Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Looking back

Well, here I am sitting in my kitchen, in the states.  I can't believe I'm back, especially after all the drama that ensued on the journey home.
Sunday morning I woke up early and headed to Kensington Gardens for one last time and sat at the Round Pond with a book.  I'm really going to miss sitting at that park.  Then we left for Heathrow at 11 AM.  Well it only took us 20 minutes to get there and check-in didn't start until 1 PM.  So we had to sit outside the airport and do nothing for an hour and a half.  After checking in, we found out that our flight was delayed from Bombay (good ole Air India).  So we left close to 6 (it was supposed to leave at 4:10) and I ended up sitting in the exit row and getting fully trained on how to open the door for the slide.  Why would they ever put me in charge of that?!?!?  They played Prince Caspian and we were pretty far into the movie when the guy 2 rows behind me stopped breathing.  They called for a doctor over the loud speaker and then he started seizing.  It was so scary.  They had 3 doctors run up to help out.  He finally calmed down  and they moved him up to first class.  When we finally landed it was 7:15.  I got through customs pretty quickly and then waited over an hour for my luggage (waved to the sky at 8 pm to say goodbye to my flight to Cleveland).  After we collected all our luggage, Aly and I headed to the Air India ticket counter to try to get out of there that night, but they couldn't get us on any flights.  So they put us up in a really nice hotel for the night.  Aly was able to go to the American ticket counter and get on a flight the next day, but the Continental one closed at 8:45 so I had to go back at 3:30 am the next morning.  We went to our hotel, ate dinner, I took a nap and then headed back to the airport, only to find out that I couldn't get on a flight to Cleveland until 8 pm that night!  So I took a bus to Midway and caught a flight there to Cleveland and finally made it home that after noon.  I took this as a sign that I shouldn't have left London...
But now I'm back and posting on here for the last time.  Just wanted to give my top ten list!  It was hard to put together because there are so many things that I did and so much that I loved.  So here it is, in no particular order
1.  The trip to Wales and all the transportation issues that ensued.  And how could I forget the "release" from jumping off the cliffs.
2.  Rolling down the hill at Greenwich on the Eastern Hemisphere.
3.  The Hard Rock Calling concert in Hyde Park.  Best line up ever, best weather of the summer, new friends and lots of dancing
4.  Going to the Wimbledon tennis tournament and sitting front row at Paul-Henri Mattew's match, drinking Pimm's and lemonade, watching Venus and Serena, hearing everyone cheer after Andy Roddick lost, watching the number one men's doubles team and eating strawberries and cream
5.  Working at AdConnection.  I can't even begin to describe everything and the memories are unforgettable.
6.  My trip to Prague: Most beautiful city in Europe
7.  My Saturday visits to Borough Market and Portobello Road
8.  Seeing Wicked in the West End
9.  My Paddle boat ride in Hyde Park with Julia
10.  The chauffeured bike ride from Leicester Square to Piccadilly Circus with Julia.

Alright, London's over, time to head back to Columbia for my last semester of college.  Cheers!

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Have 3 months really gone by??

I guess I'm still in disbelief that I'm leaving tomorrow for the states.  Like Marylyn said, it feels like when we get back to the states that no time will have passed and it will be May 17th.  I guess I'm in denial that this summer is over.  But I have truly enjoyed the last few weeks and this whole summer.  I love it here in London, despite the weather.
Ok quick recap...
Wednesday
Went to work and got lunch with some of the girls from work and then gave my presentation that I've been working on most of the summer to the company.  It was funny telling them about Great Britain because they live there and didn't know some of the stuff I told them.  We then headed to Wimbledon Village for my goodbye drinks.  It was so much fun being with everyone.  They made me gave a speech and I tried to not be sappy, but it's hard.  I've spent 2 months working with these people and they have taught me so much.  It soon moved onto a pretty crazy night and there are no words to describe the fun we had.
Thursday
Went to work for the last time.  It was hard to tell myself that this will be the last morning I go to work because I didn't believe it.  I went to lunch with a bunch of people from the office and then we came back and I had my exit interview with Steph.  It was very humbling hearing all of her feedback.  And the best part of it was when she told me that they would love for me to come back and work after graduation in December!  It really hasn't set in yet and everyone else seems really excited when I tell them, but I'm still in disbelief.  I guess that's why I don't feel like I'm saying goodbye forever, because there is a very big chance that I will be back.  After my meeting, we went upstairs and I sat down at my computer to keep working, and Nick said "Halli..."  and I guess I looked scared because I thought I did something wrong because he then said "Don't look scared.  This isn't a bad thing...and then he gave a nice speech and gave me a card and gift from everyone at AdConnection.  They got me a GORGEOUS watch. I was in shock.  All I got them was a card to share!  I'm terrible!  Saying goodbye to everyone was so weird because it's hard to believe that I see the same people everyday and I won't see them either ever again or for a few months.  After work I went for drinks with the people who couldn't go the night before.  And then rode the tube home with Lucy for one last time.  We met some turkish men on the tube who wouldn't stop talking to us.  Pretty funny, but I guess you had to be there.
Friday
Woke up early and went to Oxford Circus one more time for some gift shopping and a last stop at Primark.  Then I met Julia at the Imperial War Museum.  It was really neat and had a Holocaust exhibit and a Trench experience and Blitz experience.  Then we grabbed lunch and headed to the Westminster Pier for the boat to Greenwich with everyone.  It was neat seeing the city from the Thames.  When we got to Greenwich, we went to the Prime Meridian and stood in 2 hemispheres at once!  It was a lot of fun and we got a great view of London from the top of the hill.  Then, Christy, Julia, Aly and I decided to roll down the big hill.  It was definitely one of the highlights of my trip.  I won the race to the bottom!  Then we went to a pub for our last fish and chips, and caught the last boat back to London.  The ride back was fun because we sat on the top and had a hilarious Australian tour guide.  And we got to see Tower Bridge open,  for one of the few times of the year, for a larger boat.  Then most of the girls went out to a pub in Carnaby Street for some drinks for the night.
Saturday
Woke up and headed to Portobello road with Julia, Christy and Jen.  Made some good purchases and enjoyed the lovely rainy, cold, crowded atmosphere.  I got my last Hummingbird Bakery red velvet cupcake!  I'm going to miss those!  Then we met up with Kaylin and went to Abbey Road and did our Beatles picture, like 5 times, and Julia got to be Paul without shoes.  Then we came home and packed.  Not fun.  But I'm all packed now, and am NOT ready to leave!  But we're getting ready to go to dinner drinks one last time at a pub around South Kensington and then we leave at 11 am tomorrow!  AHH!!  I really cannot believe I'm leaving!
Things I've learned:
1.  Never say mocha with a long "o" in London
2.  Cars hate tourists on Abbey Road
3.  I can survive in a flat for 13 weeks with 5 other girls, one bathroom and two bedrooms.
4.  Some English people say bathroom
5.  I was made to live in this city.
So this is my last post in London.  I hope you've enjoyed following my adventures in London and Europe.  Stay tuned for my top ten favorite parts of the summer (it will be hard to do, I promise) and see you in the states soon!

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

52 stars?? Really??

Someone at work today told me there were 52 stars on the US flag.  I was in shock.  It was seriously the only time that someone said something about america that wasn't true.  They seem to know EVERYTHING here, but this definitely caught me off guard.
Okay recap of the past few days...
Sunday
Christy and I woke up early and headed to St. Paul's Cathedral for church.  Yes that's right.  I, Halli Levy, went to a church service.  It was very interesting, especially since it was held in one of the most beautiful cathedrals in the world.  It's where Princess Diana was married.  The only strange thing was when the priest started relating an ignorant comment someone made about boobs to how the person ACTUALLY meant that they think the cathedral is as pretty as boobs.  I totally think he pulled that out of left field.  After the cathedral we headed to Brick Lane, got some falafel, met an English guy in US Army fatigues, got a recipe for falafel from him, saw a stolen Old Navy sweatshirt for sale, and got caught in the rain.  So then we headed to King's Cross and finally got our picture at Platform 9 3/4!!  YAY HARRY POTTER!!!  Then we went for tea at Kensington Palace at the Orangery.  I can't believe it took me all summer to go!  Then we came home, went for our last Wagamama meal, and had a little jean washing party because we didn't want to pay 5 pounds just to wash our jeans.  Needless to say, it was quite humorous and we almost stained the bathtub blue.
Monday
Came in a little late to work because my train decided to terminate at Putney Bridge which is 4 stops before mine.  So I had to take the bus which took FOREVER.  And since I was last, I had to make the tea.  Surprisingly, I didn't drop the tray (I'm 3 for 3!!!).  We had 2 presentations today.  One from shortlist, a men's magazine, which was interesting.  Then we had one from Gorilla Nation.  This was by far the worst one I've seen all summer.  They talked forever, but when I say "they," I really mean just the guy JP because he kept cutting off the other guy.  I did get a free notebook and pen and Starbucks muffin, but it was so boring and they were talking about internet stuff that I didn't understand, and neither did anyone else.  But then I left for class right after.  It was our last class (woohoo), and we got 10 pounds because they never spent it on outside activities for us.  I finally got an A on my final paper!  After class, Julia, Jen and I decided to spend our 10 pounds at my favorite Earl's Court pub, O'Neills.  We got a pitcher of a delicious cocktail, some irish stew and played quiz night,which we lost terribly.
Tuesday
Went to work on a very dreary and rainy day.  Had a good day overall.  I finally finished my presentation, which I will present tomorrow, and learned some stuff about media and helped with other presentations.  It's so weird to think that in 2 days I won't be working there anymore.  I really love my internship and the people are a lot of fun.

Things I've learned:
1.  I will never master the European way of eating with a fork and knife
2.  I have absolutely no clue what is going on in the states right now with movies (i.e., didn't know about Pineapple Express)
3.  I'm still trying to understand what a "re-skin is"
4.  People are still obsessed with Team America here.
5.  Whitney Houston made a song for the LA Olympics.

Okay, time to enjoy the end of my trip!  I'm really going to miss London!

Saturday, August 2, 2008

I played "baseball" in London

Okay I put quotes around it because the baseball I played was a combination of baseball, softball and rounders.  Quite amusing I must say, but I will get there in a minute.
Sunday
Christy, Jen and I took a train to Windsor for the day.  We really lucked out on the weather for the day because it was ht and gorgeous out.  We ate lunch on the river at a restaurant called Brown's (like the Cleveland Browns!) and I ran into one of the women from work (small world!).  So then we ventured to the castle and walked around with an audio guide (not as good as the Westminster one) and saw everything except the Cathedral, which is like the main attraction but it is closed on Sundays for worship!  It was really pretty and we saw this huge dollhouse that was so intricate.  And we saw the staterooms where the main halls are and the guests are entertained (aka really important people).  There was a hall that had all the knights' coat of arms and the ones who were stripped of their titles had their coat of arms painted over in white.  How embarrassing!
Monday
Had a normal day at work.  They all thought I went on another crazy trip and were surprised when I said I only went to Windsor on Sunday.  Then I went to class where I turned in my last paper, so some of us went for a drink at the pub at our school to celebrate.
Tuesday
More work, can't remember if anything exciting happened.
Wednesday
Worked again, got drinks with work, and then went to Ice Bar with some of the girls.  It is a bar made of ice and they give you an eskimo coat and you can only stay in there for 40 minutes.  You get one drink and the glass is made of ice.  Then we went to O'Neills for some live music.
Thursday
Great day at work.  I got to leave early with two of the people from work and go shopping for drinks and food for our Softball game against one of our clients in Hyde Park.  I wore my Indians shirt and they all assumed I had amazing baseball skills (they admired my stance!  I told them my dad would be so proud!).  So we played "baseball."  It was really confusing for everyone because they combined their rounders rules and American baseball rules into our own game.  It was a lot of fun, but I am definitely still sore.  We then headed to a pub and hung out for the rest of the night.
Friday
Went to work and went out for lunch with everyone to another client's restaurant, Wagamama.  The had a normal day in the office with lots of laughs.  They made me do my terrible British accent.  And I made tea for everyone for the second time (I finally overcame my fear).  Then I came home and went to Fabric with my flatmates.  It's this crazy and famous club with 3 rooms and one even has a bass in the floor.  We then ventured home on the buses and met some interesting people at the bus stops and got invited to see the "dogs" (greyhounds) the next night because "it was the last night in London that the place was open."
Saturday
Got up and went with Julia to Hyde Park for our paddle boat date.  It was so much fun!  Then we met up with Christy and Lauren to go to Borough Market.  We got the same food again (mmmm) and then headed to Harrod's.  I can't believe I waited so long to go there.  It was so neat and there was every designer imaginable.

Things I've learned:
1.  The British love using American accents
2.  Champagne Cider is ridiculously strong
3.  The Queen hated Princess Diana
4.  Part of Windsor Castle burned down in a fire
5.   It's really hard to teach baseball.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

A Birthday, A Picnic(k) and A Tourist

What is really sad now is that I have pretty much become so comfortable here that I feel like I live here, but I have to leave in two weeks!  Who knew this day would come??  But now I am making the most out of every day I am here.
Wednesday
Went to work and then came home to go to Julia's birthday celebration.  We met here and her parents at Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese pub.  It's one of the oldest pubs in London and one of three pubs in London that are allowed to have the "Ye olde" title in their name.  It was so neat!  It was built in 1667 and is still running.  There was even a room that said something about only serving men at this part of the bar.  Afterwards, some of us headed to Piccadilly to O'Neills for some live music and dancing and then headed home.
Thursday
Went to work on an absolutely gorgeous day, so at lunch we ate at a tapas restaurant outside to enjoy the weather.  After work, I came home and ordered tickets for The Dark Knight at midnight that night.  So we went to Leicester Square, where the European premiere was held on Monday, only to learn that when they say 00:20 (aka 12:20 AM) on a Friday, they really mean Friday night, not Friday morning.  So we went there for nothing...but that meant that we still got to go the next night.
Friday
Went to work and spent an hour going grocery shopping at Marks & Spencers for food for our company picnick (that's how they spell it here).  Then we went to the park for our picnick where I tried brie for the first time (mmm).  Then I learned how to play rounders which was described to me as "Englishman's lazy version of baseball."  Honestly, I wasn't that great, but in my defense, I didn't understand the rules.  Then I came home and took a nap before heading to The Dark Knight.  On our walk there, we saw asians having a karaoke night on the balcony of the Chinese restaurant across the street from me.  Also, they had metal detectors and police patrolling Leicester Square so we felt paranoid, yet safe.  But we saw the movie, and it was AMAZING!  I was so impressed with everything in it and the story line.  Definitely kept me guessing and I think Heath Ledger did an impressive job.
Saturday
Woke up early because it was my first weekend in London in July (I have traveled the past 3 weekends).  Then Christy and I headed to Westminster Abbey and they have the best audio guides I have ever used.  Definitely beats Bath.  They had pictures and movies on this one!  The Abbey was very impressive and I'm glad I finally went.  Then we headed to Borough Market that is a market with all food.  This is my new favorite place in London.  It smelled amazing and everything looked delicious.  We got these chicken wraps that had salsa on them.  The chicken was so tender and of such good quality.  And then we had fresh Apple and Strawberry juice.  Then we walked around and found things like Ostrich eggs and Zebra meat and decided we have to come back more to get the food and bring some juice back.  Then we went to the Science Museum and saw some neat things, but we were tired and there were kids everywhere, too many, so we couldn't see much.  Even though British kids normally steal my heart because of their accents, I really couldn't stand these ones.
Things I've Learned
1.  How to play rounders
2.  It's only a couple minute's walk from Leicester Square to Piccadilly Circus
3.  London is overflowing with Americans in July
4.  Charles Darwin is buried in Westminster Abbey
5.  Julia's dad is definitely not Mexican

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Czeching in and out...oh and I saw Michael Caine

The past few days have certainly been filled of some crazy memories...
Thursday I jetted off to Prague, by myself.  I ventured to Luton airport where I had to sit FOREVER because my flight got delayed.  I finally got on my flight where I was surrounded by stag parties who were so excited to get to Prague and all I wanted to do was read my book and nap because it was after 9 at night. (yes I know I am a loser).  Well I finally made it to Prague and ran to catch the final bus of the night, without buying a ticket, but this is when I first learned that they don't check tickets on any Prague public transportation unless the cops decide to go and fine people.  So I made it to Liz, Bree and Gabby's place for the night.
Friday I woke up early with everyone because they had a big presentation and I headed out to go site-seeing.  I took Liz's Prague book with me and found Wallenstein Palace, Prague Castle, some random parks, then wondered around the Jewish Quarter where I got really lost, but it's okay.  Because I found Old Town Square and the most expensive street in all of Prague and went shopping at Hermes and Cartier...okay just kidding but I wished I did.  But I found a Kosher Restaurant and got some falafel and then ventured more in the Jewish Quarter and saw the oldest synagogue in Europe.  Prague is honestly the most beautiful city I have ever seen (minus Tzaft, Israel).  I then came back to the "dorm" and hung out with everyone, ate dinner at a traditional Czech pub, then I fell asleep really early.  So then Saturday we got up really early and saw everything else in Prague that I didn't see the day before, and I was with everyone instead of by myself.  We walked on Charles Bridge, went in some Cathedrals, ate some pizza, saw the big clock, got lost some more, and went back to the dorm and ate dinner and got ready for the pub crawl.  The pub crawl was so much fun and I of course flocked to the British guys on it because I seem to think I identify with them now.
Then Sunday we went to Bohemia Bagel (the start of our pub crawl the night before) to get lunch and our free tshirts from the pub crawl.  Then I headed to the airport.  I either got off the bus at the wrong stop or the bus just drops you off in the middle of nowhere.  But I somehow managed to find my way by reading the czech street signs.  And the rest of my travels were uneventful because I made it back perfectly fine.
Oh and one interesting Prague story.  Friday I went and got some souvenirs for the family only to see that A. they didn't give me Brent's snow globe and B. they didn't give me a receipt.  So I went back the next day and told them that I paid for it and didn't get it, and they just wrapped it up and gave it to me.  If I was in America, that would NEVER have happened.
When I got back into London I went with Julia and her parents to DaMario's, Princess Diana's favorite Italian restaurant this is around the corner from me, where we ran into some of the boys after their venture to Greenwich.  Then we went to a pub for some drinks and uncivilized conversations.
Monday I went to work and then didn't have class so Christy and I went to the red carpet premiere for the Dark Knight.  It was so cool.  We saw the bat mobile drive around for 10 minutes and then Michael Caine and Maggie Ghyllenhall (sorry about my spelling), Christian Bale, Aaron Eckhart, McFly, and some guy named John that's famous but I don't know who he is.  We staked out on chairs at Garfunkel's and watched the red carpet for a while and then came home.
Today I had work, where 2 of the bosses jetted off for the day to Germany for an hour meeting.  Isn't it crazy that people can just go to Germany for an hour meeting?  Well then after work I met Elise for a delicious Chinese dinner.  And then now we just sang happy birthday to Julia because she just turned 21!  Can't wait to celebrate tomorrow!
Thing I've learned:
1.  People think I can't spell my name correctly because I say "h" wrong in England
2.  Prague people aren't very nice
3.  My cousin just had a baby girl!!  Congrats Marlee!!
4.  People smoke too much in Europe so now my clothes smell like smoke because they have no smoking laws in Prague
5.  Even though I carried around a tour book in Prague, people still thought I was a native.  I guess I really do look like an Eastern European.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Remember that one time I jumped off a cliff?

Yep that's right!  I, Halli Levy, jumped off some cliffs.  But it wasn't as simple as that.  Let me just start at the beginning...
So last Friday night, Christy, Julia and I took the 11:30 pm train to Cardiff, Wales.  We got on the tube a little late to the infamous Paddington Station (think of the childhood stories of Paddington Bear) and had to run to our train just before 11:30.  It was just like in Home Alone Lost in New York when the family was running through the airport.  Well, we made it to our train, with time to spare.  At the first stop we picked up some drunk men who looked like they were in their late 30s.  And they were wasted.  One guy was yelling about losing his cell phone and it turned out that it was right there on the floor.  Mind you it's midnight and these are drunk grown men acting like they've never drank before.  So we switched to "the quiet coach."  We arrived in Cardiff at 2:30 AM and were forced to stay in the waiting room at the station until 5 am so we wouldn't be seen as "trespassers" on CCTV.  So we attempted to make ourselves comfortable in the piss-smelling room and watched Sweet Home Alabama, only to be joined later by quite a few interesting characters.  When we were able to walk around, we decided to make an appearance on the streets of Cardiff, that were still trashed from the night's festivities and eat some McDonald's.  We then found ourselves running back to the station to catch our next train to Haverfordwest (our destination for the cliff jumping).  We jumped on a train that was on our platform, only to find out that we got on the Hereford train...AKA the wrong way.  So we get off in Newport (a place I would never like to visit EVER again) and are stuck there for an hour and a half.  There is nobody working there and it is in the middle of nowhere.  We then take the train to Swansea where we finally get ahold of the place that we were trying to get to and I tell sweet Lorraine our situation and how we won't be able to make it to the morning session of coasteering, so she squeezes us into the afternoon session.  So we hang out in Swansea for a couple hours and do some shopping.  Then we take our 4th and final train of the day to Haverfordwest, hop in a cab and make it to Preseli Lodge with time to spare!
Now time for the real adventure...
So it turns out, the afternoon session is Christy, Julia, me and 10 guys on a stag party (AKA bachelor party).  What could be better?  So we gear up in our wetsuits, life jackets and helmets and head to the rocky beach.  Then we do the coasteering, which is way more intense than I ever thought.  I'm still sore!  So we waded through the water first which then became quite rough and then there were large rocks/boulders and we had to do jumps off them.  It was crazy.  I can't believe I did it.  At one point we had to scale a rock that was a mini cliff.  I was towards the head of the line with about 8 people behind me.  I freaked out and almost couldn't make it across because I couldn't find footing.  But I made it, even though I did slide down the rocks at the end.  But I have never been more proud of myself.  Every time I took a jump off the rocks, I told the instructor "My mom is gonna kill me!!!!!"
So then we head back to the lodge to see if we could wash up before heading back to London, only to have Lorraine tell us that we have all the time in the world to shower because she wasn't letting us spend the night at the train station again since we missed the last train to London.  So they put us up in the lodge for the night.  I thought the Irish were nice, but the Welsh definitely top my list.  Everyone there was so nice and welcoming and they all had heard our story.  We were the celebrities of the lodge!  There was a different stag party staying and a hen party (bachelorette) and another group all there for the night.  So we hung out with them for dinner and then the 3 of us took a 20 minute trek to the beach only to have a little run in with a dog and some mud.  But we made it to the beach to watch the sunset.  We came back, drank some wine, played some pool (which the balls are just yellow and red, no numbers, no stripes), and then passed out on the couches from sheer exhaustion.  That morning we headed out to London and made it back perfectly, and just in time for Julia to head to work.  And then I finally did my laundry for only the second time this summer, but I didn't have enough change to finish drying my clothes all the way, so I had wet clothes laying around.  Oh the joys of being cheap.
Okay and a quick recap of the past couple of days...
Monday
Went to work and finished up our big presentation for Tuesday.  Then I had to run home so I could make it to Imperial for my meeting with GK and IE about the status of my internship and then sit through class, which wasn't too bad because we talked about advertising the whole time.
Tuesday
Went to work, and it was a quiet day because half the people were off at the presentation.  At lunch I planned on going to buy another book to add to my list of 6 I've read this summer.  But one of the girls at work offered her library card to me.  Best thing ever!  And it made me feel like an actual Londoner since only residents have library cards.  So I came back and about an hour after lunch I hear music and it turns out, they have ice cream trucks in London!  So we all chased down the ice cream man so I could have my first London ice cream truck experience (they thought we didn't have them in the states).  I got an ice cream cone, which is actually whipped cream in a cone (no complaints here!), and we took some pictures, which were up on facebook in a matter of minutes.  Then a few of us headed to get drinks after work where I had more revelations about how I've been lied to my entire life.  Schools have always told me that we had to learn the metric system because EVERY other country uses it.  Well, the English schools taught their students that America uses the metric system.  They use feet and miles here.  So after a few drinks and revelations, I headed to the tube and made a "friend."  This little Indian man from Sri Lanka sat down next to me and told me that I have a great and strong aura.  Now mind you I'm a little drunk and so I become over interested in what he has to say.  I am sitting there, totally amazed at everything he says about me (even though it is all so generic).  Definitely a situation they warn you about.  Luckily he didn't get off at my stop.
Wednesday
Headed to work and had the usual day.  Got invited to the red carpet premiere of Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging, but turned it down because of a previous engagement: CHRISTY'S BIRTHDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!  So we went to Ping Pong Dim Sum for dinner.  Little did we know that we would have a celebrity siting as soon as we came in.  Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland was also enjoying some dim sum.  Only Emily had enough courage to say hi.  But we had an awesome meal and I had an amazing drink called "Ping Pong" and it was basically a fancy white wine spritzer with grapes.
Tomorrow I head to Prague for my last trip of the summer.  I'm flying by myself to stay with some Mizzou people on the Advertising trip.  Hopefully my travels are uneventful.
Things I've learned:
1.  The bugs in Great Britain love me as much as the ones in the states.  I am once again, as I am every summer, covered in bug bites and hydrocortizone cream.
2.  My tube card works on the trains too in London (these are different than the tube/underground).
3.  Glamour is the number one magazine in Great Britain (a saleslady came today and gave us a presentation about it)
4.  a WAG is "Wives and Girlfriends" of soccer players and they are tanned, botoxed, arcrylic nailed up women
5.  Contrary to previous belief, I think I like chicken curry.  We had some in Wales at the lodge and it was good.  Or maybe we thought it was good because we were so hungry.

Alright, off to bed (it's 2:40 am here) and then work and off to "Czech out" of London and jet off to Prague.  Cheers!

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Dublin Highlights: Long overdue

Okay, so sorry this has taken so long but this past week has been VERY hectic.  But let me give you my Top 10 of Dublin (in order of occurrence and not necessarily the greatest moments)
1.  The cab driver on the way to the bus to the airport in London put a light on to let us know that we were talking so loud the driver was having trouble concentrating.
2.  Eating lunch at this pub where the waiter was Romanian and barely spoke English.  By the end of ordering the meal, we thought that Caroline and I were going to get 2 sandwiches each (because we ordered 2 things on our sandwich), Jen was going to get the wrong sandwich, Kaylin's was going to have other stuff on her "grilled cheese only," and Stew, well he got some stew so we figured it would be ok.  But at the end of the meal, we were waiting for a candid camera crew to jump out.  What made it even crazier was the fact that we were the only people in the restaurant.  (Apparently people don't eat lunch out on Saturdays and if they do, they must not eat until 3 pm because that's when everywhere opens)
3.  Becoming a certified whiskey taster at the old Jameson distillery.  I even got a signed certificate and everything.
4.  Learning all about the advertising campaigns at Guinness and drinking more Guinness than I have ever in my life.
5.  Walking back from Guinness with Stew in the torrential downpour because we couldn't fit in the cab.
6.  Going to Temple Bar and, after 2 failed attempts, finding a classic Irish pub complete with live Irish music and a man with a little tiny guitar who was AWESOME.
7.  Seeing the Kilhanmain Gaol and wondering how terrible it would be to be a prisoner there.
8.  Getting lost on the way to the Docklands and never finding them.
9.  Walking around and seeing Dublin.
10.  Did I mention how much it rained?  but on the upside, the Irish are the nicest and friendliest people ever!
Oh and how could I forget the sound the crosswalk signs made when it changed to "walk."  It reminded me of Mario Smash Brothers.  Every time I crossed the street I thought I won a prize.

Okay quick recap of last week...
Tuesday
Went to work and had a lunch out with a bunch of people at the office because it was BOGO at pizza express (yum!!!).  Then Christy and I bought a bottle of champagne and chilled at the flat while everyone else went on Alan's Party Parade (we were way to tired to join).
Wednesday
Of course it had to rain some more...because it will never stop here!  The office manager at work didn't want to go to the post office in the rain, so I went and received a Krispy Kreme donut in return.
Thursday
Worked again.  We've been working on this huge presentation for Tuesday so I was swamped with that.  But after work, I came home and met up with my friend Jake for dinner.  Played some catch up and whatnot, and then I went to Courtfield with my flatmates and some of the boys.  Story of the night: Some creepy man sits down at the table next to ours and starts talking to Christy and wants to know her name and be her friend.  He is creeping all of us out and we just want him to leave us alone, so Carl steps in, because at this point he is angry, and tells the guy off.  Fortunately he left us alone but all the tables around us were watching him try to talk to us.
Friday
Worked some more.  We went for drinks at lunch and I got a lemonade, but not the American kind.  The make it with like sprite or seltzer water and lemon juice.  Delicious.  Then we all decided to treat ourselves with some food from M&S (Marks & Spencers AKA a really nice grocery store) but I still managed to spend under 3 pounds!  After work I came home and got ready for my trip to Wales...but I am not blogging about that just yet because it is so intense that it needs its own post.

Things I've learned:
1.  There is a Monopoly pub crawl that will be completed by flat 1
2.  I can make a mean cup of tea (I'm ready to try it out on my colleagues at work)
3.  British women LOVE American men and they all want to marry/date them
4.  It's supposed to rain here pretty much every day the rest of the summer
5.  The British economy is in a downturn too. (I know you really wanted to know that)

Alright, time to try to get my bearings back after my adventure in Wales...I can't believe I made it back alive...SERIOUSLY...

Monday, July 7, 2008

How to Celebrate 4th of July in London

1.  Watch Independence Day starting at midnight
2.  Take the day off from work
3.  Wear red, white and blue, or the most American clothes you have
4.  Drink only American beer
5.  Go to the Texas Embassy
6.  Dance to a live band
Yeah that was pretty much my 4th of July.  After a rain filled Thursday where it ended with watching Independence Day, Friday was beautiful.  I took the day off and thought I would go and do some tourist stuff, but I ended up spending my whole afternoon trying to book our train to Wales for this upcoming weekend.  Who thought the only people working at the train station were ones who couldn't speak english?  It was so ridiculous I can't even begin to describe it because you won't believe me.  That's why I gave up on trying to book it over the phone and made Julia go with me to the train station to buy tickets.  It only got worse.  It was so insane and he kept saying "Are you going together and coming together?" and then messed everything up, but fortunately we got our tickets and we're officially going to Wales on an overnight train on Friday and coming back Saturday night.  But then we headed up to Texas Embassy for the night to meet up with everyone else.  And even the boys I met at the concert the previous weekend came up from Surrey.  The night was complete with baseball (even though it was Yankees/Red Sox), Budweiser, burritos, tequila (sorry Mom, but I had to), margaritas, and dancing and singing with the live band.  But don't worry all you adults, I was completely coherent!
Side note: I talked in my sleep that night and said "america" and woke up Julia.
Things I've learned:
1.  Never call the train companies.
2.  Shipwrecked is a show that is a combo of Real World, Road Rules and Survivor.
3.  How to make the perfect cup of English tea.
4.  There are no natural disasters here, like tornados, earthquakes, hurricanes, etc.
5.  When it pours here it monsoons!

Stay tuned for my entry about Dublin with special guest, Caroline!

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

nothing is better than a concert in the park

Honestly, Saturday will forever go down in history as one of my favorite days in my life.  But let's start where I left off first and then I'll explain my reasoning.
Friday
After a day of work, free lunch and then drinks, I was literally dragged out by Julia and Lauren for an adventure in Piccadilly.  Lauren met some club owner of China White where Prince Harry frequents, so we got in there VIP and free of charge.  We got there really early and decided to come back later when it was more crowded.  It was honestly straight out of a movie and creepy.  The sinks had rocks in them and the rooms were floor to ceiling covered in sheets.  So we left and went to Cheers next door.  I proceeded to get hit on my an Italian I couldn't understand and a 50 year old man and the shot girl even sympathized with us because we're poor American girls who can't afford to buy drinks. (but we didn't pay cover because Lauren worked her magic at the door).  We then went back to China White and got led to the VIP table.  So we weren't sure if that meant we got free drinks.  So Lauren checked it out with buying a shot and then we went to the dance floor and the waitress chased her down and made her pay.  Needless to say, I had a nice sober night and tried to enjoy the sweaty European and creepy Asian men dancing on me.  We took the bus home and Lauren got harassed by a South African the whole way home.
Saturday AKA the best day ever
We got up and headed to Portobello Road for food for the day and then went to Hyde Park for the concert we've been waiting for all summer.  It was awesome.  I honestly don't think there are any words to describe how amazing it was.  First this band that won some contest was on, and they were good.  Then Robert Randolph and the Family Band came on and I was so excited because I hadn't see them since the DMB concert after senior year.  They were everything I could've hoped for and more.  Then Jason Mraz was on and Christy took a video of us singing.  Next was John Mayer and Christy and I decided to get closer to see him.  When we came back to where we were, we couldn't find the rest of the girls.  This group of British and New Zealand guys made fun of us for being lost and we ended up hanging out with them for the rest of the concert.  We danced through some Sheryl Crowe with them.  And she looked amazing (white pants suit...I hope I look half as good as her when I'm her age.).  We had dance offs and just had an absolute blast.  We then spotted the other girls finally right before Eric Clapton came on.  So we hung out with them and then went back to the guys.  After watching the videos we took from his performance, we noticed that we were the ONLY ones dancing in the whole crowd.  The concert ended with everyone coming back on stage.  Probably my favorite concert ever.  We hung out with the guys after (they were from Surrey) and witnessed a man streaking and a man playing bagpipes.
Sunday
I had a nice little "lie in."  And then didn't leave the flat until I went to get my "fringe" AKA bangs trimmed.  Which are much shorter than I'm used to I might add, but I'm getting used to them.  Then Marylyn and I met Julia at Wagamama with a 2 for 1 coupon I got from work (they're one of our clients).  We saw the Euro game between Spain and Germany through the window and watched the Spain fans go CRAZY.
Monday
Went to work as usual and had the typical day there.  Then we had our lovely class where I got my paper returned and it had a circle around Perez Hilton with a "?" next to it.  I only referred to him because our speaker did (who was the former editor of the Guardian (a national paper here)) and I assumed as a journalist, he would know who that was.  Whatever, I hate that class and it's not the reason why I'm here.
Tuesday
Went to work again and had a good day.  I took a nice walk through Wimbledon and found restaurants that I didn't know were there.  I didn't realize that it would end up being the hottest day of the year and I would feel so sweaty when I got back.  But then of course I got back and still had a cup of tea.  Which I made by myself and didn't ask anyone else if they wanted any because I was scared to make it for everyone since I have such high expectations to live up to.  So when they found out that I made it "selfishly" they told me that I would end up greedy and a conquerer.  But it's okay now.  We all then walked to some really far tube station after work to go to a quiz night at a pub (AKA trivia night).  It was so much fun.  I knew more than I thought.  There was a question though that was "what does the American slang word 'cheaters' mean?  Eye glasses or boots?"  Ummm when have you ever heard that term?  I was not happy with that question and I ended up guessing glasses and it was right, but really?  I thought it was funny that they would even have that question.  There was even a question "What sport is the shortstop in?"  Well we were in like 5th to last place, but only 6 points behind the first place teams.  I would definitely go back, unless I have the same issue with the tube as I had coming back.
Wednesday
Another day at work, but today was a little chilly so I got some soup and rolls for lunch (only 1.70 pounds for lunch!).  Then I came home and went for a little girls night at the pub with Julia and Caroline for a drink.  We met a man who was in town by himself watching Wimbledon.  I honestly don't think I could do that, stay in a hotel by myself and sit alone at a pub, but I completely commend him.
Things I've learned:
1.  There is a TV show that puts colleges up against each other and one of the guys at work went on it when he was in school.  Definitely a pop culture reference that I need to know.
2.  Quiz nights are huge here.
3.  Wooden ties are a stereotypical souvenir here (don't worry dad I will buy you one).
4.  Don't call pants "pants."  They're trousers here.  Pants are underwear.
5.  Friends was just as big here as it was/is in the states.
Ok.  Off to bed.  Night!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

i'm in love with a french tennis player

...and every other male tennis player I saw at Wimbledon today.  Ahh Wimbledon.  Probably one of the many highlights of my trip, definitely in the top 5.  But let me do a quick recap first and then I will get back to Wimbledon...

Saturday
Because we had so many visitors, we decided it would be a good idea to do a little pub hopping.  We went to a pub we hadn't gone to since the first night  and closed it down and then went to Courtfield and closed that down too.  Then we got separated and my group headed to Mango Lounge to see if the rest had sauntered over there, but after an awkward conversation with the bouncers, we didn't find anyone else there, so we decided to try to buy more to drink because it was still early.  Well, in London, everywhere stops selling alcohol at 11 (besides clubs) so we went from convenience to convenience store and finally found one that sold it to us illegally and gave us free chocolate.
Sunday
I had a lie in (that's what they call a lazy day in London) and then headed to the pub (O'Neill's) to watch the Spain vs. Italy game.  It was a shut out for both teams and end in PKs (penalty kicks) and Spain won.  We got to listen to everyone sing their team songs.
Monday
Headed back to work.  Wimbledon started on Monday so the tube and my station were extremely crowded.  They even set up some turf and a huge Wii tennis station right in front of the tube stop.  I'm totally going to play it some time during the tournament.  I had class after work with GK and this Mizzou alum who works for FOX News and was hating on Mizzou and journalism degrees the entire time.  I didn't like him, and he didn't help his case because he kept contradicting himself.
Tuesday
Another day of work.  Today I got to book a meeting at a hotel that I researched and picked and negotiated the price.  I felt accomplished!  Haha.  Then after work I headed to the tennis courts to see what the deal was with tickets.  When I got back home I realized a. Andy Roddick was playing while I was there, and b. I had blisters because I walked an extra 20 minutes to the Park.  no fun.  Then that night we did another little pub crawl and of course ended up at Courtfields.
Wednesday
Worked again.  Had a conversation on the phone with a man I couldn't understand so I had to hand off the phone.  Came home, hung out a bit, and then went to O'Neill's to watch the Germany vs. Turkey game.  It was much more crowded this time.  And I realized I go to O'Neill's too much because a.  I recognize all the bartenders and b.  One knows my drink (Guiness...mmm.  They even pour it so there's a clover on the top).  BBC kept disconnecting so the game kept going out and we missed Germany's second goal.  But the ending was amazing and Germany ended up winning.
Thursday
More work.  During lunch I decided to take a walk around the area and then grabbed lunch at a food court.  I left work early because I was meeting Julia at Wimbledon!!!  I made sure to dress in my preppiest of preppiest clothes and we headed to the que (AKA line) to wait for 2 hours.  After 5 pm the tickets are 6 pounds less so we made sure to get there for after that.  They only let people in if other people leave so that's why we waited.  But it wasn't too bad and the line kept moving.  We finally got in and we could feel the excitement from Centre Court where Roddick was playing.  We weren't able to watch him though because it was more money to get tickets just for his match.  But we heard the crowd up until he lost...
But we got in, and went straight for Court 18 where Venus and Serena Williams were supposed to be playing next.  We got some Pimm's and Lemonade (the staple drink of the summer and of course Wimbledon too) and scored some front row seats on the side of the Mathieu-Chardy Match.  Mathieu is #14, French and totally gorgeous.  I knew it was love at first site.  So dreamy...haha...But then we left because the Williams match was switched for time constraints.  We ran over to their court only to not be able to sit.  So we squished into the outside corner with 30 other people.  I would have been fine if the boy in front of me didn't have a large backpack, talk on his cell phone (so not ok at Wimbledon!), and have TERRIBLE B.O.!  But still, I got to see the Williams sisters in the flesh!  We then walked over to see #3 Erlich (an Israeli) play with another Israeli in doubles against this attractive British guy and some scrawny Australian.  It was such a good and close game and they decided to postpone it halfway through the 4th set with Erlich down 1-2 sets but up 4-2 in this set.  They said it was too dark (there are no lights).  So we headed out, not before stopping for the infamous strawberries and cream that I was told I had to get.
So pretty much, I'm in love with Paul-Henry Mathieu and he has already made $400,000+ in this year alone!  Gosh that sounded shallow!  But seriously though...
Things I've learned:
1.  People don't understand the word "line" it's "que" and "queing up"
2.  Beans and toast is a popular food here
3.  Grilled cheese is toast and cheese
4.  Disney and FOX work together in the UK.
5.  The UK takes a lot of shows from the states.  People LOVE 24 here, and they talk about the OC and The Hills.

Alright, off to bed for me.  I promise I will put pictures up ASAP.  Plus, I have to put up pictures before I see John Mayer, Eric Clapton, Sheryl Crowe, Robert Randolph and the Family Band, and Jason Mraz on Saturday.  Cannot wait!  Cheers!

Saturday, June 21, 2008

I love house music!

What a whirlwind week it has been!  I've been so busy with work and everything that I haven't even been able to comprehend what I've been doing!
Wednesday
I went to work and did the usual work stuff.  I went to the infamous Marks and Spencers to pick up a sandwich for lunch.  It cracked me up because they had "authentic New York sandwiches" AKA corned beef sandwiches.  After work a bunch of the employees took me out for drinks to "The Slug."  I surprised them by ordering a pint of Peroni.  For some reason they thought that Americans don't drink...hmmm...Well anyways, they decided that they would get me drunk, before I ate dinner.  And before I knew it I was definitely more drunk than I was planning on.  But somehow, I made it home on the tube by myself. I got home, entertained my roommates for a bit, finally ate dinner, welcomed Miss Laura Eisenbeis to London,  and passed out.  I had forgotten that Eric was coming to stay with me, but he didn't get in until 3 in the morning.  He ended up ringing Flat 5 and waking them all up and totally pissing them off.  But he got in, so all was well.
Thursday
I went to work, not feeling a hundred percent, and helped put together the weekly news email we send out to our clients.  For lunch we decided to go to the super market and pick up food for a picnic.  We got a whole roasted chicken for 3 pounds!  It was awesome and totally delicious.  After work, I came home and went with Eric for a drink to O'Neills.  Then we came back and just hung out with everyone.  Another one of Lauren's sorority sisters came in too so we had another person visiting and we  all just sat around and talked.
Friday
Went to work, did nothing too exciting since I spent the whole morning stressed out over this graph that I was making.  The electricity went out so I had to redo it, then my computer froze 3 times.  I was not happy.  I came home and we all went out to Camden Town to go to Koko.  It was AWESOME.  It was set up like an old theatre and there were so many hidden rooms and floors that we went exploring.  There was even a man dressed up as Elvis (he was completely out of place).  But we were excited because we finally found a place with house music.  There was a stage and a dance floor and on the stage was this awesome DJ duo Joe and Will Ask (I think that's what they're called).  They jammed on their matching Mac laptops.  And then there was this band that played house music and they were really cool too, but at this point there were so many people there and they started moshing so we had to get out of there.  So then we ventured to the bus system again and made it home safe and sound.
Saturday
Slept through my alarm, but we made it to the theatre in time to buy tickets to see Wicked this afternoon.  I came home and went to Portobello again, but the lovely tube system decided to shut down the line we needed to take (and it was only a 2 stop journey!).  We then had to find the right bus to take and then take the bus through the Saturday traffic.  What should have taken 5-10 minutes, took one hour.  So all I had time to do was buy some food from the farmers and book it out of there so I could make it back for the play.  I tried to find the bus, but couldn't so I decided to take the tube, but I had to go on a round-about way since my line was still closed.  I made it home just in time to throw my dress on, grab my makeup to put on during my ride on the tube, and make it to the theatre.  But it was totally worth it!  Wicked was awesome and I loved every second, especially when Fiyero fell up the stairs accidentally.  But I loved it and can't wait to see another musical while I'm here.
Things I've learned:
1.  I have to check out Burrow Market.  Apparently it's a market with lots of delicious food...mmm
2.  How to dance to house music
3.  No girl wants to be called a bunny boiler
4.  There are nine body parts that are 3 letters long.  Can you name them?
5.  I now know all about the different stations on British TV and am learning all the shows.  Shipwrecked seems to be a favourite (just practicing my British spelling).
Ok, I'm out...Cheers!

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

I love playing host!

There has been a constant string of visitors for the past week and I'm loving it!  First, Christy's friend Kristen was here, then Kristin came, and then I met up with Elise who will be here the rest of the summer and I can't wait to see her all the time.  Then yesterday, since the Bergamo trip is done, we had some of my AKPsi pledge brothers in and one of their friends and some other Mizzou people who were staying in a hotel by us.  It was so much fun to see them and just hang out.  They came by our flat late because they were sight seeing, so we headed to O'Neills to get them some fish and chips, but the kitchen was closed.  So we drank some, the boys went to Burger King, and then we came back to hang out and Kyle and I made grilled cheese for dinner.  Even though they left this morning before I got up, it was still nice to have them here for a short time.  We get some more Bergamo kids tomorrow and other visitors too.  This is fun!  haha
Ok now for what people have been constantly questioning me about: my internship...
I LOVE IT!  I mean it's not like I've done a whole lot in the past 2 days, but I already know that this summer is going to be awesome because of my internship.  I got there Monday morning with no expectations.  I came into the cozy office and met the office manager who then took me into the kitchen to give me the first of MILLIONS of cups of english tea I will have while working there.  She (and everyone else in the office who has made tea with me in the kitchen) is obsessed with their instant-hot type tap.  But this one blows off an obnoxious amount of steam and leaves you feeling like you just got a steam treatment for your face (not bad...).  So after my tour of the downstairs, I went upstairs to meet my supervisor, who is one of the bubbliest people I have ever met.  She constantly is smiling and I can tell she loves what she does.  The office even talks about how she is very knowledgeable in what she does.  I then met some people around the office and found out that one of the guys has family in Chagrin Falls!  What a small world!  Then Steph took me around the office and showed me the other building next door.  The building is separated into: first floor admin and accounts, second floor sales and planning, and the other building has the new type of media focus (cell phone rings, videos, etc.).  It turns out that the person who will be in charge of me for the rest of the summer is on holiday for the week, so things will be different starting next week.  But either way, I still like my job a lot.  I've been learning the programs they use and creating spreadsheets with the airings of the commercials.  I know it sounds nerdy but it's all fascinating to me.  I am perfectly content with listening to the people talk on the phone to clients and media outlets and learning about the business.  I think what I love so much about this job is that I have an obvious place here.  In my previous internship at home, I fit in, but I never had any real tasks to do and I definitely wasn't taught anything.  At AdConnection, everyone wants to teach me things.  They want me to ask them questions about what they do.  They want me to see what they do, and sit in on meetings and check out the sales pitches they've created.  And they ask me if I want to do more.  I never had that before and it is so nice to have it now.
So the first day at one we all went out for drinks at the luxurious Terrace of Wimbledon, for an hour and then went to get lunch and took almost about an hour for that.  They showed me a supermarket that sells ready made sandwiches for cheap, and there's a salad bar and I can buy cheap microwave stuff.  So I don't necessarily have to pack all the time, and I can still save money.
Today I left for work and almost got pushed off the tube because it was so crowded.  I got to work and started working.  I made spreadsheets all day and learned all about TV spots and the different shows in England.  We all ate lunch at a table outside and we talked about things that differ between here and America.  They honestly thought our lives were just like Superbad and Legally Blonde.  I mean I must admit that I base my previous London knowledge off of movies too, like the Notting Hill and Love Actually...but now I realize that it is so much more than that.
Funny work story: We are all sitting there, engrossed in our work, and all the sudden Steph yells, while on the phone, "A cat jumped in the window!"  And seriously, a cat did indeed jump in the window, and run around the office.  I was scared about getting rabies, but everyone was yelling about fleas?!  Random I know, but I guess rabies from stray animals isn't a concern here.
On my way home from work today I ran into quite a bit of trouble.  I got to the tube station to find, after 20 minutes, that the train driver was missing.  So when the next train made it, there were so many people stuffed in because it was the first train in 45 minutes.  I was stuck standing the whole ride.  We also had a signal failure and sat in the outskirts of London in the middle of no where for 10 minutes.  And then when the train started again, people fell from the jolt.  So what should have taken 30 minutes took over an hour and 15 minutes.
In other news I finished my 4th book of the summer...I need a new one...already...
Things I've learned:
1.  Brilliant has many meanings and people say it after EVERYTHING, and cheers too.
2.  Tea is like oxygen to the British.  They drink it every hour and our office has this email thing that emails, in a rotation, to the person making tea, what everyone wants.
3.  Apparently I look under 18 (I've been told this MANY times).
4.  How to spell the English way...AKA colour, honour...
5.  University/College is a Uni
And I have to stop referring to things in American terms because no one knows what I'm saying.
And did I mention I love my job?
Cheers!

Sunday, June 15, 2008

My last weekend unemployed

So far this weekend has been pretty chill.  Friday, after I swore off the tube system, I braved the Friday afternoon crowds at Oxford and went shopping.  I figured shopping was better than pouting about my terrible travel experience earlier in the day (refer to previous post).  If I thought my stress level was high before, I have no idea how high it got.  I went to Primark (CHEAP clothes, like 2 pounds for a button down) and so did half of London.  It honestly looked like they all were shopping because the world was ending tomorrow and if they didn't get everything at Primark, they would perish.  So I only got a shirt and a dress (12.50 pounds total) and headed along the street to look at the other stores.  There were at least 2 of every store on the strip, if not 3 and everything was packed.  So then I headed back to the flat and waited for everyone to get back from work.  Christy and I decided to buy our favorite champagne again for before going out.  We then headed to Tiger Tiger, where the cover was 10 pounds!  It had the tightest security I have ever seen at the entrance to a club.  And luckily, after spend all that money on cover, I didn't spend a dime the rest of the night.  It was really crowded, but I had fun and talked to an Irish guy who I didn't understand, a drunk guy who I didn't understand and an Australian guy who was really nice and easy to understand.
Saturday, Christy and I woke up early and headed to the trooping of the colors for the Queen's birthday.  We got there early so we could get a good spot.  We realized that we had a good spot for the later part, not for the early part.  So we saw the beginning,  after waiting for an hour and a half, and decided not to wait another hour and a half to see the rest.  We came back and were greeted by some more mice visits.  This is a serious problem and our landlord seems to not care.  I am so afraid that I will be woken up at night by mice in my bed!  Then last night I went to Heathrow to meet Kristin at the airport.  It was so good to see her after four weeks of being away.  She came back to the flat with me, chilled at a pub until closing, and then we took the tube to the London Eye and walked around, got lost for a bit and then found Trafalgar Square and the bus we needed.  On our way to the bus, I saw a guy in a Cleveland Browns sweatshirt.  It turns out that he's from Seven Hills and is studying in Germany and just in London for the weekend.  This was a better Cleveland run-in than on the tube Friday night...
side note:  I saw a guy on the tube wearing a Cleveland Indians hat and I was like "Hey, are you an Indians' fan?"  and he said "Is that what this hat is for?  I had no idea; I just wear it."  But then we were talking and he told Caroline that he was an undercover cop...luckily we got off the tube when it started getting weird...
So then this morning (Sunday) Kristin and I woke up early and walked to Kensington Gardens to look at the Palace and walk around in the gardens.  Then we visited Peter Pan and saw the Princess Diana Memorial fountains.  Oh and watched a man chase his dog who ran away from him.  We then took the tube to the British Museum and hung out there for a bit (it was WAY too crowded though).  Then we stopped a pub that is officially my new favorite.  It's called Shakespeare's Head and it is massive.  And the menu is not only huge, but it is also CHEAP.  For about 5 pounds I got a chicken sandwich, fries and a beer.  All the drinks were just over 2 pounds!  I am definitely going back.  We came back and then Kristin's bag broke and wouldn't close, and we had a major crisis, but fortunately Carl was here to save the day and fix her bag, probably temporarily, but enough to get to the airport.  So I just came back from sending her off and now I'm looking forward to seeing Elise tonite and the Bergamo and Denmark visitors this week.  Oh and I start my internship tomorrow...
Things I've learned:
1.  Museums on Sundays=no go
2.  People who ride the bus alone like to make random conversations with people
3.  London bobbies (cops) are so much friendlier than US cops
4.  Coors Light is looked at as a "premium beer" (direct quote, no joke)
5.  I still hate mice
oh and Julia and Kevin got back from their Prague/Berlin extravaganza!!  YAY!!
Cheerio!

Friday, June 13, 2008

Oh London public transportation, how I currently loathe the...

After the day I've had thus far, I honestly think I should boycott the tube system for making my day a living hell.  I set out this morning at 11:25 am to find my internship in Wimbledon.  I made it there on the tube perfectly fine.  Once I got to Wimbledon is when everything started going downhill.  I got so unbelievably lost trying to find where I was going.  I ended up in a residential area far from where I was supposed to be.  I came back and walked past the same pub 5 times.  And then I finally found the street I needed.  It was 10 feet from where I had been walking this whole time.  So I found the building and it is nestled in between car repair shops and "tyre" shops (that's how they spell tire).  So anyways, I headed back to the tube station to find that my Oyster card (my pass for the tube) was only for zones 1 and 2 (central London) and I was in zone 3.  So I went to the desk to try and fix my card only to find that it wouldn't matter because my tube line was down because of some spark.  So he sold me a ticket for what he says was one station, but handed me one for a different station (and I didn't realize this until I was already on the train).  I got off at my stop and found out that this was, and I quote, "The Largest London Overground Junction."  Great.  So I get off and some nice man who works there helps me and tells me that I have to buy another ticket to get back to the tube.  So I run all the way down to the ticket window, passed by an elderly man who had taken a spill and had a crowd of people around him, and bought a ticket (so now I'm at 4.50 pounds in just train tickets AKA $9!) and ran back to catch the next train (it's 1:35 at this point).  So I make it back to the tube and get back home.  I head to the ticket window to change my Oyster card and I was fortunate to have a nice hispanic man help me.  He calmed me down and fixed everything for me.  He even made a comment about how I have the same name as Halle Berry and I told him how she grew up in the area next to where I live.  Gotta love the random nice people!  So now I'm at home, debating if it would be okay for me to get a drink, by myself, because that's all I want and everyone else is at work.  I think I might just head to a museum though.
At least today is the last day I have off before I start my internship on Monday.  Yesterday I felt like a housewife because I went grocery shopping, cleaned, met Christy, Caroline and Marylyn for lunch and then came home and took a nap until Christy came home.  Christy and I headed to get burgers from Gourmet Burger Kitchen and some of our favorite champagne.  The burger was delicious, but my stomach isn't used to red meat (and this confirmed my suspicions that the burger I had the other day was NOT red meat...).  So now I think I won't eat red meat for the rest of the summer.
Things I've learned
1.  Clapham Junction is the BUSIEST rail station in London
2.  We may have had a ghost living upstairs...
3.  Londoners get so lost all the time too
4.  Wimbledon is not considered in London
5.  Dublin is nowhere near the Blarney Stone

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

No longer unemployed!!

Yep that's right!  As of 4:52 pm London time, I have an internship!  All this hullaballoo has finally gotten me an internship!  I received a call at 4:40 from a London number and I was so confused at first because with the combination of a bad connection and a British accent that was hard to decipher, I didn't really understand what was going on.  But apparently I was getting interviewed for an internship with AdConnection, a media buying and planning firm.  So I got the job!  It's in Wimbledon and is 1.6 miles from Wimbledon Park where the tennis tournament is in 11 days!  I am so excited!  I was bummed for .5 seconds when I realized I didn't get the River Publishing internship, but that doesn't matter because this is way cooler!  So now I get to bum around the city until Monday when I start working.
Since I wasn't working Tuesday, I met up with Leah again and we ventured around the Natural History Museum along with 10 million school kids on field trips.  It was neat and I will probably go back soon to see more of it, but so far, it's not my favorite museum.  Then we were starving and were looking for some place to eat so we stopped at one of those food carts and I got what was called a cheese burger (FYI this was my first red meat experience).  When I got it, I wasn't sure if it was the best red meat to be eating (it looked like it might have some other meat in it, but I didn't care because I was STARVING).  So I ate my mystery meat and we headed through Hyde Park to see the Peter Pan statue that my flatmates and I have been searching for.  It was so cool.  All my dreams of flying around London with Peter came back to me, and now, more than ever, I want to sit on the hands of Big Ben like they do in the movie.  We then parted ways and I said goodbye to Leah who is heading back to the States tomorrow, and I headed to the Round Pond in the Kensington Gardens area and read my book.  Another day of sunshine=more color for me!  I am thoroughly enjoying this weather!  I then came to our flat to make dinner and wait for my flatmates to come home from work.  We then headed to a pub for the night until they rang the bell for closing.
Today Alan (another one of the three of us without an internship) and I went to the International Enrichment office to see what the deal was with our internships, only to be greeted by a locked door because they were off greeting the new kids who arrived today for session 2.  So we went to the British Museum and looked at the Greek and Egyptian things.  It was so neat to see parts of the Parthenon and all the statues of the g-ds and goddesses.  Have I mentioned I'm obsessed with Greek mythology?  We also saw the Rosetta Stone.  The Egyptian things were also interesting, and my favorite part was the mummy exhibit.  They had Cleopatra's mummy there!!  It amazed me how they kept the remains so preserved.  It might have something to do with the fact that they remove the brain of the dead through the nose and the other organs through the butt (sorry if I grossed you out).  We then came back and I headed to the book store to find a new book since I am done with the Twilight books until the beginning of August when the fourth one comes out.  I picked up a sandwich and headed to the Belvedere park for the first time and ate and read and watched some young men AKA blokes play football (AKA soccer).  A storm started to blow in so I headed home and received the phone call that held my destiny for the summer.
Things I've learned:
1.  Even the British think the French are rude to English speakers.
2.  Mummification is a long process, but it really preserves the body.  Maybe I should look into it...
3.  Pret a Manger has AWESOME food
4.  I will finally admit that I can't drink as much beer in England as I do in the States because of how much alcohol content is in it
5.  Taking the tube round trip in zone 1 (central London and where I live) is around the same price as a gallon of gas in the States

Oh, did I mention I'm going to Dublin July 5 and 6?  Because I am!  Best 4th of July weekend ever!!  Texas Embassy and Dublin...CAN'T WAIT!!
Cheers!

Monday, June 9, 2008

I'm actually getting a tan in London!

Yep, that's right!  Whoever said it rains ALL the time in London was seriously wrong!  The past week has been amazingly sunny and hot actually!  I have laid out at the park two days in a row!  The paleness I thought was inevitable has not happened.  Ok now for the Weekend Update
Thursday
Thursday night my flat and the boys who were not at the Bauer work party went to Zoo Bar, a club in Leicester Square.  It was so much fun!  But the drinks were a bit pricey.  Apparently the cheap nights for drinking are Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays (completely opposite from the States).  We were even privileged to have a random girl get up on a pole and do a complete dancing show for us.  I swear she thought it was ok, but it definitely was not.  After that we had our first experience with the bus system since the tube stops running a little after midnight.  Julia and I were a little lost and some nice bike man (think Shakespeare's bike guys in Columbia) offered us a free ride to the bus stop.  So we took him up on his offer, but for his enjoyment he rode as though we were on a highspeed chase and pretended to hit cars, dodged in and out of traffic and took sharp corners.  But we made it to the bus stop, took the right bus and made it home safe and sound.
Friday
Some people had to work, but the rest of us did not, so we slept in.  Then Julia, Marylyn and I met Christy for lunch by where she works and ate at this little italian place (it was DELICIOSO!).  After that we came back and Marylyn panicked because she lost her oyster card (the tube pass AKA our most prized possessions).  But everything got worked out.  Then Julia and I went grocery shopping and then came back and headed to a pub with some of the guys and our flatmates.  Of course, the night could not go on without a crazy story.  Julia, Marylyn and I all experienced what is known as this "underground males hooking up in random bathrooms together."  But this was in the girls' loo (I should probably use the English terms) and I was definitely caught offguard (don't worry Mom and Dad, nothing happened to me, and I am not completely scarred for life).  Needless to say I probably won't be back there.
Saturday
My flatmates and I woke up early and headed to Portobello Road in the Notting Hill area.  It was AWESOME.  Portobello Road is a street that has a market every Saturday with clothing, jewelry and food vendors.  I got some more pashminas, a new jacket, and food.  The food was the best part.  They had fresh fruit and produce and I was definitely in heaven.  I got an awesome sandwich and some potatoes to bring back home (only 50 pence for a pound!).  And we even found this absolutely delectable cupcake shop.  I got this amazing red velvet cupcake (Kristen, might even rival ours!) and a coke in a glass bottle (which I saved so I could recycle it when I got back home since London is going green and I felt bad throwing it away.).  We then went a the hunt for a trash can which we didn't find for about a mile (the road is 2 miles and we ended up walking there AND back=4 miles).  We came back to the flat and I met up with a friend who I hadn't seen since high school.  I met her at a pub in Covent Gardens and then we walked around and watched the street performers.  There was one who had no crowd and was shouting so we went to see what was going on.  He then started doing a trick for us "American girls" and the Essex boys that came by.  A crowd gathered round and we almost asked him for some commission for attracting him such a large crowd.  He was hilarious, told a bunch of jokes that were not appropriate for the children around, and did some crazy magic.  Then we parted our ways and I headed to the London eye with my flatmates and some of the guys.  We went at while the sun was setting but it was only a 15 minute ride so we didn't get to see the sun actually set.  But it was still neat to see the city.  Then we went to this Cheers place (made after the show Cheers) and haggled our way in for free cover, but then were greeted by overpriced drinks.
Sunday
Once again we had AMAZING weather so Christy, Lauren and I brought a picnic to the park and laid out on a blanket.  I didn't realize how hot is was going to be so I rolled up my jeans and sweated in my black tshirt.  Then we noticed that it is not only okay to wear bathing suits in the park, but it's also socially acceptable to wear just your underwear, even if it is a white thong and you don't necessarily have the body to even remotely pull it off.  Yes that was my view for 3 and half hours, but how could I forget the speedo man!  So after we left, Christy and I decided it was the perfect time to do our laundry.  We didn't realize how hard it would be to find change, do our laundry and then bring it back.  We thought we looked really silly carrying our luggage around, but everyone else is always carrying luggage around so we totally fit in.  Two hours later...we were done! (yes I know it is a terrible story).  At midnight it was Stew's birthday so we celebrated with singing and a small cake and cupcakes and some reading of "this day in history."
Monday
While everyone else headed off to work, I went off to my rescheduled interview at River Publishing.  I met with Angie, my potential supervisor, and had what I thought was a pretty decent interview.  We totally connected with our aspirations to be movie stars, in a perfect world of course.  She told me I would know by tomorrow because she had one more person to interview, out of three.  So cross your fingers for me, because otherwise I will be unemployed!!  Afterwards, I met Julia for lunch, because she doesn't start her internship at NBC until next week, and we went to this pub by the Chelsea FC stadium.  I love pub food by the way.  We then came back home and headed off to the park because it was so hot.  More tanning for me...and another thong spotting (and it was the same lady with her stupid Palmeranian (spelling?) dog yapping away).  We had to come back because we had our lovely class with George, which I still loathe.
Now I'm sitting here admiring my tan while we wait for the guys to get back from their work function so we can celebrate Stew's birthday.  Well that's all for now.  Getting excited for the Queen's Birthday celebration this weekend, so I guess I should say G-d Save the Queen!

Thursday, June 5, 2008

My Karma hasn't been nice to me this week

So I realize that I haven't updated in a few days but here is an overview of my past week since I got back from Paris.
Monday
Went to both of my classes and got out of class after 9 pm.  Then Christy and I decided to go find the places where we were having our interviews the next day.  First we went to where mine was supposed to be (Leicester Square) and got bombarded by people trying to recruit us to go to clubs.  We of course got lost and this cute American boy tried to help us figure out where we were going.  I finally decided (30 minutes later) to go into the Raddison and ask for directions.  It turns out, the publishing company that I'm interviewing with is next to Haagen Dazs!  How convenient!  So then we went to find Christy's place and it was all the way in the city of London, aka the business district so it was A. really far away and B. scary to walk around because it's deserted at night.  So we of course walked the wrong way twice, ran into some sleeping homeless people, and saw a sweet bridge with the London crest.  When we finally realized that we were walking in the right direction, we had to go back to the tube station so we wouldn't miss the last tube of the night.
Tuesday
So all day I relaxed and got ready because I had my interview at 3 pm.  This is where my week really took a turn for the worse.  I went to my interview and got there 15 minutes early.  The male receptionist called the woman I was supposed to interview with, but she didn't answer and we just assumed it was because I was early.  So I sat there and waited and after 30 minutes he finally got ahold of her.  But get this, she was out of the office at a meeting somewhere.  Apparently there was a miscommunication with my program and the time was never confirmed.  So I called up the program, furiously, and told them what happened.  They said they would straighten it all out.  I was not happy.  So I got home and although I wanted to go out and get a nice cocktail to drink away my sorrows, I decided that drinking a depressant would not be the best idea, so Christy and I had a Champagne night to celebrate her internship (remember how we thought we found her place the night before?  Well it turns out, our program gave her the wrong address and she had to take a cab all the way to her real place.  But she got the job!).
Wednesday
Still no word on the status of my internship.  We had to get up bright and early to go to Parliament for a tour.  The place was gorgeous and has so much history and tradition in it.  They follow all the customs from the original days, even wear the outfits!  It was neat to learn about their government and see the lavish decorations.  Then we headed out to lunch to a pub.  they gave me my sandwich only to realize that there was something wrong and they had to send it back to remake it.  It took forever to get back and by the time I got it, we had to leave to go to our tour for the BBC.  So I ate faster than I've eaten in my life, and made it to the BBC in time.  It was really cool to see the BBC, but I got called out for talking (as always).  They told us stories about how demanding some celebrities are.  Like J.Lo refused to walk 50 feet to her dressing room so they drove her there and the only other person ever to drive through this courtyard was the Queen.  Prince wouldn't walk to a dressing room on another floor, but since his dressing room was on a different floor, he made someone carry him.  J.Lo required them to paint her entire dressing room white since she refuses to sit on anything else.  Mariah Carey wanted a room full of puppies, unfortunately they could not oblige.
Afterwards I called up my program and they told me good news!  I have an interview on Monday morning with my internship!  So that meant I had the rest of the week off.  So I looked up trips to Prague for the weekend and thought I found some.  So I booked it, but I looked today (Thursday) and saw that they messed up the booking and had me down for the wrong day.  So I had to call and cancel my trip and sat on the phone, INTERNATIONAL CALL, for 17 minutes talking to an Indian lady.  So now I'm not going.
Later some of my flatmates and I went to Kensington Gardens to sit and read because it was beautiful out.  We sat in these chairs for a while and then saw that there was a guy collecting money for using the chairs so we booked it out of there so we wouldn't have to pay.  Then some of us went to a pub to hang out for the night.
Thursday
Julia, Kevin and I went on a London Walk about the Beatles (thanks Aunt Jori for the recommendation!).  Our tour guide was an intensely avid Beatles fan, Beatles button down, Beatles man bag and all.  He acted like him and Paul AKA Paul McCartney were BFF.  Most of the rest of the group competed on who was a larger Beatles fan.  But we saw some really neat stuff, like where they recorded different songs, places they frequented, the place they sang on the roof for their last live performance and Abbey Road and recording studio.  It was totally worth the 5 pounds.  Then we stayed in the area and found this French pastry shop where we had lunch.  It was AMAZING.  They even gave use free samples of this chocolate pastry that was chocolate upon chocolate upon chocolate, AKA deliciousness!  I then came back and went to Waterstone's bookstore (London's Borders) to buy the final book in the Twilight series (yes I'm obsessed).  On the way back, we saw this lady drop her stroller with her two babies inside and it looked like she hurt them, but apparently they survived the fall.
Okay well I'm all caught up now so now I can look forward to the weekend!  Chip chip cheerio!
Things I've learned this week:
1.  Never book flights on cheapoair.com
2.  Don't try to custom order in a pub
3.  Australians love Billabong
4.  Leicester Square is a huge hotspot
5.  People pay to register their TVs every year and all the money funds the BBC

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Crepes, Wine and Bread

Yeah that was pretty much my diet this past weekend in Paris and I loved it!  Crepes are AMAZING and the wine of course too, and who could forget the delicious French bread?
Friday we headed off, straight after class, to the coach station to catch our bus to Paris.  The coach station is just like an airport, but there were pigeons flying in and out because the doors were open.  I thought one was going to take off my head off.  When we finally got on the bus, we were welcomed by the wonderful smell of gross (a combination of BO and urine).  And of course Lauren and I decided to sit across from the bathroom in the middle of the bus, but the door didn't stay closed, so everytime we took a turn, we got an even larger whiff of the gross smell.  Well besides that we got to go on the chunnel.  The bus drove onto the train and then we rode underwater to France.
We finally got to Paris at 9:30 (30 minutes early) and had to figure out the Metro (the Paris subway).  So we go to the machine that wouldn't take any of our credit cards.  Then we find the ticket window where the lady was mean and didn't speak English.  We finally found someone who spoke French and English and got all of our tickets for the Metro and got on the Metro.  It was the complete opposite of the nice and clean Tube in London.  There was grafitti EVERYWHERE and it was actually kind of scary.  But we made it to our hostel and the guy at the desk had the grossest teeth EVER.  But our rooms were nice and we had our own bathrooms.  Definitely not your stereotypical hostel that you always hear about.  So then we went to a pastry shop for dinner and crepes (crepe #1) and then went next door to the cafe and sat on the sidewalk sipping on wine and cocktails.
The next day we got up nice and early for our full day of being tourists.  We headed out to the Louvre, only to make a wrong turn and find Notre Dame (beautiful) and then made another wrong turn and end up at the Pompidou Museum of Modern Art.  And Marylyn really wanted to go in.  But somehow we all got separated and some of them ended up at a Starbucks, so we gave up on the museum and finally ran into them.  We headed to the Louvre.  It was really neat.  I saw the Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, some Rafael work and some Egyptian stuff.  All totally worth the 9 Euros admission.  Then we headed to a cafe to drink some wine and eat dinner.  I got a bowl of French Onion Soup because I thought it would be the most cliche thing to do.  We then headed down the Champs-Elysees where all the shops are, got some crepes and continued down to the Arc de Triomphe.  Since it is located in the center of the busiest round-about in Europe we had to go underground to get there.  They were doing this ceremony for a fallen soldier while we were there so we couldn't go in the very center, but it was still neat.
So then we started to head out to the Eiffel Tower which we had gotten glimpses of the entire day, but hadn't seen it upclose yet.  We went too far around the round-about and ended up going the completely wrong way.  But we stopped at a pastry shop and got chocolate croussants and other delicious pastries and got directions.  We finally get to a building, turn the corner and there it is standing right in front of us.  It was absolutely breath taking.  We then waited to go up to the top of the Eiffel Tower and were serenaded by some boys from Holland and one proposed to Caroline.  On our way up, it got dark so the Tower lit up and it was gorgeous.  We saw the whole city from the top.  When we got to the bottom, we realized we had spent a total of 3 hours waiting in line and going in the tower.  We were so exhausted from the day that we just went back to the hostel and went to sleep.  But before I went to sleep I made sure to get my large French baguette and ate the ENTIRE thing.
The next day, the boys left in the morning to go back to London, but the girls ventured out to the Palace of Versailles.  We were first told that the Palace had free entrance, then we got there and they said it was 25 euros so we went to the gardens that were only 6 euros.  There they told us five more prices for the palace, so we were confused.  We walked around the ENORMOUS gardens.  I swear King Louis was compensating for something.  We then decided that since we came all this way, we were still going into the Palace, no matter what the cost.  So we waited in line and, fortunately, the price had dropped to 10 euros (weird I know).  This Palace was just as amazing as it's gardens.  The only disappointing things were the construction (there was a fake picture of the palace covering up the under construction part),  the annoying tourists who bumped me out of the way and wouldn't let me take pictures, and that Julia and I didn't take our romantic row boat ride.  We then went to this nice little crepe cafe where we got galletes, wine/drinks, and more crepes (i think this was #4).  The waiters were making fun of us being American and one had a crush on Caroline.  But then we got kicked out because they closed at 6 pm and headed back to our hostel.  We then went to the coach station and boarded our night bus (and we were reunited with Christy and Emily who were staying with a friend for the weekend).  On this bus we had a little boy who wouldn't stop crying.  But that wasn't the worst thing.  We got to the chunnel and were told to get everything off the bus and they shut us in this glass room (looked like a gas chamber to me).  They scanned our passports and Xrayed our bags.  We got back on the bus, only to be driven 500 feet across the border to get off and get our passports stamped in England (I already have an England stamp, I wanted a France one!).  We finally permanently got back on the bus only to wait 2 hours because we were early and the chunnel was late.  So we ended up getting in 30 minutes late at 6:30 am.  But it was totally worth it.
Other noteworthy tidbits:
1.  At the ATM there was a French homeless guy who kept talking to me in French even though I told him I only speak English.  I was so flustered and wanted to get away that I ended up crossing the street without looking and almost got hit by a car (Mom and Dad I know you loved reading that)
2.  Speaking of ATMs, I think Kevin tried to use 30 but none accepted his card.
3.  When Lauren woke us up the first night from a night terror, I couldn't find my phone and decided that someone had entered our room and stole it.  But it ended up being stuck in my pillow.
4.  Another Halli embarrassing moment: I wasn't paying attention and accidentally put Lauren's contacts in the first morning.  And only realized it after I decided that my contacts felt weird and Lauren was missing her contacts.
5.  I was mistaken as a French girl at the Arc de Triomphe and someone tried to convince Marylyn she was Brazilian at the Palace of Versailles.
Au revoir to all!
Next time I will tell you about my mishap with my internship...stay tuned...

Monday, June 2, 2008

Make that 1 more flatmate

Yep, we found some cockroaches.  Gross I know.  But we killed them.  I think we were more afraid to open the door this morning and see that we had an infestation of mice and roaches that formed over the weekend.  Either they aren't here or they're hiding.
I'm going to quickly go through what happened before I left for Paris on Friday because we just got back from our overnight busride and I need some sleep.
Thursday we our internship placements.  I still have an INTERVIEW with River Publishing, but I found out that it is competitive with people outside the program.  So now I'm freaking out that I won't get it.  I'm going to spend all my time until tomorrow at 3 pm preparing.  But, she told me all these details about the internship and it sounds absolutely amazing.
My flatmates and I went to see Sex and the City early that evening.  These mean French girls made us move because they tried to enforce the assigned seats rule, but nobody follows it.  But that could never ruin the movie.  It made me cry.  If you haven't seen it yet, go see it!
Then came back and had champagne (to celebrate our internship interviews and Sex and the City) and made the most amazing dinner.  And when I say most amazing, I mean it was the best meal I've had since being here (and I have eaten really good food) AND I made it.  Grilled bell peppers in olive oil and italian seasoning, added noodles and spaghetti sauce.  Bon appetite!
Then we had a fiasco.  We participated in a little mouse hunt in Caroline and Lauren's room because we found the mouse.  Well maybe mice, we're not sure, but chaos definitely ensued.
Paris: details after I have some sleep and can comprehend the weekend.
Things I've Learned:
1.  Kids ride scooters EVERYWHERE (like the razor scooters).  It's a necessity.
2.  Brand Republic is the British version of Ad Age
3.  I spend too much money
4.  Don't stand next to the street because huge double decker buses will hit you (Christy had two close calls)
5.  Everyone says cheers instead of thank you.
Okay off to bed since the bus ride didn't allow me to sleep much.  Good night, or rather good morning (it's 7:28 am here.)

Thursday, May 29, 2008

My lack of sleep is not conducive to my health

I know I said I slept really late on Monday, however, it didn't seem to carry over to the rest of the week.  Tuesday I once again woke up early to work on a paper and then had to sit through my class trying to stay awake.  What kept me going was Caroline's depiction of Kevin as "Dad Man."  Long story.  Then we had our internship orientation where they told us the basic knowledge of what you should and shouldn't do, and then they started to scare us.  They told us that we can still botch up our interviews next week and lose the internship.  It's rare, but it does happen!
After some grocery shopping to stock up on lunch food for the next week, we went to Sports Cafe.  It is a really nice looking bar, but it is all Americans.  Since our goal is to meet as many Brits as possible, this was definitely not helping.  But we stayed and had fun and watched the creepy guys tie sweaters around their waists.  We made sure to leave in time to take the last tube home so we wouldn't have to figure out the bus system.  Good times had by all on the tube.
When we woke up at 7:15 this next morning, we realized that it might not have been such a good idea to go out like we did.  We took an 8 am bus to Warwick (2 hour busride, slept the whole time) and stopped at a rest stop aka "Welcome Break" and Lauren went in to buy some water.  I went to open my water, not realizing that Lauren had accidentally bought me carbonated water, and it exploded everywhere.  I guess my karma was getting me back for going out the night before.  We got to Warwick and hung out at the castle.  It was so neat and we got to go all throughout it.  I wish they would have given us another hour so I could have seen the combat and stuff, but I did find time to climb 530 steps to the top of the tower.  We then got back on the bus and headed to Stratford-upon-Avon to see Anne Hathaway's (Shakespeare's wife) house and walked on the same exact floor that Shakespeare did and then to his birthplace (which we later found out was just his birthplace because he did not live in Stratford).  After that it started to torrentially downpour and gave us only one choice of things to do during our 4 hour break: go to a pub.  Now normally I would have loved sitting in a pub, sipping on beer and cider for 4 hours, but when you are lacking sleep, like I was, it is hard to finish even one pint and stay awake.  I got some delicious fish and chips and then we headed to the theatre to see Taming of the Shrew (10 Things I Hate About You is based off of it).  The theatre was neat, but the play was so hard to follow because not only did they modernize it, but it also was a play within a play.  It might have also been hard to follow since I was struggling to stay awake.  I was told that they changed the ending to the play so I guess I will have to read it to really understand it.
On the bus ride home I dabbled in sleeping and playing this 6 degrees type game with movies and actors.  I wasn't playing to begin with so I started shouting out movies and I don't think that it made Lauren happy.
Today I once again woke up early and wrote my paper.  We find out our internships and interview times today and then my flatmates and I are getting all dressed up and going to see Sex and the City.  It came out here yesterday, but since we were Shakespearing it up until 12:30 AM, we couldn't go.  Oh and Paris tomorrow!
Things I've learned:
1.  Parking garages are called "Multi Storey Car Ports"
2.  Shakespeare APPARENTLY died in a pub
3.  Sports Cafe raised their pound pints to 1.50 pints and they start after 10
4.  Roof thatching costs 17,000 pounds (AKA $34,000!!)
5.  All Shakespeare gave his kids when he died was 5 pounds, but he gave his friends 10 pounds.
Cheerio and, in Miss Frasco's words, God Save the Queen