Andrew Brennan

Avatar

Life & Times in London

Random Header

Interview with Mr. Cameron

Caught this article in the Independent today about David Cameron and teh gays. It makes me more comfortable about our (likely) new prime minister.

A bit odd that the interviewer had to explain the rationale behind religious schools having more homophobic bullying, and his “cloudy memory” about thinking he hadn’t voted against gay couples adopting when he had is classic PR.

Still, he seems sincerely to be for equality, and that’s important.

And on a less serious note, MyDavidCameron.com is brilliant.

1 January – Shepherd’s Bush tube

1 January - Shepherd's Bush tube

[See on Smugmug]

Photos etc.

I’m taking a photo every day (or thereabouts) for 2010 again. It’s a great way to remember what I do and when I do it. For this third year of daily photos, I’m still trying to improve my workflow to ensure it remains a fun hobby and doesn’t become a chore.

I use an Eye-Fi card to copy photos from my camera to my computer. I know it isn’t that much more effort to pop the SD card out of the camera and place it into my card reader, but it does make a difference when you’re copying photos often. I have the older ‘Home’ version, which doesn’t post photos automatically to the internet; I like to give my photos a bit of an edit first.

After copying and sorting the photos into folders, I run them through Picasa, editing and starring the best ones to make them daily photos. Then I select the latest starred photos and send them to Smugmug directly from Picasa, where they go into the gallery.

This year I’m attempting to post them on this blog too. I’m experimenting with Tim Linden’s Smugmug Automator plugin. So far it’s just posted the same photo about 20 times, so now it’s time to tinker.

UPDATE: Plugin fail. It doesn’t seem to want to post different photos at regular intervals. Ah well. Thinking of rigging something up with Friendfeed…

A Running Update

sneakers

I’m doing the Amsterdam marathon on October 18. I’ve been training for it for the past few months, perhaps not as religiously/scientifically as I could have (the New York Times training tool turned out to require too much data entry), but I have been having a pretty good go of it, and my goal time is still 3:20. It’s nice to have something to train for.

Many of my recent runs have been fantastic, and thanks to My Tracks (an app on my Android phone that uses the phone’s GPS) I know exactly how far I’ve gone on my long runs. The longest run so far was over the bank holiday weekend, where I ran from our flat to Hampton Court Palace, which turned out to be 22.64 miles. Anthony cycled along for the whole distance and brought snacks.

This past weekend I had two good runs, one with Anthony (our first time running together ever, surprisingly) on Saturday and one with Anne on Sunday, where I met her in Mile End and we explored east from there–our run was slightly marred by the pack of friendly but slow bikers who crowded the path, but we did lose them eventually and some of the sights along the Limehouse Cut are pretty cool. That run turned out to be nearly 16 miles.

I’ve needed new sneakers for ages, and yesterday I finally got around to picking some up. At Runners Need I learned that I pronate (on the gait analyzing treadmill), so my new sneakers correct that and after the western canal run this morning so far so good.

Now that the marathon is under 3 weeks away, I suppose I should start thinking about tapering. I’ve never been much of a taperer — we’ll see how it goes.

Dinner at The Ivy

The Ivy

Anthony and I are always looking for an excuse to celebrate, so when we learned that I would be ‘celebrating’ my 10,000th day on earth this week (my 10th kiloday, or metric birthday I suppose you could call it), we booked a table at The Ivy to try it out.

Short verdict — we still prefer The Wolseley for a delicious, upscale, splurge-worthy dinner. Not that The Ivy was bad — to the contrary my rump of Suffolk lamb with creamed polenta & salsa verde was delicious, as were Anthony’s sausages, and the wine we got (Dolcetto d’Alba, Cigliuti, Piedmont 2007 Italy) was fantastic, and the prices weren’t as obscene as we were expecting — but overall the experience just didn’t quite match up with The Wolseley.

The Ivy’s decor is disjointed (and kind of ugly), and the service wasn’t anything to write home about. Because we weren’t regulars we only had the option to book at 6pm or 9:30pm — we chose the latter, which was later than we would have liked. We also didn’t see any celebrities, which (I hesitate to say) is one of the reasons you go to a place like The Ivy. Ah well — overall our dinner was a 7/10, and we’ll probably be back there at some point.

Barbados, Boat Race, Easter, etc.

Um, where did the past six weeks go? Before I head off to China tonight (for the “2009 Xinjin Water City ‘Longhu Cup’ International University Rowing Show and Dragon Boat Festival” in Chengdu where there are pandas), some highlights:

Barbados (14-22 March)

All Seasons Resort Barbados

Anthony and I had a fantastic time. So sunny and so relaxing–there was time to just sit around and read, which there never is in London. The beaches were great and our hotel, the All Seasons Resort Europa, was very nice and in a great location (the west ‘Platinum’ coast, which is less touristy than the south coast). I ran a ton and got to see a lot of the island that way. We also had some great dinners at The Tides and The Cliff, and spent one day on a catamaran snorkeling in a coral reef and swimming with sea turtles.

 

Boat Race Weekend (28-29 March) 

Putney, Boat Race Day 2009

Always great to see all the old boys together around Boat Race time, particularly the guys who flew in for the weekend. On Saturday night there was a loud and rowdy boat party on the Thames. And on Sunday there was a similarly loud and rowdy Boat Race Ball after Oxford won both races.

 

Easter Weekend (10-13 April)

55A reunited

We definitely took advantage of the time off for Easter. On Thursday night Anthony and I went to Oxford to Alex’s leaving dinner — she’s spending 8 weeks in Malawi traficking orphans for Madonna working at a hospital. Caught up with Jamie, Greg, Martin, Yannis, Robbie, Henry, Nick, Pango and several other Oxford types. Friday night was a very fun at Trash Palace, Saturday night was a late one at Kensington Roof Gardens, then on Sunday we had a fantastic Easter lunch at Dottie and Bianca’s–so much delicious moussaka.

 

Other highlights

Tony and Ryan

Sara’s Hats, Cats & Spats party at the Albert & Pearl (27 March) — there were many great hats, cats, and cat-themed hats, but not so many spats.

 

Skylon

Wired UK Launch Party (31 March) — Anthony was able to snag us invitations. It was fun (and there were great canapes and an open bar), but I couldn’t shake the feeling that this is just the wrong time to launch a high-brow tech magazine.

 

Dinners — We had Buddy, Sam, Chris E., and Sara over for what turned out to be some very good chicken tacos (2 April). Andrew (sans David) had us over for another rather boozy dinner in Belsize (15 April). And last night we went to Asia de Cuba for Ryan’s birthday–having heard bad things about the one in San Francisco, I was pleasantly surprised. The Asian-Cuban fusion concept actually worked, and the food was very good (highlights: the beef spring rolls and the miso-blackened cod).

 

Chengdu

And now I’m off to China for just over a week, to race in a regatta with a bunch of guys I rowed with at Yale. I’ve been back on the erg quite a bit in the past six weeks, and it wasn’t as bad as I was expecting. Chengdu appears to be the Chicago of China–important internally but not well known internationally. Bianca and Tony have been there before, and Bianca said that the downtown area at night is “seriously surreal in an asian-futuristic-hello-kitty-meets-jetsons kind of way. Everything is pastel neon.” So that should be interesting. And there’s a panda nursery, which makes Anthony insanely jealous. We’ll see about this place.

And we’re off

Putney

The past two weeks:

  • Awesome morning runs along Regent’s Canal
  • Seeing Jamie and Greg and Martin and Alex and Robbie in Oxford and then Alex and Robbie again in London
  • Keats is finally back and staying with us while he hunts for a flat
  • Preparing for Barbados

We leave for Barbados tomorrow morning. I’m SO. EXCITED. I’m bringing my running shoes, a stack of books, my camera, and that’s about it. No computer, no email, no Facebook, no Twitter. I actually feel slightly anxious about leaving all these modern trappings behind–which means I’m way overdue for a break.

Brunches, Sushi, and Wandering the City

img_1459

Friday 20 February — Drinks with Carl, Giulia, Claire, Franklin at Akbar, then serious dancing at Trash Palace.

Saturday 21 February — Had Robin and Ali over for brunch, attempted to watch Mishima, a Life in Four Chapters but it was too heavy for Saturday afternoon post-hangover viewing. Wandered into the City attempting to find an ice cream place with Ali but failed. Had Mike B over for dinner; Anthony made a Thai red curry that turned out really well. Then we saw F*cking Men at the King’s Head theatre on Upper Street. It’s an American play about modern gay relationships, and it was pretty good aside from the consistently dodgy American accents and occasionally dodgy acting.

Cleaver Square, Kennington

Sunday 22 February — Gym, burritos, pints with Mike W and Daniel at a surprisingly charming pub in Kennington. Well, surprising in that it was in Kennington yet kind of charming.

Sykes and Fred at Habibi Sushi

Tuesday 24 February — AM gym, work, then all you can eat conveyor belt sushi at Habibi Sushi in the City with Dottie, Bianca, Sykes and Fred. Quantity made up for quality.

Thursday 26 February — Amazing run before work along Regent’s Canal, work, then pint, burrito, pint with Ryan, Rob K and Mayumi near Charlotte Street. The black beans at Benito’s Hat were mushy and flavorless.

Dinner aftermath

Friday 27 February — AM gym, work, dinner in Balham at Simon and Kasia’s with Anthony, Jessica and Luke. Simon made some amazing jerk chicken, ribs, salmon and rice & beans. There was very serious arguing about literature and Beyonce.

Saturday 28 February — Had a lovely day with Roisin and Tom. First Anthony and I wandered down to Spitalfields Market to meet them for brunch at Canteen, then we had tea at Coatsie’s before walking back through the City to Clerkenwell. Chilled out at our flat, then attempted to get free burrito’s at Mucho Mas’s reopening, but the line was too long, so we went to Mem and Laz instead. Saw Roisin off then Anthony and I went to Tati and Sam’s housewarming.

Hammersmith Bridge

Sunday 1 March — Gym in the morning, then Putney (and a mission to get there–3 tube switches) for the Oxford-University of Washington fixture. Was nice to see the usual OUBC suspects and especially Terence, who’s in town this week for work. Oxford won both pieces but UW didn’t make it easy.

Monday 2 March — Anthony and I watched 21 Up, the third part of an ongoing documentary (7 Up) that started filming a group of British kids in 1964 and catches up with them every 7 years. This episode was filmed in 1978. It’s been really interesting (and sometimes sad) to see how these people have changed so far.

Recently

Valentimes (14 February)

love hearts

Had an excellent dinner at Dottie and Bianca’s new place near Whitechapel on Valentine’s day. Keats, Tab, Tony and Carl B. also attended. My favorite bits of the evening were Bianca’s avocado spring rolls (fortified with bacon!) and the passing around of appropriate/inappropriate love hearts.

 

Manniversary (13 February)

Anthony and I have been going steady for two years now, somehow, so to celebrate we went to The Wolseley for dinner. They apparently keep track of your reservation history (which, um, maybe violates EU privacy laws?); this worked to our advantage as we got a very nice table in the corner. Anthony had these amazing scallops with black risotto, and I had the steak frites and an avocado and bacon salad.

 

Abercrombie and Kent Party (11 February)

Ali at Maya

Emma is currently working for Abercrombie and Kent, the ridiculously posh ‘private travel’ agency (they invented the concept of the safari, apparently) and she invited a bunch of us to the launch of their new branch in Harrod’s. After monopolizing the champagne and canapes, we went to the afterparty that Robin organized at Maya and had a bit of a dance.

 

Murder Mystery Oxford (5 February)

Tony

Yannis invited us to the Oxford Gastronomy Society’s murder mystery dinner, which took place in the McKenna room at Christ Church. The traffic out of London wasn’t bad and we managed to make the dinner on time. The murder took place in 1920s Chicago and after warming up to our characters — I was US Congressman Darrin Toosteal — we had a very nice time. The food was good too.

 

Snow (2 February)

Percy Street Snow

London got a little snow and CHAOS ENSUED! Seriously, nearly everything closed. I managed to trudge into work in my wellies no sweat–Percy Street looked nice in the snow.

 

Tough Guy (1 February)

Tough Guy 2009

Never again. This ridiculous event was actually fun for the first half–it was a cross country course with climbing and jumping obstacles. It was freezing cold but Ben and I were still smiling (Rob and Robin, whose idea it was to do this, both cancelled, blaming rugby and skiing-related injuries); I had enough layers on and was starting to sweat. When the sun came out briefly, I naively thought, “Hey, maybe it will be nice to cool down in the water.”

Oh how wrong I was. The second half of the course, where we trudged and swam through streams and pools, was perhaps the most painful physical experience of my life–ten times worse than the last 250m of a 2k rowing race. It was unimaginably cold and kept getting worse. First the water was thigh deep as we jumped into and climbed out of a stream, back and forth in an S pattern about eight times. Then it was waist deep as we alternated between ponds and running through flaming bales of hay. Then it was chest deep until we were completely submerged for the underwater tunnel and later the ‘death plunge.’ I managed to hold it together and finish in just over 2 hours, but Ben started shaking uncontrolably somewhere around the flaming bales of hay and had to be pulled out by the medics. It took me several hours to completely warm up again after the finish.

The only good thing to come out of this madness: knowing that every athletic competition I do in the future will be easier than Tough Guy.

January Highlights So Far

Daily Photo!

I started doing this in 2007 but trailed off about 200 days in when I hit my free Flickr account’s 200 photo limit. Copying, editing and posting the photos got tedious too. This year I have a much better workflow: Photos make it to the computer automatically (through an Eye-Fi card), then I edit, describe and upload them to the SmugMug gallery within Picasa. Easy Peasy.

Something to train for!

I’m way happier at the gym when I have something to train for. At some point Robin, Ben, Rob and I decided it would be a good idea to do the Tough Guy this year on 1 February (“the worlds safest most dangerous taste of mental physical pain endurance toughest events” says its website). Um, maybe this wasn’t such a good idea:

Hurrah?

Events!

31 December: Emma made a fantastic dinner at Boris’s in Bermondsey. Couldn’t see the fireworks from Tower Bridge due to the fog.

6 January: Took the day off work to see Mike (as Romeo) in the understudy run of the RSC’s Romeo and Juliet. Stratford was quaint but if I were a teenager growing up there, I think I’d find it excruciatingly boring.

7 January: Dinner with Jon at Mem and Laz. Good to know he’s survived Japan so far, sad that he’s going back.

8 January: Lastminute.com deal at the Michelin-starred 1 Lombard Street. Was alright, however not as good as The Square or Pied à Terre.

11 January: Anthony and I saw Slumdog Millionaire. I really liked it, especially the cinematography and soundtrack.

13 January: Ali’s birthday. Nice Thai dinner and hanging with the EFs.

17 January: Anthony and I watched The Wave, a German film about a dictatorship experiment gone wrong at a high school. Then Tati and Sam came over for dinner–Anthony made his Sausage-Lentil soup, which was delicious, and we’re going to have leftovers for ages.

Next,