Yearly Archives: 2009

The comedy of errors opens

This was the opening weekend for Shakespeare on the Commons, an annual tradition put on by The Commonwealth Shakespeare Company. This year’s play is The Comedy of Errors, a tale of mistaken identity among two sets of twins.

Each year these free performances introduce a new generation to a classic play from William Shakespeare and offer families and friends a fun and affordable evening out in the city. I wish the weather in New England offered more opportunities like this.

Show your support for Boston’s local theater scene and bring a friend or two with you to enjoy this performance. The Commonwealth Shakespeare Co. deserves their accolades, but it is the crowds that come each year, which makes all their toil worthwhile. Performances run through August 16th; Tuesday thru Saturday at 8pm and Sunday’s at 7pm.



Gratuitous eye candy that sums up exactly how I feel today.

Enjoy the weekend.

Flashback Friday: Jimmy’s Harborside

According to an article in The Boston Globe, Jimmy’s Harborside, one of Boston’s most endurng restaurants, will not be rebuilt and will be replaced by a 3-story, 20,000 square foot Legal Sea Foods restaurant. You can read the Globe’s article here.

The Boston Globe has a cool pictoral history of the restaurant which concludes with an artist rendering of the new building – see photo below (courtesy of The Boston Globe). The dramatic change and investment made by the city and private developers over the past 10 years has turned this desolate parcel of land into a significant opportunity for the city to reclaim and rebuild.

Just scored tix to tonight’s game

I’m off to the Red Sox game tonight. Hopefully the rain will stay away and some of the humidity will subside. Regardless (or irregardless as I’m likely to hear someone say at Fenway tonight), it should be fun. These are sweet tickets just 5 rows from the visiting team’s batting circle and practically next to Jack Welch’s personal seats.

About one month ago, I enjoyed watching the Red Sox beat the Atlanta Braves from these choice seats. I included a couple pictures in my blog entry, An evening at Fenway. Perhaps I should have entitled this “An evening at Fenway II”.

Let’s hope that the Sox rally and can win tonight.

Charlie bit me

I’ve been laughing about this video since it was first shared with me earlier this year. I’m not sure why I did not post it previously (I thought I had). It is very cute and worth the watch.

I love the English accents and the lack of remorse Charlie shows after he bites his older brother.

Back in the swing of things

I have not commented much on my gym routine since early May. At that point I was feeling very confident and was writing to document my progress, but a few weeks later (over Memorial Day weekend) I came down with meningitis and it took me a few weeks before I was able to recover sufficiently to go back to the gym. Unfortunately, I could not pick up from where I left off and it took me awhile before my work out could return to the same level of intensity as before. A couple of weeks ago, I felt like I had finally returned to where I had been before getting ill.

My routines at the gym have progressed and now my trainer has me focusing approximately 1+ hour on one muscle group at a time. I have not been as faithful when it has come to going to the gym on my off-days (when I’m meant to work out on my own). However, I recently asked Stu to create a cardio workout for me to help build endurance (surprisingly, lifting weights can leave me out of breath gasping for air). I feel like if I can build my cardio I’ll be better able to manage the crazy work outs he creates for me.

I’m not sure when I’ll get the chance to add this to my gym routine since I don’t think it is likely I’ll be getting there (with the exception of my standing appointment with Stu on Wednesday) until the weekend, but I’ll try to comment and let you know if it was too easy or left me gasping for air.

Suggested Cardio Routine
Warm up at 4.5 for 5 minutes
Run at level 6 for 15 sec.
Jog at level 5 for 25 sec.
Run at level 8 for 15 sec.
Jog at level 6 for 25 sec.
Cool down for 3 minutes at 4.5
Run at level 9 for 15 sec.
Jog at level 7 for 20 sec.
Run at level 10 for 10 sec.
Jog at level 8 for 15 sec.
Cool down at level 5 for 3 min

Make sure the incline of the treadmill is at 4-6 and adjust accordingly.

FlashForward Friday: Boston’s waterfront

For the past few months I have been writing an entry each Friday called, “Flashback Friday”. You can see / read past entries by linking here. Just to mix things up a bit, I thought I would showcase what the future of Boston might look like by sharing a proposal that has been put forth from the prominent Boston developer Don Chiofaro. His firm has purchased the Harbor Garage on Atlantic Avenue (next to the New England Aquarium) and is proposing a bold mixed-use development that will include parking, office space, residences, hotel and commercial space.

In Don’s own words, this would provide an archway from the harbor to downtown. The buildings are quite beautiful and looks as if it would significantly change the Boston skyline. The Boston Globe says, “The 40-story office building and a 59-story hotel and condominium tower would be built on land between the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway and the New England Aquarium, and also feature a glass corridor at the bottom.”

Of course this would not be Boston if there was not some community activism deploring such a bold initiative and there have been cries from some who have said the project is too large, but given the alternative of two beautiful new buildings or keeping a decrepit concrete parking garage, I’ll vote for Mr. Chiofaro. Hopefully, Mayor Menino will appreciate both the legacy this development could create as well as the tax revenues it will bring to the city.

If you would like to read more about this project you can link to the article in The Boston Globe.

Pictures courtesy of The Boston Globe.

MA shows yet again it is a pioneer in healthcare reform

Massachusetts is again leading the nation in healthcare reform. This time the state is considering an overhaul of the way payments are made to hospitals and doctors. Last week a state commission voted unanimously to scrap the current system “fee-for-service”, in which insurers typically pay doctors and hospitals a negotiated fee for each individual procedure or visit.

The commission recommends that the state make the shift within five years. This would make Massachusetts the first state to end fee-for-service, and instead pay providers a yearly fee for each patient, thus eliminating financial incentives to overtreat. Could more states follow? There are plenty of critics of ending fee-for-service, but if you are going to reform healthcare you need to follow the money. Over time I would hope that pay-for-performance would also be introduced to encourage best-practices and to financially discourage inefficiencies (but that is a subject for another entry).

I’m not certain when the state legislature will vote on this recommendation, but I do believe that Gov. Patrick supports the commissions recommendations. It is likely that this too could serve as a model for President Obama and the U.S. Congress as they address the issue of healthcare reform. No doubt states like California which are nearly bankrupt in part due to sky-rocketing healthcare costs will also be watching closely to see what sort of impact this has on access to service and over all cost.

For more information here are some additional articles:
BusinessWeek – A MA model to fix health care
Breaking News 24/7 – MA considers move from fee-for-service

Who do you attract?

Earlier this month I included a quick quiz that evaluated “how gay are you?” I lost some points and only rated 35% gay.

Undeterred, I just finished another survey which asks “Who do you attract?” According to this survey, I attract Yuppies. Is that still a term that is widely used? I do agree that rednecks are least likely to approach or be attracted to me. I think it is fairly obvious that a guy created this survey because based on dating stories / nightmares from some of my girlfriends the categories of “Who you attract” would likely read more like the following: Ego maniac; Player; Emotionally Unavailable, etc…

What type of person do you attract?

Your Result: You attract Yuppies!
 

You attract the very well-dressed, job oriented type of people. They usually have their finances together, are ‘middle of the road’ on most topics, generally happy with the ‘main-stream’ of things. If it is stability you are after, these are good people to attract, if you seek adventure, it may be time for an overhaul.

You attract geeks!
 
You attract models!
 
You attract artsy people!
 
You attract unstable people!
 
You attract rednecks!
 
What type of person do you attract?
Quiz Created on GoToQuiz

A bit of song and dance to brighten your day

With nearly 7.6 million views, I may very well be the last person to have watched this clip on YouTube. However, I wanted to add this to my blog if only for posterity sake. I’ve just finished watching SYTYCD because although I have no coordination and even less rhythm, I absolutely love this sort of thing. If you can, watch this in HD.

Thanks to my sister Elizabeth for forwarding me this clip.

Provincetown – July 2009


The weather was absolutely spectacular while I was down in Provincetown. The town was filled to capacity (so much for the economy keeping people away).

Time was spent relaxing at the Boatslip, going to Tea Dance in the afternoon and out at night, a bit of shopping here and there and several memorable meals including a lobster dinner at a beautiful house in the East End that had spectacular views of the water and the Provincetown’s Pilgrim Monument.

I’ve only been away for two days, and I’m already missing it terribly. As much as I love Boston, Provincetown is where I feel most at home.

Tweeting Pink

I’m not exactly sure what is taken into account by Stockholm Pride as they ‘rank’ one’s Twitter account, but I thought it was funny all the same.

Thanks to OMG for the tip.

1% Heterobosguy is 1% HeteroFound words such as: brunch, clueless, cocktails, drinks, gym, and southend

Off to Provincetown

Do you like my groovy shades? I found them last August on a random trip to the tiny town at the tip of the Cape. They are a nod to Dame Edna.

Tomorrow I’m leaving right from work to catch the last high-speed ferry to Provincetown, and I will not return until Monday evening. I’m excited about relaxing with friends and enjoying the weather, and looking forward to life without a computer for a few days… so no more blogging ’til I return.

Abby Dion – 8 weeks old this Friday

I have no regrets that I do not have children of my own in large part due to the fact that I get to play with and care for my two nephews (Jack and Austin) and now my first and only neice, Abby.

Where has Dick Cheney gone?

Approximately one week ago news stations and blogs were obsessed by reports that the Director of the C.I.A. – Leon Panetta – had recently visited Congress and disclosed that for the past 8 years there had been a secret counterterrorism program that had intentionally been concealed from the Senate and House intelligence committees.

The NY Times July 11th article, “Cheney is linked to concealment of C.I.A. Project” implicates V.P. Cheney. The Times asserts, “The report that Mr. Cheney was behind the decision to conceal the still-unidentified program from Congress deepened the mystery surrounding it, suggesting that the Bush administration had put a high priority on the program and its secrecy.”

It turns out that the program was designed to target leaders of Qaeda, which I think most Americans (especially in the days that followed the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001) would favor. The Times issued a follow up story in their July 13th article, “C.I.A. had plans to assassinate Qaeda leaders”. The article indicates that “Mr. Panetta scuttled the program, which would have relied on paramilitary teams, shortly after the C.I.A.’s counterterrorism center recently informed him of its existence. The next day, June 24, he told Congressional Intelligence Committees that the plan had been hidden from lawmakers, initially at the instruction of former Vice President Dick Cheney,” again implicating former V.P. Cheney.

I know many people do not have a problem with the idea of taking out leaders of terrorist organizations, but that is really not the issue that makes me so uncomfortable. Rather it is the lack of disregard for the “checks and balances” that makes our Democracy work (and worthwhile) that time and again seem to have been completely disregarded in the Bush administration. This concept that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney knew what was best and could only be effective if they were allowed to operate without supervision and without having to answer for their actions leaves me sick to my stomach. What would be the reaction (I wonder aloud) if President Obama and V.P. Biden operated in such a manner? What if they acted with the best of intentions but refused to disclose information, respect other branches of government and twisted laws to find interpretations that suited their means?

In the weeks leading up to this controversy, V.P. Dick Cheney was on the proverbial war path asserting that President Obama was compromising the safety of the U.S. He made several visits to the Sunday morning talk shows (i.e. Meet the Press, Face the Nation, etc…) and his daughter, Liz, was almost a permanent fixture on MSNBC and CNN expressing her disdain for the new administrations’ actions.

However in the days that have followed since Panetta shut down the Bush era counter terrorism program, there has not been a single peep from anyone named Cheney. Why the sudden silence now? Silence is not an impartial judge, and I’m left to wonder if the former V.P. believes the public’s assumptions are preferable to his answering these accusations. Mr. Cheney are you even more evil and despicable than my assumptions would lead me to believe?