one at a time.

Only reading the manuscript afterwards
did I see the logic 
of the narrative thread.
I also saw that I had a manuscript,
not a book.
That is where the real work begins:
removing, revamping; praying.

The next book will arise
and force me to write it.
Or not.

This time
I WILL have an outline,
some structure, a narrative arc.

Or maybe I won't.

You can learn how to write clearly,
and you SHOULD
(if you want to be any sort of writer)

But to be a Writer
you will need magical Ideas.

You can ask the Brownies,
you can pray,
you can decide what the market wants.

But creating a story that breathes,
that lives,
that strangers will care about,
remains a tough task
requiring some luck
in the end.

At least it is to me.

Thanks for being a part
of that magic!

           Please leave your comment!  cloudia

Aloha Friday

ALOHA!

“When you fish for love,

bait with your heart,

not your brain”

 

Mark Twain


"Wisdom is the abstract of the past,
 but beauty
is the promise of the future."

 Oliver Wendell Holmes





"You think dogs will not be in heaven?
I tell you, they will be there long before any of us."

Robert Louis Stevenson





          Thanks for visiting! Comment?  cloudia

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Hawaii 5-O Season Finale

 A L O H A!






What a jazzy Hawaii sky. 
Eighth notes?  NO, SIXTEENTHS!



"Shoulder the sky, my lad,
and drink your ale.

A. E. Housman






"The brain is wider than the sky. "

Emily Dickinson








“An inexhaustible good nature 

is one of the most precious gifts of heaven, 

spreading itself like oil 

over the troubled sea of thought, 

and keeping the mind smooth and equable

in the roughest weather.”

 

Washington Irving 



  ><}}(°>




Hawaii 5-O has been a clear success for CBS this season and WILL be returning in the Fall.

As A local I'm thrilled that the show is actually good. 
And what a season finale!

Spoiler Alert: If you haven't seen the show yet,
read no further.

First of all I gotta say that the camera-work makes our island and our town look GREAT.

The writers do make our relatively safe home seem dangerous - but that is the price you pay
for hosting such a show.  The original cast did, after all, save our islands from super evil 
criminals every week.

I was happy to see one of my favorite new hang outs featured in the NEXT to last show;
The Downbeat Diner was a great location to bust into and make an arrest.  The place has a bar, 
and All American food like breakfast and burgers, plus a front row seat on the urban circus
that IS Honolulu's famous Hotel Street

What I especially appreciate is that I can get my burger
made with Big Island (Hawaii) grass-fed beef, and my friends can get ANYTHING in the place
made full-on VEGAN!

Masi Oka will be coroner on the show next season as a regular cast member.  But just when we 
thought that lovely Kelly Hu had cinched a recurring role, she got BLOWN UP REAL GOOD
in the opening moments of the finale!  

Didn't see that coming.

And now that we are really getting fond of the characters and loving their team,
it looks like 5-O is coming apart at the seams.  

The normally boring, plot device
that is the trusted Governor 
(who formed the 5-O team)
turns out to be in bed with the super criminals
that Steve McGarrett relentlessly hunts! 


I had wondered if Jean Smart would be back in that previously placid role next season.
(Hawaii did replace our female gov
with a male in the last election.)
Well Steve answered that question definitively
with a gunshot to the gubernatorial chest! 

I know politicians are unpopular as a caste right now,
but what a shocker.

Shocking and (dare I say it?) satisfying.
"Take THAT you lying scum bag!"

So Steve ends the season charged with murder.  

Kono (played by Grace Park)
is picked out of a line-up. 

Danny (Scott Caan) seems headed back to the East Coast with his formerly estranged
wife and lil` daughter ( cute local Teilor Grubbs);


Yummy Daniel Dae Kim
finds himself back on the HPD police force
with a promotion
and the job of arresting his friends!

Not too shabby, writers.
  Threaten the thing we love,
and make us know how much we love it!

I can hardly wait for next season.

  We all know that this popular show
will be back next season,
and not just to send McGarrett to prison.

But HOW will this audacious show wrap up all this amazing tumult?!

Who will play Hawaii's new TV governor, 
Arnold Schwarzenegger?

How will Steve and Kono be cleared? 

Will Danny's X-wife really leave her
millionaire developer?

This show has shown a willingness
to dare amazing plot lines.  

What will they do next?!

Rumor has it that big time stars 
are lining up to play guest shots
just like on the original show.

Diddy may even be back.

So be there- ALOHA!

           Do stop by 'comments'  cloudia
BONUS POINTS:
 







Obscure show paved way for Hawaii police dramas

By Lee Cataluna 
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Dec 21, 2010


That the reboot of "Hawaii Five-0" is doing so well at a time when scripted network dramas are desperate to come up with salable ideas says a lot about the durability of the cops-in-paradise genre.

But long before "Five-0" and "Magnum, P.I." showed up, a formulaic little drama called "Hawaiian Eye" plowed a path that all of the Hawaii-based TV shows would later follow.

Off the air for nearly 50 years and too obscure to be captured on some meticulously restored DVD set, "Hawaiian Eye" is hardly revered or even remembered by fans of Hawaii-based TV shows, probably because so little of it was actually shot in Hawaii.

But in four seasons on ABC, the show probably did more to plant the balmy idea of Hawaii in the minds of middle-class Midwesterners watching TV on wintry Wednesday nights than any glossy magazine spread.

From a tourism marketing standpoint, the timing of "Hawaiian Eye" couldn't have been more perfect. Premiering in October 1959, only months after statehood and simultaneous with the start of regular jet service, the show capitalized on the Hawaii craze that swept the nation.

The show, about a detective agency based at what was then the Hawaiian Village Hotel in Waikiki, followed the adventures of Anthony Eisley and future "Wild, Wild West" star Robert Conrad, punching out bad guys, rescuing beautiful guest stars and doing a lot of smoking.

To local audiences, there was an added treat. Comedic actor, singer and nightclub performer Poncie Ponce got co-star billing (along with Connie Stevens) as the resourceful cab driver Kim Quisado, whose far-flung collection of cousins, uncles and nephews could always be counted on to provide a crucial bit of information from the "street."

Ponce was one of the first Filipino-American actors to get star billing on a network drama.

A few clips of "Hawaiian Eye" are posted on YouTube, including the amazing opening credits that captured Conrad and Eisley surfing off Waikiki. (While Conrad was a natural athlete, Eisley looks a bit shaky on the board, making you wonder how many takes were required to get the shot.) Connie sits safely in a canoe. The scenes are long and slow and sometimes go on for minutes without lines of dialogue while the soundtrack plays.

Besides Ponce, the best part of the show is the most contradictory. While the old "Five-0" is beloved because it's shot on location, "Hawaiian Eye" is hilarious because it was shot on the Warner Bros. lot in Hollywood. Most scenes take place indoors. The set for downtown Honolulu, the scene of an armored truck robbery, looks suspiciously like Gotham City from "Batman."

The show may not have been faithful to Hawaii's scenery, but it got the genre started.