Archive for August, 2009
This Wedding Gets My Vote!

Philip (cousin) and Brigette are quite the DC power couple. He’s now a Georgetown PR grad student (after a stint working on the CHIP lobby) and she now works for a fund-raising firm (after a stint raising money for the DNC).
They met working on a Democratic campaign in Oklahoma City after college. And even though a Democratic candidate rarely wins in the Sooner state… their love did. Politics was the reception theme – they even had a voting booth where you could choose if you wanted them to stay in DC or move back to Oklahoma.
Now they are honeymooning in Greece, the birthplace of democracy.
Ryan enjoyed the voting booth – notice the stickers.

Voting is sewius.

My cousin, the groom

Hil and the blushing bride

Cousins and family friends

The Aunties love Obama

Obama hits the dance floor.

Obama even came to the after party.

Weddings and the like …
Saturday is my cousin’s wedding back home. I love his fiancée. She is smart and pretty and classy. Look at the happy couple in the Oklahoma Brides magazine!

I used to be in weddings every other weekend (results here and similar results here).
As I rapidly grow older, weddings are few and far between and they are a blast. They mean more to me each year. I’m starting to understand why my mom went crazy over every detail of my wedding – weddings are important. They bring family together. From weddings you get the pictures that stay on your coffee table. You get the pictures you use to show new friends your “Aunt Hazel” and “Grandpa.” They create infamous stories like “The tropical storm almost ruining Will and Ellie’s wedding,” “The placement of the DB,” ”Morgan almost died before Deirdre picked her up,” “Someone gave your party favor to the church garage sale?,” and “The rowdy table 3.” And they create memories with your family that you will cherish and remember forever.

I don’t work for Texas Instruments …
Posted by hilstreet in corporate America, news on August 26, 2009
I work for a technical B2B company. This makes it hard for me to explain what my company does to my friends, my mom, and my blog readers. Non-technical people know what PR is but a multifunction DAQ board? Wha happened?
My colleague Trisha just made this a little easier with her kick-butt coverage.
Check it out – Virginia Tech students used our products to make a car that the blind can drive! Coverage appeared in Engadget and CBS. You can see our company logos on the buggy. Here’s the work that went into it.
I can git beetween da couches.
Posted by hilstreet in My animals on August 25, 2009
Oh, and I am beautiful.

Little Shop of Horrors is Non-Fiction?
Hil Street Animal Correspondent, Courtney sends another good one!
Giant Plant Eats Rodents
Tuan C. Nguyen, LiveScience Staff Writer
A giant plant that can gobble up bugs and even rodents has been discovered in Southeast Asia.
The carnivorous plant (nepenthes attenboroughii) was found by researchers atop Mt. Victoria, a remote mountain in Palawan, Philippines. The research team, led by Stewart McPherson of Red Fern Natural History Productions, had learned of the plant in 2000 after a group of Christian missionaries stumbled upon it while trekking up a remote mountain and reported it to a local newspaper.
The discovery, announced last week, was detailed in the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society.
The pitcher plant is the world’s second largest and can grow to more than 4 feet tall, with a pitcher-shaped structure filled with liquid. The plant secretes nectar around its mouth to lure rats, insects and other prey into its trap. Once an animal has fallen in, enzymes and acids in the fluid break down the carcass of the drowned victim.
“All carnivorous plants have evolved to catch insects but the biggest ones, such as this one, can eat rats and frogs,” McPherson told LiveScience. “It’s truly remarkable that a plant this big has been undiscovered for so long.”
The world’s largest pitcher plant (nepenthes rajah) was discovered in 1858 by British naturalist Hugh Low in Borneo. The plant’s rat-eating habit was confirmed four years later when his colleague Spenser St. John found a drowned rat inside one of the specimens.
Though some have approached McPherson to ask about the likelihood of cultivating the monster plants as mouse traps for rodent-infested regions like New York City, the botanist (who also happens to specialize in pitcher plants) says he finds the idea “a bit far-fetched.”
“Mice and rats are attracted to the sweet nectar of the plant, but it only catches them occasionally,” says McPherson. “It just isn’t practical. There will be too many mice for the plant to catch anyways.”
A wedding of social networks
In a beautiful ceremony in front of witnesses friendster, friendfeed and my space, the two married promising to love each other “‘until our platforms die” using LOL Cats vows.
Go to facebook.com/twitter
Thanks for sending, Blake.
Hil Street does not laugh at missing pets …
Posted by hilstreet in My animals on August 20, 2009
… but she does laugh at poorly written posters.
The dog is SO WHITE, he may be invisible.

Warning: parental advisory
Posted by hilstreet in My animals on August 19, 2009
Goodbye, Red Dog. You were with us a long time.
Oh! The carnage …



Hollis licks his chops after the deed is done.

Look into the eyes of death!!!


The 10,000th reason to love Husbanks
Scene: Friday, midnight. Husbanks is falling asleep.
Hil: I heard a song last week at a restaurant and I really liked it. I don’t know which band it was.
Husbanks: (does not respond – he is trying to sleep)
Hil: It said “tumbling down” at one point. And it was a whiny voice with reverb. I googled the lyrics “tumbling down” and only thing that came up was Paulo Nutini. It wasn’t Paolo Nutini.
Husbanks: Doesn’t sound like Paolo Nutini.
Hil: Who was it?
Husbanks: Chain restaurant or local?
Hil: I don’t know. But they had the best mac and cheese. Dun nuh nuh huh tumbling down. Reverb. Whiny. Maybe synthesizer strings?
Husbanks: Band of Horses.
Can you believe he guessed this with these clues? Thank you, Husbanks.


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