the meaning of gifts
Friday, February 10th, 2012This one came from the
drugstore, the others from the
bargain bin at Zayre.
• • •
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This one came from the
drugstore, the others from the
bargain bin at Zayre.
• • •
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Subscribe via RSS to Wade’s Daily Haiku. Or have it delivered daily by e-mail.
The rush passed as the
diners evaporated,
leaving us to chat.
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Bits of autumn strewn
about the lawn, stragglers in
a too warm winter.
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She let the party
and the presents slip by for
time with friends and fam.
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Strange smells and noisy
motors, loud neighbors and cramped
closet. Time to flee.
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The battle is not
on the turf but on the air,
dueling commercials.
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Beings from the near
future swarmed the terminals
to download updates.
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The broken parties
pulled up their chairs to confide
tales of hiding out.
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They crawled out, grateful
to be alive and thinking
about death’s house call.
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Not so much bang and
whimper, but fading passion
and indifference.
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The caregiver wraps
booboos on scraped paws and sings
of quiet jungles.
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Some dream of escape,
others of the past, and some
see nothing asleep.
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The flock of fluffy
sheep crowded toward the streams of
grass on the bare plain.
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The sculpted tower
of sugar shatters into
bitter, sweet pieces.
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From left, Emma Stone, and Oscar nominees
Octavia Spencer and Viola Davis star in “The Help.”
Hollywood has been reaching deep into Alabama’s past, present and future this week …
• Last week, “Red Tails” opened nationwide. The George Lucas-produced action movie follows the story of Alabama’s Tuskegee Airmen in their aerial battles against German pilots and their ground war against discrimination. The stars include Terrence Howard and Method Man. “Red Tails” reached No. 2 last weekend in box office take.
• Black history also plays a role in Tuesday’s Oscar nominations, which included two state connections. Montgomery native and Auburn grad Octavia Spencer earned a spot in the Best Supporting Actress category for her role as Minny Jackson in “The Help.” Earlier this month, she won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture.
The movie, based on Kathryn Stockett’s novel of the same name, follows the relationship of a young white woman and two black maids in Jackson, Miss., in the 1960s. “The Help” earned four nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actress for Viola Davis and another Best Supporting Actress for Jessica Chastain.
In the Best Documentary Short category, “The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement” scored a nomination. The 25-minute movie tells the story of James Armstrong, who marched carrying the American flag at Selma on Bloody Sunday in 1965. He was the first to file suit to desegregate Birmingham’s schools. Armstrong died at 86 in 2011 of heart failure.
Director Robin Fryday of San Francisco teamed up with director Gail Dolgin, who received a previous Oscar nomination for “Daughter from Danang” and died from breast cancer in 2010. “The Barber of Birmingham” had its Birmingham premiere in March at the Alabama Theatre.
The Academy Awards airs at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 26 on ABC 33/40.
• “A Smile as Big as the Moon” tells the true story of Mike Kersjes, a high school football coach and special education teacher who leads his special needs students to Space Camp in 1988. Kersjes and Joe Layden co-wrote the original book of the same name. The movie, filmed at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville and also in Wilmington, N.C., stars John Corbett, Moira Kelly and Cynthia Watros. It has its Huntsville premiere  at 7 tonight and airs at 8 p.m. Sunday on ABC 33/40.
Video: Minny (Octavia Spencer) gets a taste of revenge
in a scene from “The Help.”
http://www.hulu.com/watch/317572/the-daily-show-with-jon-stewart-george-lucas
Video: George Lucas discusses the struggle to find funding
for “Red Tails.”
Video: interview with director Robin Fryday and
James Armstrong’s grandson Darren on
“The Barber of Birmingham.”
Video: a look at “A Smile as Big as the Moon”