Look! (*cough*) My New Theme! (*achoo*)

I hab a code ib by dose. Breathing out of my nose is hit-or-miss, leaving my throat dry and sore and my head sort of buzzy. Whee! Oxygen Deprivation! Woot!

But, cheering me up and lifting my spirits today is this bee-yoo-tee-ful new, professionally designed theme! Isn’t it pretty?! Notice the return of the five-petaled wild geranium flower in the header and as an icon in the sidebars-yay! This beautiful design comes to me courtesy of the IZEA design team, and I love everything about it!

Both the boys want to have friends spend the night tonight, but I just don’t have the energy to deal with that many extra kids in the house, so I had to make an executive parental decision. Ryan’s friend spends tonight, Nathan’s friend spends tomorrow night. I don’t think I’m contagious, as long as I wash my hands a lot and don’t sneeze directly onto either of them, I think they’ll be fine.

Since this template is brand new, if you happen to come across something that doesn’t work right, a bad link or anything, please let me know in a comment, or with a DM on Twitter (twitter.com/Table4Five) or an email at elizabeth(at)table4five(dot)net. With the way I feel today, it’s a miracle I got myself dressed correctly, so I wouldn’t put it past myself to miss something really obvious.

Over on MomReviews, I’ve got a giveaway of a $50 gift card to Carrabba’s that ends tonight at 10:00 PM ET. On MomCooks I have the recipe for Italian Sausage Lasagna with photos, and today’s Four Foods on Friday. Hope you’ll stop by! And could you bring over some extra Kleenex while you’re at it? thanks.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

WordWorld Playset And Episode Sneak Peek

The second season of the break-through children’s television program WordWorld begins February 13th with a special Valentine’s Day themed episode. In just two years, WordWorld has been made available to 22 countries, and according to a recent study funded by the Department of Education, the WordWorld television series has proven to be an effective pre-literacy tool for kids! Only 1 in 8 children’s television programs meet that critera, so you can feel good about letting your kids watch WordWorld.

The February 13th program features two episodes with a musical short in between. I had the opportunity to view the episodes and share the information with you so you can plan to watch if you are interested. Episode details:

1. My Fuzzy Valentine:
When Sheep decides she wants to make a special Valentine song for her friend Bear, she runs into trouble finding just the right rhyming word. With the help of Fly, she discovers the perfect ending to her song and gives Bear a special Valentine’s Day gift.

2. Fruit Cha Cha: short musical number with Crab and Duck singing a song to Shark about choosing healthy foods as snacks.

3. Love, Bug: Bug wants to sign his name on his Valentine to his special WordFriend, but he doesn’t know how. With lots of help and encouragement from Frog, he learns how to trace letters to spell out his name, and surprises his special WordFriend with a signed Valentine.

You may have noticed WordWorld also has educational toys available at stores like Target. In December I was sent the Snug As A Bug Magnetic Play Set, and Kaitlyn loves it! I have to help her put some of the letters together to spell out the bugs, and she has fun mixing and matching, too. The best part is that the play mat folds over and secures with Velcro, and the pieces store in a pouch or right inside.  It’s fun for her to move the pieces around, and by this summer I’ll start helping her sound out the letters and use her finger to trace them.  I just love toys that are educational AND fun!

WordWorld also has a great website with a book, a video, and games. Check it out with your preschoolers!

And I said, what about Breakfast at Tiffany’s?

breakfast-at-tiffanysHow I made it to 42 years old without having seen Breakfast at Tiffany’s is beyond me, and now it’s been newly released in a 2-disc set as the Breakfast At Tiffany’s – Paramount Centennial Collection–and best of all, it’s only $12.49 on Amazon.com! It would be the PERFECT Valentine’s Day movie!

Breakfast at Tiffany’s stars Hepburn as Holly Golightly, a New York City party girl who embarks on a wildly entertaining, comedic adventure to find love in the big city, when all she really has to do is look next door. Directed by Academy Award nominee Blake Edwards, the film also stars George Peppard, Patricia Neal, Buddy Ebsen and Mickey Rooney. The film earned Oscars for Best Song (“Moon River”) and Best Score, and was nominated for Best Actress, Best Writing and Best Art Direction.

Did you know that Breakfast at Tiffany’s was a short novel published in a book of stories by Truman Capote? I had no idea! I thoroughly enjoyed this movie, I can see it being added to my go-to list of romantic movies I watch over and over, along with You’ve Got Mail and When Harry Met Sally. I took a lot of notes while watching, things like “self-professed wild thing learns that love doesn’t mean being caged up” and “learns the hard way that depending on rich men to take care of her ultimately leads to heartbreak”.

Capote created a character who had a down-on-her-luck background so that she wouldn’t seem completely unsympathetic. A wife and stepmother at FOURTEEN, she escaped to New York and although we don’t know how she survived at first, we now see her living the party-girl life in an apartment paid for by a mobster’s lawyer and flirting with rich men to get money for cab rides and to tip the matrons in powder rooms. She has a cat that followed her home one day, but she just calls him Cat because she says she “has no right to name him since they don’t belong to each other”. She has loads of acquaintances but no real friends until writer Paul Varjak moves into her building.

Holly moves Paul into her circle, calling him “darling” and letting him buy her drinks and meals, flirting outrageously but keeping him at arms length, until her past finds her in New York and she needs Paul’s help. She is looking for her “big score”, a really rich man to sweep her off her feet, but doesn’t seem to care at all whether there is love involved.

What I had to remind myself while watching this movie was that it was released in 1961, a time when women were still expected to find a man to marry them, settle down, and have babies, and not expect much personal success. The audience might find themselves incredulous that Holly would charm fifty dollars out of her dinner companion on the pretense of needing it to tip the powder room matron but really spending it on herself, but at that time, most women looked to men to take care of them. It would have been “beneath” Holly, after all she had gone through to get to where she is now, to go get a job as a secretary or waitress. Sad, but true for that time.

The title of the movie comes from the opening scene, when we see Holly, still in her evening gown and jewels, walking down what I assume is New York’s Madison Avenue, stopping in front of the window display at Tiffany’s, and eating a pastry and sipping a cup of cofffee. We later learn that she never goes to bed on Wednesday nights because she has to get up early on Thursday for her trip to Sing Sing prison to visit “Sally Tomato”, the mobster who advises her on her spending and gives her a “weather report” that she passes to his lawyer. We find out later that it’s not just a weather report, surprise surprise.

The other main character in the movie is Paul Varjak (played by George Peppard), a published writer who is basically a “kept man”. His rich benefactor is a married woman who lives in the same apartment building as he and Holly, and until he gets something new published, Paul is dependent on “2-E”, which is a situation he would very much like to get out of.  It’s obvious he’s fallen hard for Holly practically from their first meeting.

I could tell you the whole plot of the movie and what I thought of every scene, but instead, I’m going to just say if you haven’t seen Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and you like romantic movies with charming co-stars, rent or buy it. The 2-disc Centennial Collection has commentary by the producer on disc 1 and 8 featurettes, the original trailer, and still galleries on the second disc. Best of all, Amazon.com has this 2-Disc collection for the unbelievably low price of $12.49! You can’t beat that price!  Make it part of your romantic evening with your sweetie for this Valentine’s Day :)

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]