Sunday, October 12, 2014

USA trip 2014 - New York Comic Con

New York ComicCon (NYCC) 9th-12th October, 2014

I was lucky enough to have a free 4 day pass to ComicCon courtesy of some friends who had invited me to join them at their show. Apparently these passes sell out very fast and outside the gates, I saw scalpers trying to sell tickets at some outrageous price. I'm not great with large crowds so I didn't last very long on Thursday afternoon. Popped in to have a bit of a look around at the stores. I was looking for a Pop toy - Baby Groot from Guardians of the Galaxy... but the line was sooo long!

The autograph lines...
Fri 10th Oct - I popped by in the morning and wow... there were soooo many people around. Lines were a mile long... There were seriously more people in one place than I have seen in my whole life. Apparently 100,000 people in the whole premises which consisted of a few big feature rooms for panels, smaller rooms with other activities, a big hall with lines for celebrity autographs and a huge hall of stalls... Very overwhelming...


The good thing is that for the panels, if you show up early, you can have a wristband which will give you entry to the panel. So you collect your wristband and closer to the time of the panel, you return to the entry point. They limit the number of people in the rooms so no wristband, no entry. So I turned up early and collected wristbands for the panels I wanted to attend then I went back to my hotel for a bit of a nap... I was actually popping in and out of the convention centre all weekend because I didn't want to buy that much and the crowds were getting to me. I just wanted to see some of the panels.

The queue to go into a panel...
I really enjoy panels because the stars of various TV shows/movies give you insight into what goes on behind the scenes. Sometimes you learn personal information about the stars but I really enjoy when they tell stories of what happens on set whilst filming the show/movie. I enjoy when producers or editors talk about why certain content was included or character development during the series/movie. I find those kind of details fascinating... However, I find it creepy when in Q&A people ask questions like "oh you said on twitter that your dog is sick. Is your dog better?" It's a bit of a stalkerish/creepy question when you don't really know the person...

Anyway, I've condensed this post into some highlights from various panels I attended...

Elementary TV Show Panel

Lucy Liu, Jonny Lee Miller and Ophelia Lovibond are terribly thoughtful with answering questions...

Some reference to Sherlock Holmes' popularity with his leading ladies...

Lucy Liu

I'm such a big fan of Jonny Lee Miller. He was very funny and entertaining.
There was a random Robot Chicken panel I was watching on a TV screen whilst waiting to go into the Marvel Agents of Shield Panel. No photos were allowed in the Marvel panel because they were going to give new season spoilers so they had security guys walking up and down the aisles and a hint of a camera or recording device and they threatened to toss you out on your ass...

Robot Chicken panel. I know Seth Green and Matthew Senreich (creators) and Breckin Meyer (writer) and the girl is Clare Grant but I've never seen any of her work...
This year was special because it was the first time that the Star Trek: The Next Generation cast were all together (minus Wil Wheaton). They appear separately at lots of events but are never together like this. One of my childhood favourite shows was ST:TNG so it was soooo cool being able to attend the panel. Patrick Stewart was actually meant to be doing this panel but he made his apologies and offered three replacements...
Denise Crosby (Tasha Yar), Michael Dorn (Worf) and Marina Sirtis (Counsellor Troi)

Michael has a very very deep voice... His latest project is Ted 2 which was being filmed in NYC at the moment

Marina Sirtis... she's absolutely hilarous!!
I absolutely loved the Arrow panel too...
Stephen Amell - Green Arrow

Colin Donnell (Tommy Merlyn)... Ahhh I'm still so sad about Tommy...

These guys are hilarious! No wonder they had such good on screen chemistry...
2014 marked the 30th anniversary of the release of the first Karate Kid movie... wow... 1984... I remember watching it as a kid and it's still and oldie but a goodie and favourite of mine... This panel was a cast reunion...
The cast came into the panel with the phones videoing the crowd for social media purposes...
They look a little older but not 30 years older... I haven't really seen any of them except for Ralph Macchio in anything else...
Martin Kove (John Kreese), Ralph Macchio (Daniel Laruso), William 'Billy' Zabka (Johnny Lawrence)

Somebody in the audience offers to fight Ralph Macchio

Kreese "Mercy is for the weak... An enemy deserves no mercy..." and Martin Kove is still sporting the Cobra Kai t-shirts...

What's their anti-aging secret?

Forever Panel - this TV show premiered on New York TV a week ago. It's about a doctor/mortician who can't die. Every time he gets killed, he is reincarnated naked in water. He works with a New York city police detective to solve crimes and it gets complicated as he's hiding this massive secret...
Ioan Gruffudd

Alana De La Garza
One of my other favourite panels was the Person of Interest TV show panel...
Who knew Jim Caviezel could smile so much and was so chatty... he is definitely not like that in the show... but I suppose that's what makes a good actor...
L to R: Greg Glageman (producer), Jim Caviezel (John Reese), Michael Emerson (Harold Finch), Kevin Chapman (Lionel Fusco) & Amy Acker (Root)

Jim getting Michael in a headlock... and paying him out so much in the Q&A

Fusco!

Who knew Jim Caviezel could smile so much?

Finch

Amy Acker seemed so lovely... but she came across as a bit ditzy... I'm sure she is really smart but she was so giggly and vague during the Q&A...

Sunday, October 5, 2014

USA trip 2014 - New York Day 1

We arrived in New York at 5am after taking a red-eye from San Francisco... Because of the time difference, we had barely slept a couple of hours and were totally knackered...
Hotel checkin wasn't until 3pm so we dropped our bags and tried to stay awake exploring Manhattan.

We had bought a New York city pass that included the hop-on-hop-off bus so we got our passes and decided to take it easy on the bus tours...
Unfortunately, being as tired as we were, we never managed to stay awake on the bus... Oops!!
We hopped off at Central Park and were looking for a nice spot under a tree to have a nap for a couple of hours but there was some street marathon on and people everywhere so there wasn't a quiet spot to be found... So back on the bus to fall asleep again...

After doing an uptown loop we had a drink at Starbucks and went back to the hotel.
Part of 8th Ave near our hotel was closed because there was a street market/fair. Lucky us... was fun to walk around and look at all the stalls.

With a little bit of time to kill, I decided to go visit Gunther Von Hagens' human body show. He is a German anatomist I have seen on tv and he is famous for inventing the technique of preserving the body called plastination. As an anatomy major, I enjoyed seeing the dissections. There is one specimen where they dissected and preserved the venous blood vessels. Sooo cool!
I wasn't allowed to take photos except for one specimen of a man on a horse.

The hop-on-hop-off bus tours includes a night tour of Brooklyn. They decided to put on some fireworks for us which was much appreciated!


We passed one of the coolest clocks I have ever seen... I did really like it... call me quirky...
The numbers look like gibberish...
Here's how to read the clock:
- it's 20:12:1392046 - 8:12:1392046 seconds
- it's 03 hrs and 47 mins until the end of the day.



Saturday, October 4, 2014

USA Trip 2014 - San Francisco & Muir Woods

Today is my last day in San Francisco and then it's off to New York.
 
I have an old school friend living not quite in San Francisco but nearby. She and her husband drove in to catch up. We went out to Muir Woods which is a national park north of San Francisco across the Golden Gate bridge.
It is a very pretty wood and we did a short hike enjoying nature and the warm weather.

The trails through the woods are paved by concrete or wooden boarding making it a nice easy stroll.


Old school friends...

Friday, October 3, 2014

USA trip 2014 - San Francisco Alcatraz

3rd Oct

Today I went to Alcatraz. Tickets sell out a while in advance so we had booked them a couple of months ago. When you pre-book the tickets are $30. There are tour companies who are able to sell you ticket packages last minute with hop-on-hop-off passes. They charge over $100 for the tickets. What a rort.

I had read online that it was good to go early to beat the crowds so I booked the earliest departure time which was 8:30am. It was actually a little painful trying to get up that early to get down to the wharf because we have been out late at nights so sleeping in a bit.

The boat to Alcatraz leaves from pier 33.
And it's about a 15min boat ride.
A staff member at Alcatraz greets you at the pier and gives everybody a bit of a briefing on what you can do on the island. 
He introduced an older man who has been a prisoner at Alcatraz prior to it being closed down due to increasing cost to run and maintain. People were rushing to take photos with him and I couldn't help wondering how he became such a celebrity when he was obviously there previously as a criminal. People are odd. He had written a book about what it was like to be a prisoner on Alcatraz and we were advised he would be in the bookshop signing and answering questions. 

The island was a naval defense base before it became a prison. It was also inhabited briefly by some American Indians so has quite a history. 

Up the hill a bit from the pier is a building in which they screen an introductory video on the history of Alcatraz. Then many people head up the hill to the guard office to pick up headsets for a 3/4-1hr guided tour. We decided to do the tour later because there was a tour conducted by some volunteers on the gardens of Alcatraz.
 Our guide took us on a walking tour around the island. When the island was a prison, many buildings were inhabited by the warden and family as well as guards and their families. We saw shells of buildings that used to be there. The children used to go to school on the mainland each day and would leave and return by boat.
Our guide had photos of what the island used to look like when it was inhabited. Many of the prison guards' wives took to cultivating beautiful gardens on the island.
After Alcatraz ceased being a prison island, it was left for many years and a lot of weeds and trees grew wild.
The volunteers who look after the gardens are restoring them to the way they used to look based on the old photos they have of the island.
I thoroughly recommend this walking tour if it is available. It is usually an early tour. It's nice to look at some natural beauty on the island rather than focus solely on the prison side of things. It's really interesting that a prison could become such a tourist attraction.

Me in a solitary confinement cell
 After the walking tour, we decided to do the tourist thing and proceeded to the prison block to pick up our headsets and do the audio tour of the island.
The audio tour took me through the whole prison and everyday life inside.
The audio tour featured some of the prison guards and prisoners who voiced their experiences at Alcatraz.
I must admit it was mildly interesting but I didn't really care to explore the whole place so fast forwarded through most of the tour... meh it's a jail...
The grounds and view of San Francisco from the island were more interesting to me.

Our visit also happened to coincide with an art exhibition. I'm not sure if they usually have art exhibitions on Alcatraz but I did like this one. This exhibition was of a Chinese artist named Ai Weiwei.

This is an excerpt from a signboard about the exhibition:
"The exhibition addresses the situation of people around the world who have been deprived of their freedom for speaking out about their beliefs - people like Ai himself. A vocal critic of the Chinese government, Ai was secretly detained for 81 days in 2011, and as of August 2014, he was still not permitted to travel outside of China."
The artist Ai Weiwei has had his passport confiscated by the Chinese government and is a house prisoner in China. He designed this exhibition in his studio in Beijing and had students and helpers put it together on Alcatraz. I found this exhibition very thought provoking and moving.

The first thing you see walking into the hall is a large kite dragon. It really is beautiful. The dragon is meant to look both delicate and fearsome. The pattern on the wings of the kite contains birds and plants that represent nations with records of violating the citizens' human rights and civil liberties. There are also some quotes featured on the kites.




The next hall featured the images of people who have been imprisoned by authorities in their country for various reasons - racial, religious or political beliefs. The exhibition was a collage of their faces made by lego blocks. At the end of the row there was a book explaining why each of these people was included. I was glad to see Meriam Ibrahim's image there as I had been praying for her prior to coming to the USA.
It is interesting to note that the artist Ai Weiwei chose not to include his own image in the exhibition. I would have liked him to.


Nelson Mandela


We had enough of Alcatraz so returned to San Francisco after looking at the exhibition.

When we got back to San Francisco, we decided to explore Pier 39. It is deceptive because this pier doesn't look like much from the street but when you walk along it, it just keeps going on and on...
At the end of the pier is a colony of sea lions. They are just lying there on pontoons - every which way and on top of each other. It's fascinating to watch and listen to them.

Apparently there are a lot more of them in Summer. It's Autumn right now and apparently a whole heap of them have gone on their honeymoon to Mexico. Those males without a mate - the rejects - are left here... I think they're really cute. Poor reject males...

It's nice to be a sea lion... sleeping all day in the sun!
 


There is a song by Tony Bennett that goes "I left my heart in San Francisco..."
At the end of Pier 39 there is a heart sculpture.
At Union Square, the park entrances also feature Tony's heart... I really do like San Francisco so I'm in danger of leaving my heart here as well...

After leaving Pier 39, we went back to the hotel to freshen up. I booked some cheap last minute tickets to see Pippin at the Golden Gate theatre.

It's no secret that I loooove musicals. Pippin is one on my list of ones I haven't seen but want to see. So we took the opportunity to see a show in a new place. It was a pretty little theatre.

I hadn't expected much of the show but was really impressed and enjoyed it a lot.





Thursday, October 2, 2014

USA trip - San Francisco #4

2nd Oct, 2014

With a better understanding of where we wanted to explore further and what we wanted to see, we bought a 3 day all in travel pass. It's quite economical at $23 and includes all buses, electric trains and cable cars (trams). Considering a cable car ride is $6 and a muni (bus, train) ride is $2.25 then it's great because we can hop on and off as much as we like.
The famous San Francisco cable car
First we wanted to explore Chinatown a bit more. San Francisco boasts the largest Chinatown outside of Asia.
Apparently the time to visit Chinatown is very early in the morning where you see people everywhere buying fresh food - fruit, vegetables and seafood.

There is a park where the older people gather to play mahjong. We saw Portsmouth square from the bus on the hop-on-hop-off tour. I would have liked to go there. I guess it's akin to chess in the park.

We walked around Chinatown a bit and looked at the various stores. There are lots of souvenir shops and lots of shops selling knockoffs.

The big pagoda gate is the beginning of Chinatown. To the left and right of the gate there is a shop called "Michael". I'm not sure how accurate this story is but apparently the store previously had a different name but Michael Jackson went in there and loved everything in the store so ordered 2 of everything. Since he literally bought the store twice over, the owner named the place "Michael".


Then we took a bus past the Italian precinct but didn't stop off to eat because we were still full from dim sum. So we continued on to Fishermans Wharf again and visited the Ghirardelli complex with its 3 chocolate stores. Had an icecream at the takeaway store at the front before exploring the complex a bit more. Note for next time, if the line at the front store is long then go to one of the other two as they a requieter stores and have more seating. We watched some of the workers handmake chocolate.

The beauty of the all day travel pass is that we could just hop on a bus for a couple of stops, walk a bit and then catch another bus. San Francisco is pretty hilly and I didn't fancy puffing my way up the hills.  
The afternoon was when the fun began for us. We decided to go a little nuts and go and see Mrs. Doubtfire's house at 2640 Steiner Street.

 Since Robin Williams passed away, people have been coming here and putting flowers outside. The rocks in the flower bed have messages of tribute as well.





Since we were on a roll and in the area, we decided to go and visit the house from the tv show "Full House" at 1709 Broderick Street. I think the Tanner house was a grey/blue colour in the show but now it is purple.


After our movie/TV reminiscing we took a bus out to the north beach past golden gate park. The water was really cold. It was really beautiful watching the sun set over the water.


Got back to the hotel and then made our way out again for Italian food near Washington square. We took a walk along Columbus Ave looking at all the Italian restaurants.

When we were on the hop-on-hop-off bus, we passed the Original U.S. Restaurant (U.S. stands for united Sicilian). Our guide told us that was where the San Francisco baseball team got their meatballs. So we decided to try it. The place was ok but nothing to write home about.
If you walk up Columbus Ave towards Fishermans Wharf you will find the comedy club that Robin Williams started out at.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

USA trip - San Francisco #3

Day 2 of our hop-on-hop-off bus pass.

In the morning, I decided to go off by myself to explore the Presidio area.
I got off the hop-on-hop-off bus at the Palace of Fine Arts which is seems oddly placed in the area. It is an outdoor Romanesque columned outdoor area with a pretty lake.



I walked a little way through the Presidio area towards Cressy Field. George Lucas owned an area of land here until recently when it was all sold to Disney. Lucasfilm offices are located here. There isn't much to do but I wanted to see the Yoda fountain. You can't go into the offices but you can have a look at all the memorabilia from the movies that is all around the lobby of the building.


Also in the Presidio area is the Walt Disney family museum. This is managed by the family and contains exhibitions about the life of Walt Disney. You can buy exclusive pins and memorabilia not found in places like Disneyland. I didn't go into the museum because of time constraint.

Met up with Marika after lunch and we hopped on the Golden Gate park loop of the bus tours.
Incidentally, our guide told us that here everything is called "Golden Gate" something. If you are meeting somebody, you need to be specific - e.g. Golden Gate bridge, Golden Gate park (they are at opposite ends of San Francisco).
The park is man made and is very large. Because the park is not natural but man made, they imported trees that would survive in the San Francisco climate. Wondering through the park, you can smell the eucalyptus from the tall trees that are one of the two most popular trees in the park. It felt like being in Australia... However, these trees do not have those dangerous grey drop bears in them....

We did a driving loop through the park but because it was late in the afternoon, we didn't have time to get off the bus to have a look at any of the attractions. I took some photos of some of them. I would have liked to see the Conservatory of Flowers and the Japanese Tea Gardens.
Conservatory of Flowers


The road at the eastern end of the park exits towards the beach. There are two windmills which seem a little oddly placed but are kinda cool.
Windmill
Inside the park there is also a science museum. Apparently it's also good but we didn't have the time to visit.

The bus made a loop outside the park and we ended up at nearly sunset at Land's End where there was a lookout over cliffs of the Californian coast.

 After the bus tour, we headed back to the city. There are a lot of shops around Union Square heading towards Powell. We decided to grab more cheesecake from the Cheesecake factory and then do some shopping.