Boston

I’m still processing what happened yesterday in Boston, vacillating between being really, really sad and confused/angry/frustrated. I love that city. I have so many friends there.

I’m trying to focus on the acts of bravery, heart, and selflessness that Boston residents displayed yesterday. Those are Boston traits.

Yesterday, I ran an errand around 1 pm to buy lightbulbs. As I left the office, I looked at the sky. Took a picture, actually, because it was so blue. Here in the northeast, blue blue skies in springtime are hard to come by. Later that afternoon, when I heard the first reports of the bombings at the marathon, I immediately thought of that blue sky. The same blue sky that I remembered from the morning of 9/11. That juxtaposition of beauty/darkness. Eerie.

As I watched footage of the explosions later that night, seeing such chaos on a street that I’ve walked countless times with my love, I was struck by the symbolism. All those flags lined the street to signify international camaraderie, and represented participants in the race. As the blast made those flags shake, I cried. The world needs to remember that we are all in this together. This kind of violence needs to stop.

Thinking of all those injured, maimed, frightened yesterday. Thinking of all those runners who were nearing the finish line when some coward detonated the bombs. Finding solace in stories of people helping one another in the middle of all that darkness. Thinking of my Boston (how the gold dome of the state house glows in late afternoon sun, the north end cannoli, concerts at the garden, Miek’s friends at Uptown Cafe, Copley, all my Batesies who grew up there or just “15 minutes outside” the city.)

Sending love.

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Unapologetic

Way back in September, Miek surprised me for my 26th birthday with tickets to see Rihanna in Boston — the show scheduled for March 10. We booked a quaint little Beacon Hill hotel through Jetsetter, and spent the next few months getting excited.

On our way down to the show last week, Miek got a weird 1-800 number call. It was Ticketmaster informing us of Rihanna’s “laryngitis” and need to cancel the Boston show. Slightly deflated <understatement>, we decided to keep driving and make the most of the weekend.

Despite dropping my debit card at the south-bound rest stop (and not realizing this fact until reaching into my wallet at a store on Newbury Street…), and mourning the canceled show, we still had a pretty fun time. A lesson for me in “going with the flow” and taking things as they come. When you’re with your best friend and it finally feels a smidgen like spring, few things can completely dampen spirits.

Some highlights:

1.) The snug Beacon Hill Hotel and Bistro. Gray-walled and archetypically “New England”, this hotel had class without being pretentious, comfortable rooms despite being small in footprint, and a world-class staff. The spunky blonde bartender gave us waters and sodas for free after an afternoon of walking the city, and the front-desk concierge stopped up late-night and fixed our Direct TV with a smile. Owned by an American and a Swede, the hotel is undeniably European. A nice departure from the “big box” hotels that pepper the city.

2.) Laughing at the ridiculously haughty and pompous worker at Levi’s. Look, I know you’re working on Newbury Street — the self-proclaimed “Rodeo Drive” of Boston — but come on, you’re hocking denim. The wardrobe workhorse. No matter how “museum quality meets boutique” you say they are, they are still jeans. And I found better ones for $10 at the Forever 21 down the street.

3.) Running through the chilly North End streets after dinner to pick up to-go cannoli at Modern Pastry. Miek lived in Boston during college, but had never been to this family-run Italian joint. It was well worth the wait.

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The Revere, Boston

Miek and I bombed down to Boston yesterday to see Frank Ocean at the Paradise. Thanks to SniqueAway we got great rates on a room at The Revere, a swanky spot near Boston Common.

A spacious room with a killer cityscape view from the concrete balcony, full-size toiletries (a long-haired girl’s dream), complimentary flutes of champagne upon check-in, and a great restaurant on-site (get the braised short rib stroganoff) made for a great experience.

Now… for some brunch and window shopping along Newbury Street — Boston’s Rodeo Drive.

xo Al

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The Alabama Shakes

Everyone needs to see the Alabama Shakes live. I’m serious. They are that good.

Miek and I saw them at The Paradise in Boston this past weekend. The crowd was wild for Brittany Howard and her incredible band. A band truly worthy of all the hype.

Brittany was a combination of Aretha’s sass with James Brown’s funkiness. Like a Stax record that meant business with intrinsic humility, soul, power and skill. That’s what happens when you form a band with the quiet kid who wears band t-shirts to class. That’s what happens when you write songs with your high school friends on someone’s basement floor.

We met the bass player as we were sitting in the lounge. We told him that we had discovered the Alabama Shakes by Shazamming a song playing before a Drive-By Truckers show. He said “That’s really cool!” and meant it and shook our hands. You just don’t get that anymore.

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