You know how I was adamant that I was going to chronicle every bit of our cross country road trip in painful detail?
Epic fail.
Granted, some stuff has gone down since then.
Still.
In an attempt to make amends with my slighted conscience, I’ll provide a ridiculous synopsis of everything else after Oklahoma.
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So, when we last left our heroes, we’d just left our friend Amanda in Oklahoma and were en route to Vegas, with stop offs in New Mexico and Arizona.
We passed a lot of abandoned farms.
Floored it past weird, Jesus-centric places.
And settled into the music, as alien landscapes whizzed by.
And then we passed into New Mexico.
With snow on the ground. *Facepalm*
Then we got lost in Albuquerque, because my “familiarity” with the city–having been there once before–landed us in a neighborhood of boarded-up houses and bail bond offices. We disregarded all red lights, defaulted to our “Whole Foods” GPS input, and ended the day with super hot Mexican food at a local haunt near our non-sketchy hotel.






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The California countryside took my breath away. It looked like A Walk In the Clouds took a dump everywhere.














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The next day, we found a Whole Foods, where I’m pretty sure I saw Jake Gyllenhaal.
Then, we started patrolling neighborhoods, driving through Beverly Hills, and getting lost in Koreatown. Eventually, we started targeting antique shops, and got out in one neighborhood in West Hollywood to stretch our legs. The architecture was amazing. Which was why we were looking up when we ran into a group of people leaving a corner coffee shop. And when I looked down to see whose coffee I nearly spilled, I settled on an oddly familiar face. It was Sandra Oh. After we passed through the crowd, muttering apologies as we went, we turned the corner and I exploded. “OH MAH GAWD, THAT WAS SANDRA OH!” “Who?” “SANDRA OHhhhhhh.” As if yelling it louder was going to help. I figured that if I did see any celebrity, I’d just be like, “Oh, there’s so-and-so. They’re shorter in real life.” Instead, I started talking about moving to the neighborhood, becoming neighbors with Sandra Oh, and referring to her as Sandra Oh every single time we decided to do something together. Like, when we’d host a backyard barbecue. “Sandra Oh and I are going to get pineapple for the kabobs.” We’d become best friends. And I’d laugh with her and say things like, “Oh, Sandra Oh. Pass the goddamned sangria.”


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Between the time Les Mis ended and The Hobbit began, we ran to Malibu, walked along the shore, and took in the sunset.

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