Sunday, January 31, 2010

30 days of cable

It's been more than two years since my family made the decision to kill cable.

It was mostly a financial decision, but one that went hand-in-hand with our overall dismay at what we saw and how it affected our lives. We soaked up such life-enriching shows as "Myth Busters," "Gene Simmons Family Jewels," "Project Runway," "Survivorman" and "Little People, Big World" in the days before we called up Time Warner and told them we were done spending $65 a month on noise that was taking up valuable space in our home and in our heads.

We made it through the (delayed) conversion to digital last year with our $7-post-rebate box, which unlocked the world of Create and KLRUQ, two additional PBS stations that many cable subscribers don't have access to, and if they do, are buried under a mile-high stack of sexier stations.

Ten channels suited us just fine. There was always something interesting on at night, usually "History Detectives" or "American Masters." Julian had "Super Why" and "Dinosaur Train" that kept engaged him over breakfast in the morning.

Sure, we watched "American Idol" and "Seinfeld" reruns, and we even had to *gasp* find something else to do during the commercials besides fast forwarding through them. (We could do without 90 percent of traditional primetime programming, however. You can keep "24" and "The Mentalist" all to yourself.)

But last December, we embarked on a little 30-day vacation to cable land. When setting up my iPhone at the you-know-what store, we found out we could switch our land line and Internet from Time Warner and save the exact same amount that having my iPhone would increase my cell phone bill.

They threw in the all-too-tempting promotions ($400 in all), if we signed up for their cable. Free install and all.

I'm a sucker for a deal.

A week later, a nice guy showed up to hook it up, and a few hours later, he and Ian were making playdate plans for their boys. (Most of you know this, but my husband is what you might call friendly.)

And with the flip of a switch, cable was back.

"Only for 30 days, right?" I asked Ian. "That's it," he replied.

I'd toyed around with the idea of blogging every day of these 30 days, but — if you can believe it — I never found the time. Probably had something to do with the blaring noise and pretty pictures I found my attention glued to.

There's something slightly more sticky about cable television verses the stuff you get over the air. (Insert reference to staring at a car crash here.) There's a psychological reason that sex and celebrity sell, and cable companies will always create the content based on ratings, so I have zero hope that the (de)escalating will ever cease. ("Who are these Kardashians?" Ian asks an equally clueless me. "Are they heirs to a hotel chain?")

I also know that the number of channels will continue to grow. Seriously, who needs 850 of anything, much less cable channels?

Could you imagine if every single night, you ate at an all-you-can-eat restaurant that had 850 dishes of every ethnic and distinct flavor? Some nights, you spend 3 hours just looking over the menu only to end up on an episode of "Man V. Wild" that you're sure you've seen before.

So, we've been feasting on television's Golden Corral for almost a month, and I am quite literally counting the days until we can call The Company and kill this squawk box that's eating up a tranquility — which included a healthy relationship with television — we once enjoyed.

Of course, Julian loved being able to watch "Yo Gabba Gabba" whenever he wanted, and we got a kick out of "Ru Paul's Drag Race." I got to catch up on a bunch of "Project Runway" I missed over the past few years, and Jaime and what's-his-face are still blowing up stuff on "MythBusters." Bear Grylls is still, well, you know exactly what he is, drinking his own piss and all.

But the disquiet is unsettling. Even when the television is off, the pull to turn it on is so much stronger than when you only have 10 channels to choose from. Books, magazines, cooking, playtime, even movies are more attractive when "Desperate Housewives" or "20/20" are the best options on the tube.

It saddens me most is that when we go cable-less again in a few days, we'll be getting back to a "normal" that is foreign to most American households. A normal where NickJr does not exist. A normal where Rachel Maddow is someone you read about on Twitter. A normal where Rick Steves is the Travel Channel, and Christopher Kimball is Alton Brown.

A normal where our emotional energy, our well from which we water each other and ourselves, isn't sucked dry by the massive elephant — whose weight is at least a quarter advertising — that is the world of cable television.

I'm still not going to know who the Kardashians are or what witty observation Tony Bourdain most recently made, but I think I'll survive.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Snapshots from the turn of the decade


Just after Christmas, I took the picture above. My red phone, which would soon be replaced with an iPhone (see below). Second-hand guitar books my dad bought my mom. His reading glasses, my keys, lens cap and sparkling black shoes. Julian's plastic snake.


That day, we went out to Uncle Tom's house for a bonfire, but nothing warms my heart like seeing three of the most important people in my life making music together. My mom, at 55, has become serious about her guitar practice. Every day, like meditation, she plays. She and my dad play well-known songs that marked the early days of their marriage, but when they are with Ian, they just jam. Feeling the song instead of reading it from sheets of paper.

Maybe they should start a band. The Bonfire Bandits?

I love the cedars at Tom's house. Live oaks are generally considered the superior Central Texas tree (I've been hearing about "those invasive cedars" since I was a kid visiting his house.), but the cedars at his house have been thinned so that are now taller and more like trees instead of large bushes. But he still has to thin them out every few years. Last summer, he and Scott did a bunch of work on the yard, leaving beautifully shaped stumps like this behind.

(P.S. I uploaded about 25 more Christmas photos to the holiday gallery. Over on Relish Austin, I posted this blog post about all the food-related fun we had in December, including a New Year's paella party.)

Fast forward to the first few weeks of the new year and the new decade. Now I have this miniature computer — thanks to Ian and his mom — on which I can look up recipes, directions, weather, news, Twitter, Facebook and take and share photos. (I hope to use it in the future to update this blog. My apologies ahead of time for the decreased quality in photography for posts on the run.)

Already 2010 is off to a roaring start. It's going to be a big year in so many ways.