Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Green = Good

Apparently my blog is turning into a daily dose of things that I love or have started to love, but I guess that's the way it is. No apologies -- I am one of those people who wants to share the things I love with everyone else. What I love other people should love too, no questions asked.

And today the thing I love is Superfood. What is Superfood, you might ask?

According to Wikipedia (which we know is always right [note sarcasm]), "[a] superfood is a type of food believed to have health benefits beyond those of more common foods due to specific phytonutrient . For instance, blueberries are considered a superfood or superfruit because they contain significant amounts of antioxidants, anthocyanins, vitamin C, manganese and dietary fibre which are believed to provide important health benefits."

The particular Superfood that I love is by both Odwalla and Naked. Don't let the greenness fool you; I once was a fool who thought I couldn't possibly enjoy any beverage that was green. I was very wrong! Not only is it fabulous, it is sweet. It has the sweet of greatness.

The positive effects of so-called superfoods is still being questioned and studied by science. But who doesn't want a drink with grapes, blueberries, broccoli, apples, and all sorts of other things rolled int one that tastes good?

Future deliberations on the actual validity of the idea of superfoods to come at a later date.

**This superfood public anouncement was brought to you by the color green
and by
Air: It's Everywhere You Want to Be.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

I love Starbucks

Say what you will about the massive corporation and coffee giant that is Starbucks, but I love it. I loved it when I was in high school because it was ellusive -- an alien place where I knew so little about coffee that it was impossible for me to order without the help of a friend.

I loved it my freshman year of college as the place where the Baristas were always happy and smiling.

I loved it that summer when I became one of those Baristas and learned not only the names of all the drinks but how to make them. I became an expert at steaming and foaming milk, pulling the perfect espresso shot, and how to talk someone into a drink that I think they should try. Coffee is a strange sort of love and it creates its own unique culture. When channel surfing, I can't help but stop on the Discovery Channel when it runs a special on coffee and where America got it from (Italy, in case you're wondering. Originally, the Middle East developed espresso and Italy stole the idea of the coffee bar and turned it into the culture that it is today.)

I then learned the love of a local coffee shop named Jittery Joes in Athens and became an employee as fast as I could.

And after graduation, when I desperately needed to pay off the last semester's debt, Starbucks welcomed me with open arms as an employer until the day I quit to work for TrialGraphix.

Starbucks strives to make itself your "third" place. (I apologize if it's a different number, I'm a bit hazy on the particulars) It's not work, it's not home, but it's the third place where you belong. In a way, it is one of your homes.

And, being a former employee, I know that they donate money to help save the rain forest and they pay their employees well. They also work to help small coffee farmers. It's a great company to work for and offers health benefits after three months of working 20 hours a week or more. It's one of the only companies I've ever heard of that lets you work part time and have health benefits. I know that the company truly cares about making good coffee and serving quality beverages, even if I do occasionally run into a negative experience at a store. Perhaps I drank the Kool-aid the management serve to me but I love the store.

I had registered a $25 Starbucks card online so that if I lost it I wouldn't lose the balance. I get e-mails from them every now and then about the company. And do you know what I found in my inbox this week?

A gift. The e-mail told me the next drink was on them. There was an additional $5 on my card, no action on my part required.

Starbucks gave me a free drink =)

Try to realize that Starbucks singlehandedly created most coffee markets that exist nationwide today and any local establishment is reaping the benefits of a coffee culture that Starbucks created. And it did it in the footsteps of Seattle's Best. Sure, coffee drinkers abound in the world with or without Starbucks. But the quality is amazing and with Starbucks came quality and the only reason that McDonald's and Dunkin Donuts no longer serve black sludge or bitterness in the mornings.

So you can think what you want about the massive, evil, giant corporation trying to take over the world. But I love it.


Saturday, March 1, 2008

Music I think everyone should listen to

I won't lie - I think there is a part of me that is satisfied by stumbling across something the masses haven't discovered yet. An even biggest satisfaction comes from loving something that perhaps the masses never will, being sort of a patron of unloved things that should be loved. I can admit this though I also feel that I will not love something simply because it is obscure or unloved by many. But still, I can recognize my own pride in advocating the unknown. Perhaps it's the part of me that is in everyone else: the discoverer (or archaeologist, scientist, detective, or whatever your personal seeker is called.)

That being said, here is some music I have stumbled upon recently or learned to love these last few years of discovery:

-Regina Spektor -- Anything really, though in particular "Fidelity," "On the Radio," and "Hotel
Song"
-A Fine Frenzy -- Anything really, though in particular "Almost Lover" and "Near to You"
-Colby Callait -- Bubbly from the radio is good, also "Realize" and "Magic"
-Holly Brook -- "Like Blood Like Honey" Album
-Eric Hutchinson
-Marie Digby -- Not so much unknown anymore, thanks to MTV, particularly "Umbrella" by
Rhiana
-Butterfly Boucher
-Imogen Heap (largely known, largely not); she is also part of Frou Frou (also LOVE)
-Josh Joplin
-Hope foraGoldenSummer
-Carrie Ann Hearst
-The Wandering Sons -- they sound like they're from GA or TN but are actually from Appleton,
WI

So, since I love them, I figured I would share.

Something Joel sent me that made him laugh and think of me....

The link in the title is to an amazingly funny podcast that has 3-4 different clips of audio, perhaps 59 minutes long, that seemingly have nothing to do with each other but are listed under the subject "Tough Crowd."

I LOVED this podcast and am now fervently searching through the Americanlife.org website for more gems. I cannot thank Joel enough for sharing [Thanks Joely =)]