Thursday

There’s not a whole lot to say about today, really. It was pretty much just your typical, run-of-the-mill Thursday.

It poured rain in the middle of the afternoon, bucketing down just minutes after I’d wandered back to the office after lunch. Which was lucky, because I’d left both my umbrella and jacket behind at my desk. It had quit raining long before it was time for me to actually leave for the day.

And that, honestly, is about the closest I came to excitement today. They were filming something up the block from my office, or seemed to be, but I didn’t see what. It was a block away, the street was blocked by police, and it was going to rain. It’s possible it was location shooting for Glee, which I’ve seen but don’t watch, but I say that only because there was some chatter on Twitter about them filming for it elsewhere, nearby, in the city. I didn’t actually see anything definitive.

And that was Thursday.

Tuesday

Today had a distinct Tuesdayness about it. Lots of other people at the office were taking part in an all-day copywriting workshop, which if I can’t remember if I wasn’t invited to or just declined to attend weeks ago and forgot about. Either way, I’m sort of glad I didn’t go. I don’t write a whole lot of copy these days — which, for us, extends mostly to back cover descriptions — and did I mention it was all day long?

I was much happier just working at my desk and enjoying the gorgeous weather on my lunch break. Aside from the humidity, which keeps hovering right around 100%, the weather has been quite pleasant the past few days, Sunday and today especially.

Not much else to report. A decent, if unremarkable Tuesday all around.

Earth daze

I’m not entirely convinced that today was Friday. Or maybe it was multiple Fridays, all stacked up on top of each other. It was a slow day, whatever it was.

In the lobby of our office building yesterday morning, they were handing out small flower pots, complete with wildflower seeds, in celebration of Earth Day. Which, for some reason, they seemed convinced — to the point of having made up a sign to declare this — was April 21st. Earth Day is, in fact, today, April 22nd — but maybe they just assumed, and not wrongly, that there wouldn’t be enough people in the office on the Friday before Easter, and so they just decided to move things up a day early. I didn’t get a free pot myself, which was sort of disappointing; a guy was still setting them up when I arrived at the office yesterday morning, and by the time I went downstairs for lunch, he and his table were gone. But the whole thing lent today a slight air of confusion: if Earth Day was on a Friday, and the buildings owner was convinced yesterday was the day in question…well, you can see how today might not feel like a proper Friday.

But it’s Easter weekend, and it finally does feel properly like a Friday — albeit one very rapidly approaching its conclusion. I’m looking forward to a nice meal with the family, colored eggs and candy, the whole shebang.

No three- or four-day weekend for me, I’m afraid, but it should be a nice one nonetheless.

Must be a Thursday

What can you say about a Thursday that hasn’t already been said, and better, by people like Arthur Dent? Not a whole lot, as it happens.

We had a short meeting, an informal Q&A really, with our books and journals CEO, who was visiting the New York office. I can’t speak to the later meetings held later in the day, but our early-morning one was surprisingly informative and interesting, giving a nice overview of where we’ve been as a company and where we’re headed.

Right now, though, I’m just headed to bed.

This day was just bananas

So today was kind of an interesting day.

I got to sleep in a little later than usual because I wasn’t headed to the office, but to a conference a little further uptown, and I would be taking the subway from Penn Station to arrive there at 9 am. I was filling in for a colleague for about four hours, helping to sell books to psychoanalysts. Aside from the exhibit space itself, which was in a dark and cramped room well off the beaten path from the rest of the conference (or much of anything else in the hotel that would direct foot traffic our way), those four hours passed just fine. I left a little after 1 pm and walked back to the office.

Where I stayed for the better part of half an hour, mostly just to grab a bite to eat for lunch, and check in. (Also to print out my receipt for a talk I was attending later that evening, but I’m getting ahead of myself there.) I ate a chicken club sandwich, read a couple of e-mails — my favorite was easily IT’s earlier apology for the fact that we were apparently “experiencing internet and network access” — and got my name badge and team number for our company- and midtown Manhattan-wide scavenger hunt.

Yes, a scavenger hunt. It was ten bucks, to benefit the World Cancer Research Fund, the company’s charitable organization of choice, and I got a T-shirt out of it, plus a couple of drinks (again, skipping head), and an excuse to leave the office at 2:30 and run around Manhattan taking photos of bananas in unusual places.

This, in itself, is sort of a long story. The company’s charitable events, from fundraisers to races to this inter-office scavenger hunt, are for some inexplicable reason, banana-themed. So we got bright yellow shirts, a bag of bananas to each group, and instructions on the sort of pictures we had to take. There were ten in total, from “a police officer holding a banana” to “a banana in disguise” to “a banana riding a subway.” It was all silly, and a surprising amount of fun, thanks in no small part to the really lovely weather we had today. The eight or nine groups started near the UN, a few blocks from our new office, and reunited at a bar further downtown. There, a winner was picked, leading to the sort of grumbling and nitpicking — the teams showed up long before HR did to judge who arrived first — that’s likely only of mild interest to the parties involved.

The important thing is, it was a surprising amount of fun. Even if — or probably because — I was only really at work for about fifteen minutes today.

After the drinks — a beer and whiskey sour, the latter of which our HR department graciously bought, along with a round for our office — I headed uptown, near Columbia, for a talk between Neil Gaiman and Paul Levitz, hosted by the university. I had a very nice dinner right beforehand, at a Japanese/Thai place across the street from the theater, and enjoyed the heck out of the talk itself. (I also spotted Amanda Palmer briefly at the box office, so that was neat too.)

And now I’m home, a little tired but glad to have had such an interesting day. Tomorrow probably won’t be half as exciting, but it will at least be Friday.