ONION TACOS: Self-Indulgence: Days of Wine and Roses: A REGEDIT FIX!
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Saturday, November 15, 2014

Self-Indulgence: Days of Wine and Roses: A REGEDIT FIX!

Days of Wine and Roses
One of the things that I love to do, when I have the time, is to watch old movies on TCM.  It is a reward to myself especially after a tiring and trying day/week; a moment of unadulterated, self-indulgence, if you will.
This a.m. I was up early as usual, but I had to perform some dire updates/maintenance on my HP desktop.  During my early morning maintenance ala fix-the-damn-system, I made myself take a deep breath, turn on the tele, and watch an old movie starring Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick.  The movie was Days of Wine and Roses,” and it was also the muse for today’s title post.  I had to do something to get myself away from the computer so that I could focus on the issue then develop a proper fix later.  Plus, I had to forget the awful experience I had last night with the MS technician who tried (in vain) to help me restore my MS Office 365.  The tech was friendly, but not very knowledgeable, and needless to say…she did not help with my 365 issue.  So, I had to plan to wake up early this day in order to fix the issue on my own.  I had to run my comp in safe mode, create a system restore point then run it, manually uninstall/install (no RevoUninstallar) MS 365, then  I had to use the property data files of some software programs that I installed as a college course-related beta-project, to fully uninstall those cumbersome and (negatively) infectious software programs and apps.  Yeah, I used their own property data to get them the f--- out of my registry and system.  THEN… I had to manually fix the regedit.exe (registry) in order to properly reset and assign default associations to certain programs (i.e. MS Word.doc).  It was a handful to jot down, can you imagine actually having to perform each and every single action. 
Anyhooowwww…
The movie I mentioned just had me shaking my head for most of the duration, and I kept uttering the word “disgusting” to myself – sometimes out loud.   The synopsis of the legendary movie with the legendary troupers: a young couple happen to meet by chance (isn’t that how all romantic movies begin? LOL!); they have a misunderstanding; they fall deeply, madly in love (is there any other kind of love in CINE?); they get married (“boy gets girl” and vice versa – thank-you!); they, of course, have a baby; they develop marital issues (they should have) that stem from the booze that they both equally love; they separate (the separation is not shown, but rather is implied by time-elapsing sequences); then as one tries to get sober, the other does not even want to try; lastly, the movie ends with you kind of pitying one person in the failed relationship but feeling disgusted with the other; for certain, one feels badly for the child.  Don’t get me wrong, through-out the entire movie there is equal disgust for the couple, but at the end of the movie, you can at least forgive the one who is trying to change for the sake of the child among other obvious reasons.  It was a good movie - as always, thanks TCM - for the wonderful movies of days long past.  In conclusion, the movie serves as a reminder of how good things still are no matter how bleak they may appear on any given day or moment.  At the end of the day, at least life is not as mucked up as the lives of the two nutcases in the movie. 
To paraphrase the words of one Rain Man…”it was definitely, definitely” 3 out of 5 stars.

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