My trip to Ronchamp

Cathedral in Ronchamp, originally uploaded by Arun Stephens.

I have decided, every now and then, to choose a photo I have taken and write a little bit about it.

Back in February, I went to visit one of my friends who lived in Belfort, France. We went on a day trip with one of her friends to this small town (about half an hour away by train) called Ronchamp. It is the smallest French town I have even been in. And it’s famous for its Cathedral.

We weren’t sure how to get there. But there was a sign pointing up a road. We had no idea what it looked like. We had no idea how far up the road it was. It was up a hill, too. But we came to see the Cathedral, so we went up the road. We did come to a small abandoned church-like structure, and thought “is this it?” but a the odd car or tractor continued driving past us so we figured there must be more further on.

Anyway, we eventually got to the cathedral. It was very strange looking. Not church looking. It looked like somewhere that the Smurfs would live. But it was a church.

We stayed at the church, visited the gift shop, and took photos. And then went back down the road into town.

I bought the nicest pain au chocolat I had ever had. It was nice. I recommend it. Maybe I will go back there one day.

There was also a museum. I was interested in what it was, but I can’t remember. So perhaps it wasn’t that interesting after all. The others didn’t want to go.

We walked around the town, and then went back to the train station. Directly opposite the station was an Ed supermarket. I went there and bought some Kit Kats, I think. And maybe some of those “Monster Munch” chips. Maybe. I can’t quite remember. It doesn’t really matter because it doesn’t add to the story.

Then we came home.

The end.

Election results

I just wrote a whole lot and then Internet Explorer crashed because the Flash plugin crashed. That was annoying. I got a screenshot of most of it though. Perhaps Blogger should automatically save drafts like Gmail does.

As predicted, Sarko and Ségo got through to the second round. I watched TF1 and it was pretty boring. They didn’t break down results by département or anything, though the breakdown is available today. Every hour or so they had a new update with their fancy election music in the background. All the channels had a countdown until 20:00 when polls closed and they could announce preliminary results. They stayed pretty much the same all night: Sarko with 30%, Sego with 25% and Bayrou with around 18%. And Le Pen with 10% – a lot less than last time.

It was funny though. A lot of the interviewees were, when they were getting annoyed with PPDA (who was talking over people quite a bit – including his cohost, Claire Chazal), talking to him by name “Je crois blah blah blah, Patrick Poivre d’Arvor” – much in the style of “that’s not what I was saying, Paul” (or “Mr Holmes” in Winston Peters’ case).

Here in the Alpes-Maritimes, Sarko won by quite a bit (more than the average). In the first round of the 2002 elections, Le Pen was out on top here, but thankfully he was fourth placed. Many pundits think that Le Pen lost quite a lot of votes to Sarko, who, I think Jean-Marie Le Pen’s spokesperson (and daughter), Marine, described as “Le Pen Light” (as Diet Coke over here is called Coca-Cola Light). In any case, it wifi be interesting to see whether the left all gets behind Ségo and the right behind Sarko (and how the centrist Bayrou’s supporters will vote) and whether there wifi be as high a turnout in two weeks as there was today.

I got quite a few hits yesterday after writing about the election, quite a lot from France. Not sure if people were looking for commentary in English, mais mix Français, merci de venir lire mon blog !

Teaching life skills via… The O.C.

That might sound like a strange title, but it’s what’s happening on France 2 in twenty minutes. They are showing Newport Beach (as it’s called in French) every day (starting from the first season) as part of thing called Mag 2.0. Each day they take a theme from The O.C. (today’s is “bad reputation”) and people can talk about it via webcam, on the forum, by a web form, and by text message.

And it looks like they are looking for people like Ryan, Marissa and Seth as well. They are looking for “un bad boy”, “une jeune fille attirée par les bad boys” and “une personne introvertie”. What they will do with them I do not know. Maybe they will talk on TV about their lives.

Tomorrow the theme is (roughly) “I want to give up” (or maybe “chuck it in” as the dictionary says “plaquer” means to chuck. Also means to tackle in rugby. You know, the episode where Ryan goes and lives in one of the Newport Group’s model homes, and ends up setting it on fire.

Election day in France

Today is the first round in the French presidential election. A candidate has to get a majority (i.e. > 50%) in order to win. If nobody gets over 50% today, then there is another election in two weeks with the top two candidates from today, who most people expect to be Nicolas Sarkozy and Ségolène Royal.

I was wondering how often the first place getter in the first round doesn’t win in the second round. It turns out it happens quite often. In the 5th Republic of France, there have been 7 elections that needed a second round. In three of those elections the second place getter won the Presidency. Thanks Wikipedia. Actually, I could be wrong about the exact numbers as I figured that out this morning and could have forgotten by now. Interesting, anyway.

Tonight there will be election coverage on all the main channels. It will be interesting to see the French way of doing things. I wonder if someone will hijack a plane and threaten to fly it into the Eiffel Tower?

Campaign posters don’t just go up anywhere. There are special boards that are erected in each town with all the posters on them. The usual vandalism happens (usually putting Hitleresque moustaches on Le Pen and Sarkozy) and the posters tend to get replaced fairly often too. I haven’t see any campaign ads on TV though (because I don’t watch much French TV).

P1010826

I wonder what these will be replaced with next week, for the second round?

Brazilian money’s similar to euro money

Hello.

I found a 5 entavos coin from Brasil in my change today. As you can see, it’s very similar to a 5 euro cent coin. Almost the same size, and even the 5 looks like it’s in almost the same font. It’s got diagonal lines too.

One cool thing is that it has the Southern Cross on it.

That is all.


P1010791, originally uploaded by arunstephens.

The Brazilian coin’s on the left. Euro to the right.

Nouvelle Star: My audition

So, a couple of weeks ago Nouvelle Star, the French version of Pop Idol, started on M6 with the auditions in Marseille, which I attended. Unfortunately I wasn’t good enough or bad enough to make it to TV but I am available online:


Casting Marseille - Candidat 7458 - nouvellestar
Casting Marseille – Candidat 7458 – nouvellestar

So vote for me and maybe I’ll get to the top of the home page. But probably not. And don’t be so mean as the person who wrote the first comment “fallait apprendre la chansson un peu mieux que ca :) hihi” (“You should learn the song a bit better than that“). Well, I say you should learn to spell “chanson” properly!

The song was Johnny Hallyday‘s 2006 hit “La loi du silence“. Well, it was supposed to be.

Where is Brian?

Gad Elmaleh, a French stand-up comic and movie star, did a show in Lyon that’s on DVD now, called L’autre, c’est moi. All the kids have seen it here. Well, most of them. In it, he recounts how at school one of the first sentences he learnt was “Where is Brian?” He and his classmates respond “Brian is in the kitchen.” Brian also has a sister. “Jenny is the sister of the Brian. Jenny is in the batttthhhhroom.”

I thought I would see if that old-fashioned way of teaching English still works in the 21st century. It turns out it does.

P1010785

I drew a house on the board with a kitchen and bathroom and a lounge and a bedroom. I realised that it’s actually a good way to teach prepositions.

Hello and Welcome

So, I am finally getting around to posting stories about my trip to the other side of the world and my time in France. I tried writing my own blog engine to go with my photos on my web site at http://www.arunstephens.com/ but really, why reinvent the wheel? So here I am on the apparently new Blogger.

Like I promised on the old blog (which had two posts – http://www.arunstephens.com/blog.aspx) I am going to start writing backdated posts, starting from when I left home. Not sure whether I can actually backdate things though. Hopefully I can put some photos on here too, but I’m not sure about that either.

That’s all from me for now. I am at school and my next class is in 7 minutes.

Mont Blanc

This is the view from the top of l’Aiguille du Midi above Chamonix-Mont-Blanc.

Mont Blanc

Somewhere in that photo is Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in Europe. It looks like a painting. Everything was so white. And the air (at 3800m) was so thin I was having trouble catching my breath. Even walking one set of stairs became difficult.

Nouvelle Star 2

(I wrote this in my hotel room on Word. It hasn’t been published before 14/03/07.)

Right, I’ve got all that I needed to get done. In only 40 minutes too, that’s pretty good. Actually I didn’t have much to do, just get that photo printed (they have kiosks everywhere that do that – it took a while to find though) and I found a photocopier. So 0,40€ later, I have everything done. It was actually 0,50€ because the photo machine didn’t give change. I already had some ID photos so that was lucky. Otherwise the total would have been a whopping 4,50€!

I’m not sure whether I should order breakfast here in the morning. I guess I kind of have to. No other choice. Plus it comes with a paper. I can get it for 6:30 and then head downstairs. How exciting.

Right, now I’m going to try and find me some dinner. I do hope that I’ll be able to see a bit of Marseille tomorrow but I’m not counting on it. I don’t even know what time I’ll be able to get home. We’ll see.