Split, Rila Monastery, BulgariaAugust 30th, 2009 View Comments |
Tweet |
Since I’ve already demonstrated my love for randomness, more about Ferris Bueller…

Split, Rila Monastery, Bulgaria
From a Bill Simmons ESPN.com reader mailbag column:
Q: In light of John Hughes death (one of my favorites of all time) I ask you this obvious question about “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”: How is it possible to fit so much into roughly an eight hour span?
– Mike, Columbia, Mo.SG: Glad you brought this up. … Shouldn’t three Chicago kids re-enact Ferris’ entire day and see if they could pull it off in less than eight hours? Bring a couple of Flip cameras, tape everything, see if you can do it and stick the results on YouTube. John Hughes would be proud.
Brilliant. I’m amazed this hasn’t already been done.
And if it has, please point me onward…
Life Lessons from Ferris BuellerAugust 12th, 2009 View Comments |
Tweet |
Edward McNally, a boyhood friend of John Hughes who provided some inspiration for the movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, details a couple lessons from Ferris Bueller:
… the Tao of Ferris has its own wisdom. Hughes had Ferris talk directly to the camera. To us. He says, deal with your fear. Believe in yourself. Make sick days count. And: Do you realize that if we played by the rules, right now we’d be in gym?
.. one key lesson from Ferris is his repeated message to his despondent buddy Cameron. Your current situation doesn’t have to be your fate. There’s always another way.
… In high school we gained admission to a sold-out improv performance at Chicago’s Second City by claiming status as an advance crew for Kirk Douglas, then a major star who the papers said was in town filming. Pranking a comedy club seemed fair game. In the legendary scene where he tries to fake two friends into a fully booked restaurant, Ferris neglects to check the well-known name he borrows from the reservations list. “You’re Abe Froman?” the snooty maitre d’ huffs at 18-year-old Ferris. “That’s me,” Ferris insists. “Abe Froman?” scoffs the maitre d’. “The ‘Sausage King of Chicago?’ ”
But Ferris is fearless. Doesn’t back down. And is seated with an apology.
Still my favorite movie.
(What else, you ask? Office Space and Say Anything, of course…)
(via Kottke)



