Cast:
Lindsay Lohan
Al Gore
LL: Forsooth, my ears do hear a sound divine! 'Tis my cellular device. Pray, who may be calling me at this time? The sun has long given way to the reign of the Queen Moon and her starry associates.
AG: Fair maid! Is that you?
LL: Al Gore? Pray tell what brings you to my ear?
AG: Is this an inconvenient time for you? Tell me truly.
LL: Well, no. But it is rather out of the usual.
AG: My darling of the russet...bleached...white trash...locks! Your skin is like burnt ersatz sunshine! How I long to envelope you in my arms like a homeless, oil-slicked seal!
LL: Oh, Al! Truly?
AG: Your eyes twinkle more brightly than the shiniest recycled bottled in all this world!
LL: Oh, Al! To be with you tonight would make me happier than a newly polished pole in the hottest club in New York! No throbbing techno music could ever compare with the dulcet monotone of your voice!
AG: Let us meet, then. Beneath the hangar of my private jet, we will make our commotion heard to Mother Nature herself.
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Knots of Blood
As per the assignment, here are my seven summation sentences (whew, almost too much alliteration there for me to handle!):
Sc. 1: Two brothers: Zach is a man who is content with what he knows and sees, but Morris is a man who wants something more.
Sc. 2: From the letter-writing, we see that Zach is a man of the flesh, while Morris is a man of thought.
Sc. 3: The color of one's skin makes all the difference, even when growing up; even so, the color of one's skin does ot necessarily dictate the company that one keeps.
Sc. 4: Zachariah convinces Morris to dress up to meet Ethel, which is ironic because Morris is essentially a while man who must pretend to be a white man.
Sc. 5: The dialogue between Zach and Morris betray their true racial heritages; however, Morris seems to have some guilt regarding his white appearance.
Sc. 6: Zach questions the inferiority of his blackness, and whether or not he is beautiful, too, despite his skin color.
Sc. 7: Although Zach and Morris are "play-acting," they are actually playing the roles that society has assined to their skin colors; in the end, Morris decides that it is what flows through one's veins that decides family, not what one's appearance.
Sc. 1: Two brothers: Zach is a man who is content with what he knows and sees, but Morris is a man who wants something more.
Sc. 2: From the letter-writing, we see that Zach is a man of the flesh, while Morris is a man of thought.
Sc. 3: The color of one's skin makes all the difference, even when growing up; even so, the color of one's skin does ot necessarily dictate the company that one keeps.
Sc. 4: Zachariah convinces Morris to dress up to meet Ethel, which is ironic because Morris is essentially a while man who must pretend to be a white man.
Sc. 5: The dialogue between Zach and Morris betray their true racial heritages; however, Morris seems to have some guilt regarding his white appearance.
Sc. 6: Zach questions the inferiority of his blackness, and whether or not he is beautiful, too, despite his skin color.
Sc. 7: Although Zach and Morris are "play-acting," they are actually playing the roles that society has assined to their skin colors; in the end, Morris decides that it is what flows through one's veins that decides family, not what one's appearance.
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