What do you do when one of your best homies is going through a tough break up? Well, just about anything you can to help him take his mind off it. For filmmaker Andrew Cohn, that meant indulging his recently dumped buddy Enrique’s fantasies of becoming a Food Network Star.
After his long-term girlfriend broke up with him, Enrique asked Cohn to help him film a foodie road trip through New Mexico’s Green Chili Cheeseburger Trail, an offer Cohn couldn’t refuse. So they set off, leaving New York for a ten day trip through New Mexico to make a film about cheeseburgers. But Cohn had a better idea: He’d turn the cameras on Enrique, rolling day and night, and make the movie about his friend getting over his ex. The resulting film is called Chile Road.
And the trailer:
“Chile Road” Official Trailer from Andrew Cohn on Vimeo.
They’ve submitted it to Sundance. Wish them luck!
Vermouth is one of those rare words that sounds like it tastes.
I began writing most of my YLTLSBC posts well after 10pm, and I usually spent more time brainstorming and jotting down sentence fragments (most of which I didn’t use) than I did shaping these ideas into well-written blog posts. (In the future, I would much rather spend the same amount of time writing fewer, more developed posts.) The exercise has, however, made me more conscious of how I am using/misusing my time.
With YLTLSBC/September ending, I’m imaging a new set of challenges for myself in October. I’m trying to stick to a daily schedule loosely built around the work/creative patterns I’ve established this past month. (Turns out breaking up my work day by practicing music for an hour after lunch makes the rest of my afternoon much more productive.) Nothing radical, really, but a way to avoid wasting time in the margins.
It’s literally just a sketch right now, jotted down on a post-it note…
I’ll let you know how it goes, of course–just maybe not on a daily basis.
I want to take stock of and refine my media diet. I’m surrounded by headlines and hungry for context. My old filters have drifted out of calibration or I away from them. I’m holding out for islands of honest analysis in a sea of spinning assertions. I want to fortify my politics with poetry, more intricacy than intrigue, to strip the arbitrary from my art. I find this music full of bombast and static, and am unmoved.
2 frozen bananas, peeled
½ cup frozen blueberries
½ cup frozen raspberries
1 cup orange juice
1 huge-ass beet, diced
Add all ingredients in a blender and frappé.
Voilà, beet smoothie.
(Add water to preferred taste/consistency.)
2 down, 8 to go.