My Visit to Drybar Georgetown

Have you all tried Drybar yet? I've been reading about the only blowouts salon chain for so long, and ever since an outpost opened in Washington, I've been curious to experience the cult of blowouts. This is the longest my hair has EVER been, so now seemed like an ideal time to try it out before I chop it in the spring.

So this past Friday, I hoofed it to Glover Park/Burleith for an early morning appointment. Note: it may say Georgetown on the website, but that's a bit of a stretch. If you don't have a car, the location is inconvenient, but buses do run up Wisconsin every 10 to 15 minutes. Here's a rundown of my Drybar experience:

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​The design is beautifully done. It looks appropriately posh, and makes that $40 a pop seem like a bargain. (Joe, you might want to stop reading here.) The place is huge too, there's a whole back room with styling stations near the shampoo room. I didn't wait at all for my appointment. I met my stylist, got my hair washed, and chose the Mai Tai from Drybar's "menu" of hairstyles, and drank some lemon-flavored water. No champagne as it was 8 a.m., but maybe I should've gone for it.

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​As seems appropriate in the girliest place ever, flat screen televisions played The Devil Wears Prada without the sound on. I caught the tail end of this, and then the first 5 minutes of Mean Girls. Again, of course they played those movies. 

Actually, I barely watched any of it because I took my glasses off and the screen turned into vaguely-Anne-Hathaway-shaped blurs. This is where my guide stops being a service to readers, because I can't see at all without my glasses and I have no idea how the stylist created my hairstyle.​

​But this is how it turned out:

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​Ignore the overgrown bangs, please. I really liked the job she did, and enjoyed the overall experience as a girly treat, but I don't know if wavy done hair feels like me. I know that's more about my own issues and way beyond the purvey of Drybar, ha. My friend Alex said, couldn't you have done this yourself? Maybe if I really tried with the curling iron.

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​No, looking at this picture I realize that there is no way I could do this myself. The back looked really pretty. It stayed this way pretty much all day, looking a little less "done" by the evening, then turned into very loose waves the next day and was pretty much gone the third day. But your milage may vary.

On the way to the salon, I read the Yelp reviews and some people were really unhappy. Women are just so picky about their hair.  And everyone's hair is different, so it seems even more difficult to fit everyone into a "Cosmo-Tai" or "Mai-Tai" or whatever. That's a lot of hurdles for drop-in blow-out places like Drybar to jump through. I feel like I have a level of trust with my own hairstylist that is difficult to replicate with a one-off appointment. I also wonder if the stylist positions here are a difficult job to fill in general, since your tips have a cap on them without cut or color? Do most people who love doing hair want to cut hair as well?

But I can see why these styles of salons are hitting it big. If you have a special occasion or maybe you want to get your hair did and feel pretty, this does the trick. I'll probably just stick to my normal hair appointments and try to get better at doing my own hair, but it's nice to know that it's in the neighborhood. Curious about trying Drybar DC for the first time? Want to tell me about your experience? Comment below!

Rabbit Ears

Here in cable-less land, when you want to watch the Oscars and your digital tuner/antenna only picks up Fox, Spanish television, and something called Cozi TV (?), you have to get creative.

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My roommate and I battled the antenna for an hour, with ABC flickering on occasionally then going back to the dreaded blue screen. Googling didn't help at first: the advice we found included "try adjusting the placement of the antenna." Doy. That must've been click bait. But a very high-tech solution of aluminum foil plus a box duct taped to the wall actually worked! And just in time, when the show was about to start and we had given up hope.

​What did you think, if you watched? I realize now that I will never watch any live, national event on television without also scanning Twitter, and I don't know how I feel about that.  My personal Twittersphere hated Seth and thought he was the height of misogyny, but I follow a lot of feminists. Everyone's Twitter echo chamber is different, I suppose. His whole hosting schtick was so meta. And no one's dress really stood out to me. But 2012 was an amazing year for movies.

Judging from the previews I've seen recently, I don't know if I'm optimistic for 2013. Spring Breakers, I'm looking at you. And every movie set in the future about aliens invading the earth. There are a lot of them. I just saw Side Effects though and really enjoyed it. It's a corkscrew of a plot, and some fine performances.  

Back to our living room: should we keep the ​jerry-rigged box situation? Or just get cable already.

Tunes Tuesday, "New Beat," Toro y Moi

I love Spotify but I don't understand what's going on with it sometimes. I managed to disable the Facebook feature that adds every song you listen to the newsfeed — at least I think, and hope and pray. I don't want all my Facebook friends to know that I routinely listen to the same song 10 times in a row. And that sometimes it is a Taylor Swift song.

But beyond that, I haven't investigated the social media settings aside from occasionally checking my inbox. And this week, I clicked on this song, sent via my friend Serena's hip kid sister. I don't know how I came in possession of this, but here it is:

Second single from the Toro Y Moi full length "Underneath The Pine" out February 22nd on Carpark Records. www.toroymoi.com www.carparkrecords.com p + c 2011 Carpark Records

Toro y Moi just put out a new album, but after hearing this song, I was curious enough to download 2011's "Underneath the Pine" and I'm stuck with this one for now. I think "New Beat" should immediately be your new theme song. It has a confident strut, like the dude who knows he's the hottest person in the room. Don't you think? 

Modern Apartment Door Numbers

A new management company took over an apartment down the street from me, and watching the renovations, I thought of something...

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If an apartment building switches over to new numbers in a Helvetica font or similar, I bet you that they raise the rent. That's an amenity. Yuppie urban class-A apartment dwellers can't get enough of sans serif.

Tunes Tuesday, "You've Got Friends (Valentine's Day Mix Tape)," DJ Lani Love & Major Taylor

Yesterday, R29 ran a Best-of Valentine's Day guide I wrote that featured fun things to do this week for everyone, not just people who are coupled-up. Writing that got me genuinely excited about the holiday, which I haven't always been. Now I'm all about heart-shaped everything (as seen in my Eater DC article today).

Unfortunately, I think Valentine's Day can often be about comparing yourself to others, whether it's not being in a relationship and wanting to be in one, or stacking your relationship and V-Day gifts against other people's experiences. But why not have a day to celebrate love? This is sappy, yes, but I like the idea of appreciating what you have and the good friends who love you.

Brought to you by DJ Lani Love & Major Taylor Follow Major Taylor at djmajortaylor.com TRACKLIST 1. "Friends", Whodini 2. "We're Going to Be Friends", The White Stripes 3. "Just a Friend", Biz Markie 4. "Just Friends", Amy Winehouse 5. "With a Little Help from My Friends", The Beatles 6.

My Chicago friend DJ Lani Love's Valentine's Day mix celebrates not romantic love but friendship in all its forms. Fittingly, she collaborated with her friend, Major Taylor, to create this ode to friends who always have each other's back. I love the selections from LCD Soundsytem, Justice vs. Simian, White Stripes and Friends (the band). And I never remembered the "My Buddy" jingle being so operatic. Happy early Valentine's Day, and to quote Golden Girls, thank you for being a friend.

Nana's Valentine Mart, Mintwood Place, and Weekend Fun

As a Mount Pleasant resident, I'm so sad that Nana is closing the brick & mortar shop. I loved having them in the neighborhood. You never know what you had till it's gone, eh? They threw a fun Valentine's-themed pop-up on Saturday (as written about in R29) with jewelry, cards, hipster accoutrement, and live music. What a charming scene!

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The stenciled, hand-painted fabrics from DC Etsy seller Printed Wild totally won me over. A little cosmetic bag came home with me — more on that later! Didn't purchase anything for anyone else, only Valentine's Day presents for myself. 

I chatted with the employee who rung up my purchase, and she said Nana has the space till the end of February, so there will be one last hurrah party in Mount Pleasant. But Nana will keep doing similar pop-up marts around the city, which is something fun to add to your calendars this spring. And this is complete scuttlebutt, but I heard a gourmet grocer might be coming to the Nana space. We shall see.

On Friday, I headed one neighborhood over to Adams Morgan for a Restaurant Week dinner with friends at the much-hyped, Obama-approved Mintwood Place. Wouldn't it be crazy to pick out the DC places where the President goes for date nights? I'm pretty sure Obama isn't constantly refreshing his food blog reader, so someone must have that job. "Barry, the kids on Yelp are going crazy for the escargot hushpuppies at this place."

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Anyway, big thanks to my friend Carolyn who scored us the reservation. She's so with it. I took note of the globe light fixtures at Mintwood, after reading on Eater that ne'er do wells keep stealing them. People are so weird. The City Paper too just ran an article about how apparently everyone pockets copper mugs in restaurants. What? If you frequent PX and Bar Pilar, you can afford to buy your own dang mugs. I guess people will steal anything that's not nailed down, or even if it is nailed down, in the case of the light fixtures.

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This one inside Mintwood Place is safe though, phew! We loved the atmosphere, and all four courses of our meal lived up to the hype, as Carolyn's boyfriend Alex noted. I was partial to the burrata and kale starter and the baked Alaska. Can't wait to go back! Even a cocktail at the bar would be fun.

After dinner, I made Joe watch the film "The Loneliest Planet." It has Gael García Bernal in it, Cup of Jo blogged about it, and it involves a couple dealing with a fluke encounter on a hiking trip that shakes their entire relationship. Sounds interesting, right?

Well, to give you an idea of how snail's pace slow this film was, there would be a wide shot of the couple hiking starting in one corner of the tv screen and then you'd watch the entirety of their walk to the other side of the screen. I felt I could go to the bathroom and return and they still wouldn't have reached the television's right side.

With the last scene, I told Joe, "Sorry to make you watch this. I thought it would be a little more fast-paced than people taking down a tent in real time."

"It's OK. They're actually pretty quick at taking down the tent, I'll give them that," he said.

So the landscape was beautiful, but you could compress the action into about five minutes. I'm alright with slow movies, but this felt like it never built to anything and people didn't talk about things like normal humans. Also, the girl annoyed me. OK, rant over. Have you seen it? Am I showing my gnat-like attention span or do you agree? It got good reviews. I suppose I prefer more of a plot and dialogue.

Those are my weekend highlights. I also watched "Couples Retreat," which is a sentence I never ever thought I'd write. That one was not my pick.