Archives for Litsa Dremousis, 2003-2011. Current site: https://litsadremousis.com. Litsa Dremousis is the author of Altitude Sickness (Future Tense Books). Seattle Metropolitan Magazine named it one of the all-time "20 Books Every Seattleite Must Read". Her essay "After the Fire" was selected as one of the "Most Notable Essays 2011” by Best American Essays, and The Seattle Weekly named her one of "50 Women Who Rock Seattle". She is an essayist with The Washington Post.
Litsa Dremousis
About Me
- Litsa Dremousis:
- Litsa Dremousis is the author of Altitude Sickness (Future Tense Books). Seattle Metropolitan Magazine named it one of the all-time "20 Books Every Seattleite Must Read". Her essay "After the Fire" was selected as one of the "Most Notable Essays 2011” by Best American Essays, and The Seattle Weekly named her one of "50 Women Who Rock Seattle". She is an essayist with The Washington Post. Her work also appears in The Believer, BlackBook, Esquire, Jezebel, McSweeney's, Monkeybicycle, MSN, New York Magazine, New York Times, Nylon, The Onion's A.V. Club, Paste, PEN Center USA, Poets & Writers, Publishers Weekly, The Rumpus, Salon, Spartan Lit, in several anthologies, and on NPR, KUOW, and additional outlets. She has interviewed Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys, Betty Davis (the legendary, reclusive soul singer), Death Cab for Cutie, Estelle, Jenifer Lewis, Janelle Monae, Alanis Morissette, Kelly Rowland, Wanda Sykes, Tegan and Sara, Rufus Wainwright, Ann Wilson and several dozen others. Contact: litsa.dremousis at gmail dot com. Twitter: @LitsaDremousis.
Thursday, July 26, 2007
Today we salute my cherished friend, Mr. Eric Spitznagel...
...who is not afraid to fly the dork flag very, very high regarding the (sure-to-be-awesome) Simpsons movie:
http://vonnegutsasshole.blogspot.com/2007/07/useless-and-far-too-personal-simpsons.html
I'm not judging. I will be the exact same way when the Sex and the City film is released. (That's right. I said it.)
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2 comments:
I prefer to think of it as coming out of the dork closet. If given the chance, I would be on the biggest, gayest float in that particular pride parade, leading the chant, "We're here, we're a little too into an animated show about a dysfunctional yellow family, get used to it!"
In any case, I believe this is the first time my dorkiness has ever been saluted. Just barely tolerated? Yes. Greeted with a disdainful eye roll and a smirk? Sure. But saluted? Never.
Thank you, Litz. You complete me.
What an enjoyable blog. I shall also be the same way when Sex and the City is released.
Eh. We all need candy.
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