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Wednesday, Dec 14 2005

Wed evening

We had the overall NY company Xmas party last night. Only a fraction of people attended, but it was nice. The theme was gambling night. A few tables were setup with all sorts of games (Black Jack, Roulette, etc.) and people played w/ fake money. Hors d'oeuvre were being served. The most appreciated feature was an open bar that lasted late into the night. It sure was a fun party . I will try and post some pics once I get them. Everybody looked great.

The event was held at a place called Home, which is a hip new Chelsea club, around the corner from the office. The Editorial review from City Search says:

"Hip partiers make themselves comfortable with bottles and a rowdy dance floor."

Monday, Dec 12 2005

Monday night

Company Xmas party tonight. We went to Matsuri, the Japanese restaurant in the Maritime Hotel. From the NY Times:



"Youthful and exuberant, and stylish as all get-out, it pulls off the neat trick of presenting both traditional and modernized Japanese food in a warehouse-size basement that feels as much like a club as it does a restaurant.

The visuals are impressive. Huge paper lanterns, crazily squashed and lopsided, hang from a vaulted ceiling lined with dark wooden ribs. The walls are faced with lustrous jade-green ceramic tiles. The floor is dark polished wood. Over the brightly illuminated sushi bar, where chefs work at top speed throughout the night, a mysterious pattern behind frosted glass turns out to be a series of identical sake bottles, their labels neatly aligned and facing outward. The waiters wear uniforms emblazoned with the bull's-eye design normally seen at the bottom of a sake glass, another sly reference to the restaurant's mind-boggling list of nearly 200 sakes.

Into this operatic setting steps Tadashi Ono, no stranger to the idea of cuisine as theater. Formerly the chef at La Caravelle, he created a serene temple of avant-garde Japanese cuisine at Sono, where he made not only the food but the plates and bowls as well. The mission at the high-energy Matsuri is different. Most of the menu is dedicated to perfectly traditional sushi and sashimi, with fairly standard hand rolls added on. Matsuri offers nearly 30 species of fish, with a couple of less commonly encountered selections, shad and pink snapper. On a Manhattan scale of sushi excellence, I would put Matsuri in the upper third for quality and freshness, with a special commendation for the sweet egg custard sushi."

Lots of sake flowed all evening, it was fun.


Sunday, Dec 11 2005

Sunday

Watched Mr. and Mrs. Smith today. Pretty bad movie, although it's always nice to see Angelina.

Tomorrow will be a long day at work. At least we'll have an informal company party in the evening.


Spain's Architectural Explosion

Interesting article in the Arts section of the NYTimes today about Spain's Architectural Explosion.

It talks about Mr. Terence Riley's, the NY museum of Museum of Modern Art chief curator of architecture and design, travels through Europe looking for work to include in a show he was organizing about stadiums, auditoriums and theaters around the world.

As he traveled through Spain last February looking at various projects before heading on to other European cities, Mr. Riley changed his mind. "I had this revelation of sorts," he recalled. Mr. Riley realized that the show was right in front of him: an explosion of inventive architecture in a country that had long shunned experimental forms. From the Barajas Airport Terminals in Madrid with its vast wings of wavy steel, to the Santa Caterina Market in Barcelona with an undulating roof of riotous color, so much of what he was seeing was compellingly original.



The country is using architecture "to stabilize neighborhoods and maintain a sense of urban life," he said. Instead of centralizing social services, education and medical services in Barcelona in large, hulking structures, for example, smaller eye-catching versions of them are scattered within each of the city's 41 traditional barrios, enlivening the neighborhoods and enriching the city's architectural fabric. And then there are the projects that draw attention purely because of their design, like the performing arts school in Tenerife by GPY Arquitectos, a mélange of stone and wood partly exposed to the open air that harnesses the city and the Atlantic as backdrop.

Unlike China, he said, where most of the big commissions are going to foreign architects these days, Spain is turning enthusiastically to its own as well as to outsiders. "There is a very good and healthy mix," he said.

You can read the full article here (requires subscription)


Google Video

I've been playing around with Google Video this morning. Still in Beta, but it works fairly well. I looked at it after it was released, but it seems like now it has enough content to make it a worthwhile tool.

For soccer fans, a couple videos worth watching:

Jornada 12 : Real Madrid - FC Barcelona

Nike's new shoes

On the second one, just wait till he starts playing with the ball, and what he can do with it.

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