Tuesday March 16, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Wedding Planning
Typically, our inbox is filled with:
Spam, press releases, angry notes from brides, more spam, questions from grooms, questions from brides, more spam...
...and then some obnoxious emails about Bridal Showers, more spam, forwards of not-funny videos, and more hate mail.
Then, every once in a while, there's something like this.
Monday March 15, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Wedding Planning
A reader is taking us to task. In the article Your Role Planning the Reception: 10 Signs of Danger we wrote:
"It's simple. If your fiancée thinks that you need to slash the open bar and cheap out by only serving wine, simply cut 5% from the guest list. Done and done. You don't think it's possible? We'll show you.
"This can't be a compromise. Never sacrifice the open bar. To clarify: "open bar" doesn't mean that your guests are able to order a 1937 Glenfiddich. You should, however, have the basics: house rum, whiskey, vodka, etc. As an aside and cautionary warning, The Plunge's fearless founder thought it'd be fun to have a "Scotch Tasting" at his wedding...and it set him back twelve grand. So know your limits before you give the bar a green light.
Friday March 12, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
The Bride,
Complications
Whoa. This one's a little nutty.
Have you seen anything like this? Give us your thoughts.
A reader asks in the forums:
"My fiancée and I have been engaged for almost a year... We have agreed on everything having to do with the wedding... All has been good.
Thursday March 11, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
The Bride
As regular readers now know, from time to time, we turn to one of the less-crazy bridal sites, OneWed, for "her perspective."
From OneWed's Marta Segal Block:
Unless you're marrying absolutely the wrong girl (and I know The Plunge has a test to help you figure that out), she doesn't really care about size. She doesn't care about your "shoe size" and she doesn't care about how big the rock in her ring is.
Now, if you have "big feet," you probably realized a long time ago that for a casual "dance encounter" you don't have to work quite as hard as someone with a "smaller shoe size." You hopefully also learned that in a relationship just having "big feet" isn't a substitute for actually learning a little bit about which "dance moves" work for your girlfriend. If you have "smaller feet," you hopefully learned that once you learn how to dance, size doesn't matter.
Wednesday March 10, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Wedding Planning
A reader writes:
"My fiancee and I have started talking about food for the wedding. My parents offered to make the food and take care of everything foodwise (of course help will be enlisted), while her parents are worried that it would be too big of a task to undertake and that we would screw it up.
"Putting aside the question about the quality of the made food versus the catered food, and the fact that if something does happen her side of the family is going to be livid with my side and not the caterers, am I crazy to even consider my parents proposition?
"I seem to think it would be possible, especially knowing that we have 18 months to plan it all out. We've planned some big events before and had everything turn out, and by doing the food ourselves, we could save a ton of money. For what its worth, we're thinking we'll have about 150 people at the wedding.
Tuesday March 9, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Wedding Planning
A reader asks:
"So my fiancée and I are a little confused about what to do with our first dance. We can't decide whether to have our first dance immediately upon entering the reception hall or to wait until after we've eaten and all the toasts are over.
"In the first case we would have something to do after the fanfare of our initial entrance. In the second case the continuity of the "dance mentality" is preserved. Which would be more beneficial to the flow of our reception?"
________
Monday March 8, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Wedding Planning,
Complications
What's the exact opposite of chocolate and peanut butter, you know, two great things that go great together?
Two awful things that go awful together: wedding planning and taxes.
A fairly informative (if a touch dry) article in the Wall Street Journal about how getting married impacts your taxes.
From the Journal:
Thursday March 4, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Bachelor Party
Email from a reader.
We thought about cleaning it up, but what's the fun in that?
Here it is, in its glorious, untouched form:
"I am the best man of my brothers wedding and that means im doing the bachlor party,all of are friends that we invited like to drink and have fun and pretty much anything goes.
Wednesday March 3, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Complications
This story has a little bit of everything: violence, brides, car crashes, jail, drunkenness, honeymoons, weddings, and even a sex offender. The only thing surprising is that no, in fact, it's not an episode of Jersey Shore.
From The New York Daily News: "Timothy Keene and his blushing bride Marissa spent their wedding night in separate cells after she tried to run down one of her new spouse's ex-girlfriends, Barnstable police said."
We're going to go ahead and assume that this counts as a "Don't" in Reception Behavior.
Other wackiness: the groom is a registered sex-offender. And the bride also pointed the car at the ex-girlfriend's kid, too. Well at least she's thorough. When you go on a revenge vendetta, the prudent move is to wipe out the entire family, this will intimidate your enemies and serve as a deterrent. (See: Keyser Soze.)
Tuesday March 2, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Wedding-Porn
I'm convinced that Hollywood is a game of Madlibs.
Studios create titles with a fill-in-the-blank methodology that produces gems like the just-announced "The Wedding Doctor," starring Nicole Kidman. You can probably guess the premise and visualize the entire film, right?
From New York's Vulture: "Kidman would play a relationship analyst who advises couples on their interpersonal dynamics before they marry. But after she meets her latest clients, the doc decides she'd actually be a better match for the groom-to-be, triggering a showdown with his fiancée."
Really? Do we really need that movie?
Monday March 1, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Bachelor Party
You know the obvious stuff. (And if you don't, we cover it here.) The basic things you must do in advance for a bachelor party: Picking a weekend, surveying options, reserving hotels, coordinating airfare.
That's Bachelor Party 101. And for the weekend itself, we cover your expected behavior here.)
In the past year, however, we've hit enough bachelor parties to lose a liver, and we want to add and emphasize the following.
Friday February 26, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
Gift Registry
Okay. This is kind of funny. And it's so obvious that it's amazing it hasn't happened a million times before. (Or maybe it has. And no one notices.)
The movie Wedding Crashers, of course, explores the idea of sneaking into weddings to score with girls. But what about scoring with gifts? There's usually a ripe, glittering table full of blenders and towels and fine china, just yours for the taking.
One woman decided to do just that.
Thursday February 25, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
The Bride
As regular readers now know, from time to time, we turn to one of the less-crazy bridal sites, OneWed, for "her perspective."
From OneWed's Marta Segal Block:
A couple of weeks ago over at OneWed.com we released our Top Ten Wedding Trends for 2010. I have to admit, I feel a little guilty about that. Most women who don't think of Marie Claire as their bible and aren't contestants on America's Next Top Model have a bit of mixed relationship with fashion and trends, and I don't want to add to the stress.
Although the dawn of the metrosexual has definitely increased the pressure on men to get a grip on current trends and fashions, the truth is that most men pick a look in high school and pretty much stick with it for the next 50 years. Don't believe me? Are you currently wearing any of the following: polo-type shirt, flannel shirt, button down shirt, sports/concert t-shirt, ball cap, white sneakers? Yeah, I thought so.
Wednesday February 24, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
The Bride,
Complications
Yes, we get the irony.
We realize that any website that touts articles like How Wedding-Porn is Brainwashing Your Fiancée, Your Reward for Suffering: Planning the Honeymoon, and Your Get Out of Wedding Free Card--Convincing Her to Elope...this kind of website, we admit, has no business telling you "not be sarcastic."
That said... don't be sarcastic.
If you have a little "prank" that you think will lighten up the wedding party? Don't. Just forget it. If you must, share the idea with your buddies. But don't actually do it.
Monday February 22, 2010 - Posted by:
Jeff in
The Proposal
A reader writes:
My girlfriend and I are going to be getting engaged on an upcoming weekend.
The process has been very open: we picked out the ring together, she knew when I talked to her dad, and she even knows that I'm proposing that weekend.
However, she doesn't know how or exactly when I'm proposing that weekend. To further complicate matters, her parents are divorced.