Sometimes truth is strange than fiction.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

American Goulash - Part 4: Still in Dah Kitchen



Nagymama reads through some of the fan letters that were sent to her during her simultaneous YouTube & MySpace Feature! Note: I printed them all out with really big text so she would have an easier time reading them.

Thank you, again, everyone, for giving my grandma her 15-minutes of fame after being alive for almost a century! (She will be 97 in April! Doesn't she look AWESOME?!)

Special thank you to Cameraman Matt, for his assistance with capturing our family events on film.

Songs used: Brahm's Hungarian Dance No. 1, performed by Leo Christopherson.

Before you click "play", here are the original videos (in chronological order) in case you're a new reader that has missed some Nagymama action:

Nagymama
The Real Nagymama

Velcome to Piscataway
Velcome Back to Piscataway
Velcome to the Kitchen

If you are having any trouble seeing any videos, you can probably view the slightly pixely-er YouTube versions.

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Snakes on a Brick

One warm summer, I spotted a little green snake in our back yard. I cautiously watched it slither across my line of vision, stopping only a few feet in front of me to warm itself on the sun-drenched concrete slab behind my house.

I immediately recognized it as a non-poisonous garter snake because my father sent me a book on reptiles for Christmas earlier that year. He told me that it was important to know your reptiles because he was missing one of his fingers due to a poisonous snakebite. Since I have a great affection for all of my limbs, especially my fingers, I made sure to memorize every snake.

Despite my slight apprehension, I was lulled into a trancelike state as I watched the snake gently move his head side to side, probably surveying the area for his next warm meal. I must have stood for quite some time because Nagymama started calling my name.

“Stephie! Vhat are you lookink at?”

“Shhh, be quiet, you’ll scare it away!”

“Scare vhat avay?”

“The snake! Don’t worry, it’s not-”

Before I even utter the word “poisonous”, Nagymama reached over, grabbed a loose brick, and threw it on top of the snake. I think my grandma must have been a ninja in a past life because somehow, the brick landed right in center of the creature. I watched its final death throes in horror before it went limp like a deflated balloon.

If that wasn’t traumatic enough, Anyu wouldn’t even let me give the snake a proper burial.

“Don’t you dare touch dat ting,” she yelled, “It’s full of diseases!”

Instead of taking care of the mess herself or even recruiting Nagymama to discard the carcass, I had to live with the thing, rotting away over several months in the backyard. Long after the snake decomposed/was carried away by red ants, the brick stayed in its exact location, a shrine to the cruel, unusual murder of my little non-poisonous friend.

The next spring, I got sick of the brick, so I moved it back to its original pile. My mother immediately noticed that something was wrong.

“The brick!” she shouted, “Dah snake was under dat brick! Now you hands are full of poison!”

“Anyu, there is no poison, it was a garter snake.”

“Oh, so how do you know?”

“Because Apu sent me a book on snakes so that I wouldn’t get bit by a poisonous one and lose my finger like he did.”

Anyu laughed.

“Is dat vhat he told you? You know, your fodder lost his finger because he got drunk and ran it over wit a lawn mower. Now go vash your hands before you die.”

Photo by Ivan Tortuga

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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

It's a Dog-Eat-Child Vorld Out Dere

My family has never been too keen on animals, but as a young girl, I loved all critters: horses, fish, puppies, kittens – if it swam, crawled, or galloped, I doodled pictures of it all over my notebook. Unfortunately, even though I am fascinated with the gestation cycles of seahorses and the unusual mating rituals of jumping spiders, when it comes to actually interacting with animals, I’m afraid of everything.

I think some of my irrational fears stem from childhood trauma. When I was in kindergarten, I sprained my ankle on the jungle gym, so I was stuck at home for what seemed like FOREVER. Nagymama said I looked too “pale and horrid”, so one day, they took me outside to get some sun and propped my leg up on our picnic table.

No more than five minutes after I started reading one of my “Berenstain Bears” books, the neighbor’s German Sheppard saw me, jumped over the fence, and ran over. I had never actually pet a dog before, so I was a little cautious but still curious.

Anyu was in the front yard, chatting with Nagymama and vehemently pointing to some photos in the “The Weekly World News”. I called to get her attention, "Anyu, look a doggie! Can I pet it?"

Anyu looked over at me and screamed in horror, “NO, STEPHIE, HE’S GONNA EAT YOU!”

As my mom continued to scream and panic, Nagymama chased the dog into the front yard with a broom. The neighbor must have heard the commotion so he hopped over the kapu to apprehend his dog. Anyu made me promise never to talk to strange dogs again.

A few months later, we went over to our neighbor Gustaf’s house and to see his new Chihuahua. At this point, my mother had bred so much fear into me that I dove behind her and clung to her legs every time that stupid dog yipped.

Gustaf’s wife, Olga, found this hilarious, “Stephie, he von’t hurt you, jus go over and say, ‘Hi!’”

“Anyu said I wasn’t supposed to talk to strange dogs.”

“Oh, Peppy isn’t a strange dog. He’s basically a cat.”

This was pretty confusing to a sensitive six-year-old. The dog barked at me a dozen more times, so I just cried so we could go home.

I don’t think I really came in close contact with another dog until high school. I started dating a guy named Bob that had a large black Labrador named Xena. The first time I went to his house, I just about jumped on the couch to get away from this thing. One day, he finally convinced me to pet the dog (he promised to distracted her with a treat and tightly grip her chain). I lightly brushed the side of her fur, and after a few minutes, I was comfortable enough to pet her on the head.

"Okay, I guess dogs aren't so bad," I said, as I scratched my forearms. And my neck. And my face.

Anyu was right all along. I shouldn't talk to strange dogs. I'm allergic.

Photo by Sanja Gjenero

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Monday, February 4, 2008

Cartoons!

Preliminary American Goulash Character Designs for my Pitch Package for a Cartoon Show!

Special thanks to Brent Smith for helping me brainstorm with some sketches! Sometimes you need an unbiased opinion to help you pick designs and move forward when you're....close....to the subject matter. Now that I've written, scanned, inked, colored, and freaking composited this darn thing, I have some meeting with Cartoon Network, Nickelodean, PBS & More!

Special Warning: These characters are "based" on my life but uh, they aren't actually "real" people. You see, essentially, cartoons need to stereotype in order to be, well, cartoons. So, um, if this is my family reading this, these are NOT cartoon depictions of you. Really. It's just a coincidence. So, uh, don't kill me. You know I love you, right?

That said, here's vhat I haf so far:

Nagymama (the 96-year-old woman of steel...and Little Debbie Snacks(tm))
nagymama cartoon

Anyu (the over-protective mother with no brain-to-mouth filter)
Anu Cartoon

Paprika (the dorky sheltered child who is afraid of everything)
cartoon paprika

Alia (Paprika's sassy, yet equally sheltered best friend - you guys will hear about her soon in these blogs)
islamic cartoon

Liz (Paprika's stressed out cousin)
pregnant cartoon stressed

Margo (Paprika's sarcastic and chronically single cousin)
Photobucket

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Quick Bite: Burst Day

(some of you might already know this story from The Quiz, but a few people asked me to elaborate so here goes:)
My family waits until the last minute for everything. My cousin Liz was about eight months pregnant before the planning and preparation for her baby shower even began. By the time we reserved the room at the church, invited everyone we knew, researched different type of party games, and painstakingly crafted baby-themed gift baskets and decorations, poor Liz was already busting at the seams.

Despite the event’s tardiness, the shower went extremely well. The room looked fantastically festive, the food was delicious, and a ton of people showed up, even Nagymama!

Of course, as soon as Nagymama stepped through the door, she pushed everyone to the side, and hustled towards Liz with a beautifully gold wrapped box with a big red bow on it. She immediately stuffed the present in Liz’s hand, kissed her on the cheek, and yelled, “Hoppy Burst-day!”

Everyone laughed and assumed that Nagymama was joking, until she walked over to us and loudly muttered in Hungarian, “Boy, Liz got really fat.”

Must have been that 8 pound baby she had for dinner, huh, Nagy?

Photo by Neil Gould

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