Yesterday was Blogger’s Unite, a day to do something good for some aspect of society. With so much need in the world, I was not really sure where to start, so I decided to start with a baby elephant, Tong Jan.
I fostered her after reading her sad story before she came to Elephant Nature Park, and after learning how she was rescued when she was three months old. As life-long lover of elephants, I always wondered at them from afar. They seemed magical and majestic, yet after digging a little further (and previously fostering another elephant, Max), I learned that elephants can be particularly needy and savagely abused. Their size can certainly hide their amount of mistreatment.
I did not plan to foster another elephant before the holidays, but it was the challenge of Blogger’s Unite that got me to consider doing something, even minor, to help make the world a better place.
Over the weekend I spent some time in New York City’s Central Park, walking around to clear my mind and relieve stress. I snapped a few photos of my time while walking by the Chess and Checkers House, going inside the Dairy, and spanding some time in the Central Park Zoo and Children’s Zoo. I uploaded the pictures I took there to Flickr.


Michael was mentioned in this past week’s Cindy Adams Gossip column in the ONLY>New York Post. A nice comment about Michael’s book A Very New York Christmas which has an introduction by Cynthia Nixon. Way to go, Michael!
Technorati Tags: Cindy Adams, Michael Storrings, Cynthia Nixon
Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
I saw the Salzburg Marionettes’ new production of the Sound of Music this evening at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was wonderful! The music and story-line are so familiar, but seeing a live marionette production (which I have never seen live before!) with the singing and the music makes me think of entertainment and engagement in a new way.
I see and hear Julie Andrews, but she was not there. Instead, my mind interpreted what I saw and heard and processed it through my experiences. This makes me think of the simulacrum, where there is a copy of the real item that in itself becomes the real item itself.
Whatever the case, I think this is well-worth seeing.
Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
People who know me know that I have a love of pugs, so when I saw this, I could not resist. Nothing like something cute for a cold and dark morning. Click it, and it may give you a chuckle as well.
Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
Hard to believe that the original puppets used in the stop-action Christmas movie, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer were almost lost to age and neglect. Of course, at the time nobody knew how popular the movie would become, even elevated to cult-status, sans people dressing as misfit toys. Even though they have been on recent tours (nostalgia or new markets?) that have not been in or around NYC, they still hold a certain fascination for me.
Philosophically and culturally speaking:
- Perhaps they hearken back to a simpler time (if there was such a thing?)?
- Perhaps they hold a gentleness for a violent and scary world (when was it never not that way?)?
- Perhaps they remind us of childhood (who really had a happy one, after all?)?
- Perhaps they are simply iconic or even somewhat archetypical (even in a Kantian perspective?)?
Whatever the case, in its simplest, they look good!

Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
I read about this fascinating scientific find in North Dakota, almost nine years ago, where a mummified dinosaur was found. This is the first time an intact dinosaur with its mummified skin has ever been studied. The National Geographic Channel
will have a special on this, Dino Autopsy, this Sunday at 9:00 pm (EST I believe, though they do not state that).
The National Geographic Channel website has a handy email or text notification service for this program, which is a rather convenient feature.
I have always loved learning about dinosaurs, as they seem like such magical and mythical creatures. My mind cannot really wrap around what it must have been like millions of years ago when these beasts moved around the world, and thriller movies and books only heighten the interest in them. I am a member of the American Museum of Natural History, and took some wonderful photos of their dinosaur exhibit when I visited the museum last Fall (though I never seem to have uploaded them for some reason).
I wonder how they became extinct? I wonder if we may, too?
Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
Michael Storrings signed his Christmas ornaments, dessert plates and mugs, coasters, and placemats for the fourth night in a row last night at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. Even though it was raining during the 8th Annual Winter’s Celebration in and around the Tree Lighting at Lincoln Center, people still came out to meet with Michael.



I wish I could have attended the entire event, but I was teaching last night, and attended after my class ended. The few pictures I was able to take are available on Flickr.
Technorati Tags: Christmas, Christmas Ornaments, Metropolitan Opera, Michael Storrings, Winter’s Eve
Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
Michael Storrings will be signing his ornaments and new line of dessert plates and mugs at the Metropolitan Opera Shop tonight. Picked up by today’s Community Affairs calendar of the New York Times as well as News Long Island, Michael will be there during the Lincoln Center Tree Lighting Ceremony and the 8th Annual Winter’s Eve celebration.

Technorati Tags: Christmas, Christmas Ornaments, Metropolitan Opera, Michael Storrings, Winter’s Eve
Posted by: Jeffrey Keefer
I was able to help Michael at his ornament signings again yesterday. He again had some of his friends stop by. I wish I would have gotten more pictures, but it was busy!





Technorati Tags: Christmas, Christmas Ornaments, Michael Storrings, Saks 5th Ave., Saks Fifth Avenue