Vassar New Designs

The web team at Vassar has launched several new sites. Chris reworked the History Department. Kevin completely revived the Libraries. An outside freelancer rebooted the Powerhouse Theater (a good old version of mine could still be view here). Of course, I also banged out a clean and simple design for Art Department. Congrats everyone for the fantastic jobs.

Blog Burns

As you can see for the past two weeks, I have been posting quick thoughts and links on the right side bar via Twitter. That way I can reserve the blog for longer posts. It works well except for two problems. First, Twitter has been tremendously slow due to the increase of twits and users. It also takes while to load on my page. The second problem is much more important. My Google Ads take a huge drop because of the lacking in blog posts. Twitter makes quick posts so much easy though so I am still weighing the advantages and disadvantages between the two.

These days I hardly have anything to blog. My marriage life is so far so good. I eat right and sleep pretty well; therefore, no dramas to write about. I am also getting tired of reviewing Vietnamese music. Looking back at my archive for the past two years, not so many albums I get a positive review. In fact, these reviews make me sound like a harsh prick. There are no innovators like Tung Duong and Ngoc Khue that get me excited anymore. I am just going to wait until I come across something that worth writing about, or else I am not even going to bother anymore.

Vietnamese Tasteless Hip-Hop

Andree Right Hand’s “Cho Anh Fuk Lan Cuoi.” Simply awful and misogynistic.

Going Freelance

Now that the wedding is out of the way, I would like to focus on my passion by going freelance. Of course, I still hold on to my daytime job. Although I love what I do at George Washington University, I am somewhat limited by its established design. I do have room for creativities, but my main responsibility are to keep all the sites update and consistent. It actually works out great for me. Now I can fulfill my fulltime duty and still have creative space for other projects.

When I was still at Vassar, I received quite a bit of inquiries for freelance opportunities, but I had to turn them down because Vassar required tremendous creative effort like working on the banners on the homepage, small banners on the Infosite, and redesigning each department web site to have a unique look and feel—not to mention the entire homepage gets a new look every week or so. My current position doesn’t require too much design, but it does require time and energy. So in order to balance out my time and design, I would like to take on smaller freelance work with much more creativities. Of course, I wouldn’t turn away any exciting opportunity, but I would like to concentrate on quick content and more on design. I have two areas I would like to go into.

The first one is wedding site. After doing a site for my own, I felt the site is such a wonderful complement to the entire package. The site turned out not only a fantastic piece of memory, but also very informative. On the homepage, I have a slideshow of our photos. I used our engagement photos before the wedding to drive friends and family to the site. Once they get there, I layout the entire agenda so they know what to expect. If they need accommodation, I have some hotels listed near by our houses as well as the reception place. I also included our Love Notes so they read about our story and listen to our music. But what I love most about the site is that I already have our wedding photos uploaded and ready to share to our family and friends around the world just three days after the wedding. I am now working on my sister in-law and her future husband’s site. So if you are getting marry and would like a unique, elegant site, I can work with you.

The second one is for nail salon promotions. An old school friend of mine who now own a nail salon would like me to work on a site for him. Nothing has been official yet since I’ve been swamped with the wedding and everything, but I would love to branch into this sort of work. The site would be mostly visual and a few content like about, services, and maybe some special online coupons.

I am actually just thinking out loud here. Will see how things go once I actually get some clients.

Exposed

A great piece on blogging from Emily Gould:

I still think about closing the door to my online life and locking them out, but then I think of everything else I’d be locking out, and I leave it open.

Caxton Street Festival

What a vibrant site for a seafood festival. Love the big red lobster on top of the header.

Oh Saigon

A film by Doan Hoang:

Airlifted out of Vietnam on April 30, 1975, Doan Hoang’s family was on the last civilian helicopter out of the country at the end of the war. Twenty-five years later, she sets out to uncover their story. The film follows her family as they return to Vietnam after decades of exile, where her father, a former South Vietnamese major, meets his brothers again to confront their political differences: one was a Communist, the other a pacifist. Meanwhile, Hoang tries to reconcile her own difficult past with her half sister, who was mistakenly separated from the family during the escape.

World’s Largest Fake Breasts

With her 36MM bust weighing in 20 pounds each, stripper Maxi Mounds won the Guinness World Records for World’s Largest Augmented Breasts. She shares:

“I’ve seen some pretty funny things happen. Men walking into things and getting slapped by their girlfriends because they were staring too hard.”

Women shouldn’t slap their men for “staring too hard” because you don’t see those melons around too often. I am sure women would stare at them too out of curiosity.

The First Dance

Caught a glimpse of Thien Kim’s live show (on DVD that is) and her performance of Ngo Thuy Mien’s “Niem Khuc Cuoi” takes me immediately back to our first dance. All that I can say is that Thien Kim’s rendition is nowhere near Thu Hoai’s. From articulating the words to capturing the emotion, Thu Hoai sang like a man in love, something not easy to accomplish from a female vocalist. It was a wise choice that she didn’t switch the roles from his to her like Thien Kim did, which ruined the intention of the song.

A few guests had questioned our song choice. The title, “Niem Khuc Cuoi,” alone is already sad and some of the lyrics are even sadder. We picked the song for both its sweet and bitter content. We wanted to share both sides of love, not just the good side. We had our ups and downs and I am sure more down moments in the future are inevitable. We have to recognize the reality of love in order to work out our conflicts.

Our initial plan was to go with Thuy Vu’s rendition on CD. It was the version that we first danced together over an intimate dinner at her apartment back in Beacon, New York. Unfortunately the mixer didn’t work at our wedding. The sound was badly distorted even from the original album, so I requested Thu Hoai to cover it and she didn’t disappointed us. She was right there inside the music and I could felt her every word. Where is Mr. Truc Ho? Scoop her up, please.

While we danced, my wife whispered in my ears, “I love you and we will be together forever.” The only thing I could do was to hold her tight and kiss her. That particular moment has filmed inside my mind. Every time I hear this song, the sound, sight, and sweet lips begin to play. It was simply unforgettable.

Stuck In My Head

Lines I can’t get off my mind:

Boi chinh em da yeu mot thu tinh yeu nho nhen
Boi chinh em da yeu mot thu tinh yeu khong cong bang

Minh Khang’s “Nguoi Ra Di La Anh”

I do anything when I put my mind to it
A whole lot more when I put the nine to it

Jay-Z’s freestyle

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