Entries Tagged as 'andrew'

Summer of Rachelle Concludes and Happy Birthday To Me

September 7th, 2008 · 3 Comments


Roscoe Village, Chicago

This is the third year in a row at this apartment that I’ve hosted a barbecue for my birthday (2007, 2006). I like to have everyone over. It’s a bit of work, especially since we always have a Labor Day weekend barbecue the weekend before too, but sometimes I like not being out on my day and not having to figure out how to go home.

Since I started a job at Roundarch this past Tuesday, this barbecue was also the last Summer of Rachelle event. Sometimes it feels like we just had the Summer of Rachelle kickoff, but I think I spent the summer well with the right amounts of relaxing and traveling and spending time with friends and family.

Aside from Scott and Erin, who had just left; Ed, Cinnamon and Andrew, who hadn’t arrived yet; and Jill who, was manning the camera, the following two photos show everyone who was at the party.


Chris, Lisa, Kate, Alden, Amanda, Jessica, Jessica, Paul, Quinn, Rachelle, Chris, Dallas, Limey, Jen, Brian, Caroline, Chad


Richard, Stephanie, Danny

We grilled a ton of sausages and some turkey burgers Dallas made earlier. I had special requested the turkey burgers. Also, last year when we made wontons, we had a bunch of leftover filling. It has been in our freezer all this time because Dallas and I never made wontons ourselves. Dallas’ mom gave us the idea to saute the filling up and serve it with lettuce, and make lettuce wraps. We forgot to put it out for the barbecue, but it was a delicious snack, along with hot mustard, later on in the night. I have been making this pasta salad with fresh basil all summer and people seemed to like it a lot yesterday. I also made some cookies and will post the recipe at another time.


Dallas as the lead Rock Band singer.


Alden, Jessica, Paul

We spent a lot of time last night outside, but also spent a lot of time inside playing Rock Band. I bought another guitar so now two people can play guitar at the same time, one on lead and one on bass. Everyone was taking turns on the different instruments. It was a lot of fun. I was psyched because we were getting the old band back together, too. Paul, Alden, Jessica and I used to play Rock Band all the time when we worked together at Google. It was fun to play with them again.

I had a really great time last night and was thankful to everyone who came over. I have great friends and family! Thanks to Jess for the flowers and to everyone who brought wine and beer and delicious food, too. Happy birthday to me… and welcome to the working world!

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Tech Cocktail 5

July 13th, 2007 · 1 Comment

Ron May & Eric Olson
Eric Getting the Ron May Treatment :: Tech Cocktail, Wrigleyville, Chicago

Andrew Huff
Andrew Huff :: Tech Cocktail, Wrigleyville, Chicago

The Doctor
“The Doctor” :: Tech Cocktail, Wrigleyville, Chicago

Glowing Drink
Always with the glowing drinks :: Tech Cocktail, Wrigleyville, Chicago

Eric Olson & Frank Gruber
Tech Cocktail Cofounders, Eric Olson & Frank Gruber :: Tech Cocktail, Wrigleyville, Chicago

I was excited to go to last night’s Tech Cocktail because I missed the last one. I saw a lot of people I knew and it was fun to catch up but the big surprises of the night were when I ran into Erin and then discovered Scott. I haven’t seen these guys for weeks… err… months. Erin and I were blabber jabbering nonstop catching up.

- Tech Cocktail 3
- Tech Cocktail 2

I was using the 50mm lens and realized that it’s not so great in a crowd. There were a few times when I just needed to step back more and couldn’t because of all of the people.

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My Experience on Chicago Tonight

February 9th, 2007 · 6 Comments

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The Set :: Chicago Tonight

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Andrew & Kevin :: Chicago Tonight

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Andrew & Rachelle :: Chicago Tonight

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Andrew, Kevin, Rachelle :: Chicago Tonight

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Carol Marin Interviewing Forrest Claypool :: Chicago Tonight

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Kevin Getting His Microphone :: Chicago Tonight

On February 7, I was on the local news program Chicago Tonight for a segment on local blogs. Andrew Huff from Gapers Block and Kevin O’Neil from CTA Tattler were also in the segment, for which I was greatful. i was nervous enough, but it helped to spread the attention aroud to two other people. The segment was only 7 minutes long, which also helped. Here are some of Andrew’s photos from the experience. These are my thoughts from the night:

  • I’ve been on the news before, but never live, and never in the studio. This was a new experience for me. I tried not to freak out!
  • Everyone was so nice. From Faith, who first contacted us, to Lauren, who took care of us, and the lady who did our makeup and Phil Ponce, the host and interviewer.
  • I didn’t even really think about how we’d have to get TV makeup on. In fact, I’d left work early that day to go home and shower and make myself presentable. Guess that wasn’t really needed!
  • The studio is located at 5400 North St. Louis. Everyone assumes it’s downtown somewhere, but this is far from the truth!
  • When I went to get makeup on, the makeup lady was doing Phil Ponce’s makeup. To kill a few minutes Lauren showed me the studio. I asked if I could take a photo, because, you know, we’re bloggers and that’s what we do: We blog stuff. She had to check quick if it would be ok, because the image would be making an appearance on the internet. It was ok, so I snapped away.
  • The makeup lady went to town putting on a ton of makeup and it only took her maybe like 5 minutes. She was also frustrated because Forrest Claypool and Tony Peraica weren’t there yet and they were going on before us and she was going to be rushed even more. Also, Andrew told me that she said Tony Peraica was always late and running in at the last minute and that it makes his face red, which makes her job hard.
  • We had to sign a release saying that they could basically do whatever they wanted with the segment or use our name for promotion or whatever.
  • We had to get mic’d up. I don’t know why I didn’t think about these things and then they felt odd when we had to do them. The microphone guy put the pack on my back, then I had to run it under my shirt, then he clipped it to my collar.
  • Andrew and Kevin and I waited in this room that overlooked the studio. We could see Carol Marin interview Forrest Claypool and Tony Peraica and we could watch other segments on video monitors in the room. There was no snacks or water in the room. I wasn’t hungry, but Kevin was! I was just dying for a sip of water. While waiting we took photos of the studio and of ourselves and talked about the joys and frustrations of running a site and managing so many contributors.
  • At one point, Phil Ponce came in and introduced himself and just chatted with us. It was nice because then we felt more comfortable with him for the interview. He asked me how to pronounce my last name and I told him. I also commended him on pronouncing my first name right. He said I had a great name. Later on when he introduced me on the air he called me Rachel. Grr. Everyone comments on the stink eye I gave him in the clip!
  • While backstage Phil also asked us where we all lived. I said Roscoe Village and he said “You know, some people call it “Costco Village.” What? Phil Ponce is giving me shit! I said, “You know, Phil, I’ve never been to Costco.” and he thought I was kidding. He was all, “yeh, suuuuure you haven’t.” When I made the point that I don’t have a car and probably wasn’t about to carry a 24 pack of toilet paper home while walking, then he believed me. I found out that Phil lives just a couple blocks from Dallas’ old apartment in North Center.
  • When it was our time, Lauren came and got us and took us down to the studio. We sat at a table and finally got a sip of water from some mugs set out for us. The lighting guys had us all look towards Phil while he adjusted the lighting on each of us. There was a segment on some guys who surf in Lake Michigan in the winter playing and we all watched it and made fun of them when they said they weren’t cold at all even though there were iciccles hanging off their faces.
  • Our actual segment went by really fast. It was the fastest of any part of the experience. The first question was super easy. What’s your site, what’s it about. Easy. The second question was “What’s the buzz on your site right now? What’s a hot topic?” Kevin was answering about how “duh, the CTA is the buzz because duh, my site is the ctatattler.” Not in those words. Ok, maybe that’s just what I was thinking. No, wait, I forgot. I wasn’t thinking ANYTHING. My mind actually went blank and I couldn’t remember anything that we wrote about in the last day. I froze and my hands were sweating like crazy because I knew that any second Kevin would be done speaking and I’d be called on to answer the same question and I had NOTHING. Somehow I skated through by saying the CTA was a hot topic on our site too and that politics were always popular to write about. Phil said something about how they were talking about politics earlier in the show and I got the chance to tell him that we’d interviewed Forrest Claypool for Chicagoist too. The third question was easy – Why do people contribute to the site if you don’t pay them? I said it was a good creative outlet for people who don’t get to write about things their interested in for their “real job.” The fourth question was something like “Why do people read blogs?” I was all set for this one. I had a great answer. Andrew took his turn, then on to Kevin and I was right about to open my mouth to answer when Mr. Ponce said something like “And Rachelle, we’d love to hear what you have to say on the topic, but we’re out of time.” Ahhh! Pwned!
  • After the taping you’re up and out, no hanging around to watch the rest of the show! That was fine with me. I picked Dallas up in a cab and we met his coworkers who were visiting from California and I got to drink off all my nervous energy.

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In the French Quarter

December 3rd, 2006 · 1 Comment

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Dallas travels a lot for work and to a lot of interesting cities, but a lot of the time he’s stuck out in the suburbs of those cities or in an office park or wherever his company’s office happens to be. A couple weeks ago he told me that for his trip to New Orleans he’d be staying right in the French Quarter. I did a quick search online and found out airfare was really cheap ($145 + taxes +fees = $170) so I decided to tag along. I’d always wanted to visit New Orleans and so this was my chance.

Now, I know New Orleans is a big and diverse city and this trip was really short (flew in Wednesday night and out Friday afternoon) and that most of my time was spent in the French Quarter (with a short jaunt to the Garden District), but it was enough time to get a taste and want to come back for more.

After walking around the French Quarter for almost a full day and covering much of the neighborhood, I sat down on the steps to the Louisiana Supreme Court and wrote these thoughts on the back of a receipt in my purse:

  1. I wasn’t sure what to expect before coming, but the French Quarter was not affected too much by Hurricane Katrina and the flooding that a lot of the city experienced. The French Quarter is the oldest part of town and was build on the highest ground. That’s not to say that if you go a few blocks out of the Quarter you won’t see boarded up businesses, water lines and signs that the city is still ailing.
  2. The French Quarter is seeped in history. Many buildings have signs that say “Since 1797″ or the like. There are a lot of decorative plaques that tell what the building used to be or what the street name used to be. There are also more official landmark signs that tell when the buildings were given the designation and what used to happen there. For example, the building where I ate lunch used to be a popular spot to trade slaves.
  3. There are so many cultures coming together here. Everyone thinks French, but the French who first settled had African and Afro-Carribean slaves and then the Spanish came and had Cuban cooks and then there were a bunch of German and Irish people and let’s not forget the Native Americans and somehow this all came together to form the culture and food and architecture of New Orleans.
  4. Southern charm. People are polite. They say hi. They stop and talk. They call you “ma’am.”
  5. The architecture is gorgeous. The streets in the French Quarter are narrow and most buildings are a few stories tall with balconies. The buildings have a variety of styles, but they’re all so colorful. People here aren’t afraid to paint their houses red or blue or yellow or pink or green.
  6. Bourbon Street is where most of the touristy bars and stores are. And every other building is a strip club or an adult shop. If you go one block in any direction from Bourbon street, it’s a completely different scene. Houses, boutiques, galleries, antiques. Still, every store, restaurant, and bar offers “to go” plastic cups for whatever you’re drinking. You may openly walk around the French Quarter drinking booze, so long as it’s not in a glass container. Day and night on Bourbon are like day and night. Nighttime is a party, daytime is a hangover.
  7. I felt good to be in New Orleans doing my tiny part to pump some money into the economy. I heard over and over that since the storm conventions have been cancelled and people aren’t visiting. There was a tour I went on the last day of the trip. The guide said that before the storm there would normally be 20 – 25 people on the tour. That day, I was the only person. Me and the tour guide. And she said that was about how it went. Now there’s only 1-3 people/tour. I would like to come back some day and visit more of New Orleans, to see more of the city and to see how it’s rebounding.

P.S. A big thanks to Andrew and Cinnamon. They love New Orleans and got married there earlier this year and they were kind enough to send me literally pages of tips and ideas for things to do when I was out exploring. I barely skimmed the surface, but it was helpful insight.

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Six Apart Vox Party @ Museum of Contemporary Art

July 29th, 2006 · No Comments

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Mena & Rachelle :: MCA, Chicago

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Krissy, James, Chris :: MCA, Chicago

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Matt, a friend, Cinnamon :: MCA, Chicago

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Michelle, John, Jason, Greg, Andrew :: MCA, Chicago

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Rachelle & Krissy :: MCA, Chicago

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Andrew & Mena Demo Vox :: MCA, Chicago

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Andrew, Eric, a friend, Scott :: MCA, Chicago

On Thursday night a bunch of folks from Six Apart were in Chicago to have a party and demo their latest product, Vox. I did a post previously about Vox, so it may sound familiar, even though the product is not available to the public until about October. It was awesome to meet everyone from Six Apart and I tried not to be too much of a fangirl to Mena, but a photo of us together was required! I also found it cool to bring together my Chicagoist world with my FeedBurner world with the blogging in Chicago world and throw in Six Apart. Also, Krissy from Six Apart, who I’d been emailling with quite a bit to set up a Chicagoist reader contest, also is the Music Editor at SFist.

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