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September 20, 2008

Pickup

When Ruby and Sapphire hit the Pokemon scene a new ability came with them. This ability is known as Pickup.

Diamond and Pearl also allow for the Pickup ability and the following Pokemon can have this ability: Aipom, Ambipom, Linoone, Meowth, Munchlax, Pachirusu, Phanpy, Teddiursa and Zigzagoon.

Most players of Ruby and Sapphire made it a point to use their Zigzagoon/Linoone as an HM machine as well as an item finder. Even know I keep a Linoone in my party when training so that I can collect rare stones used for evolution.

If you keep a Pokemon with the Pickup ability in your party there is a 10% chance he will “pick something up” at the end of each battle.

Lv. Common Uncommon V. Unc. Rare V. Rare
1 - 10
11 - 20
21 - 30
31 - 40
41 - 50
51 - 60
61 - 70
71 - 80
81 - 90
91 - 100

Be aware that some of the rare items only appear if a Pokemon is within a certain level range. For example TM01 Focus Punch can only be found if your Pokemon is between levels 71 and 90. Once your Pokemon turns level 91 he can no longer Pickup a Focus Punch TM.

Like Nerds Talking About Sex

"The Arsenale is full of pieces like this – by people who are getting old and have a pressing need to reassure each other that they are artists. ... The 2008 biennale is the year that the avant-garde finally disappeared into its own darkest recesses. Let's hope the recession finishes the job." Hilarious snarking of the Venice Biennale.

Put on the Brakes

As noted in the previous post, I'm quite convinced that some drastic action needs to be taken to avoid a cascading and debilitating series of crises. But the more I look at this plan, the more wrongheaded it seems. But if I'm understanding this deal, the taxpayers are going to pony up close to a trillion dollars to take bad debts off the hands of financial institutions who were foolish enough to make the deals in the first place. And in exchange, I think the tax payers get nothing? Sebastian Mallaby makes the good point that this is radically different than the S&L Crisis RTC which was liquidating the assets of thrifts that had already gone belly up -- paid the ultimate price, as it were. And as the insurer on the accounts, the government inherited the assets anyway. It was just a matter of selling them off. But here the point is to take these bad debts off these companies' hands so they can go back to being profitable businesses. This is moral hazard on steroids if I'm understanding this right.

Also, according to the Journal, finance industry lobbyists are already giving orders to Republican hill staffers not to allow any meaningful reforms or protections for taxpayers. So, just the money. No strings attached.

House Republican staffers met with roughly 15 lobbyists Friday afternoon, whose message to lawmakers was clear: Don't load the legislation up with provisions not directly related to the crisis, or regulatory measures the industry has long opposed.

"We're opposed to adding provisions that will affect [or] undermine the deal substantively," said Scott Talbott, senior vice president of government affairs at the Financial Services Roundtable, whose members include the nation's largest banks, securities firms and insurers.

A deal killer for the group: a proposal that would grant bankruptcy judges new powers to lower the principal, interest rate or both on a mortgage as part of a bankruptcy proceeding.

Late Update: Mulling this more and listening to the insights in your emails, the key clearly is how much the government pays for these distressed assets. They may be bad debts. But that doesn't mean they have no value at all. Bought at the right prices and given time on the books -- which the government is uniquely in a position to allow them to do -- the government could even turn a profit on some of them. But the key is at what price they're bought and whose get bought. That seems like precisely the kind of process that requires oversight and accountability to make sure the taxpayer doesn't get fleeced.

Dancing on the Edge of the Abyss Update: Paul Krugman has a post up that I think tracks basically along the lines I've raised -- only from the viewpoint of someone who has a profound understanding of these things rather than no understanding at all. He says, no deal.

Yep, It's Crap Update: I can't seem to find any of the people who I respect thinking the bailout plan, as presented, is a good idea.

Before We Jump In

There are subjects I know a lot about and others I know very little about. And the high-wire financial mess we're currently in falls clearly into the latter category. But I know enough to be troubled that we appear ready to give upwards of a trillion dollars in unfettered and unreviewable spending authority to the ... let's face it, the Bush administration, the folks who did such a bang up job in Iraq and New Orleans.

This morning a friend told me it's like the Iraq War all over again -- Shock & Awe, followed by an occupation of Wall Street, and all with no exit plan.

In all seriousness, Paulson seems like a very able guy. And without a roadmap in hand, he appears at least to have avoided catastrophe so far. But let's take a moment to realize just how much money we're talking about.

It is probably inevitable in such cases that the public gets stuck with a lot of the bill for the recklessness and perhaps even criminality of the people who got us into this mess. Even if it is their 'fault', we (as a country and its citizens) are simply too bound up with the consequences of their actions to let them play out in an unfettered manner.

But we need both some orderly system of decision making and some conditions imposed on the people, and the industries, that brought us into the ditch.

Here's a note received today from one TPM Reader ...

The current proposal for the bailout -- $700 billion to be used however the administration chooses to use it -- should not be allowed to pass in its current form. This is the same administration that has mismanaged Iraq, DOJ, Katrina. Why can they be trusted to preside over this in a way that is even-handed and for the benefit of the taxpayers? As Krugman and Atrios have pointed out, if insolvency rather than liquidity is the real problem, then this may not even fix the problem. Even if there is some modest stimulus package appended to the bill, the bill will still be a bad idea if it gives such unprecedented and unchecked power to the Bush administration.

It would be great if you guys could lead a push -- like the anti-SS privatization one from a couple of years ago -- to impose limits and rules on the bailout. The Dean Baker post on your site is a good proposal and maybe it makes sense to press congressman to agree to elements of it, particularly the caps on executive comp which has gone completely out of control here. It also makes sense to regulate the CDS market -- $65 trillion in it, more than in banks, with no transparency.

Make those who are to be rescued agree to some conditions so that this will not happen again. Otherwise, this is basically giving Wall Streeters (who are to be fair friends with both parties) a lot of money for nothing in exchange.

We'll be publishing more of your emails. So please let us know your thoughts.

Photo



Win Tickets to the Best Dessert Party Ever

From Serious Eats

20080919-madmac.jpg

On October 11 at 9 p.m., the New York Wine & Food Festival is putting on what might be the best dessert party ever.

The bash is going to feature almost 50 of the nation's best pastry chefs putting out a sweets spread the likes of which we have never seen before. Folks like Johnny Iuzzini from Jean-Georges, Michael Laiskonis of Le Bernardin, Nancy Olson of Gramercy Tavern, and Francois Payard, along with many of their most gifted peers, will be serving everything from Concord grape popsicles to pumpkin cheesecake to chocolate caramel parfaits.

So if you live in or around New York City and you love sweets, this event is a must. Or if you want to come to New York City for a lovely weekend excursion, this is a great event to build the weekend around.

Thanks to the festival organizers, we're going to be giving away four $175 tickets a week for the next four weeks over on Serious Eats New York.

And even if you don't win, you can buy tickets here. The proceeds from this event and the entire festival go to the Food Bank for New York City and Share Our Strength, so we'll all be getting the ultimate sugar rush for a good cause.

i wish i had known about this before i went to saint...



i wish i had known about this before i went to saint petersburg!

TONIGHT: “Signs of Change” opening in mid-town at Exit Art

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SIGNS OF CHANGE: SOCIAL MOVEMENT CULTURES 1960s TO NOW
September 20 - November 22, 2008
SATURDAY, September 20, 7-10pm: Opening Reception with live screen printing and ice cream from the Tactical Ice Cream Unit (operated by Arthur Magazine’s “Applied Magic(k)” columnists The Center for Tactical Magic)
Exit Art
475 Tenth Avenue
New York, NY 10018
T: 212.966.7745 ext. 15
www.exitart.org

In “Signs of Change: Social Movement Cultures 1960s to Now,” hundreds of posters, photographs, moving images, audio clips, and ephemera bring to life over forty years of activism, political protest, and campaigns for social justice. Curated by Dara Greenwald and Josh MacPhee as part of Exit Art’s Curatorial Incubator, this important and timely exhibition surveys the creative work of dozens of international social movements.

Organized thematically, the exhibition presents the creative outpourings of social movements, such as those for Civil Rights and Black Power in the United States; democracy in China; anti-apartheid in Africa; squatting in Europe; environmental activism and women’s rights internationally; and the global AIDS crisis, as well as uprisings and protests, such as those for indigenous control of lands; against airport construction in Japan; and student and worker revolution in France. The exhibition also explores the development of powerful counter-cultures that evolve beyond traditional politics and create distinct aesthetics, life-styles, and social organization.

Although histories of political groups and counter-cultures have been written, and political and activist shows have been held, this exhibition is a groundbreaking attempt to chronicle the artistic and cultural production of these movements. Signs of Change offers a chance to see relatively unknown or rarely seen works, and is intended to not only provide a historical framework for contemporary activism, but also to serve as an inspiration for the present and the future.

During the exhibition, there will be ongoing screenprinting workshops with guest artists and activists in collaboration with the Lower East Side Printshop as well as the following programs and events.

“In addition to the extensive material presented in the exhibition, the curators have organized numerous special programs throughout the exhibition period including a two-panel symposium on Thursday September 25, featuring creators, lenders and theorists from social movement cultures around the world, and a weekend of film screenings and discussions at Exit Art and 16beaver, featuring the rarely-seen film Narita: Peasants of the Second Fortress, of which only two copies with English subtitles are known to exist.”

WEEKLY SCREENING SERIES

(schedule and program is subject to change)

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday at 3:30pm

Friday and Saturday at 5:30pm

WEEK ONE: September 23 – 27
Newe Segobia is Not for Sale: The Struggle for Western Shoshone Land (1993)
The Land Belongs to Those Who Work It/La tierra es de quien la trabaja (2005)
To Walk Naked (1995)
Break and Enter (1970)

WEEK TWO: September 30 – October 4
Stronger than Before (1983)
Carry Greenham Home (1984)

WEEK THREE: October 7 – 11
Korea: Until Day Break (Excerpt from …will be televised) (1990)
Un Poquito de Tanta Verdad / A Little Bit of So Much Truth (2008)

WEEK FOUR: October 14 – 18
What the Fuck Are These Red Squares? (1970)
The Columbia University Divestment Struggle: Paper Tiger at Mandela Hall (1985)
Standing with Palestine (2004)

WEEK FIVE: October 21– 25
Films TBA.

WEEK SIX: October 28 – November 1
Five Days for Peace (1973)
Indonesia: Art, Activism, Rock ‘n’ Roll (2002)
People’s Park (1969)

WEEK SEVEN: November 4 – 8
Excerpt from Lanesville Overview I 9 (1972)
Be a DIVA (1990)
I the Film (2006)

WEEK EIGHT: November 11 – 15
Films TBA.

WEEK NINE: November 18 – 22
A Very Big Train Called the Other Campaign/Un tren muy grande que se llama: La Otra Campaña (2006)
Crowd Bites Wolf (2001)
Fourth World War (2003)

SIGNS OF CHANGE EVENTS

TWO-PANEL SYMPOSIUM
THURSDAY, September 25: Signs of Change Symposium
6 pm: Producing and Distributing Social Movement Culture
Panelists include: Yustoni Volunteero/Taring Padi Collective (Indonesia), illcommonz (Japan), Favianna Rodriguez/Tumis Design (Oakland, CA) and others TBA. Moderated by Gregory Sholette, Assistant Professor Queens College Department of Art, Co-Founder PAD/D & REPOhistory/New York.

8 pm: Assessing the History and Future of Social Movement Culture: A Critical Analysis
Panelists include: Sasha Roseneil/Professor of Sociology and Social Theory, Director, Birkbeck Institute for Social Research, Birbeck, University of London (UK), Sandy Kaltenborn/image-shift berlin (Germany), Mary Patten/Artist & Professor, School of the Art Institute (Chicago), and others TBA. Moderated by Kazembe Balagun, Brecht Forum/blogger: blackmanwithalibrary.com (New York, NY).

COLUMBUS DAY WEEKEND
Saturday, OCTOBER 11 to Monday, OCTOBER 13:
Weekend of Screenings and Discussion, co-sponsored by 16beaver group. Curated in collaboration with Benj Gerdes and Paige Sarlin.
SATURDAY, October 11 at Exit Art, 475 10th Ave @ 36th Street
4 pm: Finally Got the News (1970, 16mm, League of Revolutionary Black Workers).
7:30 pm: Narita: The Peasants of the Second Fortress (Sanrizuka: Dainitoride no hitobito) (1971). In Japanese with English subtitles.
Introduced by Sabu Kohso, Japan-born writer and activist, and Barbara Hammer, filmmaker. Screening Co-sponsored by Asian/Pacific/American Institute and Tisch Department of Photography & Imaging at NYU in conjunction with The Uses of 1968: Legacies of Art and Activism Symposium and 1968: Then and Now Exhibition. $5 at the door

SUNDAY, October 12 at 16beaver group, 16 Beaver Street, Fourth Floor $5 – $10 donation
12 pm – 9 pm: Featuring Diva TV (1989); Queen Mother Moore Speech at Green Haven Prison (1971); Winter Soldier (1972); Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan (2008); Stronger Than Before (1983); Fourth World War (2003) and others TBA. Discussions to follow.

MONDAY, October 13 at 16beaver group, 16 Beaver Street, Fourth Floor $5 – $10 donation
12 pm – 9 pm: Featuring Happy Anniversary San Francisco, March 20-21 (2003); What the Fuck Are These Red Squares? (1970); U.S. Premiere of Five Days for Peace (1973); Crowd Bites Wolf (2001); A Very Big Train Called the Other Campaign (2006); U.S. Premiere of What Would It Mean to Win? (2008); Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance (1993); and others TBA. Discussions to follow.

For more information on the programs at 16Beaver, please visit www.16beavergroup.org or call 212-480-2093.

16beaver group is located at 16 Beaver Street, Fourth Floor, New York City.

PREMIERE SCREENING
FRIDAY, October 24, 6–8 pm: Premiere screening of newly subtitled short films and footage of the 1960s Dutch Provo movement, and book release of Richard Kempton’s Provo: Amsterdam’s Anarchist Revolt (in collaboration with Autonomedia Press).

SCREEN PRINTING WORKSHOPS
In collaboration with the Lower East Side Printshop the exhibition will feature ongoing screen printing workshops with guest artists and activists. Check http://www.exitart.org for schedule and participating artists.

ELECTION NIGHT AT EXIT ART Save the date November 4, 2008. Please check http://www.exitart.org for more details.

Listening to the Baseball Prospectus podcast, where you can hear how real baseball people talk. Joe Madden, the manager of the Rays, just used "attitudinally" and "the Tipping Point" in consecutive sentences.

Lipstick on a Pig in a Poke

TPM Reader CR:

Please please be against this bailout. I cannot begin to think of all the myriad reasons why this bailout as it is being floated is a bad idea of the most colossal of proportions, but I will try.

Why are there no [details], because it will be a pig in a poke. There will be a bums rush just like when Bush tried to pressure Congress into passing the Protect America Act. They will wait until right before the election and try and jam the Democratic party up and say that if they do nothing then we are all going to Hell in a hand basket. There will be nothing good about this plan unless you are a big banking and insurance CEO. What a surprise!

While the Resolution Trust Corporation was a moderately well regarded solution to the 80's S&L scandal, this proposed idea does not, and almost certainly will not be similar, though its proponents will claim it is. The RTC took over failed banks and sold off the banks' assets. Very simple. It was simply an enormous bankruptcy trustee.

The crucial difference here is that this bailout will not be taking over failed banks, just taking over the bad debts of the failed banks. So the banks will be able to live on and be free to do the exact same thing all over again. I cannot think of a worse philosophical, policy, or practical solution than this.

You have banks and investment houses that lobbied Congress to remove restrictions on their activities and now their own activities have loaded them down with the crushing weight of bad debt from which they all profited handsomely before they got stuck holding the pile of s**t. ...

If we are going to subsidize taking over these bad debts, then we should be taking over the entire banks and liquidating them. Period.


TPM Reader BC:

Why do I have the feeling that this bail out of the financial system is going to be the market equivalent of the Patriot Act? We're in a crisis which gives the Bush Administration an opportunity to push legislation through Congress with little or no debate. In six months from now, how many "little surprises" are we going to find out about? Gifts to the industry or Bush Administration that got inserted into a bill that was approved without being read -- let alone, thoroughly examined -- by most members of Congress. I agree something needs to be done but do we really trust the people that brought us this mess to develop an optimal solution? Our financial markets operated safely and successfully for over half a century under the Glass-Steagall regime. Since we started deregulation, it has been crisis on top of crisis. Democrats should not agree to any bail out that does not include reintroduction of regulatory safeguards and effective oversight. Unfortunately, I have heard almost nothing from them except for Barney Frank. That leads me to conclude that they will be a.) unprepared to present a plan and/or b.) unable to articulate it in a way that can win public support.

TPM Reader TC:

Is it just me? With this last enormous bail out of our Wall Street Investors/Corporate America, I have this picture in my mind of these cartoon Republicans sweeping out the last of the people's money from the vaults. It took eight years, but they managed to get it all. The War/Private Contractors, the Oil Companys, the deregulation and fleecing of America. These Republicans started their tour of duty eight years ago with the coffers overflowing, flush with cash.

Sorry Thanks wins Adrienne Shelly Grant

Image source: indiewire.com

The film I worked on late last year, Sorry Thanks, has received a $10k grant from The Adrienne Shelly Foundation and Artists Public Domain, awarded by IFP. There's a new, more complete website for the film now, and a trailer should be added within the week. Check back or join the mailing list on the site for more information. I've already told my friends, but I saw most of the film finally on my last visit to New York, and I think it's the best work I've done as an adult.

IndiewireDISPATCH FROM NYC
Hollywood Reporter: IFP hands out $130K at Indie Filmmaker Awards

September 19, 2008

They’re looking for us

DB again:

Perhaps you consider Music and Lyrics (2007) a bit of fluff. Bear with me. Apart from offering an ingratiating parody of 1980s music videos, which at the end gets replayed as a parody of 1990s Pop-Up Video, this movie provides a nice example of a technique that film viewers tend to enjoy.

Alex Fletcher, a has-been pop singer, gets a chance to revive his career by writing a love song for Cora Corman, current goddess of teenyboppers. Alex can dash off a melody but he needs a lyricist. His agent has advised him to try to collaborate with the “very hip, very edgy” Greg Antonsky. Their first meeting doesn’t go well. Greg’s lyrics, rhyming witch and bitch, don’t suit Alex’s more romantic style, and Sophie, Alex’s plant-tender, keeps interjecting sweeter lines. After first eyeing Sophie lecherously, Greg decides she’s a simpleton. He dashes out, condemning Sophie and Alex as sentimental fools: “You people disgust me!”

As written, the character of Greg the lyricist is only mildly funny, but the insert shots of actor Jason Antoon raise the comedy thermostat. With his lowered brow and glaring, slightly unfocused eyes, Greg tries to play the badass, but his aggressiveness comes off as egotistical pettiness.

The cutting relies on single shots of each character, in keeping with today’s style of intensified continuity editing. This ensures that we track every character’s facial expression. When Sophie first interrupts, Greg glares, then lolls his head backward; his time is too important to spend with these losers.

In all, Greg is onscreen for about three minutes, and the plot continues without him.

Eventually, Alex and Sophie break up because Alex is prepared to let Cora turn their song into a sleazy number. The climax comes at Cora’s concert, when Alex appears onstage and sings a tune he composed for Sophie: “Don’t Write Me Off.” At the song’s close, we get a shot of him at the piano followed by several reaction shots in the audience, with Sophie’s close-up favored.

After a backstage reconciliation between Alex and Sophie, the film’s second plotline is resolved. Cora performs the number she asked the team to compose, but it’s played the way Sophie had wanted. The up-tempo melody brings Alex and Cora onstage together and then, as the third verse begins, ties together the secondary characters in a series of reaction shots. We first see an African-American backstage handler, whose vigorous swipe of his arm launches a string of smiling responses.

We get shots of Alex’s agent and his daughter, then Sophie’s brother-in-law and his son, and Sophie’s sister and their kids.

Their responses celebrate both the romantic couple’s success and the sincere emotion that the song elicits. This aura of good feeling is confirmed negatively by one more reaction shot.

It is the sort of satisfying surprise that Hollywood often trades on. After being offscreen and out of mind for eighty minutes, arrogant Greg returns. We didn’t see him come to the concert; we didn’t know he was there; we had likely forgotten he existed.

This shot is agreeable because it keeps Greg’s sourness consistent. A more kindly film would show him smiling begrudgingly, won over by the authentic sweetness of the music. But instead he mimics blowing his brains out and lolls his head back as he did before.

Greg’s appalled reaction to the song confirms our initial judgment of his character and our sense of the song’s unpretentious sincerity.

If you’re like me, this unexpected four-second shot makes you laugh. The director, Marc Lawrence, has followed tradition by including humor in a scene of high sentiment, not diluting the happy tone but reinforcing it. Call it corn, hokum, or tosh; claim that it hits below the belt. I won’t disagree. But the mixture of laughter and sentiment works on us like a reflex. And Greg’s response inoculates the movie against seeming wholly naive or cloying. As so often, Hollywood lets us have things, emotionally speaking, both ways.

This response is accomplished through one of the most powerful weapons in the filmmaker’s arsenal. A director can disarm our emotions through a single reaction shot.

Recoil and reaction

The same sort of dynamic is at work in a less lightweight scene. Everybody remembers the moment in Jaws when Sheriff Brody, scooping chum over the side of the Orca, is taken unawares by the arrival of Bruce the shark, bursting out from the background.

But Spielberg, who understands audience response, follows this nifty shot with a topper. In a reverse-angle framing, Brody’s head snaps into the shot with the abruptness of Wile E. Coyote reacting to the Road Runner.

The sudden thrust and halt of Brody’s head sells his stunned facial expression. Our shock at Bruce’s entrance is joined by our uncontrollable urge to giggle at Brody’s cartoonish trajectory and the sheer stupefaction on his face—not fear yet, but rather a recognition of the sheer enormity of the adversary. From here on, his refrain, “We’re gonna need a bigger boat,” will remind us that unlike his shipmates, he has been very nearly head to head with the Great White.

The reaction shot seems like a simple technique. Doesn’t it just spell out or repeat what’s happening? Sometimes, but not always. As we’ve just noticed, it can let the director layer the effect of a scene. Once an action has gained a particular emotional coloring, the reaction shot can add a different tint. The romantic exhilaration of the song in Music and Lyrics is heightened by Greg’s bad-natured gaping. Bruce’s fearsome movement forward is balanced by Brody’s recoil and his comically fixed stare into space.

And sometimes the layering and balancing can take place within the reaction itself. In John Woo’s A Better Tomorrow, Mark Lee enters a restaurant and pretends to be playfully feeling up a woman in the corridor. But he’s actually planning to kill a gangland leader, who’s partying in a room off right. First shot: Mark looks winsomely off after the retreating woman. Cut to the leader celebrating.

    

We might expect that the return to Mark will show his fake expression fade into a sincere one. Instead, Woo simply shows a new expression on Mark’s face as he listens to the party offscreen right.

Eisenstein admired Asian theatre for its “acting without transitions”; here the brief shot of the gangster eliminates the emotional transition taking place on Chow Yun-fat’s face. Mark’s determination is all the more forceful for being so abruptly presented, as if a mask has simply fallen away. 

Mirrors like big faces

Prototypically, the reaction shot shows a face expressing emotion. The technique trades on our ability to grasp expressions, often very quickly. We’ve perfected this skill since birth, and there’s evidence that newborns are pre-wired to detect and respond to certain expressions, especially from mom. Exposure to actual expressions in their daily lives allows children to refine and tune this proclivity. So one part of the reaction-shot technique is a very well-practiced skill that cinema has exploited.

Some recent findings in neuroscience suggest that reactions portrayed onscreen can arouse us deeply. Back in 1995, researchers observed that one sort of nerve cell was activated in a macaque monkey’s brain when the monkey reached for a peanut. No surprise there, since that cortical area is known to be a region involved in planning and initiating bodily movements. But researchers noticed that the same cells fired when the macaque watched another monkey reach for a peanut. Soon researchers were finding clusters of these “mirror neurons” in human beings, strongly suggesting that when we see someone do something, our brain responds as if we were doing it ourselves.

Since facial expressions involve stretching and relaxing facial muscles, it’s possible that mirror neurons play a role in arousing empathy. The mere sight of someone smiling or frowning can trigger some of the same neural events as when we smile or frown ourselves. We’ve all experienced a sort of “motor mimicry” when a radiant smile makes us involuntarily smile too. In one set of experiments, neuroscientists found that people’s mirror neurons responded the same way to film shots of disgusted faces as they did to disgusting smells in real life. Reaction shots may gain their strength from not merely our ability to understand facial expressions but the power of facial expressions to trigger in us an echo of the emotion displayed. With a string of shots of smiling faces, as in the Music and Lyrics concert, our own impulse to smile would have to be put down by force of will.

Of course, characters can display their reactions onscreen without being shown in reaction shots in the modern sense. Many films of the earliest years portray the actors in a long-shot framing of the entire action. Realizing that our eyes will turn to areas of high information content like hands and faces, directors often staged and lit the action for easier pickup of the faces. You can see examples of that in this and this earlier entry.

But the reaction shot as such implies cutting, either breaking down the scene through analytical editing or building up a scene from details (so-called constructive editing). In the 1910s, directors began systematically creating a scene from separate shots. (For more on this development, go here and here.) In this approach, particularly as practiced in Hollywood, a person’s facial expression could become part of an ongoing suite of shots, each concentrating on one item of information. Thanks to cutting, the facial reaction could be underscored, sharpened, and timed for best effect. The suddenness of the cuts to reactions in Music and Lyrics and Jaws is central to their effect.

A reaction shot need not be a close-up, and it need not show only one person. One of the funniest reaction shots in cinema, I think, occurs in The Producers, when Brooks cuts from the “Springtime for Hitler” number to the audience’s frozen, slack-jawed response. This long-shot framing suggests that we should think of the reaction shot as a functional category; it’s a role that various types of shots can fulfill.

Still, the development of the close-up as a technique is tied its function of showing responses. In silent cinema the people’s faces, reacting to the flow of story action, are providing a continual measure of the characters’ states of knowledge and feeling. Entire scenes could be played out as a string of intercut reaction shots, as Kuleshov proved in theory and the Americans showed in practice. In Dreyer’s La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc, as above, the reaction shot is virtually the dominant technique. And point-of-view cutting patterns integrated the isolated close-up reaction shot with images showing what the character was seeing.

With the emergence of sound cinema, you could argue, the reaction shot was briefly demoted. In early talkies, scenes were played in wider shots, and cut-in reactions could, in the hands of inept directors, seem brusque interruptions. But fairly quickly the reaction shot returned, usually as a stressed moment in a scene built out of more distant and neutral framings. Nowadays, with directors using fewer ensemble shots and disinclined to frame actors in prolonged, balanced two-shots, the reaction shot has retained its place in popular moviemaking.

Apart from registering a character’s response, the reaction shot also offers a broader take on the action. Noël Carroll has suggested that the reaction shot can steer us toward the proper way we should construe the whole fictional world we’re witnessing.

For instance, both fantasy fictions and horror stories feature monstrous beings. But in fantasy a troll or griffin might be benevolent. In large part, the way we construe the monster will depend on how the other characters respond. If the hero or heroine looks kindly upon the creature, as in The Golden Compass or Pan’s Labyrinth, then we know we’re not supposed to be horrified. Carroll explains:

A creature like Chewbacca in the space opera Star Wars is just one of the guys, though a creature gotten up in the same wolf outfit, in a film like The Howling, would be regarded with utter revulsion by the human characters. (1)

Reaction shots instruct us in how to respond to the fictional world as a whole.

So robust is the reaction shot that it can stand on its own, if it gets a bit of help from context. In The Third Man, Holly Martins has been trying to defend his old pal Harry Lime from accusations of crooked dealing. When Holly visits a hospital ward, however, he sees what Harry’s bogus penicillin has done to babies. But we don’t; director Carol Reed shows us only Holly’s dispirited reaction.

As Clive James puts it:

The movie’s whole moral structure pivots on that one point. Unless we are convinced that the two men are seeing horrors, there would be no justification for Holly Martins’ delivering the coup de grace to his erstwhile friend.

 

A chase through feral eyes

Reaction shots can modulate across a scene, as the characters’ feelings change. But I’m also impressed by the way a scene can build emotion by developing from flat, affectless reaction shots to more intense ones. A good example is the long climactic highway chase in Road Warrior.

The outlaw gang is pursuing a tanker truck they think is full of gasoline, while Max, the Feral Kid, and a few warriors ride the monster truck. The scene’s stunts, acrobatics, and vehicular mayhem are impressive, but these qualities have been replicated in a lot of movies. What gives the Road Warrior scene a special pungency are the many reaction shots of the characters mounted on the truck. For the most part we’re aligned with them both physically and emotionally, and we are allowed to share their moment-by-moment reactions to each turn of events.

Early in the sequence, when the tanker team knocks out some pursuers, we get unequivocal reactions of jubilation.

But as the marauding gang gains control of the tanker, the reactions of the team turn to glum, nervously comic dismay.

The scene’s emotional graph is traced most thoroughly in the reactions of the Feral Kid. Throughout most of the film he has two expressions—neutral and fierce. Clinging to the side of the truck, he watches the steady progress of the pursuers with mild apprehension. If he started to shriek with fear now, the scene would have nowhere to build to. I think that we’re inclined to read his expressions as signs of his characteristic stoicism.

But when Max starts to dispatch gang members with his shotgun, the Kid lets out a hoot of pleasure. At one point a thug sends an arrow into the cab. No emotional response from Max or the Kid.

Max blows the thug off the roof of the cab. The kid crows.

The Kid’s laugh licenses us to laugh too—at the businesslike crispness of Max’s response and at the sheer infectiousness of the Kid’s admiration. (Our mirror neurons are presumably working overtime.)

The next phase in the arc comes when Max orders the Kid to crawl out onto the truck hood to retrieve the shells. Now the boy’s expression becomes cautious and a little fearful.

He sprawls on the hood and grabs the shells. At that moment Wez pops up, clinging to the front grille, and we get two lunging reaction shots.

If the Feral Kid had shrieked earlier in the scene, these cuts would have less impact. The high point of the drama is matched by the fact that finally, something has happened to scare the bejesus out of this boy. Even Max has lost his cool, wrenching the wheel ferociously.

Soon, in another laugh-inducing reaction, Wez realizes that he is point man in the crash that is soon to come.

You couldn’t ask for a better example of how reaction shots can be more than a one-off tactic. In Music and Lyrics, the quick insert of Greg gave a little jab to the scene. In Road Warrior, the Feral Kid’s changing reactions add an emotional curve to the progression of the chase. Without him, the scene would lack a whole layer of feeling.

There’s much more to say about the reaction shot. We’d want as well to talk about films that withhold information about characters’ reactions—by using enigmatic or ambiguous reaction shots, or by eliminating reaction shots altogether. (Think Antonioni, Hou, Angelopoulos, Tarr, and others.) Maybe I’ll take those matters up in another entry. For now, let’s salute one of the most enjoyable and arousing dimensions of cinematic storytelling. It only seems simple.

(1) Noël Carroll, The Philosophy of Horror; or, Paradoxes of the Heart (New York: Routledge, 1990), 16.

Most-rewatched movies

Shared by Jake Dobkin
Rushmore, American Psycho, Fight Club.

Question of the week over at the Onion AV Club: what movie have you rewatched the most times? My short list: Star Wars, Ocean's 11, The Day After Tomorrow, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure. I've also seen Zoolander a fair number of times but not as many as the others.

(link)

John Madden, football for fans

A nice short appreciation of John Madden and how his insistence on telling and showing people how the game of football is played has had an impact on how the game is played and watched.

Thus, the first tenet of Maddenism: a football game can be understood only by analyzing all its complexity. As he once put it: "Football isn't nuclear physics, but it's not so simple that you can make it simple. It takes some explaining to get it across."

This is also the rare profile that mentions nothing about Madden's bus and fear of flying.

(link)

TIm Wise on Privilege


This is your nation on White Privilege
By Tim Wise

For those who still can’t grasp the concept of white privilege, or who are constantly looking for some easy-to-understand examples of it, perhaps this list will help.

White privilege is when you can get pregnant at seventeen like Bristol Palin and everyone is quick to insist that your life and that of your family is a personal matter, and that no one has a right to judge you or your parents, because “every family has challenges,” even as black and Latino families with similar “challenges” are regularly typified as irresponsible, pathological and arbiters of social decay.

White privilege is when you can call yourself a “fuckin’ redneck,” like Bristol Palin’s boyfriend does, and talk about how if anyone messes with you, you'll “kick their fuckin' ass,” and talk about how you like to “shoot shit” for fun, and still be viewed as a responsible, all-American boy (and a great son-in-law to be) rather than a thug.

White privilege is when you can attend four different colleges in six years like Sarah Palin did (one of which you basically failed out of, then returned to after making up some coursework at a community college), and no one questions your intelligence or commitment to achievement, whereas a person of color who did this would be viewed as unfit for college, and probably someone who only got in in the first place because of affirmative action.

White privilege is when you can claim that being mayor of a town smaller than most medium-sized colleges, and then Governor of a state with about the same number of people as the lower fifth of the island of Manhattan, makes you ready to potentially be president, and people don’t all piss on themselves with laughter, while being a black U.S. Senator, two-term state Senator, and constitutional law scholar, means you’re “untested.”


White privilege is being able to say that you support the words “under God” in the pledge of allegiance because “if it was good enough for the founding fathers, it’s good enough for me,” and not be immediately disqualified from holding office--since, after all, the pledge was written in the late 1800s and the “under God” part wasn’t added until the 1950s--while believing that reading accused criminals and terrorists their rights (because, ya know, the Constitution, which you used to teach at a prestigious law school requires it), is a dangerous and silly idea only supported by mushy liberals.


White privilege is being able to be a gun enthusiast and not make people immediately scared of you.


White privilege is being able to have a husband who was a member of an extremist political party that wants your state to secede from the Union, and whose motto was “Alaska first,” and no one questions your patriotism or that of your family, while if you're black and your spouse merely fails to come to a 9/11 memorial so she can be home with her kids on the first day of school, people immediately think she’s being disrespectful.


White privilege is being able to make fun of community organizers and the work they do--like, among other things, fight for the right of women to vote, or for civil rights, or the 8-hour workday, or an end to child labor--and people think you’re being pithy and tough, but if you merely question the experience of a small town mayor and 18-month governor with no foreign policy expertise beyond a class she took in college--you’re somehow being mean, or even sexist.


White privilege is being able to convince white women who don’t even agree with you on any substantive issue to vote for you and your running mate anyway, because all of a sudden your presence on the ticket has inspired confidence in these same white women, and made them give your party a “second look.”


To read the entire piece and comments go to The Red Room

Photo of the Day: I Scream, You Scream

From Serious Eats

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Photograph from balsamia on Flickr

Don't let that melted ice cream go to waste—it can be repurposed as an ephemeral piece of artwork! Painting a version of Edvard Munch's The Scream is especially appropriate. [via Swiss Miss]

Related
Photo of the Day: Nat King Cole Slaw
Latte Printer Art

Menomena @ the Independent tonight

As much as I love Menomena, it's a shame I'm not going to make it out to their show at the Independent here in San Francisco tonight.

Let's watch their video for "Evil Bee" off of Friend and Foe:

While we're at it, let's watch the Muppets' "Menomena" song, because it really never gets old:

Doo-doo, doo doo doo.

● The new Microsoft ads

After a couple of teasers starring Jerry Seinfeld, Microsoft is airing some new ads that take Apple's "I'm a PC" out into the real world. So instead of John Hodgman's dorky PC character (who is parodied in one of the new ads), they've got all sorts of people -- basketball players, actresses, scientists, fashion designers, etc. -- proudly declaring "I'm a PC". As Michael Sippey mentions, the ads do communicate a "message of joy and abundance and widespread use of Personal Computing", but they're not "great".

I briefly worked for a design firm in the late 90s that did a lot of advertising work. One of the hard and fast rules in the office -- which was taken from a book written by a successful ad man whose name I cannot recall -- was that if a company was #1 in a certain space, their advertising should never ever mention the competition, not even in an oblique fashion. And even if a company was #2, they should do the same and act as if they were #1.

That's the problem with Microsoft's ads. They're still #1 and the bigger company, but by referencing Apple's successful ad campaign, they're acting like Apple is #1. (John Gruber made this same point the other day.) The ads fail because they serve to remind people that Apple comes up with good ideas that Microsoft then takes and shapes into something that so-called "normal people" can use or understand. Except that this isn't 1993. With the iPod, iPhone, iMac, OS X, the Apple Stores, and the iTunes Store, Apple has their finger firmly on the pulse of what normal people want and Microsoft's recent attempts (the Zune, Vista) to keep up by emulating Apple have failed. If MS had created the "I'm a PC" message on their own, the ads would be great, but these copy-and-paste ads lack soul and are merely "eh".

What's interesting is that with the I'm a Mac/I'm a PC ads, Apple mentions Microsoft explicitly, over and over, proving the old adage that rules are made to be broken. What works in Apple's favor is that they are the #2 company and were clever about how they attacked #1. Microsoft's hamfisted ads are almost saying to Apple, "nuh-uh, my mom thinks I'm cool" while the image of Hodgman's frumpy PC is hard to shake and makes Windows seem lame without being overly insulting about it.

Better To Ask Forgiveness

Red Sweater: “It’s widely expected that the iPhone developer community will inherit this charming aspect of the Mac developer community: its insatiable desire to share techniques and code, making us all more productive and more capable of creating top-notch applications.”

Blogging Soon Elba [Flickr]

Hugger Industries posted a photo:

Blogging Soon Elba

--
Sent from bMobile -- please excuse terseness.

New NAMAC Website Launches!

We invite you to check out NAMAC's new website! With a fresh new look and feel, many areas of the site have been redesigned to nurture the growth of NAMAC's online knowledge network. Here is a brief overview of some of the new areas and features of our site: Things You Can Do Promote Your Events and Organization NAMAC Members' latest posts now appear on our front page as well as in our expanded Member Events & Announcements section. Announcements from NAMAC Members are also fed in to our new Face of the Field section, which highlights the latest activity from NAMAC members.

All site users (including Non-members) can post job announcements directly to NAMAC's Job Bank. Share Your Ideas Once logged in with a new user account, all site users can comment on existing Articles in our new Idea Exchange. NAMAC Members have the added ability to submit their own Articles to the Idea Exchange. This is a valuable way to share your ideas with a national audience of fellow media arts supporters. Be sure to link back to your website in the comments and Articles to increase your own organization's marketing/web presence! Share Your Favorites Found an interesting Article, Page or resource on namac.org? Now you can forward them to important constituents, embed them directly to your blog, MySpace or Facebook profile, or submit them to your social bookmarking service like Digg or del.icio.us. Just look for the little green ShareThis () link below posts on the site to begin sharing. Submit Your RSS Feeds to Us - NAMAC Members only Does your organization have an RSS feed? Automate getting your important messages out to fellow media arts advocates and fans. Just look for the RSS icon (RSS icon) on your site and send the URL of your feed over to us. We'll make sure the latest posts in the feed appear on your organization's profile on our site.

Seven Lessons I've Learned About Startups from Drag Racing

I haven’t actually been drag racing myself. Rather, I’ve been a casual watcher of so-called “nitro-class” drag racing since it is one of the sports offered regularly on ESPNHD on many lazy Sunday afternoons. Watching nitro-class drag racing on television allows one to only gloss the depths of this sport. One must actually go to a race in person to understand the lessons nitro-class drag racing offers entrepreneurs in the software business.

1. A startup is like nothing else. Be prepared for the shock (and awe).

When I heard on one televised race broadcast that the NHRA (National Hot Rod Association) would be coming to Infineon Raceway, the race track in the county (Sonoma) just north of me, I bought a ticket. I drove up on a Sunday, eliminations day. The crowd was a NASCAR crowd and vast. I’d bought a seat that was 40-50 yards away from the starting line. The opening ceremonies included what we call in the software world “booth babes” and all the racers came to the stage to be interviewed. Then the stage sort of parted in two and two “top fuel” cars pushed forward and did a burn out. I’ve linked to representative video:

My head and chest cavity nearly exploded from the noise and vibrations. As I looked around I noticed nearly everyone had some sort of ear protection, the kind worn on the tarmac around commercial jets. The top fuel cars rolled back to the start line, went through a liturgy of staging, second staging, foot just off the accelerator, brake down, clutch about to be engaged, the racers’ eyes on a pole of light that finally goes green and: oh my God.

The best technology demo I’ve seen ever. These people had created something so powerful, so magical. My senses were excited and thrilled while at the same time being destroyed by the power of the cars themselves. This must be what Dante described when the purified souls ascend from the mountain of purgatory through a curtain of fire into paradise. And if you think I’m being over the top, I literally was covered in tiny black specks of burnt rubber that had been thrown into the air. I went through that fire.

The lesson? You’ll never do anything as direct and meaningful (professionally) as to experience and persevere in a startup. Your hands are on the controls. You get to create, shape, mold, direct. The people I’ve known to be unsuccessful in startups are those that wait for someone to tell them what to do. No, release the clutch, press down hard on the accelerator, explode off the line. When you’ve done the quarter mile you can huddle with the team to see what needs to be adjusted.

2. When you race, you move forward by winning. But you just have to win. You don’t have to kill.

I have only been a fan of the sport for less than a year, but it seems most races end with either one car exploding (blown cylinders, some catastrophic mechanical failure, lost of control and into the wall, etc.) or the race is down to the nose. We’ll deal with the first result in lesson three.

The down-to-the-wire result is what interests me. I think the same holds true for most startups. They either blow up (sometimes spectacularly) or they find themselves in long competitive slogs of back and forth down to the wire. The temptation in these kinds of races is to watch the competition, but that is a mistake. To many things are happening at a startup (or should be) for you to pay any attention to anything else but your result. If the machine is working (and it doesn’t always), the element that will win is your performance. But don’t push too hard or you might push your machine to the breaking point. This is the toughest skill to attain in a startup. I sometimes like to talk about it as “knowing the fire that’s going to kill you” versus “the fire that’s far away on the hill”.

3. Do everything you can to do one simple thing well.

There are two key components to top fuel drag racing. One is the performance of the driver, which is predicated on the other key component: the performance of the machine. In drag racing the one thing that the team does well, if at all, is to get the machine down the quarter mile track as quickly as possible without blowing up. When it works, it’s an amazing demonstration of technology. But it doesn’t always work. There are almost always some problems and the race quickly comes to its three second close. Things begin to fail. But that’s OK, you did one thing well and got the machine down the track.

How does a three second race have relevance for a startup which, haven’t we always heard, is not a spring but a marathon? Well, a startup is like a marathon in as much as you won’t get to an exit quickly. We’ll talk about this is lesson seven. But a startup is a series of sprints. Over and over and over. You have to be willing to recognize and respond to the many different opportunities that will come in the door. The is called execution. Do it quickly, increase your turnover.

4. It’s the hidden work that will make you successful. What’s going on in the pits?

It’s OK to experience explosions, too. I have noticed in top fuel drag racing even the winners sometimes limp to the finish line pieces of metal flying every which way from their machines. Now the hidden, but ultimately critical, phase of the competition begins. They have to push or tow that exploded machine off the track back to the pits where, according to the rules of the NHRA, they have 75 minutes to put it all back together for the next race. I don’t think I’ve ever got free from a 20 minute oil change place in under 75 minutes let along rebuilding the engine. This is something I clued into late in my visit to Infineon Raceway. About 55 minutes after the last race, the broken machines begin to roar, or more like throwing thunder bolts, off in the distance, off in the pits. It’s exciting: an explosive petrochemical call to the fans that they are going to see that machine fly down the track at over 300 miles per hour once again.

Startups have there pits and they are equally critical to a startup’s success. First, invest in customer support. The temptation is too skimp because it is not sexy (product development) or it is, on the other hand, painful and something to be avoided. I know I’ll get comments criticizing Joyent’s customer support. And that would be fair. We’ve had some spectacular explosions! But we’ve continued to invest in better and broader support. Customers will recognize this and repay you. Second, invest in metrics. Measure everything you can. This is how you know what to rebuild in the engine. Make measurement the operating mantra of the organization. Each person in your startup should have a small list of metrics for which she is responsible. And these metrics should roll up into one or two measurements the whole company can follow.

5. You don’t need VCs. You need sponsors. Sponsors are your customers/advertisers.

There’s been lots of conversation recently about whether to raise money from venture capital funds. It is important to make a distinction between VCs and investors. Venture capital is a type of model of investment you’ll rarely, if ever want to involve your business with. I think the drag racers have it right. For the most part they have sponsors, and when a racer wins they pimp there sponsors. That’s the ad-supported model. But is a customer supported model, not a VC Warbucks model.

What do you need VC money for? Equipment? Software licenses? Big salaries? You should be able to get a product done for sale within six months. So raise $100,000 to do that. And if the product doesn’t sell, well, that’s a catastrophic explosion. Try again.

Joyent operates many more than 2000 CPUs in our cloud and we’ve never raised VC. We scrapped. We used credit cards. Jason sweet-talked lenders. We got footholds and we exploited them. Yes, we have some initial investors, but they’re not VCs. We’ve talked to VCs. But it always turns out they want to push us this way or that. Besides, they don’t understand our passion: we build something called an Accelerator for paying customers, and we improve that when we experience explosions.

6. Join a team of racers. Partner with companies to expand your reach.

Before getting to the end, I want mention that most top fuel drag racers are part of bigger teams. This allows drivers to share resources, finds sponsors, cross-sponsor. For example, John Force Racing is a boot-strapped, very successful racing team.

For startups, the lesson is to partner. Not just with other startups, but also with bigger companies. This activity can be difficult, but must be the principle focus of a senior person at your startup. Fortunately, bigger partners are easier to get to than ever. They are watching blogs, conferences, and many other channels. Speak to them as you speak about your passion.

7. If you think drag racing is a lifestyle, you’re wrong. Startups are about a good exit (winning).

While I agree with David that startups should avoid VC, I don’t agree with the end-game of building a lifestyle business. Think like a drag racer. Win the race. Win the trophy. That’s an exit. Joyent has investors, and they want an exit. 37signals has investors. I’m sure Mr. Bezos wants an exit. Target your exit and achieve it.

The lifestyle? That’s being a drag racer. Hold the clutch just right, foot above the accelerator, breathe, watching the pole of lights, yellow, green. Go. At 300 miles per hour. Push the machine back to the pits to get ready to do it again. Next week onto another track, another startup. It’s got to be great.

More Scenes from Park(ing) Day 2008 New York City

I biked from Park Slope to Chelsea this morning and managed to visit eight Park(ing) spots along the way. Here's what I found...

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Four strangers engaged in an intense Scrabble game at the busy corner of Atlantic Ave. and Court St. in Downtown Brooklyn, my first stop.

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The Park(ing) spot on Montague St. in Brooklyn Heights was jam packed with teenagers from St. Anne's on their lunch break. These two played Connect Four.

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The Montague St. spot was designed to accommodate all ages...

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...and all species.

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In Manhattan, this Park(ing) spot next to Noguchi's Red Cube on Broadway and Liberty offered fine halal food and a front row seat to the global financial metldown.

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In Soho, on Thompson between Prince and Spring, DEGW's "City in a Box" spot was exceptionally pleasant.

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Over on LaGuardia Place, a block away from NYU, the owner of Washington Square Wine and Liquor argued with these Park(ers) from the Center for Architecture that the loss of this parking spot was hurting his business. Forget that only six percent of Soho shopping trips are done by car. I didn't have the heart to tell this upstanding merchant that if he's having trouble selling liquor on a Friday afternoon in the middle of a college campus, Park(ing) Day is probably the least of his problems.  

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There was less controversy on Sixth Ave. near W. 4th St. where NYU Wagner School students sunned themselves, tossed beanbags and provided cool drinks to passersby.

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Christine Berthet and Ian Dutton (standing and talking at left) represented Manhattan Community Boards 2 and 4 over on Eighth Ave. and 14th St. That's Ian's wife Shea on the bench with the incredible red hair.

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And explaining all of this to New Yorkers via NY1 was Streeswiki producer Lily Bernheimer at The Open Planning Project's super-high concept "Open Source City Park" spot on 8th Ave. and 15th St.

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Keira Knightly's Got a Brand Old Bag!

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We're obsessed! Keira Knightley has been seen all about Gotham donning a very Annie Hall rust Prada messenger sack. While her beloved bag may no longer be on the market, to procure a similar vintagey accountement try the Marc Jacobs flower shoulder bag, Prada nappa ruffled tote, or Tila March papillion shoulder bag on for size.

Brazilian Graffiti Writers Bum Rush Street Art Exhibit

pix2.jpg Just like here in NYC, there appears to be some friction between street artists and graffiti writers in Sao Paulo, Brazil. But instead of just going over their work in the street, a crew of vandals took things straight to the gallery:
"Last week a group of 30 Pixadores stormed the Choque Cultural Gallery in protest against the "marketing, institutionalization and domestication of Street Art" by the galleries and media."

While some might deride this type of action and even go so far as apologizing for posting a legitimate news item, others understand that the very thing that fuels graffiti and sets it apart from virtually every other art form out there is chaos. And even if you don't like, best respect it. More images of South American Dada in action.
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pix3.jpg |StreetArtPussies|

Not Ironic

From my colleague Chris Dixon at Hunch Inc., Not Ironic. Rain on your wedding day, it turns out, is Not Ironic.

Polls: Ohio Again Tied; Palin Approval Plunges

Here's a bit of interesting polling data from around the Web. The new CNN poll of polls finds virtual dead heats in Ohio and Indiana:

According to averages of several recent surveys from both states, Obama holds a slim 1 point lead in Ohio (46-45 percent) and McCain holds a small 2 point lead in Indiana (47-45 percent).

The Ohio poll of polls consists of three surveys: Big Ten Battleground (September 14-17), CNN/Time/ORC (September 14-16), and Marist (September 11-15). The Indiana general election poll of polls also consists of three surveys: Big Ten Battleground (September 14-17), CNN/Time/ORC (September 14-16), and Indianapolis Star/WTHR (September 14-16).

One of the grimmer consequences of McCain's post-convention bounce had been the spate of polls showing him with a decided edge in Ohio. Now it appears to have slipped into a dead heat, with Obama up one on average.

Meanwhile, however, McCain gains in CNN's newly revised battleground state map:

CNN now estimates that if the presidential election were held today, Barack Obama would capture 223 electoral votes, to McCain's 200, leaving 115 electoral votes would still be up for grabs. The 23 electoral-vote-lead for Obama is down from a 44-point estimated lead he held in CNN's previous electoral map. Both men are well short of the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House.

And this is a real doozy: The DailyKos/Research 2000 daily tracking poll finds that Sarah Palin's approval ratings are plunging with astonishing speed.

Can You Spare Us A Minute?

Let me ask you a favor. It helps TPM bring you more breaking videos you want to see, costs you nothing, and takes only ten or fifteen seconds. Please take a moment, go to our TPMtv page at Youtube and subscribe by clicking on the yellow 'subscribe' button on the upper left.




Many of you are fans of our four day a week TPMtv episodes. Starting in early October, TPMtv will be moving from the 'Veracifier' channel on Youtube to our TPMtv channel. So you'll want to make sure to subscribe to TPMtv to continue getting updated.

So if I haven't already convinced you, please take a moment and go over to the TPMtv Youtube page and subscribe to our TPMtv channel so you won't miss a single episode.

Highlightin' the Bogosity

We've got more on the pay cut that Sarah Palin claims she took as mayor. Bottom line is that she was still making more when her term ended than when it began. Greg Sargent has the details.

Confirmed: Despite Claim, Palin's Pay As Mayor Of Wasilla Went Up

I've just obtained some records from the city of Wasilla that confirm that Sarah Palin's pay as mayor went up, despite her claim that she took a pay cut.

One thing Palin has frequently claimed as proof of her reform credentials is that she "took a pay cut" as Wasilla mayor. As I reported here yesterday, however, local Alaska press clippings seemed to show that this is only true in a very narrow sense.

The clippings indicate that while she did pass a pay-cut ordinance upon taking office, her pay actually went up during her overall tenure.

Now we have records from the city of Wasilla that confirm this. Here is the trajectory of her pay, according to the records:

Upon taking office on 10/14/1996: $64.200

01/01/1997: Pay was cut from $64,200 to $61,200

06/01/1998: Pay rose from $61,200 to $68,000

07/01/1999: Pay cut again from $68,000 to $66,000

10/01/1999: Pay rose from $66,000 to $68,000

From late 1999 until the end of her mayoralty in 2002, records show, her pay stayed at $68,000 -- higher than the $64,200 it was when she started out, and significantly higher than the $61,200 she initially cut it to.

The records don't explain the mechanisms by which the pay shifts happened. As best as we can determine, the cuts were engineered by Palin herself through some sort of executive mechanism, and the raises were City Council-mandated hikes.

What's the upshot? Well, Palin's claim that she "took a pay cut" as mayor is true in a narrow sense. She came in and took a pay cut that she engineered herself.

But in a broader sense, the claim is an oversimplification that borders on misleading. The bottom line is that whatever her intentions, over the course of her mayoralty Palin's pay went up thousands of dollars and stayed higher for years, money which she presumably kept. (If any proof emerges that she donated it to charity or channeled it back into city coffers in some other way, we'll happily update.)

This isn't another Bridge to Nowhere. But it does fit a pattern here, where Palin burnishes her reform credentials by describing intentions as realities or otherwise boiling down the record into easily-digestible sound-bites that at best are half-truths, as this latest one has now proven to be.

The McCain campaign has declined to comment on the pay hikes.

We'll bring you the records themselves soon.

Late Update: The documentation is here. It's what the city of Wasilla's Human Resources Generalist will send to anyone who asks for documentation of Palin's pay.

Kid-Friendly Park(ing): Fingerpainting on Cortelyou

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These pics, courtesy of Sustainable Flatbush, come from the Park(ing) spot on Brooklyn's Cortelyou Road, where fingerpaint and crayons are all the rage.

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Photos: Sustainable Flatbush/Flickr

Cupcake Truck Update: Not Only Is It Real...

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Center: selling cupcakes out of a box on the street; Right: the cupcake truck in question

There's been a bit of chatter on the internet that the new cupcakes and cookies truck, Cassie's Cupcakes, spotted by our correspondent the other day might be a ruse. There have been no other sightings, no further evidence: "A part of me wants to believe the original photo was doctored, to crazy up this CupcakeTruckGate a bit," posits Serious Eats.

Let us say for starters, we just don't have that kind of time on our hands. But what we do have is some additional evidence to share, some info we failed to drop the other day.

The truck had two employees decked out in cupcake shirts (and a gal with a video camera) on the street, working the corners on Spring and Broadway, selling cupcakes and cookies out of boxes. So we might not just be dealing with a new sweets truck, but a new truck with an unorthodox and aggressive approach. Or, of course, it could be an elaborate high school fund raiser.
· Truck Report: New Sweet Truck on the Scene [~E~]

Observing Ramadan

Muslim faithful throughout the world are currently observing the holy month of Ramadan. Observant Muslims participate in fasting (sawm), one of the five pillars of their faith, this entire Lunar month (this year it extends from September 1st to the 30th). Eating, drinking, smoking and sexual activity is prohibited from dawn until sunset, when the fast is broken with the evening meal called Iftar. Local customs define varying traditions, including differing types of food used to break the daily fast. The fasting is meant to teach a person patience, humility and sacrifice, to set aside time to ask forgiveness, practice self-restraint, and pray for guidance in the future. (35 photos total)

Symbolizing the faith of Islam, the crescent moon is seen at sunset on top of the Faisal Mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

Q&A with the developers of Koi Pond

Filed under: , , , , , ,

Macworld has published a chat with the devs of one of the much-loved Koi Pond. Of course, the weird thing about Koi Pond is that it's more of a nice iPhone demo than anything else -- but just the same, it's cool to hear from designer Bill Trost and engineer Brandon Bogle.

They used to work on MMOs for Sony (and now work with a new company called Trion, also developing MMO games), and bought their first Macs specifically to try out the iPhone development program. The program was designed as a water simulator, and the koi were added later (as opposed to many of the devs we've heard from so far, these guys were actually concerned that their app was worth less than $1). And the little stories about feedback on the app are really interesting -- apparently a therapist has used it with Alzheimer's patients as a quick form of therapy.

Unfortunately, they won't mention new projects, but they do give some good advice to other iPhone developers: don't consider the unique, device-specific functions of the iPhone secondary. We'd have to agree -- there are several ways the accelerometer and touchscreen can tweak even the most traveled genres and forms of video games and software. Just recreating old Palm and PDA apps isn't good enough -- iPhone-specific apps like Koi Pond are what will really make a splash on the App Store.
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Sergey Brin's blog

Google founder Sergey Brin has started a blog. (via waxy)

(link)

It’s Park(ing) Day All Over America

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This morning, street reclaimers across the country are settling into their Park(ing) spaces -- more than 450 spots in 80 cities, according to the latest count. For our readers outside New York City, check out the Trust for Public Land's Google map to find a spot near you. TPL also has a great round-up of Park(ing) Day media coverage and the beginnings of a Flickr pool.

New Yorkers: Here's the link again to the map of Park(ing) locations, and don't forget to tag your photos "streetsblog" when you upload them to Flickr.

Happy Park(ing)!

Soccer on Shea Stadium's Hallowed Ground?

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This story has been popping up all summer...

Supposedly, New York, The Wilpons and Major League Soccer have been discussing bringing a second team to the city. There were originally reports that the franchise would play in Citi Field but the Mets quashed that rumor in a press release.

This week, the story has the Mets possibly building a soccer stadium...on the site of Shea Stadium. This seems silly for many reasons. In no particular order:
  •  Don't the Wilpons need that space for parking?
  • Isn't there a giant park just over Roosevelt Avenue where a soccer stadium could be built?
  • Wouldn't the home run apple look funny in a soccer stadium?
  • ISN'T THERE ALREADY A STADIUM WHERE THEY ARE TALKING ABOUT BUILDING A NEW STADIUM?
That last point has me thinking...could Shea Stadium possibly survive after all? Maybe they could just reconfigure her for soccer. It's done everything else, from Popes to Pop concerts. The more I think about it, the better I like this idea. I bet I could even afford a partial-season plan for the new soccer team.

Here's the story from the Queens Chronicle:

More than 25 years after the last Jets game played at Shea Stadium, Queens might finally get to see a different kind of football — namely, soccer.

In the last couple of months, Major League Soccer officials, Councilman Hiram Monserrate (D-Corona) and a particularly rabid bunch of fans touted the idea of Queens pro-soccer, played approximately where the Mets’ pitching mound is today.

“The league is looking for football fans and there are plenty of those who don’t want to go to New Jersey to see it,” said Nick Laveglia, the president of Borough Boys Soccer Club.
  
Laveglia met with Mets’ owner Fred Wilpon after getting the backing of Monserrate, who represents a heavily-Latino council district, with plenty of rabid soccer fans.
  
And according to a report last Thursday from the mayor’s office, the Mets are seriously considering the purchase of a Major League Soccer club — with the first corner kicks and visits by Los Angeles Galaxy’s soccer superstar, David Beckham, perhaps starting as early as 2011.

 With the details remaining sketchy, the plan generally has any proposed soccer stadium near Shea Stadium, which will be demolished after the Mets move to Citi Field, scheduled to open next season.
  
Currently, the MLS has 14 teams in the U.S. and Canada, including the Galaxy, which recently signed Beckham, the international soccer sensation with the famous corner kick, to a $600 million, four-year contract.
  
The proposed Queens team would be the second pro soccer club in the tri-state area, joining the New York Red Bulls, who play at Giants Stadium in New Jersey.
  
However, any kickoff in Flushing Meadows is still far from being a done deal. According to Bloomberg News, discussions between the league and the Mets were only in the preliminary stages.
  
But league officials seemed favorably inclined to give the New York area another pro soccer team. “A second team in New York would provide a true local rivalry for the Red Bulls and increase the overall popularity of the team nationally,” said MLS vice president, Dan Courtemanche.

    

September 18, 2008

these are good

I think the Seinfeld + Gates long form ad was a lure to get us warmed up for these new "I'm a PC" spots. Which I think are great. Leaving aside operating system and brand preference for a minute, what's works with these ads is the message of joy and abundance and widespread use of Personal Computing.

I use a Mac these days, but I'm also a PC. And I wear glasses.

SquirrelFish Extreme

Surfin’ Safari: “Just three months ago, we announced SquirrelFish, a major revamp of our JavaScript engine featuring a high-performance bytecode interpreter. Today we’d like to announce the next generation of our JavaScript engine — SquirrelFish Extreme (or SFX for short). SquirrelFish Extreme uses more advanced techniques, including fast native code generation, to deliver even more JavaScript performance.”

Synecdoche, New York trailer

The trailer for Synecdoche, New York, the first film directed by Charlie Kaufman, who wrote Being John Malkovich, Adaptation, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. A.O. Scott liked it at Cannes. The film will be out in limited release (NY & LA?) on Oct 24. Say sih-NECK-duh-kee...kinda like Schenectady. (via crazymonk)

Update: I removed the embedded video...I didn't know it came with all that extra cruft around it.

(link)

A New Hope

LukStarwarspolitics I'd've thought for sure they'd make a "Help us, Obama-wan, you're our only hope" joke, but this is still pretty good. (Thanks to Barb for the link.)

Share Almost Any Blog Post in Google Reader

Shared by Adam Rice
Boom!
Google Reader's sharing feature is very cool, but it's limited to your subscriptions. If you find an interesting post and you want to share it with your friends without subscribing to the feed, Google Reader is not very helpful. On a closer look, you'll notice that Google Reader lets you preview any feed without subscribing to it if you go to this page:

http://www.google.com/reader/view/feed/FEED_URL

But it's not that easy to find the feed and build that URL every time you want to share a post. And even if you do that, you'll still have to find the post.

So I created a bookmarklet that automates the process: it finds the feed and creates a different URL that tells Google Reader to search for the page's title in that feed. Hopefully, the first result is the page you want to share.

Here's how to add the bookmarklet to your browser (because of a Google Reader bug, this doesn't work in Opera and Safari):

1. Make sure the link toolbar is visible in your browser. You can enable it if you go to the View menu in your browser, click on Toolbars and check:
* Bookmarks Toolbar in Firefox
* Links in Internet Explorer

2. Don't click on the link below! For Firefox, right-click on the link, select "Bookmark this Link" and choose "Bookmarks Toolbar" from the dropdown. For Internet Explorer, right-click on the link, select "Add to Favorites", ignore the security warning and choose "Links" from the list of folders.

Share in Google Reader

Note that you'll be able to share pages only from sites that have feeds and only if you go to the blog post, not to the blog's homepage. If the post is very recent, it's likely that Google Reader didn't index it yet. If the page's title is not identical to the post's title, select the title before clicking on the bookmarklet.




Credits: the bookmarklet contains code from Google Reader's subscription bookmarklet; based on a idea by Louis Gray.

Google in one more language

As we've written before, one of our goals is to enable everyone using Google to find the information they want easily, no matter what language they speak.

It recently came to our attention that Google was not accessible to a large, influential, and notoriously quick-tempered community: Pirates. As of today we are proud and rather relieved to announce that Google Search is available in Pirate.

As you can see from this graph of the popularity of related searches from past years, we have reason to believe that this might be a timely addition:


If ye're a gentleman or lady o' fortune yerself — or just want t' talk like one — ye c'n set Pirate as yer preferred lingo usin' th' Likes an' Dislikes page, or cast yer deadlights on an example.

Posted by Cap'n Pam Greenebearde

Middle schoolers with Google might actually know more

Ladies and gentlemen, this is the candidate who comes to us billed as knowing "more about energy than probably anyone else in the United States of America". Stunning, really.

Fillintheblank Prospectus

We’re looking to grow.

With the best of breed in Baseball, Football, Basketball, and Politics, we’re looking for the next Prospectus. There are growth opportunities in sports analysis and we’d like to know if you think you’re the right partner for us. If you’re a writer focused on unique, entertaining analysis of a sport that we don’t cover, we’d like to hear from you. We have our eyes on a couple sports now, but convince us that we should look into your passion.

CricketProspectus? UEFAProspectus? IndyCarProspectus? We’re listening … unless you try to sell us on that dumb idea the Manning brothers are working on. We have three areas we’d like to work on next, but you might convince us otherwise. Email inquiries to Will Carroll via this site. I’m not hard to find.

The Real Kingman Speaks of Shea Stadium

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I missed this: The NY Daily News had a nice "where are they now" piece on Dave Kingman (Thanks, Rob, for the note!). It's hard to recognize him when he's smiling but that's Kingman, one of my boyhood heroes. Too bad he won't be at the last game at Shea Stadium either...

The man they called Kong and Sky King is laughing over the phone as he drives around his native Lake Tahoe. The subject is his golf game and, Dave Kingman says, there’s no comparison between his skill on the links and the days when he was one of baseball’s most-feared sluggers.

“I’m a horrible golfer,” Kingman says. “Let’s just say it was easier to hit a moving ball than one standing still.”

Kingman, who will turn 60 in December, is enjoying a quiet retirement in Lake Tahoe. He has two kids in college and one in high school and owns a local tennis club. He spends time hunting and fishing and “just being outdoors…I’m a homebody.

“Lake Tahoe is very quiet, far from the big city life. Very relaxing.”

While Kingman won’t make the final game at Shea later this month, he says he still keeps up with the Mets and other teams he played for, particularly the Giants, A’s and Cubs. He watches the A’s and Giants on local television regularly. Kingman was such a powerful slugger in his day that even his popups were events. He hit 442 home runs, 35th all-time and had seven seasons of 30 or more homers. He hit 154 homers for the Mets and four for the Yankees in eight games in 1977, when he played for four teams. He had a .236 career average and struck out 1,816 times, 10th all-time.

“I enjoyed the 17 years I played,” he says. “Unfortunately, I wasn’t on a championship team, but met a lot of friends. I enjoyed the six years on the Mets. I’m very happy and very content.

“I can’t imagine making a living any other way than hitting a baseball. When you take a good cut and pitcher and hitter alike know where it’s going, that’s the joy of being a power hitter.”

Kingman admits he wasn’t “as disciplined as the guys today. I admire these guys. I was a free-swinger.”Kingman wouldn’t discuss the role that performance-enhancing drugs might have played in the success of today’s sluggers. “I’m so distant from that,” he says. “It was not prevalent in my time, so I’d just as soon not talk about it. My last year with the A’s (1986), I played with (Jose) Canseco and (Mark) McGwire and I admired watching them, seeing how far they could hit the ball. McGwire came from my alma mater (USC).

“They were great power hitters. I’ll leave that right there.”


Walking desks

Some people now work at walking desks, standing-height desks outfitted with treadmills.

To the uninitiated, work-walking sounds like a recipe for distraction. But devotees say the treadmill desks increase not only their activity but also their concentration. "I thought it was ridiculous until I tried it," said Ms. Krivosha, 49, a partner in the law firm of Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand. Ms. Krivosha said it is tempting to become distracted during conference calls, but when she is exercising, she listens more intently. "Walking just takes care of the A.D.D. part," she said.

One work-walker lost 16 pounds doing two hours of work-walking over a two-month period.

(link)

Purple Pedals

We first noticed Flickr’s Moblogging, Geotagging Bike a few weeks ago, when I spotted it in Dunstan’s photostream. Since then, Yahoo! has launched a related site and Lifehacker details how the bikes work (PDF). The bike is an Electra and built by Uncommon Projects.

purple_bike.jpg

We’ve discussed bikes and mobile technology before and dig what Yahoo! and crew has built.

We hope the Purple Bikes generate even more buzz, pushing innovation. Next month, we’re back in Taipei for another Intel Developer Forum, and are looking for the latest mobile devices. Maybe we’ll see one during a Mobile Social?

Ordering an Espresso at the U of Michigan Library

is now an entirely different process. The University of Michigan is the first university to have installed the Espresso Book Machine, also termed “the ATM of books,” in one of its libraries. The wait time is about the same, but you’re ordering books now instead of Italian coffee, and the product price is a bit higher—averaging at 10 bucks a pop. But 10 bucks for a printed and bound book that is made in seven minutes is a pretty good deal, especially when you’ve got almost 2 million books to choose from. How is this possible? Or even legal?

The University of Michigan libraries have nearly 2 million books digitized for on demand printing, in addition to thousands of more books from the Open Content Alliance and other sources. But trust me when I say that these books are all very legal; in fact, they have been out of copyright for 85 years, or more. As a result, they are in the public domain, available for anyone to print, read, and repurpose—for free. The espresso version is simply covering printing costs. Compared to the average price of books these days, especially textbooks, ten bucks is pocket change. Online sites like Lulu.com already offer print versions of CC licensed works for cheap—remember the OER Handbook for Educators? It’s only 19.99 for 284 pages. Of course, ordering online is a bit slower than ordering from the EBM. 

Once the machine is installed, it is capable of being connected to other digital collections not limited to the U of M’s. Props to the University of Michigan for yet again leading the way on copyright issues.

While we’re on the topic, the Open Content Alliance has the similar goal of “building a digital archive of global content for universal access”. The Open Content Alliance is “a group of cultural, technology, nonprofit, and governmental organizations from around the world that [helps to] build a permanent archive of multilingual digitized text and multimedia content. [It] was conceived by the Internet Archive and Yahoo! in early 2005 as a way to offer broad, public access to a rich panorama of world culture.”

ccLearn is very excited to attend this year’s Internet Archive conference in San Francisco where an OCA meeting will take place in October. The theme for this year’s conference is “Using Digital Collections.”

Thanks to Peter Suber and The Wired Campus for alerting us to the EBM. You can even watch a video of how the machine works.

256MB Joyent Accelerator

I’m pleased to say we’ve lowered priced our developer Joyent Accelerator (256MB). It now sells for US$199/year or roughly US$16.50 per month. What can you do with an Accelerator like this? Anything and everything. It’s a great environment for building the next great Facebook application. We have had customer push more than 20 million pages a month on this level of Accelerator. Please visit Joyent.com for more information.

Interview digs into iPhone "Koi Pond craze"

Koi Pond is a beautiful iPhone and iPod touch application that does nothing but let you interact with a pond full of fish. An interesting interview with the creators of the popular iPhone application has now surfaced, giving insight into the development of the strangely-popular app.

Read More...

Bear Statues Attack D.C. for Greenpeace

2_2849162068_66860e5a96.jpg Kind of like how the Boston Police overreacted when they the public started noticing LED characters and thought they were bombs, police in D.C. also took no chances yesterday, calling in the bomb squad to disarm what turned out to be an art installation commissioned by Greenpeace that "highlights the shared plight of polar bears and humans in the face of global warming." Street artist Mark Jenkins, known for his public space hacking sculptures, created a series of of homeless bear statues and installed them around the nation's capital:

"For this series, Greenpeace and Jenkins added polar bear heads and ragged clothing to human figures to convey a sense of displacement and homelessness. To date, four sculptures have been deployed throughout the D.C. area in locations chosen to reach a variety of audiences and address different aspects of the global warming crisis."
Below are some more of the hobo bear installations and a video of people's reaction—most weren't so worried about them being stuffed with bombs.
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500_mark_jenkins_dc_greenpeace.jpg (Photos: PolarPicPool)

it's a beautiful day, today

hello

If The Gossip Girls Were Designers...

gossip girl shoes.jpgEventually, one of the Gossip Girl stars will design some kind of line. Our money's on Blake being the first, but until then, here's a sneak peek of what those designs would probably look like -

Blake, Leighton, and even Michelle, have all designed shoes for Stuart Weitzman's Annual Celebrity Shoe Auction, and so far, Blake's candy-themed kicks (no doubt courting comparisons like "sweet" and "confectious") are going for the highest of the three at $300 - Leighton's in the middle and Michelle's on the right.

No doubt none of these girls would wear any of these designs (though we bet Georgina would sport Michelle's metal star ones), but that's really besides the point.

In other celebrity/designer news, everyone's tickled that Ashley Olsen's designing a menswear line for The Row, launching as soon as next Fall. We're hoping - and willing to bet - that it'll still be worn by more girls than guys. We definitely see little Grey Ant-style vests and loose trousers in their very near future...


Ebert on starred movie ratings

As someone who gets quite a lot of shit for his movie ratings, I quite enjoyed Roger Ebert's explanation of how he decides how many stars to give a film and why his ratings are usually higher than those of other critics. I give this bit 4 out of 4 stars:

In the early days of my career I said I rated a movie according to its "generic expectations," whatever that meant. It might translate like this: "The star ratings are relative, not absolute. If a director is clearly trying to make a particular kind of movie, and his audiences are looking for a particular kind of movie, part of my job is judging how close he came to achieving his purpose." Of course that doesn't necessarily mean I'd give four stars to the best possible chainsaw movie. In my mind, four stars and, for that matter, one star, are absolute, not relative. They move outside "generic expectations" and triumph or fail on their own.

His "I like to write as if I'm on an empty sea" line is happily filed away, to be used as liberally as possible.

(link)

How Will You Spend Park(ing) Day?

pkingdaymap.jpg

Tomorrow New Yorkers will lay claim to the city's most undervalued real estate, unfurling sod and setting up seating, trees and public art for Park(ing) Day 2008. From Transportation Alternatives, here is a sampling of planned spots:

  • Columbus Circle: Curbside break room with grass, communal work tables, internet access
  • 8th Avenue at 15th Street: Tea garden with DIY seating and sculptures, origami folding
  • Cortelyou and Argyle Road, Brooklyn: Kid-friendly lounge in front of Cortelyou Library

This year's event will feature more than 50 space reclamations. Streetsblog will be out and about tomorrow in Brooklyn and Manhattan. What are your Park(ing) Day plans? 

viewing the cloud through different lenses

Warning: half-baked stuff ahead.

In this morning's news reader I found two interesting "cloud computing" posts; onefrom from Alfred Spector at Google and one from Werner Vogels at Amazon. And even though it's perfectly clear they were published with completely different intentions, the fact that they were published on the same day gives a lazy blogger like me the excuse to point out the differences. Especially since I think they point to the different lenses through which the two companies view the cloud...

Google's post is about harnessing computer power in the cloud to solve more computationally difficult problems based on billions and billions of data points...

Computer systems will have greater opportunity to learn from the collective behavior of billions of humans. They will get smarter, gleaning relationships between objects, nuances, intentions, meanings, and other deep conceptual information. Today's Google search uses an early form of this approach, but in the future many more systems will be able to benefit from it.

Amazon's post (well, really Vogels' post, since it's on his personal blog) is about the tools they're giving developers, in particular the new content delivery service. Here's the relevant bit that stood out...

This is an important first step in expanding the cloud to give developers even more control over how their applications and their data are served by the cloud.

This isn't to say that the folks behind Google's App Engine aren't thinking about developer services the way that Amazon is, or that Amazon's cloud group isn't thinking about how they can support the kind of uber-learning that Google is. I'm just watching how the two massive cloud providers are talking about how they see the cloud, because I think the language they use is indicative of the underlying strategy...

Better, Faster Design

On October 2, I will have the great delight of sharing the stage with Jeff Veen at Startonomics, a one-day workshop for entrepreneurs in San Francisco. Our session is Marrying Design & Development: a Match made in Heaven, not Hell. (I didn’t name it, but the topic is close to my heart.)

They asked me to write a useful blog post to give a taste of our talk. I am reposting it here just for you. I hope it is, in fact, useful.


When start-ups come to us looking for help with their product design or branding, the first question is “How long will it take?”, followed immediately by “Can we get it done faster (and cheaper)?”.

Yes, you can. Maybe.

Whether you are working with an internal or external design team, instituting a few key practices can get you much further much faster. Ignoring them can bog your team down in frustration.

1. Begin with the goal in mind. Make it an important goal.

This sounds like the ultimate duh. However, it is continually surprising how frequently start-ups hire designers based on a vague sense that their product is ugly or clunky, and nothing beyond that.

Without a clearly articulated goal, there is no way to determine whether the design work has succeeded, and it is possible to go around and around, iteration after iteration, feeling stuck in subjectivity, and never knowing which design solution is the right one.

Or, you and your team can end up debating which goals have precedence while the design work is already going on. Even if you ultimately approve and implement the work, a lingering dissatisfaction can remain.

Likewise, if the design goal you choose isn’t important to the success of the product or tied to a business goal, it’s easy to set design work aside while you focus on things that feel more important to you. Your designers will get frustrated and lose momentum that is impossible to regain.

If the state of your interface design or branding isn’t impacting your progress towards your particular business or development goals, don’t hire designers. Many products can get very far without the aid of visual designers (see: Craigslist, Google).

Having a clear goal has the added benefit of making design decisions easier and less subjective. You can ask, “Does this solution meet the stated goal, why or why not?” rather than, “Do we like it?”.

2. Don’t skimp on the initial discovery.

Entrepreneurs hear the word discovery and specters of interminable brainstorms, puerile mood boards, and general expensive wankery start dancing before their eyes.

Whether you call it discovery, research, planning and strategy, or just getting everyone around a table, this initial piece of work is critical. It is part of the design process, as much or even more so than cracking open the Photoshop. Design is ultimately making and documenting decisions. You want those decisions to be as informed as is possible practical.

Discovery serves to get all of the project stakeholders on the same page before they have an artifact to react to and evaluate. If there are fights to be had or questions to be answered, handle this in the first week or two of the project before skilled people are off making things that are of questionable value. This will ensure that everyone is making the best use of their time.

The amount of upfront information gathering required depends on the scope and complexity of the work, the size of the team, and the stage of the company or product. The further along you are with any of these, the more you will need. And, as a general rule, involve as many people as possible early in the project, and as few as possible in the following decision-making process.

Productive activities can include: a general kickoff meeting, interviews with your team, interviews with representative users, competitive analysis, branding worksessions, and conducting or reviewing additional research.

Don’t do focus groups.

The outcome should be a document that summarizes goals and aspirations, success criteria, target audience, constraints, and approach. It can be as short as a page. Even if you never look at it again, having gone through this process with your team will decrease conflict and misunderstanding and increase the chance of achieving what you set out to.

3. Have a clear decision-making process.

If you have defined an important set of goals and you have gotten everyone’s input at the start of the project, this should be cake. Identify who should provide feedback, and who has authority to make and approve design decisions. The feedback team should represent all key points of view (e.g. business and technology) with as few people as possible. The decision-maker/approver should ideally be one person.

Have a process for gathering and evaluating feedback and presenting it to your designers in one unified voice. Nothing slows down design iteration like relying on the designer to interpret multiple points of view.

And make decisions quickly. If you have done your homework in the first part of the project, you should have a strong sense of why certain design solutions are more or less likely to work. You won’t know for certain until you put it in front of your users, and then you can always modify it incrementally to better meet their needs.

Be very clear and honest in your evaluation. Once again, shocking how many times we have been encouraged down a path by a positive response, only to be told “We never really thought that was right.” For some reason, design can elicit tender sensibilities that waste a lot of time.

So there you have it. Clarity of purpose, understanding, and process will make any design project go faster.

Yes! Mule Design is hiring!

Chin-Scratching Big Think on McCain's Zapatero Gaffe

Okay, a moment to take stock on the embarrassing McCain gaffe. As noted earlier, despite the fact that McCain repeatedly suggests that Spain is a country in Latin America, McCain's foreign policy advisor Randy Scheunemann, insists that McCain wasn't confused, knew exactly who Zapatero was and meant every word of what he said. So with the McCain campaign sticking to its guns, let's review the possibilities of what happened here.

Option #1: McCain is so addled he not only doesn't know who Zapatero is but doesn't even know where Spain is located.

Option #2: McCain was not confused but actually meant his very belligerent comments about Spain and the Zapatero government (Scheunemann's line).

Option #3: Through some mixture of confusion and inability to understand the interviewer's accent, McCain was confused about who he was talking about and decided to wing it, assuming that the person he was being asked about was some other left-wing strong man from Latin America and answering with the standard boilerplate about standing up to America's enemies.

So let's run through the options. I do think McCain's age and sharpness are real issues and legitimate campaign issues. But while I think it's possible that McCain's doesn't remember who 'Zapatero' is, I obviously don't believe that in a calm moment he wouldn't be able to locate Spain on a map. So let's rule out option one is a possible but unlikely option.

So what about option #2. It's true that the neocons around McCain really do not like Zapatero. There are several nonsensical reasons but it at least started with his position against the Iraq War -- and the fact that he shortcircuited right wing efforts to exploit the ghastly Madrid train bombings. So it is true that they don't like him. But this option isn't credible either for two and possible three reasons. First, in the exchange, McCain repeatedly refers to Spain as a country in Latin America. So if Randy really wants to stick to this explanation, he needs to explain why McCain thinks Spain is a country in Latin America, which I assume he doesn't want to do. You just can't have it both ways. Either he misunderstood at some level what he was being asked or he has a presidential disqualifying level of ignorance about geography. The second reason is that back in April McCain explicitly said that he wanted to move past earlier disagreements with Spain and said specifically that he wanted to Zapatero to visit him at the White House if he is elected president. So even if we set aside the geographical confusion, McCain's camp would need to explain why he's changed his policy 180 degrees since April. A possible third explanation is that McCain would not take such a confrontational stance toward a NATO ally. But let's be honest, I wouldn't put it past him. Still, one and two are dispositive.

So we're on to option #3. Some version of option #3 is the only credible answer. Whether it was because of ignorance, confusion or inability to understand what the interviewer was saying, McCain clearly didn't understand what he was being asked. And rather than stop and say, I didn't understand your question, could you restate it?, (Or, who are you referring to?) he decided to wing it and assumed he was being asked a question about another Latin American strong man bad guy. This is simply the only credible explanation that takes account of all the evidence. I think it's a generous read to conclude that the only issue was that McCain couldn't understand the interviewer's accent. But it's definitely possible. Even that, though, puts McCain in a pretty bad light.

Equally bad, Randy Scheunemann would rather further inflame Spanish-American relations by ridiculously insisting that McCain knew exactly what he saying than admit the obvious -- that he didn't understand the question. It wouldn't be that surprising. But given McCain has premised his whole campaign on foreign policy experience they've clearly decided it would simply be too damaging to admit he was either a) confused, b) ignorant or c) reckless enough to spout off aggressive remarks when he didn't even know who he was being asked about.

Outside.in's StoryMaps

Outside.in has launched a new feature called StoryMaps. When you sign up, they crawl your blog looking for mentions of places and then make a map of your posts. It doesn't work so well for my site (mostly because -- giggedy -- kottke.org is all over the map, har har), but for sites that post about a lot of local stuff, it works pretty well. See Gothamist's implementation, for instance. More on the outside.in blog. (Disclosure: I am an advisor to outside.in.)

(link)

Eyes on the Street: Inwoodites Enjoy Closed Street, Until Workers Go Home

PTE.jpg

At this moment I hear two things through my apartment windows: a singer practicing his scales and the "beep beep beep" of construction equipment on nearby Isham Street at Park Terrace West, in Inwood.

The city is currently replacing sidewalks on these two streets, which is nice. During some of the times when construction workers are on-site, the south end of Park Terrace West, which divides Isham Park, has been closed to cars, allowing pedestrians to use the street itself for passage. This is also nice. But before the workers go home, they remove the construction barrels cordoning off PTW, leaving pedestrians with little choice but to hug the curb in the face of oncoming traffic through the evening and night.

As you can see from the photo, there is a retaining wall on the "other side" of PTW, not a sidewalk. So people leaving the park area on foot must either walk in the street or turn around and walk back through the park. In addition to being inconvenient, this, for many, is not the best alternative, as the park has seen a recent uptick in criminal activity.

Though the sidewalk nibbling here may be temporary, it's another clear and potentially dangerous instance of prioritizing cars over people.

Photo: Brad Aaron 

paint your own

IMG_0769 I go through these emotional/intellectual cycles of fully embracing the unschooling philosophy and holding the thing at arms' length, narrowing my eyes, trying to figure out if I can really trust it after all. During these questioning periods I'm driven to pull out dusty workbooks or seek out advice on handwriting curriculum and math manipulatives. I suddenly have no idea what is best for my children, and I scramble to piece together something that, for the most part, resembles normal. They humor me. They're good sports that way.

Luna enjoys the workbooks— probably because they appear so infrequently. She likes the word puzzles, the pictures of animals, and generally feeling like she is "doing school things." She has a fascination with school. I think more the idea of it than the reality. (The Ramona Quimby influence is strong with this one.)

She breezes through the sections on patterns and sequence. She answers the questions so quickly that I am convinced that she is a genius. And then I recall that she has spent the past two months consumed by Lego-building. I'm talking hours a day, for weeks, devoted to the construction of various creatures and habitats.

"Look, Mama. The walls of this boathouse [for some reason boathouses were big] are red, yellow, green, red yellow green. It's a pattern!"

And all those times I thought we were just playing.

So yesterday I was thinking, 'I really should be better about organizing art projects for them. It's been so long since she's done any painting, and really, how many times can he touch up the silver on his sword?' I made a mental note to search the library catalog for books on art projects.

Less than an hour later Luna's voice calls down from her bedroom, "Mama, can you bring all the paint and some brushes upstairs?"

"Uh, I don't think so," I responded. "I'd rather you paint down here, where it's a little easier to clean up afterwards. I can help you set you up at the easel."

"Well, I don't want to use the easel. And I can't bring the thing I want to paint downstairs. It's my dresser."

Okay. So I guess she'd been storing up some of that creative energy for something a little bigger than your typical preschool art project. There it was, that self-direction fueled by a natural desire to do and learn that all the unschooling folks talk about. Really, it's being born all the time, but I don't always take the time to acknowledge it.IMG_0777

Luckily none of that energy was lost in the redirection from the dresser to a more manageable piece of furniture; at least none that I could tell. She spent the next few hours happily painting the little Ikea table and chair that are normally splattered with paint from other art projects. Orange for the top, and alternating red and white for the legs. Hey, look at that-- a pattern.

Note: Daniel Murphy and Winning Baseball

In his return to the starting lineup last night, Daniel Murphy had two hits, including a triple, one RBI and a run scored.

I mean no disrespect to Fernando Tatis, but, with a right-handed pitcher on the mound, his absence allowed Murphy to start in left and bat second.

Murphy is a fundamentally-sound, patient, smart hitter who works well when hitting between Jose Reyes and David Wright.  In some situations, I prefer Tatis batting sixth, but, given the way the offense had been operating prior to last night, Murphy’s discipline is helpful.

By the way, for what it’s worth, the Mets are 16–7 when Murphy is in the starting lineup.

thanks to Bo, Bo, Bo, Bo H for the information

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Bucatini all'Amatriciana

One of the major benefits of having made a batch of basic tomato sauce a couple of weeks ago is that I can now make one of my favorite pasta recipes, bucatini all'Amatriciana, using Mario Batali's recipe.

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I've been making this dish for a couple of years, after we ate it at local Italian restaurant and loved it. It's a simple dish, at heart, and it can withstand a lot of experimentation & tweaking: I've made it with bacon, as well as with pancetta; I've made it with a basic 28oz can of San Marzano tomatoes, as well as with the aforementioned basic tomato sauce; I've even made it, once or twice, with a pasta other than bucatini.

But I've never been as happy with the Bucatini all'Amatriciana as I was the other night, when I made it with lovely chunks of pancetta and the basic tomato sauce. It was simple, hearty, and delicious.

McCain's Spain-Gaffe Interviewer: McCain Not Confused, Just Ducking Question

I just got off the phone with the Miami reporter who interviewed John McCain and elicited the Spain-goof answer that we've been writing about on the front page of TPM -- an interview in which McCain appeared to grow confused about who his interviewer was talking about.

She tells me she doesn't believe that McCain didn't know who Prime Minister Zapatero is or where Spain was. Instead, she believes that McCain was deliberately ducking the question of whether he'd meet with the Spanish Prime Minister.

"I didn't get the impression that he didn't know who Zapatero was or where Spain was," the reporter, Yoli Cuello, told me. "Honestly, what I thought was that he didn't want to answer the question with a yes or no answer."

(You can listen to the interview here. To recap: When asked to discuss relations with Spain and whether he would meet with Zapatero, McCain at first segued into a discussion of Latin America. When the reporter repeated Zapatero's name, McCain again talked about Latin America. And when the reporter stressed that she was talking about Spain, McCain wouldn't say whether he'd meet with the Spanish leader.)

Pressed on why McCain would keep seguing into a discussion of Latin America if he knew who she was talking about, Cuello said: "I think because I was talking with him before about Latin America. He was not giving me a straight answer. I wasn't expecting a straight answer."

Asked why she thought McCain would duck the question, she said: "The policies regarding Iraq. Because he's a Republican. The [Bush] administration doesn't have good relations with Zapatero."

A quick word on this. There is a way of interpreting what happened while allowing that McCain did know who Zapatero was. What could have happened is that on the first hearing of the question, he simply ducked it by returning to Latin America, as Cuello says.

Then, on the second hearing, where she repeated the name Zapatero without repeating "Spain," he didn't hear the name properly or was unable to track it back to the first mention of him. So he talked about Latin America again. Then on the third asking, when she stressed she was talking about Spain, McCain refused to answer because he genuinely doesn't want to commit to meeting with this particular NATO ally.

This interpretation isn't great for McCain, though, because it means on the second asking he hadn't tracked the question and answered it by winging it even though he didn't know who she'd asked about. And this isn't even getting into the foreign policy implications of his answer.

Any other interpretation, of course, is worse.

Next New Networks: Our Stars are Huge. This is an actual photo...



Next New Networks: Our Stars are Huge.

This is an actual photo of the video billboard we have running in Times Square this week (Sept 15-21), every hour on the :13, to coincide with the Web 2.0 Expo NY, OMMA and the NY TV Festival. ClearChannel has been giving us a free slot every couple months or so, which is awesome - last time we used it to Rick Roll Times Square during Internet Week.

Video on the way, it’s a great spot highlighting a lot of the people we work with.

Note: Carlos Beltran can Hit and Catch

Last night, in a win against the Nationals, Carlos Beltran hit two home, drew a walk, and made an outstanding catch on the warning track, with the bases loaded, to end the eighth inning.

“Well, as soon as he hit it I thought it was gonna be over my head, because it sounded good off the bat.  I just put my head down and went back to the wall and I was thinking I have to do something to try to cut this ball. but it stopped and I was able to make the catch.  It was good, because, you know, if it would have been over my head it would have been a different story.  But, thank God I was able to get to it.”

Beltran is hitting .282 with 26 HR, 106 RBI, 110 runs scored, 21 stolen bases, 38 doubles and will most likely win a Gold Glove Award for his defense this season.

He has a .373 batting average in 51 at bats this September, with five HR and and just seven strike outs in 14 games.

The following poll is a vague, but that’s sort of the point:

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

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El Cid -- in English

The original untranslated English version of John McCain's interview with Radio Caracol Miami has now been released.

Have a listen (the key passage about Spain starts at 2:58 in):

At first it sounds like McCain is taking a hard neocon line against Prime Minister Zapatero, but as the interviewer continues to press the point, it becomes pretty obvious that McCain has no idea who she's talking about.

His broad, generic answer is clearly meant to cover Latin American leaders generally, known and unknown -- sort of a blanket "we'll stand up to tinpot dictators" -- even if they happen to be NATO prime ministers.

Today’s Headlines

  • Two Queens Schoolgirls Injured in Rockaway Blvd Hit-and-Run (News, Post)
  • Congress Warms to Idea of $25B in Loan Guarantees for Detroit (NYT)
  • Tight Credit Market Making Car Loans More Scarce (Kicking Tires)
  • The Downside of Fung Wah Bus and Its Imitators (Gotham Gazette)
  • Measuring Cost of Driving Vs. Cost of Riding (Planetizen)
  • Port Authority Weighs Different Options for WTC Transit Hub (City Room)
  • City Butts Heads With MTA Over Tolling On-Duty NYPD and FDNY Vehicles (News, NY1)
  • City Hall Releases Mayor's Management Report (NYT)
  • Park Slope Duo Look to Launch "Alternative Fuel Co-op" (Bklyn Paper)
  • Has the 96th St. Subway Station Finally Arrived? (Curbed)

Heelys

Whippersnappers have been skating around on these single-wheeled skate shoes since the early 00's. Seeing them coast through mini-malls, supermarkets and movie theaters, I started to get jealous/curious. Turns out we don't have to let kids have all the fun! They come in adult sizes, too. I had to special order mine and they didn't arrive for a few months, but it was worth the wait. Gliding across the pavement is every bit as glorious as it appears. Kids make it look deceptively simple. I've really had to work to balance (Ironically, I've tended to stumble more while simply walking in them -- and yes, these things are potentially dangerous, so be wary). My friends think I'm crazy, but there's certainly something to be said for not letting yourself feel too old to try new things.

-- Steven Leckart

Check out this video for a Heely-er who is way more skilled than I am.

Heelys
$54+
Available from Zappos

Manufactured by Heeling Sports LTD

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Downhill Skateboarding MBT Physiological Footwear Body for Life

Quote: Knight is like ‘Good,’ not, ‘Yes.’

Last night in DC, 32-year-old Mets RHP Brandon Knight got his first major-league victory, while letting up two runs in five innings against the Nationals, who left the bases loaded in the fifth inning.

Knight, on watching the game from the clubhouse, and seeing seven relief pitchers trot in to lock down the win, said:

“I was thinking, ‘Is this really happening right now.’  We were all in here, all of us who pitched, just kind of taking deep breaths saying, ‘Everything’s gonna be fine.’  To get that final out, it wasn’t that, ‘Yes!,’ it was more, ‘Good.’  Get it out of the way, and get back to business tomorrow where we have Johan going, which, we feel pretty good about that.”

Knight told reporters he was sent text messages from family and friends, and former players from Somerset, the Independent League team where he started this season.

This will most likely be Knight’s final start of the season, since the five-man rotation, including Pedro Martinez and Jon Niese, should stay on turn through the end of the year.

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The Hidden Power: David Addington

David Addington is Chief of Staff for Vice President Cheney. Here's an excerpt from a profile about him in the New Yorker from a couple of years ago.
Most Americans, even those who follow politics closely, have probably never heard of Addington. But current and former Administration officials say that he has played a central role in shaping the Administration’s legal strategy for the war on terror. Known as the New Paradigm, this strategy rests on a reading of the Constitution that few legal scholars share—namely, that the President, as Commander-in-Chief, has the authority to disregard virtually all previously known legal boundaries, if national security demands it. Under this framework, statutes prohibiting torture, secret detention, and warrantless surveillance have been set aside.
Emphasis mine. According to many sources, he's been the author (or most senior legal support) of many of the most controversial legal policies of the Bush Administration. He was described by U.S. News and World Report as "the most powerful man you've never heard of".

He's the lawyer behind over 750 signing statements that President Bush has added to bills passed by Congress. He seems to have a different understanding of the Constitutional separation of powers, namely, that no one has the right to examine how executive decisions are made and that in times of war (which is always now since the War on Terror doesn't take a break) the President cannot be restrained by Congress nor any law, national or international.

Some results of this interpretation range from the benign and reasonable to the possibly criminal and include Bush and his team refusing requests for information (as in the case of Pat Tillman's death), documents (an F.B.I. and mob scandal), and clarification (the details of Cheney's energy task force), and has included their directly refusing to obey subpeonas in the investigation of the firing of federal prosecutors. In the last example, the executive branch has successfully avoided legal inquiry with the only consequence being two aides held in contempt by the House of Representatives but whose charges won't be pursued by the Justice Department because of executive privilege.

"Our political heritage is to be skeptical of executive power, because, in particular, there was skepticism of King George III." So says Jane Mayer, the author of the New Yorker article. But I can only guess we're no longer inheritors of that concern given the very real reduction of Presidential oversight over the last eight years.

Which leads me to admit - I feel like I can't be an informed voter without knowing what self-imposed limits an Obama or McCain or Biden or Palin presidency would place on their unrestrained and secret power. But even if they promised to restrain themselves...how would we ever know if they had?

September 17, 2008

4chan member explains the Sarah Palin hacking

I hate to link to Malkin, but this is the definitive story, quoting deleted posts from the original 4chan member who did the hack  

A Little More of the Original

A final update of the evening on McCain's uber-gaffe.

There's some unclarity whether the interviewer was done by a Spanish reporter or a Spanish language reporter Caracol from 1260 in Miami. I suspect they may have had some joint arrangement since they both appear to claim it as their own exclusive. Or perhaps the local station in Miami is working as the affiliate of the Spanish radio network.

That doesn't change the underlying story. But TPM Reader RC points out that if you go to the Caracol1260 website and scroll down below the fold to the section of audio links on the left under the headline "Hoy por Hoy", these folks have their own version of the recording. They spliced the Spanish translations in differently. And in the way they did it, you can hear much more of McCain's actual English. It's still a bit difficult to hear McCain since the translator is speaking simultaneously. But you can hear most of what he says. It's pretty clear that McCain doesn't remember who Zapatero is. And he keeps referring to his approach to Latin America even after the interview keeps pointing that she's asking him a question a Spain, which is actually in Europe.

(ed.note: Another point about this version of the interview audio, Caracol seems to have completely dubbed out the interviewers voice in exchange for a translator speaking in Spanish. If you listen to the other version from the Spanish radio channel, it's clear that the original interview was entirely in English. The Caracol version also appears to cut portions of the the exchange. So we still need to hear the unaltered recording of the exchange.)

Index of online articles from The Perl Journal

brian d foy has put together an index of articles published in The Perl Journal from 2003 to 2006, all available on the web.

A lot of the articles are out of date, of course (nobody needs my 2004 OSCON roundup, do they?), but others like Simon Cozens' Ten Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About Perl still stand up today.

Check out the list, and please post back here about the most useful article you found.

TUAW Review: Podcaster

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Podcaster AppYou've heard about the controversy surrounding Podcaster -- it's the iPhone app that was turned down by Apple for "duplicating the functionality of iTunes." The developer, Alex Sokirynsky, is now distributing his native podcast stream receiver app via ad hoc distribution.

The iPhone development world & the Mac blogosphere (not to mention the mainstream press) is still loudly debating Apple's decision, but not much is being said about the application itself. Alex was kind enough to provide a review copy of Podcaster to TUAW, so we gave the app a workout. Read on for our review of this controversial and useful application.

Continue reading TUAW Review: Podcaster

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Farewell, Jerry, we barely knew ye

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It's an open question whether TUAW readers really care about the inside-baseball, schadenfreude-laden story of an expensive ad campaign for another technology company that left many in the audience scratching their heads, wondering "are these ads about nothing?" Most of you probably took passing note of the commercials and moved on to your game of Spore.

Nevertheless, the word tonight via Valleywag and Engadget, among other sources, that Microsoft will be dumping Jerry Seinfeld from its upcoming TV spots (and bringing in a John Hodgman look-alike to directly target Apple's "I'm a Mac" campaign) is making us think. Why lose the Sein? He brought a slightly cranky, slightly spacey vibe -- not a bad matchup for Bill Gates, when you come down to it. There must have been more to it than simply "people didn't like the ads..."

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Link Blast

Delicious was down for most of this week. Now back online, I blasted its bookmarking ass with lots o’ link lovings; including, but not limited to:

  • xtrasue — is in Portland, rides longbikes, and occasionally has some amusing posts.
  • Scraper Bikes — the site for the Oakland phenomenon that is sweeping the nation.
  • Velorution — a shop in London with you stuff don’t see elsewhere.

Also see an interview with Dave Turner and Clix Wheel Release System contest.

Report: Morgan Stanley CEO: 'Need a Partner or Not Going to Make it'

This NY Times article has an explosive quote attributed to Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack: As Fears Grow, Wall St. Titans See Shares Fall Seeking to avoid the kind fate...

Oy

Well, it doesn't appear to have registered in the American press yet. But the story keeps bubbling in the Spanish press about McCain's bizarre gaffe about the Spanish Prime Minister. Here's the front page cut out from the Spanish news channel that did the interview. They've talked to the interviewer now. Her take? McCain didn't know who Zapatero was ...

Late Update: So McCain is the candidate with the foreign policy experience ready to lead on day one. But he doesn't know who the leader of Spain is. He gets confused in an interview, apparently thinking Zapatero is someone from Latin America who is an enemy of the United States and manages to create a minor international incident.

Later Update: Here's another Spanish press reax. In Spain, there seem to be two lines of thinking. The great majority appear to think the McCain was simply confused and didn't know who Zapatero was -- something you might bone up on if you were about to do an interview with the Spanish press. The assumption seems to be that since he'd already been asked about Castro and Chavez that McCain assumed Zapatero must be some other Latin American bad guy. A small minority though think that McCain is simply committed to an anti-Spanish foreign policy since he's still angry about Spain pulling it's troops out of Iraq. Finally, a few of those who lean toward the first view speculate that McCain may have confused Zapatero with the Zapatista rebel group in Mexico.

Even Later Update: One representative reader response, from among many ...

I listened to the interview. The characterization is correct. I originally gave McCain the benefit of the doubt, thinking that he was just snubbing Zapatero (something that would be welcomed by the Spanish right). When I was there, there was a lot of agitation among Spanish conservatives because Zapatero was ignoring the country's relations with the U.S. and making overtures to more leftist countries in the Latin America--Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia (all the countries mentioned in this interview before Spain). There was even a controversy because Zapatero sat down when the U.S. flag was passing by in a parade. I believe his excuse was "his legs were tired." So I figured McCain was giving the Zapatero the cold shoulder in the same manner as the Bush administration has done.

After listening to the interview, however, I agree with the characterization that McCain was unaware of our relations with Spain, or even the country's geographical and political position. When asked about meeting with Zapatero and the country's relationship with the U.S., McCain ignored the question and went into some boilerplate about America's friends and enemies and analyzing relations (think Palin and the Bush Doctrine). Then, he tried to transition his answer into more friendly territory, discussing President Calderon's government in Mexico. He never really addressed Spain, but pushed right into commenting about Mexico. The interviewer actually tried to redirect him several times (again, think Charlie Gibson and Palin), until she actually stated that she wasn't talking about Latin America anymore, but rather Europe. For whatever reason, McCain responded to this question by repeating what he said before about analyzing America's relationships with our friends and enemies.

Seriously, this was pretty bad.

Why I love Amazon mp3's Twitter account

The subject of how businesses are using Twitter in a smart way is one that's near and dear to my heart.  I can count on my fingers the number of times I've ever clicked on an online ad, yet as a consumer I'm voluntarily following a few Twitter accounts used by companies to promote their products.  Yeah, it's surprising to me too.

One of my favorites is Amazon mp3's Twitter account.  They tweet once a day in the form of a Daily Deal.  Each tweet lists an artist and album title, the regular price of that mp3 download, a one-day-only sale price, followed by the link to buy.  Genius!

Amazontweet

Their tweets put the title of an album in front of my eyes each day (a bonus for someone who is busy but obsessed with music), then give me incentive to buy right away.  And what a tremendous promotion for the artist!  The albums are often older ones, so I'm not sure how many artists pay for this kind of promotion, or whether labels are cutting deals with Amazon to promote their artists.  Either way, it's a win-win-win: for artists & their labels, for Amazon mp3's business and for mp3 buyers.

I rarely purchase music these days - my Rhapsody subscription pretty much has me covered - but today's deal inspired me to grab Dolly Parton's Little Sparrow, a spare, bluegrass-inspired release from 2001 that features some interesting covers, including Restless Heart's "Tender Lie".

The people who are using Twitter creatively and successfully right now in these companies are true pioneers.  I can just hear their higher ups, both in corporations and even in independent businesses, questioning the benefit of using Twitter and threatening at any moment to pull the plug on their "experiment".  Right now only 5,487 people are following Amazon mp3's Twitter account, but if the plug isn't pulled, that number will only grow as more people inevitably catch on to Twitter.  I hope they don't give up, because their efforts actually are influencing my purchases.

Related reading:

Why I love Amazon mp3's Twitter account

The subject of how businesses are using Twitter in a smart way is one that's near and dear to my heart.  I can count on my fingers the number of times I've ever clicked on an online ad, yet as a consumer I'm voluntarily following a few Twitter accounts used by companies to promote their products.  Yeah, it's surprising to me too.

One of my favorites is Amazon mp3's Twitter account.  They tweet once a day in the form of a Daily Deal.  Each tweet lists an artist and album title, the regular price of that mp3 download, a one-day-only sale price, followed by the link to buy.  Genius!

Amazontweet

Their tweets put the title of an album in front of my eyes each day (a bonus for someone who is busy but obsessed with music), then give me incentive to buy right away.  And what a tremendous promotion for the artist!  The albums are often older ones, so I'm not sure how many artists pay for this kind of promotion, or whether labels are cutting deals with Amazon to promote their artists.  Either way, it's a win-win-win: for artists & their labels, for Amazon mp3's business and for mp3 buyers.

I rarely purchase music these days - my Rhapsody subscription pretty much has me covered - but today's deal inspired me to grab Dolly Parton's Little Sparrow, a spare, bluegrass-inspired release from 2001 that features some interesting covers, including Restless Heart's "Tender Lie".


The people who are using Twitter creatively and successfully right now in these companies are true pioneers.  I can just hear their higher ups, both in corporations and even in independent businesses, questioning the benefit of using Twitter and threatening at any moment to pull the plug on their "experiment".  Right now only 5,487 people are following Amazon mp3's Twitter account, but if the plug isn't pulled, that number will only grow as more people inevitably catch on to Twitter.  I hope they don't give up, because their efforts actually are influencing my purchases.

Related reading:

Blue Bottle expansion at the Ferry Building

This just in!

Bb

I wish the folks at Blue Bottle had a blog.  If you google them you'll find two abandoned ones.  Sad.

Not Boring

A gigantic tunnel boring machine, as featured in "The Long Dig" (abstract only, sorry) in last week's New Yorker:

S300 tunnel boring machine

How crayons are made

Video of how crayons are made.

This is probably my all-time favorite childhood TV moment. I loved watching the smiling workers and relentless machinery turn all that formless wax into something that I USED EVERY DAY. My favorite part is the crayons popping up out of their molds. Still gives me chills, it does! BTW, the YouTube page says the video originated from Sesame Street but it was actually from Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood. (thx, janelle)

(link)

Losing It

Did John McCain really just suggest that the Prime Minister of Spain might be one of America's enemies? One of those international leaders he'd refuse to meet with?

Does he want to liberate Spain too?

The passage in question is at the end of the interview linked here (with translation into Spanish) ...

Lil Wayne & New Orleans

David Ramsey's "I Will Forever Remain Faithful" (via Sasha Frere-Jones) is one of the best things I've read in a while, and does a better job than most critical pieces of explaining Lil Wayne's appeal & importance.

Every paragraph is quote-worthy, but I especially liked this:

An eighth grader wrote his Persuasive Essay on the topic "Lil Wayne is the best rapper alive." Main ideas for three body paragraphs: Wayne has the most tracks and most hits, best metaphors and similes, competition is fake.

On mattering

I went a while there where I really didn't matter. Weird to say, but true. I was stuck in a job that demanded my silence, and as a result my personal profile faded. Sure, my work mattered to the company's bottom line, but my craft ceased to be viewable outside my office. A decade of personal brand-building, participating in a vibrant community of my peers, went into partial stasis.

On top of that, I spent the last two years focused on personal things--buying an apartment, having a baby, dealing with a baby--and as a result everything else became secondary. I was too busy to be on the radar, and I slowly fell off it.

The evidence is in the public domain. My website design hasn't changed in four years. I haven't done any public speaking since 2006. My poor dog's photo gallery is atrophied and sad. My wife's online portfolio is 18 months overdue for an update.

The good news is that era has passed. When I came to Alexander Interactive, I was pleasantly tasked with raising the company profile. I've been blogging for Ai on business topics and begun publishing opinion articles for iMedia Connection, and I'll be a panelist alongside our principals at the Internet Retailer Design '09 conference in January. We've got whitepapers and other projects planned to continue the activity.

So I'm amending the raised-profile plan to include my own. Blogging at Ai, which has been a once-or-twice-a-week endeavor, is going to become a daily habit. The Ideapad will continue its run and a half-finished redesign will go live before year's end. I'm going to look for additional publications in which to participate, organizations to join, public speaking engagements to forge, teaching opportunities to claim.

I'm refreshed, invigorated and excited. Let's light this candle.

(Note to self and others: This is the kind of blog post that I often choose not to publish, which means I don't write it at all, which helps no one, most [least] of all me. So I'm throwing it out there. I'm back in the proverbial game and stepping onto the field.)

Livid

That was the best word I could think of to describe how I feel about the hacking of Sarah Palin's PRIVATE email account. It may actually be a political positive, as they don't seem to have found anything of any interest, but I'm still really, really mad. Actually, that's nowhere near an accurate description of my current mood, but I don't believe in the type of gratuitous profanity that would be needed to properly convey my feelings.

I'm going to keep my remarks brief in the interest of preventing my head from exploding, but there are three entities I want to single out for criticism:

1. The Hackers: I realize that these people have activist pretensions, but lets call them what they are - delinquent punks. Apparently the think themselves so committed to their cause that they have the right to disrespect the privacy of American citizens at will. Of course, no such right exists, and I sincerely hope that these lowlifes are tracked down and prosecuted.

2. The Liberal Media: In this case, I do not mean, the "mainstream media" but openly liberal publications. The response from Mother Jones made my blood boil. Not only did they fail to criticize the only actual criminals involved (the hackers); nor did they stop at declaring Gov. Palin a criminal herself; they aided the hackers by highlighting email addresses obtained from the Governor's contact list, including that of her 17-year old daughter Bristol. That is not right bay ANY journalistic standard.

3. The Associated Press: Earth to AP - when the Secret Service asks to see the emails, you give them what they want. Apparently, they didn't even ask that the info not be printed...they just wanted to see the emails! I can't think of a more arrogant act in journalistic history than openly thumbing your nose at the US Secret Service.

I may or may not post more on this later. Right now, I'm going to go run my head under some cold water in an attempt to cool off (I doubt that I will succeed).

You Complete Me

I'm up to my eyeballs in appointments, meetings, reports and other real life nonsense, so posting is going to be spotty or non-existent on here 'till the weekend. In the meantime, here's a little beauty made possible by reader Mike.

The Topps Heritage T205 Target minis set. Finished thanks to a trade offer on the comments from this post, which I'm still working on writing up. There's more from this trade which I'll hopefully show off by this weekend but I thought you'd enjoy a complete set in the meantime. There's a second series of the large sized cards in Target boxes of Topps Series two, maybe we'll get more minis in Heritage Update? We can hope at least.

Oh, one other order of business before I rush off to an appointment... Indian Baseball Cards... Always. has been having a scratch off game card tournament for the past couple of weeks and yours truly has ended up in the championship game. It's the final inning of the final game and I'm up 3-1 and coming to bat in the top of the inning. All kinds of crazy stuff can happen so a victory is not assured. I've already won enough inserts and relic cards to choke a mule though, so I'm destined to be a victor even in defeat. Cool Idea from David on the tourney, it's worth checking out.


Virtually Effortless: The Easiest MT Ever

We've long spoken of Movable Type's power and flexibility. But frankly, we haven't talked much about how easy it is to set up Movable Type for your own sites, and that's because it's been harder than we'd like. Despite huge improvements in the setup process, web applications can be just plain complicated, especially since MT supports a ton of different environments. The complexity comes from having to set up the program while also getting all the supporting bits of infrastructure set up perfectly, as well.

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So today, we're launching Virtual Movable Type by JumpBox. Because we didn't just want to make it easy to run Movable Type, we wanted to make it easy to run Movable Type right.

What does that mean? Well, we've learned from the best experts in the world and built their knowledge into this new option for the MT community:

  • We partnered with JumpBox, the innovators in creating virtual appliances that work everywhere you'd want to deploy an application, from VMWare to Xen, Parallels to Virtual Iron to Microsoft Virtualization, on Windows and Linux and Mac OS. The JumpBox folks make it possible to put Virtual Movable Type anywhere you want to test, develop, or deploy it, and they provide a simple setup experience to get you running quickly.
  • Six Apart Services contributed mightily to this release, partnering with the core Movable Type team to build in the expertise they've developed from creating, launching, and supporting some of the biggest publishers on the web.
  • Finally, and most importantly, we listened to our Movable Type community. Enterprise admins told us that you're concerned about server utilization and power costs, and that virtualization is a part of nearly every platform strategy going forward. Developers told us you want a simple, reliable standardized configuration to develop and test your work against. And everybody in the whole freaking blogosphere told us you wish you could try out Movable Type with just a few clicks. So now you can!
That's the most important lesson here: You can download Virtual Movable Type and run it on your own laptop or your own server in just a few minutes, using any common virtualization software. If you've got an old Windows server sitting in the corner, get the free VMWare player and grab Virtual MT. Or if you're a Mac user who's got Parallels or VMWare so that you can run Windows applications, that same platform will let you run the new Virtual Movable Type. (JumpBox has a list of all the supported environments.)

Once you've got it running, you answer a few questions, and you get a custom-tailored configuration of Movable Type. It's even tricked out with the features people want to try most, like the Action Streams plugin. And Virtual Movable Type Pro has all the awesome social publishing features that we highlighted at its launch, too.

Virtual Movable Type is available as an option with the same licenses and versions as the regular download of Movable Type, including the open source Virtual Movable Type, the free license of Virtual Movable Type Pro for bloggers, and our standard range of business and enterprise licenses that come complete with professional support. Naturally, we have a complete FAQ to answer all of your questions about VMT. 

In short, we've made it easier than ever to get started with Movable Type, and if you've been using the pain of setup as an excuse to put off giving it a try, you've run out of excuses. Because if you haven't seen Movable Type lately, you just haven't seen Movable Type.

So, what are you waiting for? Go get Virtual Movable Type!

Jeremy Piven Plays Another Hollywood Player -- This Time on Broadway

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Need a fast talking, egotistical Hollywood caricature? Who could be better than Jeremy Piven, who has expertly portrayed the shrewd, smarmy and sarcastic Hollywood agent Ari Gold in HBO's Entourage? Apparently this is just what Neil Pepe, director of the new production of David Mamet's Speed the Plow, thought when casting the play (which was originally produced in 1988) that deals with shallow Hollywood friendships and the struggle between artistic ideals and commercial success. Piven plays Bobby Gould, a recently promoted studio production head who has trouble choosing between greenlighting a sure to be box office hit with his longtime pal Charlie Fox (played by Broadway staple Raul Esparza) and a more arty project suggested by his sexy but somewhat useless temp Karen (Mad Men's Elisabeth Moss). At a recent press preview, Piven said that the play is still very relevant in terms of how things work behind doors in Hollywood today. He gave the example of Iron Man. He said the studio execs were really against Robert Downey Jr starring in it. Apparently they wanted a Will Smith type, but director Jon Favreau stood by his friend. "Favreau went to bat and said this is my guy. [He] doubled his efforts and the result is an incredible, successful movie that is also done from the artistic standpoint of Jon Favreau using his buddy and the guy that he felt was best for the role even though he wasn’t tried and true as a commercial actor," said Piven. The situation between Gould and Fox did not have the same Hollywood ending as that between Favreau and Downey, but maybe they didn't have an ambitious and sexy secretary to contend with! Pictured from l-r: Jeremy Piven, Elisabeth Moss and Raul Esparza. Photo courtesy of Broadwayworld.com

Palin Camp Points Fingers After Clinton Cancels Appearance at Iran Protest with Her

By Anne E. Kornblut and Colum Lynch Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has carefully avoided a showdown with Gov. Sarah Palin for the last few weeks -- and now her circle is infuriated by an attempt to lure the two into a joint event. Clinton canceled an appearance at a rally next week in New York, which she had planned to attend in her official capacity as the state's junior senator, after the event's organizers surprised...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.

Sex Up the Dossier

Sex Up the Dossier. I love the energy of Favianna’s new anti-war poster designs for CODEPINK.
CODEPINK Posters for Peace

Random Photos, Part Deux

These are just pictures from walks I've taken.

Check out this guy, who was blowing these huge bubbles for kids in some kind of Clinton St Parade. "Follow Satan, kids," remarked a neighbor of mine when she saw him. ClintonFest










This was on the wall of Half and Half downtown.

MacandCheese 










And other random shots in SE:

Toaster 



 


 

VanonaWalk

Guesstimations

The results of some back-of-the-envelope calculations:

- The air in the Empire State Building weighs about 4 million pounds.
- The energy consumption of the world's population will be greater than the energy coming from the sun in less than 500 years. (Peak photons?)

What's surprising about such estimates is how often they are very close to the reality. This is especially true in a multi-step approximation, where over- and underestimates at various steps tend to cancel each other out, usually resulting in something not too far off from the truth.

Both Microsoft and Google use questions like these as part of their job interview process. We did a bunch of them in my freshman physics class; I loved them.

(link)

White House Redux: The Book

The White House Redux competition – discussed earlier this summer on National Public Radio – will soon be a book:
    With almost 500 submissions from 42 countries around the world, White House Redux, a competition launched by Storefront for Art and Architecture and Control Group last January, became one of the most talked-about architecture competitions in 2008. The brief was simple: what would the residence of the most powerful individual in the world, the White House in Washington, D.C., look like if it were designed today?

    Published to coincide with the opening of an exhibition of the competition's results at Storefront for Art and Architecture, White House Redux—The Book contains a compendium of documentation related to the competition and an overview of the results. It includes essays by Joseph Grima (Storefront for Art and Architecture) and Geoff Manaugh (BLDGBLOG and Dwell Magazine), a history of the existing White House and 123 selected projects as well as the four winning submissions. A jury assessed the submissions in the spectacular setting of the 45th floor of the World Trade Center Tower 7, a process documented in the book's 30-page photoessay by Marty Hyers.

    The book is to be available for pre-order and will ship on October 2, 2008, to coincide with the prizegiving and opening of White House Redux at Storefront for Art and Architecture, New York. White House Redux was printed in a limited edition of 500 copies.

    734 pages, color and black & white (7.8” x10.5”)
    $39 USD Shipping: $5 (USA), $12 (Rest of the world)
    Discounts available on shipping for multiple copies
With a print-run of only 500, the book should go fast – so order a copy before they all disappear.

(Note: This might be my last post here for a few days, as I'm going away for a quick – but much-needed – family vacation).

Natural Born Liars

Presidential candidates usually have to wait until they're elected to start obstructing investigations into their own wrong-doing. But ready on day one as he is, John McCain and Sarah Palin are getting a jump on this front too. I'm not sure I've ever seen an instance of a president, let alone a presidential candidate, quite this nakedly doing everything in his power to shutdown an investigation. And look closely -- Palin herself has at this point entirely turned the obstruction over to the McCain campaign. They're even the ones who make the announcements. (I won't get into the battery of lawyers plumbers up in Alaska getting all the small fry to clam up and digging up dirt on all Palin's accusers.)

Meanwhile, the claim that the Obama camp has 'tainted' the trooper-gate investigation is truly risible. This investigation was well underway and already looking bad for Palin and her husband well before John McCain picked her as his running mate. (We know: we were already covering it.) What I do not think that many people know is that this investigation up in Alaska has actually been authorized and is being run by Republicans. They make up a majority in the state senate. The committee member overseeing the investigation happens to be a Democrat. But at any moment of their choosing, they could pull him off the case, overrule his decisions, or shut the investigation down entirely.

Palin's response to this -- to the question of how Obama could have tainted the investigation which is under the control of Alaska Republicans -- is to claim that there are actually a lot of Republicans in Alaska who oppose her. And that's true. But observing that a sizable number of officeholders of your own party think you're probably a crook too does not amount to an affirmative defense. Really, it doesn't.

The fall back defense, when claims about Obama's 'taint' fall flat, is that Palin's someone who 'shakes things up'. That's what she's done in Alaska and that's what she's going to do in Washington.

But a pattern of crony hiring and politicized firings of public officials all followed up by stonewalling and obstruction of justice really would not amount to 'shaking things up' in Washington. After eight years of President Bush, that's more like steady as she goes.

Wiki Wednesday: Wikis Take Manhattan

pastedGraphic.jpgAs the number and scope of entries continue to grow, StreetsWiki needs photos to flesh out all that text. Enter Wikis Take Manhattan, a scavenger hunt and photo contest intended to provide visual content for both StreetsWiki and Wikipedia. The event is modeled on last year's Wikipedia Takes Manhattan,

Entrants will meet up on Saturday, September 27 at 1 p.m. at Columbia University (exact location TBA) and The Open Planning Project HQ in the West Village (349 W. 12th St. #3), then head out for an afternoon of shooting throughout Manhattan and across the boroughs. Participants will gather at TOPP at 6:30 for prizes and a party.

The prize list is still being finalized, but so far includes a dinner with Wikipedia creator Jimmy Wales (plus 2) and gift certificates from Bicycle Habitiat and the LimeWire Store.

Wikis Take Manhattan is sponsored by The Open Planning Project; Free Culture @ Columbia (the Columbia University chapter of Students for Free Culture) in cooperation with the NYU chapter Free Culture @ NYU; Wikimedia New York City; Creative Commons; and Wikipedia volunteers. Corporate sponsors include Bicycle Habitat, Brooklyn Brewery, B's Bikes, Birdbath Bakery, and LimeWire Store.

The contest is open to all. Keep an eye on the Livable Streets group page for updates.

Carrie: Not Dead?

young sjp.jpgYou didn't think Carried died with the movie, did you?

Because if you did, you might be so glad to know she's back - but younger.

Candace Bushnell and Harper Collins have teamed up to bring you, The Carrie Diaries, a two-book deal that explores Carrie's life as a teenager, and the series of horrible, awkward dates she went on and the cute, but slightly stupid boy from her geometry class that she pined endlessly for in between scenes in Theater.

The books come out in 2010, sure to be followed by that replacement to Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants Darren Star's been praying for.

Hold on to your Maddens, girls!


'das haus' atelier van lieshout retrospective


‘autocrat’, 1998

‘das haus’ - atelier van lieshout retrospective
ludwig forum for international art, aachen, germany
septemebr 13, 2008 – january 11, 2009

the work of atelier van lieshout is currently the subject of a major retrospective exhibition at aachen,
germany’s ludwig forum for international art. ‘das haus’ (the house) includes the studio’s work
from the early 1980’s and their contemporary projects. split into several thematic rooms, the show
looks at different periods in the studio’s oeuvre. this arrangement sheds new light on AVL’s projects,
creating new understandings of some of their key themes.

‘the modular bedroom’ shows shelving units from the 80s, a brothel from ‘slavecity’, ‘mini modular
brothel’, 2006, and a beercrate sculpture from 1987. ‘the machine room’ presents early works
inspired by machines and equipment, such as ‘blacksmith fire’, 1983, but also a recent work
‘operation’ 2007. the ‘independence room’ recalls the freestate AVL-ville; one of the first mobile
homes, ‘autocrat’, 1997, besides ‘mercedes with 57mm canon’, 1998, ‘septic tanks’, 2001 and
‘sleep/study skull’, 1996.

two new publications will be published together with the exhibition: das haus (the house) and
stadt der sklaven (slavecity). the catalogues are published by dumont verlag and will discuss
the thematic coherence between the works and document the exhibition.

each work of art is an individual work, but the work is also part of a bigger series of works. for me
all works of AVL tell one big ‘saga’. therefore it’s important to me that the works in aachen are
exhibited and shown in close relationship to each other. even the early works from the 80s are part
of this history and are still current. - joep van lieshout

http://www.ludwigforum.de
http://www.ateliervanlieshout.com

more

designboom interview with joep van lieshout



‘autocrat’, 1998


‘mercedes with 58 mm canon’, 1998


‘sportopia’, 2001


‘black smith fire’, 1983


‘mini alcoholator’, 2004


‘mini modular brothel 20 units (2x2x5)’, 2006


‘operation’, 2007

all images: copyright atelier van lieshout

The first dude abides.


TPMtv is so funny today my face hurts from laughing:

A Slightly Upgraded Workspace

A Slightly Upgraded Workspace: I got a little DIY and attached some cork tiles to my desk, to protect my arm joints from the unforgiving steel desk top.

To Tackle Global Warming, California Takes Aim at Sprawl

New bill may represent the triumph of urban planning — or expose its shortcomings.

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California, long on the vanguard of battles over land use, is poised to pass legislation that would harmonize regional planning efforts with the state’s overarching goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The most ambitious anti-sprawl legislation in the country, the bill seeks to coordinate housing, transit, and commercial development to reduce the impact of growth on the environment.

Coincidentally, I happen to be in the middle of Robert Bruegmann’s Sprawl: A Compact History. Although not quite pro-sprawl, the book is decidedly anti-anti-sprawl, portraying efforts at shaping or controlling land use as largely the outgrowth of shifting and highly subjective aesthetic standards that disregard the desire of ordinary citizens for privacy, mobility, and choice. In this view, the automobile, bete noir of sprawl antagonists, has merely made the timeless privileges of the affluent few available to the middle-class many. Without entirely dismissing the problems associated with sprawl, Bruegmann suggests that many of the proposed solutions are destined to fail, either because complex urban systems respond in unexpected ways to simplistic planning measures, or because such measures offer fragile levees against so strong a flood of consumer desire for room to stretch out.

Although Bruegmann’s argument is thin in places, the book does raise useful questions about how, when, and even why to try to shape the development of our cities and their surroundings. Such questions are helpful in clarifying goals and focusing legislative efforts toward areas they are most likely to have a positive impact (and least likely to do harm).

In many respects, California’s new regulations start in a strong place. They have a clear and quantifiable aim: the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, particularly those from transportation. Further, the regulations avoid a one-size-fits-all approach, as they must in a state as large and diverse as California. Instead, local governments will submit regional plans to state officials, who have billions of dollars of infrastructure funding to grant as incentives.

Further, the bill unites a diverse coalition of often adversarial groups. Developers, affordable housing advocates, and environmentalists (with some notable holdouts) have rallied around the legislation’s balance of carrots and sticks.

None of this, of course, guarantees that the submitted plans or the liberal application of government money will have the desired effect of bringing about low-emissions development. It’s worth keeping in mind that price levers are often a far better way of exerting pressure on complex systems than imposing direct controls. High gas prices are already slowing or reversing certain long-standing patterns of growth. Carbon pricing, gas taxes, congestion charges — all are effective tools for bringing direct reductions in greenhouse gas emissions while avoiding possibly inefficient, restrictive, or just ineffective mandates.

This may be the most important point in favor of California’s new planning regulations: they take place in the context of a set of energy policies designed to align consumer incentives with the broader planning effort. If the effort succeeds, California will likely once again set the pattern for other states to follow. If it fails, it will force urban planners to take a harder look at the tools in their toolbox.


Adam Stein is a co-founder of TerraPass. He writes on issues related to carbon, climate change, policy, and conservation.

Image credit Flickr/Bob Jagendorf.

Help us change the world - DONATE NOW!

(Posted by Adam Stein in Climate Change at 10:24 AM)

TPMtv: The First Dude Abides

Fox News's Greta Van Susteren conducted the first interview of Todd Palin since his wife Sarah was named the Republican vice presidential nominee. She grilled Todd on everything from the story behind the name "First Dude" to how he feels about the name "First Dude."

Full-size video at TPMtv.com.

Today's "What's In Your Bag?": Finger Puppets

Since we were just a little too scared to ask Anna "what's in your bag?" we took a brief hiatus, but now we're back!

Clearly the Fashion Week remnants are still among us, evidenced by the eclectic mix we hunted down this week. Kiki de Montparnasse, more puppies, Ralph Lauren, finger puppets, and a visit from my mommy... just a few of the reasons I heart New York!

--JAZZI McGILBERT


Wall Street: Social Insecurity Under McCain

via Huffington Post email alert:

If McCain Had His Way, That'd Be Our Social Security Money Wall Street is Losing

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Reuters/Brendan McDermid



John Neffinger:
I have been scratching my head why this has not been talked about more, especially since Obama has been having trouble winning votes among seniors. Now that you can't look at a newspaper or TV screen without seeing the mayhem on Wall Street, it's time to remind Americans what the world would look like if John McCain was in charge of our economic policy.   McCain is currently saying something about reform, and taking on "fat cats," and accusing Obama of being just as cozy with these Wall Streeters as anyone else. The upshot so far is that slightly more voters trust John McCain to handle the economy than trust Barack Obama.
Click here to read more.

Grapes With An End User License Agreement

From Serious Eats

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Photograph from dasmart on Flickr

Be careful the next time you eat a piece of fruit and want to reproduce its tissue; it might come with its own End User License Agreement:

The recipient of the produce contained in this package agrees not to propagate or reproduce any portion of the produce, including (but not limited to) seeds, stems, tissue and fruit.

[via Presurfer]

Recent scenes from North Korea

Celebrating 60 years of existence this year, North Korea holds out as the last Stalinist state in the world. In such a restrictive society, it is difficult - if not impossible - for residents to get news of the outside world, and for the outside world to see in. What photography comes out of North Korea is either state-produced, state-approved, or at the very least state-managed (visitors are restricted in their movement). Still, if you look over the following images with those restrictions in mind, one can still get some idea of life in North Korea in 2008. These photos were all taken within the past six months - some taken from the borders, peering in, others provided by North Korea itself, and several generously shared by freelance photographer Eric Lafforgue, who recently spent some time inside the country. (32 photos total)

Young koreans hold up colored display cards to form a background image for a performance of North Korea's Mass Games on September 12, 2008. The Mass Games are designed to entertain or celebrate holidays, and place emphasis on group dynamics rather than individual prowess. This particular show's name is "Prosper the Motherland!", dedicated to the 60th Anniversary of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, celebrated on September 9th. (© Eric Lafforgue)

Level the Playing Field

TPM Reader JL:

Hi, I'm a big fan of TPM, have never commented before but I've got a financial background and have grown really frustrated about the way the Democrats -- the Obama campaign in particular -- have not driven home their fundamental differences on how they view the role and operation of the financial markets, and how, at this point, implementation of one point of view over another is becoming the difference between the U.S. sliding downward into 2nd-world economic status or the dollar and U.S. financial markets maintaining their leading role around the world.

One metaphor the Democrats don't use, that I think of over and over when I hear Obama speak about the need for regulation: the markets operate like team sports -- like say, a football game. Team sports don't operate well without referees, and that's exactly what's happened under the Republicans.

They can blame Clinton all they want -- the fact is, the Republicans under leadership of such brain trusts as Phil Gramm have methodically removed the referees from the games, and look what's happened. One of the primary reasons investors shy away from putting money into third world countries is an ABSENCE OF REGULATION.

Why doesn't Obama encapsulate his ideas in this way? Democrats believe in free markets, but free markets need rules and referees, just like a football game does, otherwise chaos and destruction.

Grand Army Plaza, Reinvented

reinvent_GAP.jpg

Last Saturday, the opening of the Design Trust for Public Space's "Reinventing Grand Army Plaza" exhibit quickly transformed the plaza, normally devoid of any street life, into a vibrant public space. Visitors were welcomed with live music, a dance performance, food and exhibition tours. This photo set on Flickr has over 400 shots from Saturday's event. City Room reports:

Gone are the wasted expanses of concrete behind the arch, where ambulances used to lie in wait for traffic accident victims. The winning ideas include squaring the traffic circle to make more regular intersections, putting a canopy or elevated pedestrian walks over the plaza, creating a shelter for a year-round green market, adding a bike rental shop, and putting a visitor center at the subway stop.

The plaza, home to the city’s second-largest green market, close neighbor to four top Brooklyn attractions, and the occasional rooster, was done in by the car.

Residents in Park Slope, Prospect Heights, Crown Heights and Prospect-Lefferts Gardens, the four neighborhoods it separates instead of unites, are hard pressed to figure out how to reach the Bailey Fountain and the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Arch without becoming roadkill. The traffic whizzing around the plaza has been called “the only concrete and asphalt roulette wheel in the world.”

You can check out the designs of all 30 finalists here, and if you see one that you think promises to improve conditions for pedestrians and cyclists, don't forget to give it your people's choice award vote.

Photo: The Design Trust for Public Space

i remember



i remember

Disappear?

Yesterday's very bad day for Carly Fiorina didn't go unnoticed within the McCain campaign, as CNN reports:

A top McCain official contacted by CNN said, on condition on anonymity, "No big deal, but not how you get on the surrogate all-star team. Very Biden-like."

"This campaign source said Fiorina would be discouraged from additional media interviews.

Another top campaign adviser was far less diplomatic.

"Carly will now disappear," this source said. "Senator McCain was furious." Asked to define "disappear," this source said, adding that she would be off TV for a while - but remain at the Republican National Committee and keep her role as head of the party's joint fundraising committee with the McCain campaign.

Fiorina was booked for several TV interviews over the next few days, including one on CNN. Those interviews have been canceled.

If I were leaking to the press like that about Fiorina, I'd be worried about getting bugged.

Late Update: Atrios makes a good point: "Now that the government is running the biggest insurance company in the world, shouldn't we elect a president who is qualified to run a large company?"

From making a list of questions to crafting the interview experience

I recently had the opportunity to look over a list of excellent questions that my colleagues had put together in preparation for conducting research interviews. There was little to add in regards to content, so I gave instead my unbidden 2 cents about the form of the interview and some of my experiences in turning lists of questions into productive and interesting research interviews. And now I will share it with you!

Flow. What is the participant’s experience of the interview? How can the experience best be crafted to support storytelling by the participant? How can the environment you are in with the participant be integrated in to your questions? Questions are often organized by research topic, but it is valuable to consider question order from the perspective of a natural conversation. For example, you might want to know what kinds of mobile devices a participant owns and also who are the people they have close relationships with. Consider how a conversation might naturally transition from what you make calls with to whom you make calls to.

Build rapport. Think about how your questions build and re-enforce rapport. Make sure you lead with icebreaker questions that are not too personal, but easy to answer and show that you are very interested in the person’s life. Open ended questions are good for this….for mobile research, perhaps something like “Can you tell me the story of mobile phones in your life….like when you first heard of them until now?” Save demographic questions that haven’t been answered in the course of the interview until last, where these questions won’t feel so formal and distancing.

Show over tell. Is there ways for people to show you devices, artifacts, pictures, things in their life that they can use to help them talk more robustly and accurately about their life experiences. For example, when talking about text messaging, invite the participant to demonstrate how they use their phone and show you a record of the text conversations they have had with it.

Pacing. Save more difficult questions, like asking someone to project themselves into the future until after you have a comfortable rapport….until you have shared a laugh or smile. This pacing gives people time to feel that they can take risks in answering your questions such as telling you the “real truth”, sharing their hunches and trying to answer questions they don’t feel they quite have the answers for. It also gives you the ability to support the participant, when necessary, in answering difficult questions by helping them reflect on what they have said thus far. Pacing and quality of rapport are obviously also important factors when asking socially difficult questions related to things like money, relationships, politics, etc.

Language choice. Consider the wording of questions to find a balance that asks for relevant details without making people feel less than competent….they are and should be able to demonstrate that they are experts on their own lives. For example, asking people to provide a percentage breakdown of how they spend their day might be tricky and distancing depending on people’s mathematical understandings of the world.

Prioritize. Get the answers to those question you most need answered. This prioritization may change over time, but its good to have priorities because once you find a way to get people to talk, they sometimes don’t stop.

Practice and revise. Consider doing practice interviews with friends or colleagues….it doesn’t matter if they are not in the target group…the goal is to check timing, flow, rapport, and question impact. It’s amazing the things I’ve overlooked, underestimated and assumed that leap to the fore once the interview is enacted.

The thing that I often remind myself when writing question lists and creating research protocols is that this is an enterprise in experience design. As a designer creating and conducting research, I have the opportunity to craft a useful, facincating and valuable experience for both the participant and myself, in this case, the interview.

Ted Stevens Is Earmark King -- Will McCain And Palin Say Anything?

Former Hillary adviser Phil Singer has a very nice catch over on his new blog: It seems that Alaska Senator Ted Stevens is by one measure this year's king of the earmarks. Will anti-earmark warriors John McCain and Sarah Palin say word boo about it?

From The Hill...

Stevens has secured the most earmarks in the Senate defense appropriations bill, according to an analysis by The Hill. The Hill reviewed projects requested by individual members that made it into the spending measure.

Stevens's earmark share in the defense bill is more than $200 million.

As Singer notes...

John McCain likes to say he "will use the bully pulpit to make the people who are wasting our tax dollars famous." Is he going to make Ted Stevens famous? Is Sarah Palin -- the supposed arch-enemy of earmarks -- going to weigh in against the Stevens earmarks?

Palin may still endorse Stevens for reelection -- she won't say one way or the other. So I think it's fair to predict that this Joan of Arc of earmarks slayers won't say a peep about her fellow Alaskan's massive earmarks haul.

BumpList at SFMOMA - “The Art of Participation: 1950 to Now

My project, BumpList: An Email Community for the Determined (in collaboration with Mike Bennett) will be showing at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) in a show called “The Art of Participation: 1950 to Now” opening on November 8, 2008. Press release for the show is here.

Other artists in the show include: “bramović/Ulay; Vito Acconci; Francis Alÿs; Chip Lord, Curtis Schreier and Bruce Tomb (former members of Ant Farm); John Baldessari; Joseph Beuys; Blank & Jeron and Gerrit Gohlke; George Brecht; Jonah Brucker-Cohen and Mike Bennett; John Cage; c a l c and Johannes Gees; Janet Cardiff; Lygia Clark; Minerva Cuevas; Maria Eichhorn; VALIE EXPORT; Harrell Fletcher and Jon Rubin; Fluxus Collective; Jochen Gerz; Kit Galloway and Sherrie Rabinowitz; Matthias Gommel; Felix Gonzalez-Torres; Dan Graham; Hans Haacke; Lynn Hershman Leeson; Nam June Paik; Allan Kaprow; Henning Lohner and Van Carlson; Rafael Lozano-Hemmer; Tom Marioni; MTAA (M.River and T.Whid Art Associates); Antoni Muntadas; Yoko Ono; Dan Phiffer and Mushon Zer-Aviv; Raqs Media Collective; Robert Rauschenberg; Warren Sack; Mieko Shiomi; Torolab; Wolf Vostell; Andy Warhol; Stephen Willats; and Erwin Wurm.”

Should be a pretty excellent show so check it out if you are in the bay area between November 8, 2008 and February 8, 2009. BumpList will be back online starting October 1st, 2008, so please join the list once it’s live!

Palin Online: Staggering Numbers

Republican vice-presidential nominee Alaskan Gov. Sarah Palin shakes hands with supporters after a rally with GOP presidential nominee Sen. John McCain in Vienna, Ohio, Sept. 16, 2008. (Aaron Josefczyk / Reuters) By Jose Antonio Vargas Exactly how broad is the reach of this online political earthquake known as Sarah Palin? Check out the numbers: More than 1.1 million people read the Alaska governor's Wikipedia article within the first 36 hours following her introduction as Sen....Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.

Boulud's New Spot to Be 'The Greatest Diner on Earth'

2007_07_dbgbmenu_specials.jpgThe Cuozz chats up Boulud to pry out a detail or two about his upcoming Bowery restaurant, fka DBGB, which will not, he repeats, NOT be a burger restaurant. Instead it will be, "'More casual even than a bistro,' he said first. Next: 'A cross between a brasserie and a diner.' Then, with a chuckle: 'It will be the greatest diner on earth.'"

Boulud also tells Steve-o that it will include such vague notions as "traditional things," "tricks of the trade," rolling carts with a leg of veal or beef, and of course "interesting sausage." As far as the design on the 150 seat space (here's the floorplan), it will "reflect the Bowery's historic role as home to kitchen supply stores." Oh D-Biggity, what does it all mean? Most importantly, of course, Boulud says it will be "hipper" than his pricey uptown affairs. According to the Cuozz the space, which was set to open in April '08, will debut sometime this winter.
· King of NYC [NYP]
· BREAKING Exclusive: Daniel Boulud Planning DBGB for the Bowery [~E~]
· Boulud on Bowery #01: $29 Hamburgers Coming Soon [~E~]

Andre Ethier: L.A. Dodger, Food Blogger

From Serious Eats

20080917-ethier.jpgWe somehow missed this last week, and I kick myself for that because it's such a cool story. The Wall Street Journal has a charming feature on L.A. Dodgers outfielder Andre Ethier and his nascent food blog.

Mr. Ethier knows where to find the best throat-meat tacos in Los Angeles, the juiciest Salvadoran papusas and the city's tastiest Romanian chicken stew. He waxes poetic about the pinto beans in his native Arizona, where they're often pureed with cream and lard. "Here they want you to taste the bean, not the lard, which is... different."

In June, Mr. Ethier began snapping pictures of the dishes at some of his favorite restaurants and posting them on a blog he calls Dining With 'Dre.

Ethier visits restaurants both upscale and homey, drafting his blog posts on his iPhone when he has spare time. He cites the blog Feasting in Phoenix (he was born and raised in that city) as a template for his own and tells the Journal that the food thing began as a way to keep his mind off the pressure of baseball.

Also cute: He and his wife even bought their own gyro-making rotisserie for a party they threw. [Tip o' the hat to Tom B.!]

In Two-Minute Ad, Obama Directly Addresses Voters About The Economy

The Obama campaign goes up with a two-minute ad in which Obama directly addresses the camera as he lays out his plans to rescue the economy:

The Obama campaign seemed caught off-guard by McCain's rather dramatic effort to transform himself into the race's real change agent. But this new spot, coming after days of ratcheted-up attacks on McCain over the economy, suggests that Team Obama is determined not to get outflanked by McCain's newfound effort amid the financial crisis to remake himself as a fire-breathing populist who will take on Wall Street.

The long spot, which doesn't mention McCain, gives Obama a chance to accomplish a bunch of things at once. He alludes to today's financial turmoil, which Dems hope will transform the political environment to ensure that the economy decides the election, while also pointing out that he'd been addressing people's economic concerns far before the real crisis started.

He lays out his plan with more specificity than you ordinarily get in an ad. He gives his call for an economic fix a patriotic cast: "We're Americans. We've met tough challenges before." And, in an effort to use the crisis to rise above the current political battles that have damaged him, he returns to his theme of new, post-partisan politics: "I approved this message because bitter, partisan fights and outworn ideas of the left and the right won't solve the problems we face today."

Full script of the ad, which will air in battleground states around the country, after the jump.

In the past few weeks, Wall Street's been rocked as banks closed and markets tumble. But for many of you -- the people I've met in town halls, backyards and diners across America -- our troubled economy isn't news. 600,000 Americans have lost their jobs since January. Paychecks are flat and home values are falling. It's hard to pay for gas and groceries and if you put it on a credit card they've probably raised your rates. You're paying more than ever for health insurance that covers less and less.

This isn't just a string of bad luck. The truth is that while you've been living up to your responsibilities Washington has not. That's why we need change. Real change. This is no ordinary time and it shouldn't be an ordinary election. But much of this campaign has been consumed by petty attacks and distractions that have nothing to do with you or how we get America back on track.

Here's what I believe we need to do. Reform our tax system to give a $1,000 tax break to the middle class instead of showering more on oil companies and corporations that outsource our jobs. End the "anything goes" culture on Wall Street with real regulation that protects your investments and pensions.

Fast track a plan for energy 'made-in-America' that will free us from our dependence on mid-east oil in 10 years and put millions of Americans to work. Crack down on lobbyists -- once and for all -- so their back-room deal-making no longer drowns out the voices of the middle class and undermines our common interests as Americans. And yes, bring a responsible end to this war in Iraq so we stop spending billions each month rebuilding their country when we should be rebuilding ours.

Doing these things won't be easy. But we're Americans. We've met tough challenges before. And we can again.

I'm Barack Obama. I hope you'll read my economic plan. I approved this message because bitter, partisan fights and outworn ideas of the left and the right won't solve the problems we face today. But a new spirit of unity and shared responsibility will.


September 16, 2008

Redrawing the MoMA Logo


Instapaper is now being featured in the App Store! I’m very...



Instapaper is now being featured in the App Store!

I’m very honored. Thanks, everyone, for using it and making Instapaper popular enough to get on Apple’s radar. (And thanks to everyone who has purchased Instapaper Pro!)

Note: Phillies are in First, Wright is still Confident

The Phillies defeated the Braves tonight, meaning the Phillies now lead the Mets by one win for first place in the NL East, though both teams are tied in the loss column.

David Wright, following tonight’s loss to the Nationals, said:

“This is what makes it fun…This is what you work hard for.  This is what you prepare for…This is a bump in the road.  It doesn’t matter what Philadelphia does.  It only matters what the guys in this clubhouse do and we plan on getting the job done.  Like I said, we’re gonna see what we’re made of.  This is a little bump in the road, and I’m excited moving forward because I think we’ve got a room full of guys who will not allow us to fail.”

Jose Reyes, speaking to reporters, said:

“We’re still in a good position.  We just have to start again…It’s not going to be easy.  So, we just need to win.”

There are 12 games left in the 2008 season.

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Mets Lose 1-0 To Nats And First Place to Phils. Is This A Joke?

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It just gets stupider

Quote of the day, courtesy of Obama campaign spokesperson Bill Burton:

If John McCain hadn't said that "the fundamentals of our economy are strong" on the day of one of our nation's worst financial crises, the claim that he invented the BlackBerry would have been the most preposterous thing said all week.

Seems to sum it up nicely.

Getting Rid of Kosuke

I had someone bite on my offer to take away some of the Kosuke Fukudome cards I've been plagued with recently. Davis of Oklahoma is a big Cubs fan (but we won't hold that against him) and needed a Goudey rookie. We worked out a swap of the Goudey and the Heroes double card of Ichiro and Kosuke for a couple of mini cards. I threw in a few Cubs and a Dice-K to sweeten the pot. When it comes to mini cards or Cubs, the minis win every time in Casa de Dayf. I was slack about getting to the post office so I received these yesterday before I sent his package. Now I feel shame. The cards kick ass though!

2008 A&G 260 Mark Teixeira mini

THE FIRST BASEMAN THAT ATE MYRTLE BEACH

Well, the Braves' minor league team at Myrtle Beach at any rate. I've soured on Tex, but I love the pose in this figure. Very supervillainesque. "You puny mortals will never defeat the power of my MechaBoras Contract! MUAAHAHAHAHAHAAAA!!!!!!" Then the girl screams and runs and twists her ankle and the brave hero calls in the airstrike and Tex loses his balance swatting at the jet fighters and falls on top of a Mexican restaurant where he discovers to his horror that his secret weakness is guacamole. The good guys win in the end and the the hero whips off his fedora and gives the girl a great big smooch. After the credits a graveyard scene is shown and suddenly a hand wearing a gold glove pops up from the grave. THE END......?

2008 Goudey HPC-11 Hit Joe Montana Parade of Champions

I freaking love these cards. The whole set is like a tiny callery of ionic photos. Even the LaDanian Tomlinson card that doesn't fit with the rest of the cards shows LT wearing the sweet powder blue unis. The first three I pulled were of Reggie's swing, Orr's leap and Michael Jordan making out with the NBA Championship Trophy. I was hooked then. Once I get the set together I'll have to post a gallery.

I think I did pretty good in exchange for some Fukus, don't you? I hope the cards I sent are as enjoyed as much as these.

Food and Drink On-the-Job Injuries

From Serious Eats

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Illustrator Peter Hoey for Time Out New York

Though typing on the keyboard at a desk job isn't great for your wrists, shaking up a cocktail—in some cases, a whole two minutes—can't be good for the carpal tunnel either. Food and drink professionals are at risk of many physical injuries, as Time Out New York recently noted.

Baristas must watch out for "barista arm," or a tendinitis-like feeling after making hundreds of espressos and lattes in a 40-hour work week. Professional ice cream scoopers fear "scooper's wrist" after yanking out still-frozen flavors, especially if they contain pistachios or hazelnuts, which are harder to scoop.

Servers balance wobbly trays, squat to take your order, and refill your ice water with heavy pitchers. What injuries have you suffered while working in a restaurant or food business? Zesting your hands? The inevitable burn?

Sex, Lies, and Trooper-Gate

Sarah Palin is having trouble keeping her stories straight about why she fired her public safety director in Trooper-Gate.

At one point, she went so far as to say she hadn't fired him at all: he'd quit. But now, with help from the McCain campaign, she's come up with a new justification for what is again being called a firing: insubordination.

And what, you ask, did he do that was supposedly insubordinate? He was too aggressive in trying to go after sex offenders, specifically child molesters. Seriously.

● The totem fridge

Totem Fridge

For creator Stefan Buchberger, a design student at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna, the idea grew out of a semester-long theme about keeping personal space clean and tidy. "I decided to create Flatshare fridge because there is nothing more disgusting than a dirty fridge in a shared flat," he says. "At the time, I was living in such a flat!"

The fridge consists of a base station and up to four stackable modules. The modules allow each individual user to have his or her own refrigerator space and can be customized with various colorful skins as well as with add-ons like a bottle opener or a whiteboard.

The Flatshare refrigerator has the perhaps unfortunate side effect of reinforcing which household members hold lower positions on the metaphorical totem pole and therefore always need to bend down to access their unit while higher-status members can easily get at their fruit and veg without genuflection. (via cribcandy)

preGame: Mets @ Nationals (Game Two)

The Game:

The first place Mets (83-66) continue their four-game series against the Nationals (57-93) tonight at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., starting at 7:10 pm.

The Lineup:

The Pitchers:

RHP Mike Pelfrey (13-9, 3.77 ERA) starts for the Mets.

LHP Odalis Perez (6-10, 4.48 ERA) starts for the Nationals.

How To Catch It:

Tonight’s game can be seen on SNY and heard on WFAN.

The Bleachers:

For a live chat, head over to The Hot Foot Bleachers.

…this is an absolute must win for the Mets tonight…not because i think the season hangs in the balance on this game, as i still believe this team will win the division, but with the media and most fans on the brink of calling this a repeat of last september, the Mets need this win to prevent them from possibly falling to second place, which would most certainly alter the dymanic of the clubhouse…

…and, another thing, i’m tired of seeing the same old guys running out from the bullpen in big spots…i understand Jerry Manuel would get a ton of heat for throwing guys like Robert Parnell, Al Reyes, etc., in big spots, especially if they fail, but at this point, unless Roger McDowell or Jesse Orosco are being driven to the mound in a bullpen car, then i’d rather see anybody but the usual suspects out there…

…enjoy, and as always, Let’s Go Mets

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Eight Items or Less: Girl Talk, Lily Allen and KAWS

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1. PAPER covergirl Lily Allen's second album is now tentatively scheduled for release on February 9, 2009. 2. Pittsburgh biomedical engineer Gregg Gillis already sold out two shows at Terminal 5 (November 15 & 16) and has now added a third on the 18th. The New York Times called the artist, aka Girl Talk, "a lawsuit waiting to happen" due to his somewhat sample-heavy repertoire. 3. An indoor smoking ban has gone into effect in the Netherlands but the pot smokers are still safe. While tobacco smokers (and those who like to mix pot or hash with tobacco) have been pushed outside or into ventilated smoking rooms, you can still smoke the real thing indoors -- at least in "coffee shops." 4. KAWS opening at Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery in Miami this Saturday, September 20 from 7 to 10. The show will be up until November 15. (194 NW Miami Ave.) 5. Edition Hotels, Ian Schrager's new chain with Marriott, launched a website that's "main purpose, according to hotelchatter.com, "seems to be giving praise to and kissing Schrager's ass."

The Last Earth Day

This article was written by Alex Steffen and Sarah Rich in April 2007. We're republishing it here as part of our month-long editorial retrospective.

trash%20can.jpgMost of the time, we go far out of our way to blog from the sunny side of the street, but today we have something important to say that involves some strong words: Sunday should be the last Earth Day.

This weekend, throughout much of North America and across the globe, hundreds of thousands of people who care about the environment will get together at protests, concerts, neighborhood clean-ups and tree-plantings... and accomplish almost nothing. Earth Day, which every year has become less and less the revolutionary event it once was, seems this year to have entered a new phase of meaninglessness. Indeed, this year it appears to have gone into a form of retrograde motion and begun to move actively away from the concept of comprehensive sustainability that drives all rational environmentalism. In short, Earth Day has served its time, and it must go.

The biggest problem with Earth Day is that it has become a ritual of sympathy for the idea of environmental sanity. Small steps, we're told, ignoring the fact that most of the steps most frequently promoted (returning your bottles, bringing your own bag, turning off the water while you brush your teeth) are of such minor impact (compared to our ecological footprints) that they are essentially meaningless without larger, systemic action as well. The strategy of recycling as a gateway drug -- get them hooked on it and we can move them on to harder stuff -- has failed miserably. We can do better.

It is, essentially, the politics of gesture, little different than wearing a rubber wrist band or a pink ribbon, and, such a politics is primarily a means of raising money for large NGOs while making regular folks feel a little better about their relationship to a terribly flawed system. It's a broken model, and we can do better.

If the politics of gesture weren't bad enough, Earth Day is rapidly becoming a firestorm of gestural shopping. Marketers today will shamelessly slap the "green" label on nearly anything, including things that are demonstrably stupid and ecologically steps backwards -- Hello? A solar-powered bikini? WTF? -- encouraging us to mistake shopping therapy for strategic consumption. We've said it before, and we'll say it here again: you can't shop your way to sustainability, and we can do better.

What may be worse is the recent plethora of "green issues," "green guides" and special Earth Day sections that have blanketed our media. A decade ago, we would have been excited to see green ideas (even lame ones) given such prominent play, but these days, such editorial eco-ghettos strike us more as an admission of skewed priorities, with ecological sanity presented as a product feature, like a well-designed cupholder, rather than as a fundamental strategy for avoiding widespread collapse.

Of course, perhaps we're less concerned than we ought to be about widespread collapse because the catastrophe has so far overtaken not wealthy white people but poor people of color in poverty-striken regions like New Orleans, Haiti, Rwanda and the Sahel. Here, too, the message of Earth Day is disheartening: while we mark the day in part to help our kids feel a sense of environmental responsibility, on a planet where climate change alone already (by conservative projections) kills 150,000 people a year (think, roughly, of a 9/11 every week) and the forecast through much of Africa, South Asia and the Middle East calls for nothing but climate misery, the other 364 days of our year look like a smokestack-sized raised middle finger. As we've discussed before, we're by no means immune to the problems we're doing the most to create, and our society's inability to sustain itself, not terrorism, is what ought to really keep us up at night. But with what Jared Diamond calls "a global Somalia" unfolding around the world in large part because of our voracious appetites, our continuing to treat sustainability as an optional good deed fails, somewhat understandably, to lessen the moral contempt many elsewhere feel for us these days. We can do better.

Doing better will involve, first and foremost, setting a hard bar against which to measure our actions. That bar sits at the level of a one-planet life. Could every person on the planet live like us without destroying the biosphere? Are we at least taking actions which will make our lives and the lives of others one-planet in time to avert disaster?

And time is of the essence here. It looks like we have at most four decades to cut our ecological impacts by a factor of ten, and the longer it takes us, the deeper the cuts will need to be and more painful the consequences will prove. It is also entirely possible for us to fail completely, with the best of intentions, by not acting boldly enough, quickly enough. Three decades would probably be a safer target. Seen in this light, the solar bikinis and greenwashing campaigns cluttering up this Earth Day no longer look benign or amusing. They're taking attention and costing us time we might spend creating real change -- and time lost is catastrophe brought nearer. In an era, as Dana Meadows reminded us, when we seem to be running hard up against the limits of so many natural systems, the ultimate limit turns out to be time.

That measure -- one planet, three decades -- should be the gold standard against which we judge all activism and politics, commerce and innovation. And though we can't say precisely how profoundly we must change or exactly how quickly, we can't let ourselves or others off the hook in that regard: the numbers are close enough to be terrifying. One planet, three decades.

With that goal in mind, one fact pops out: you can't get there alone. None of us can. It is not possible to for an average person to live a reasonably prosperous North American (or even European) lifestyle and reduce their footprint to one planet by themselves.

This point is worth pausing on, because so much of the green marketing BS around us tells us that the planetary crises we face are our fault, that it is our responsibility to fix them and that buying products which are marketed as "green" will fix that problem. The myth of individual lifestyle responsibility is so strong, most of us don't even comment on it anymore. But in many ways, it's a lie. What most needs to be changed in the world are the systems in which we are all enmeshed, and we ourselves, acting alone, are almost powerless to change those systems. To do that, we need better information, stronger connections and new ways of thinking.

Information:

Our world is opaque by design. It is very, very difficult to get good information about the ecological and social cost of the products we buy and the services we use, or even of the actions of the institutions where we work. That's not an accident. Transparency empowers, and it's not really in the interest of anyone who benefits from the status quo to empower average people to judge whether their products, services and organizations are doing good things in the world or not.

Which is exactly why transparency is so important. If we're serious about dramatically reducing our footprints, we need to know the true impacts of our actions. We need to know the backstories of all the objects and services in our lives. We need the flows of energy and resources and money that once were hidden from our sight to be made visible. We need complete transparency in public life, so we know our governments (which are ultimately the most important shared levers for action we own) are working (and on who's behalf). And we need all this information revealed in ways that interest and delight and outrage and inform us, through projects like Background Stories and FarmSubsidy.Org and reHOUSE/bath. Knowing the true backstories of our lives is not only the first step to changing our own behaviors intelligently (through strategic consumption, for instance), it's also the best way to make clear the need for combined, collective action.

When we know the origin and the journey of things, as well as the departure route and final resting place (or ideally, the place of reuptake into a circular system), we gain tremendous empowerment and autonomy in creating a sustainable world. This is a move from cradle-to-grave processes into a cradle-to-cradle approach, in which we generate no byproduct that can't be employed in the manufacturing of something else useful. This is the "3 R's" reapplied to a 21st century context, where it's not about recycling the plastic bottle, it's about closing the loop at the bioplastic bottle-making plant. Until this happens, we are implicated in a footprint much larger than the size of our own feet, no matter how vigilantly we strive to shrink our personal impacts. No North American can achieve a one-planet life until we reduce our continental footprint, so let's go hack those systems. If we take control of the information flows, we can.

Stronger Connections:

We have our parameters: a high bar on sustainability, and a pace that can outrun the passing of time and degradation of the environment. We have our guidelines: absolute transparency in government and corporate operations, knowing the backstory of the things we buy and use, and closing the production loop on those things through cradle-to-cradle design. Now we must assemble our team.

All around the world, we are meeting each other, exchanging cards and ideas, and beginning to come into an awareness of ourselves as something new -- not a movement, really, as much as a sort of emerging caucus for reality. "The two omnipresent parties of History," said Emerson, "the party of the Past and the party of the Future, divide society to-day as of old." The party of the future is on the side of innovation, solutions and creativity. That's us, and if we don't win, the party of the past will leave to us the broken future we're glimpsing in places like Darfur. So we need to start playing to win.

The magnitude of the challenges daunts us all, of course, but it shouldn't. Every day, the community of people who understand the stakes we're playing for grows, and we become more brilliant and able. Already, loose networks exist -- of designers and architects, engineers and hackers, activists and electeds, union leaders and CEOs, neighborhood advocates and local businesspeople, church leaders and artists -- of future-focused people dedicated to trying to figure out how to ignite this transformation.

If running Worldchanging has taught us anything, it is this: there are a hell of a lot more of us than any one of us tends to think. And we have millions of friends out there (from all walks of life) who lack only an understanding of the challenge and the possibilities to become feisty, useful allies. Most people do not want to destroy the biosphere or ruin their fellow human beings or impoverish their children. We have an incredibly important asset on our side: our position is the only sane one.

What we need now are much stronger connections between the various camps of people who are all charging forward determined to build a future that works. We need an explosion in information sharing and mutual education, across borders and across disciplines -- almost a second Enlightenment, where through open debate and fresh thinking and artistic brilliance, we join together to banish ecological ignorance and transcend social irresponsibility. If that doesn't sound fun, you're reading the wrong site.

New Ways of Thinking:

We know now that one planet lives, conceived properly, will be better lives. Many products that are more sustainable are also better made and beautifully durable. Green homes -- with natural light and fresh air and good insulation -- are more comfortable than McMansions. Vibrant neighborhoods with nice streets and parks and a strong community offer a better quality of every day life. Fewer toxic chemicals in the air means less asthma and cancer; better food and more walking means less heart disease and diabetes; less driving means fewer people killed and injured in accidents. Waste is expensive, bad design is expensive, and the money we save eliminating both can leave us better off than we were. We can build lives which are bright green and prosperous.

Bright green economies will be the drivers of 21st Century business. The future belongs to those enterprises and agencies that capture the markets for wind power and other clean energy, water purification, clean tech, advanced vehicles, and the sorts of appropriate technologies (like rainwater harvesting and LED lights) needed for sustainable urban living at the bottom of the pyramid. That path leads to the future, and the wreckage of companies and countries that can't learn to think differently will line the way.

Right now, emerging nations are copying a model of development they know to be flawed, ruinous and a dead end -- our model -- but no other model exists. If we reinvent ourselves, we can light the way to a new kind of development, one which the billions of people rightly clamoring for more prosperity can actually build for themselves. We also know that a one-planet life looks different in Senegal versus Switzerland, Brazil versus Bangladesh. Those who a pioneering breakthrough innovations in design, industry, health and technology, carry a serious responsibility as a force of influence for what's to come around the world, and that influence will play out in a thousand ways.

Becoming leaders in that transition by embracing new thinking will help restore to those of us in the U.S., the respect we have lost in much of the rest of the world. Thomas Friedman argued in his New York Times piece last Sunday that in fact this "green blueprint" might be the only hope remaining we have (in the U.S.) to repair and reestablish productive, harmonious international relationships. And if those of us who have been laggards and obstructionists -- Americans, Canadians, Australians and others -- embrace collaborative leadership on sustainability and social innovation, the world's prospects will improve dramatically.

So what we need is a dramatic break with the past. Earth Day accomplished its mission; the environment is now near the top of the global agenda. By making this Earth Day our last, we can signal that the time for mere awareness is over, and the time for real transformation has arrived.

Make This Earth Day Your Last! is part of our month long retrospective leading up to our anniversary on October 1. For the next four weeks, we'll celebrate five years of solutions-based, forward-thinking and innovative journalism by publishing the best of the Worldchanging archives.

Help us change the world - DONATE NOW!

(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Worldchanging Retro at 2:21 PM)

Amy Poehler To Leave SNL

amypoehler1.jpgSaturday Night Live is about to lose another good one.

Funny lady Amy Poehler has announced that she will be saying goodbye to the sketch show sooner than originally expected. The Baby Mama star, who is about to give birth to her own baby in October, was scheduled to exit after this season finishes, but has decided not to return to SNL after her maternity leave.

Instead, Amy will go from changing newborn diapers to work on her new show, which is a spinoff of The Office.

"It's gonna be really hard—Boyz II Men hard—to say goodbye to yesterday," Amy recently joked to Men's Vogue of her depature. "SNL was dangerous, late-night, last-minute and star-studded, but like any good drug, you need to know when to put it down."

Having been on the show since 2001, Amy was one of the last shining lights left. She will be missed.

Rothko remembrance

Mark Rothko's daughter Kate remembers her father nearly 40 years after his death.

Rothko may have been depressed at the end of his life, he may not have been as clear as he should have been when it came to writing a will; but with regard to his work, and where it might end up, he had long held strong views. While selling to private individuals from his studio, he would scrutinise their reactions to paintings; they had to pass a test they did not know they were taking. If they failed, they went home empty-handed, irrespective of the size of their wallets. Lighting, on which wall of a gallery a painting might hang; these things obsessed him.

I saw Rothko's Seagram Murals at the Tate Modern in May.

(link)

'Whatever, Martha!' Premiere Tonight, Martha Gets Seriously Mocked by Daughter

From Serious Eats

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Martha Stewart's daughter, Alexis Stewart, is probably not making a precious place setting with fall leaves and acorns right now. Like mother, like daughter only goes so far. Instead, she's somewhere making fun of her mom's early '90s episodes of Martha Stewart Living.

That's the premise of the new show Whatever, Martha! Hosted by Alexis and her friend Jennifer Koppelman Hutt (daughter of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia chairman Charles Koppelman), Whatever, Martha! premieres tonight on the Fine Living network.

It's a half hour of Alexis and Jennifer vegging on a couch, or engaging in arts and crafts, while making fun of Martha's short shorts, bed fetishes, and masked OCD moments (when kids go berserk with icing, clearly destroying her concept of cupcake design).

The sarcastic narration is reminiscent of Mystery Science Theater 3000 but with more potpourri and bobbing for apples. Episode previews, after the jump.

I wouldn't be surprised if Martha had a "No Giggling" rule in her house, but weirdly enough, she's the one who came up with the show. Though putting herself in harm's way of on-air teasing, it's a pretty smart business move. Fine Living isn't usually hot with the twentysomething audience, but this could become the Martha show for people not old enough for Martha. It's also a great use of rotting episodes from 1991 to 2004, probably being ignored in some office.

Watching a preview episode, at first I sort of felt bad for the younger Martha, but quickly realized—this can only grow her empire even more. She can take a few jabs for that.

Daughter Alexis on Life with Martha

Some Best Moments from the 'Whatever, Martha!'

Previously

'Whatever, Martha!' Mocks Vintage Martha Stewart TV Shows

John McCain and Sarah Palin Break the U.S. Lying Record; Potus Illustrated Has the Scoop

This week's issue just arrived in the mail, and it's a keeper: John McCain breaks the U.S. lying record, and Potus Illustrated has the scoop. Also: Sarah Palin and Nancy Pfotenhauer (Yes, I made this. For more stuff like it, see the magazine covers tag. The two primary fonts are Knockout and Mercury, both from the geniuses at Hoefler & Frere-Jones.) More Potus info is here.

The Anarchist Ice Cream Truck: The dessert truck trend has now...

2008_09_anarchy.jpgThe dessert truck trend has now gone to the next level: politics. The City Room interviews Aaron Gach, driver of the Anarchist Ice Cream Truck, who sells ice cream, distributes progressive literature, and stores gas masks (among other things) in the freezers: "The truck is the perfect tool for monitoring police action at a demonstration, and protecting and replenishing protesters, Mr. Gach said. The ice cream attracts protesters and even some police. Often the police wave them through blockades, fooled by the truck." [City Room]

Minors: The Futures of Evans and Murphy

In case you missed it, the Mets named Daniel Murphy and Nick Evans co–players of the year for their minor-league organization.

Today, in a post to Mets Minor League Blog, Toby Hyde takes a closer look where Muprhy and Evans could be headed in their careers.

By the way, Murphy will play during this year’s Arizona Fall League, according to Baseball America.

…based on the rest of the roster, it appears that murphy will be the team’s second baseman, which is exciting…from what i can gather, the team would like to get a better look at him in this role, so to know how murphy best fits in to their plans for the off-season and beyond

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IND second system

Why people pirate games

Last month, indie game developer Cliff Harris asked on his blog: why do people pirate the games I make? That question made its way onto some popular web sites and he got hundreds of thoughtful responses. Kevin Kelly summed up the responses that Harris received.

He found patterns in the replies that surprised him. Chief among them was the common feeling that his games (and games in general) were overpriced for what buyers got -- even at $20. Secondly, anything that made purchasing and starting to play difficult -- like copy protection, DRM, two-step online purchasing routines -- anything at all standing between the impulse to play and playing in the game itself was seen as a legitimate signal to take the free route. Harris also noted that ideological reasons (rants against capitalism, intellectual property, the man, or wanting to be outlaw) were a decided minority.

The gaming, music, and movie industry would do well to take note of the key sentence here: "Anything that made purchasing and starting to play difficult -- like copy protection, DRM, two-step online purchasing routines -- anything at all standing between the impulse to play and playing in the game itself was seen as a legitimate signal to take the free route."

Last week, I tried to buy an episode of a TV show from the iTunes Store. It didn't work and there was no error message. Thinking the download had corrupted something, I tried again and the same problem occurred. (I learned later that I needed to upgrade Quicktime.) Because I just wanted to watch the show and not deal with Apple's issues, I spend two minutes online, found it somewhere for free, and watched the stolen version instead. I felt OK about it because I'd already paid for the real thing *twice*, but in the future, I'll be a little wary purchasing TV shows from iTunes and maybe go the easier route first.

(link)

Invoicing made easy with GrandTotal

Filed under:

If you own and run a small business, part of your work involves creating and sending invoices to clients. For many Mac users, invoices are created in Word, Excel, Numbers, or some other application that really isn't designed for that purpose.

Media Atelier might have an answer in their new Leopard-only invoicing package for Mac, GrandTotal. GrandTotal provides a number of design tools for creating a good-looking invoice to represent your organization, and free templates are available from Meda Atelier's website. You can then set up your customers, create a catalog of goods or services, create estimates or full invoices, and send them out either immediately or on a timed basis. Invoices are marked off when paid, and the Dock icon always shows how many invoices are due or overdue.

GrandTotal works hand-in-hand with Media Atelier's TimeLog 4 application, so for those of you who work on a billable hour basis can enter your time into the TimeLog app, then import into GrandTotal. A free trial is available for download (click downloads file), and the application can be purchased from within the demo for €49.

What do you use to create invoices? Leave a note in the comments.
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Obama Keeps Hitting McCain On The Economy

In Colorado, Obama is currently hammering McCain again for his claim that the "fundamentals of our economy are strong" -- another sign that the Obama team thinks they've got McCain in a serious gaffe that perfectly reinforces the message that McCain is out of touch with the economic distress of most Americans.

From the prepared remarks:

Yesterday, Wall Street suffered its worst losses since just after 9/11. We are in the most serious financial crisis in generations. Yet Senator McCain stood up yesterday and said that the fundamentals of the economy are strong

A few hours later, his campaign sent him back out to clean up his remarks, and he tried to explain himself again this morning by saying that what he meant was that American workers are strong. But we know that Senator McCain meant what he said the first time, because he has said it over and over again throughout this campaign -- no fewer than 16 times, according to one independent count.

Obama is also trying to sharpen up his efforts to tie the financial crisis directly to the conservative anti-regulation philosophy espoused by McCain for so long (pretty much up until yesterday, that is):

Make no mistake: my opponent is running for four more years of policies that will throw the economy further out of balance. His outrage at Wall Street would be more convincing if he wasn't offering them more tax cuts. His call for fiscal responsibility would be believable if he wasn't for more tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, and more of a trillion dollar war in Iraq paid for with deficit spending and borrowing from foreign creditors like China. His newfound support for regulation bears no resemblance to his scornful attitude towards oversight and enforcement.

John McCain cannot be trusted to reestablish proper oversight of our financial markets for one simple reason: he has shown time and again that he does not believe in it.

Separately, The Times has a good (if overly polite) rundown on the extent to which McCain's newfound populism in response to the crisis is out of whack with his decades-long record. Full transcript of Obama's remarks after the jump.

Over the last few days, we have seen clearly what's at stake in this election. The news from Wall Street has shaken the American people's faith in our economy. The situation with Lehman Brothers and other financial institutions is the latest in a wave of crises that have generated tremendous uncertainty about the future of our financial markets. This is a major threat to our economy and its ability to create good-paying jobs and help working Americans pay their bills, save for their future, and make their mortgage payments.

Since this turmoil began over a year ago, the housing market has collapsed. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had to be effectively taken over by the government. Three of America's five largest investment banks failed or have been sold off in distress. Yesterday, Wall Street suffered its worst losses since just after 9/11. We are in the most serious financial crisis in generations. Yet Senator McCain stood up yesterday and said that the fundamentals of the economy are strong

A few hours later, his campaign sent him back out to clean up his remarks, and he tried to explain himself again this morning by saying that what he meant was that American workers are strong. But we know that Senator McCain meant what he said the first time, because he has said it over and over again throughout this campaign - no fewer than 16 times, according to one independent count.

Now I certainly don't fault Senator McCain for all of the problems we're facing, but I do fault the economic philosophy he subscribes to. Because the truth is, what Senator McCain said yesterday fits with the same economic philosophy that he's had for 26 years. It's the philosophy that says we should give more and more to those with the most and hope that prosperity trickles down. It's the philosophy that says even common-sense regulations are unnecessary and unwise. It's a philosophy that lets Washington lobbyists shred consumer protections and distort our economy so it works for the special interests instead of working people.

We've had this philosophy for eight years. We know the results. You feel it in your own lives. Jobs have disappeared, and peoples' life savings have been put at risk. Millions of families face foreclosure, and millions more have seen their home values plummet. The cost of everything from gas to groceries to health care has gone up, while the dream of a college education for our kids and a secure and dignified retirement for our seniors is slipping away. These are the struggles that Americans are facing. This is the pain that has now trickled up.

So let's be clear: what we've seen the last few days is nothing less than the final verdict on an economic philosophy that has completely failed. And I am running for President of the United States because the dreams of the American people must not be endangered any more. It's time to put an end to a broken system in Washington that is breaking the American economy. It's time for change that makes a real difference in your lives.
If you want to understand the difference between how Senator McCain and I would govern as President, you can start by taking a look at how we've responded to this crisis. Because Senator McCain's approach was the same as the Bush Administration's: support ideological policies that made the crisis more likely; do nothing as the crisis hits; and then scramble as the whole thing collapses. My approach has been to try to prevent this turmoil.

In February of 2006, I introduced legislation to stop mortgage transactions that promoted fraud, risk or abuse. A year later, before the crisis hit, I warned Secretary Paulson and Chairman Bernanke about the risks of mounting foreclosures and urged them to bring together all the stakeholders to find solutions to the subprime mortgage meltdown. Senator McCain did nothing.

Last September, I stood up at NASDAQ and said it's time to realize that we are in this together - that there is no dividing line between Wall Street and Main Street - and warned of a growing loss of trust in our capital markets. Months later, Senator McCain told a newspaper that he'd love to give them a solution to the mortgage crisis, "but" - he said - "I don't know one."

In January, I outlined a plan to help revive our faltering economy, which formed the basis for a bipartisan stimulus package that passed the Congress. Senator McCain used the crisis as an excuse to push a so-called stimulus plan that offered another huge and permanent corporate tax cut, including $4 billion for the big oil companies, but no immediate help for workers.

This March, in the wake of the Bear Stearns bailout, I called for a new, 21st century regulatory framework to restore accountability, transparency, and trust in our financial markets. Just a few weeks earlier, Senator McCain made it clear where he stands: "I'm always for less regulation," he said, and referred to himself as "fundamentally a deregulator."

This is what happens when you confuse the free market with a free license to let special interests take whatever they can get, however they can get it. This is what happens when you see seven years of incomes falling for the average worker while Wall Street is booming, and declare - as Senator McCain did earlier this year - that we've made great progress economically under George Bush. That is how you can reach the conclusion - as late as yesterday - that the fundamentals of the economy are strong.

Well, we have a different way of measuring the fundamentals of our economy. We know that the fundamentals that we use to measure economic strength are whether we are living up to that fundamental promise that has made this country great -that America is a place where you can make it if you try.

Americans have always pursued our dreams within a free market that has been the engine of our progress. It's a market that has created a prosperity that is the envy of the world, and rewarded the innovators and risk-takers who have made America a beacon of science, and technology, and discovery. But the American economy has worked in large part because we have guided the market's invisible hand with a higher principle - that America prospers when all Americans can prosper. That is why we have put in place rules of the road to make competition fair, and open, and honest.

Too often, over the last quarter century, we have lost this sense of shared prosperity. And this has not happened by accident. It's because of decisions made in boardrooms, on trading floors and in Washington. We failed to guard against practices that all too often rewarded financial manipulation instead of productivity and sound business practices. We let the special interests put their thumbs on the economic scales. The result has been a distorted market that creates bubbles instead of steady, sustainable growth; a market that favors Wall Street over Main Street, but ends up hurting both.

Let me be clear: the American economy does not stand still, and neither should the rules that govern it. The evolution of industries often warrants regulatory reform - to foster competition, lower prices, or replace outdated oversight structures. Old institutions cannot adequately oversee new practices. Old rules may not fit the roads where our economy is leading. But instead of sensible reform that rewarded success and freed the creative forces of the market, too often we've excused an ethic of greed, corner-cutting and inside dealing that threatens the long-term stability of our economic system.

It happened in the 1980s, when we loosened restrictions on Savings and Loans and appointed regulators who ignored even these weaker rules. Too many S&Ls took advantage of the lax rules set by Washington to gamble that they could make big money in speculative real estate. Confident of their clout in Washington, they made hundreds of billions in bad loans, knowing that if they lost money, the government would bail them out. And they were right. The gambles did not pay off, our economy went into recession, and the taxpayers ended up footing the bill. Sound familiar?

And it has happened again during this decade, in part because of how we deregulated the financial services sector. After we repealed outmoded rules instead of updating them, we were left overseeing 21st century innovation with 20th century regulations. When subprime mortgage lending took a reckless and unsustainable turn, a patchwork of regulators systematically and deliberately eliminated the regulations protecting the American people and failed to raise warning flags that could have protected investors and the pensions American workers count on.

This was not the invisible hand of the market at work. These cycles of bubble and bust were symptoms of the ideology that my opponent is running to continue. John McCain has spent decades in Washington supporting financial institutions instead of their customers. In fact, one of the biggest proponents of deregulation in the financial sector is Phil Gramm - the same man who helped write John McCain's economic plan; the same man who said that we're going through a 'mental recession'; and the same man who called the United States of America a "nation of whiners." So it's hard to understand how Senator McCain is going to get us out of this crisis by doing the same things with the same old players.

Make no mistake: my opponent is running for four more years of policies that will throw the economy further out of balance. His outrage at Wall Street would be more convincing if he wasn't offering them more tax cuts. His call for fiscal responsibility would be believable if he wasn't for more tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, and more of a trillion dollar war in Iraq paid for with deficit spending and borrowing from foreign creditors like China. His newfound support for regulation bears no resemblance to his scornful attitude towards oversight and enforcement. John McCain cannot be trusted to reestablish proper oversight of our financial markets for one simple reason: he has shown time and again that he does not believe in it.

What has happened these last eight years is not some historical anomaly, so we know what to expect if we try these policies for another four. When lobbyists run your campaign, the special interests end up gaming the system. When the White House is hostile to any kind of oversight, corporations cut corners and consumers pay the price. When regulators are chosen for their disdain for regulation and we gut their ability to enforce the law, then the interests of the American people are not protected. It's an ideology that intentionally breeds incompetence in Washington and irresponsibility on Wall Street, and it's time to turn the page.

Just today, Senator McCain offered up the oldest Washington stunt in the book - you pass the buck to a commission to study the problem. But here's the thing - this isn't 9/11. We know how we got into this mess. What we need now is leadership that gets us out. I'll provide it, John McCain won't, and that's the choice for the American people in this election.

History shows us that there is no substitute for presidential leadership in a time of economic crisis. FDR and Harry Truman didn't put their heads in the sand, or hand accountability over to a Commission. Bill Clinton didn't put off hard choices. They led, and that's what I will do. My priority as President will be the stability of the American economy and the prosperity of the American people. And I will make sure that our response focuses on middle class Americans - not the companies that created the problem.

To get out of this crisis - and to ensure that we are not doomed to repeat a cycle of bubble and bust again and again - we must take immediate measures to create jobs and continue to address the housing crisis; we must build a 21st century regulatory framework, and we must pursue a bold opportunity agenda that creates new jobs and grows the American economy.

To jumpstart job creation, I have proposed a $50 billion Emergency Economic Plan that would save 1 million jobs by rebuilding our infrastructure, repairing our schools, and helping our states and localities avoid damaging budget cuts.

I worked with leaders in Congress to create a new FHA Housing Security Program, which will help stabilize the housing market and allow Americans facing foreclosure to keep their homes at rates they can afford. Going forward, we need to replace Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as we know them with a structure that is focused on helping people buy homes - not engaging in market speculation. We can't have a situation like the old S&L scandal where its "heads" investors win, and "tails" taxpayers lose. That's going to take ending the lobbyist-driven dominance of these institutions that we've seen for far too long in Washington.

To prevent fraud in the mortgage market, I've proposed tough penalties on fraudulent lenders, and a Home Score system that will ensure consumers fully understand mortgage offers and whether they'll be able to make payments. To help low- and middle-income families, I will ease the burden on struggling homeowners through a universal homeowner's tax credit. This will add up to a 10 percent break off the mortgage interest rate for 10 million households. That's another $500 each year for many middle class families.

Unlike Senator McCain, I will change our bankruptcy laws to make it easier for families to stay in their homes. Right now, if you're a family that owns one house, bankruptcy judges are actually barred from helping you keep a roof over your head by writing down the value of your mortgage. If you own seven homes, the judge is free to write down any or all of the debt on your second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth or seventh homes. Now that may be of comfort to Senator McCain, but that's the kind of out-of-touch Washington loophole that makes no sense. When I'm President, we'll make our laws work for working people.

But as we've seen the last few days, the crisis in our financial markets now reaches well beyond the housing market. That's why it's time to do what I called for last September and again this past March - and it is only more overdue today.

Our capital markets cannot succeed without the public's trust. It's time to get serious about regulatory oversight, and that's what I will do as President. That starts with the core principles for reform that I discussed at Cooper Union.

First, if you're a financial institution that can borrow from the government, you should be subject to government oversight and supervision. When the Federal Reserve steps in as a lender of last resort, it is providing an insurance policy underwritten by the American taxpayer. In return, taxpayers have every right to expect that financial institutions with access to that credit are not taking excessive risks.

Second, we must reform requirements on all regulated financial institutions. We must strengthen capital requirements, particularly for complex financial instruments like some of the mortgage securities and other derivatives at the center of our current crisis. We must develop and rigorously manage liquidity risk. We must investigate rating agencies and potential conflicts of interest with the people they are rating. And we must establish transparency requirements that demand full disclosure by financial institutions to shareholders and counterparties. As we reform our regulatory system at home, we must address the same problems abroad so that financial institutions around the world are subject to similar rules of the road.

Third, we need to streamline our regulatory agencies. Our overlapping and competing regulatory agencies cannot oversee the large and complex institutions that dominate the financial landscape. Different institutions compete in multiple markets - Washington should not pretend otherwise. A streamlined system will provide better oversight and reduce costs.

Fourth, we need to regulate institutions for what they do, not what they are. Over the last few years, commercial banks and thrift institutions were subject to guidelines on subprime mortgages that did not apply to mortgage brokers and companies. This regulatory framework failed to protect homeowners, and made no sense for our financial system. When it comes to protecting the American people, it should make no difference what kind of institution they are dealing with.

Fifth, we must crack down on trading activity that crosses the line to market manipulation. The last six months have shown that this remains a serious problem in many markets and becomes especially problematic during moments of great financial turmoil. We cannot embrace the administration's vision of turning over the protection of investors to the industries themselves. We need regulators that actually enforce the rules instead of overlooking them. The SEC should investigate and punish market manipulation, and report its conclusions to Congress.

Sixth, we must establish a process that identifies systemic risks to the financial system like the crisis that has overtaken our economy. Too often, we end up where we are today: dealing with threats to the financial system that weren't anticipated by regulators. We need a standing financial market advisory group to meet regularly and provide advice to the President, Congress, and regulators on the state of our financial markets and the risks they face. It's time to anticipate risks before they erupt into a full-blown crisis.

These six principles should guide the legal reforms needed to establish a 21st century regulatory system. But the change we need goes beyond laws and regulation. Financial institutions must do a better job at managing risks. There is something wrong when boards of directors or senior managers don't understand the implications of the risks assumed by their own institutions. It's time to realign incentives and CEO compensation packages, so that both high level executives and employees better serve the interests of shareholders.

Finally, the American people must be able to trust that their government is looking out for all of us - not the special interests that have set the agenda in Washington for eight years, and the lobbyists who run John McCain's campaign.

I've spent my career taking on lobbyists and their money, and I've won. If you wanted a special favor in Illinois, there was actually a law that let you give campaign cash to politicians for their own personal use. In the State House, they called it business-as-usual. I called it legalized bribery, and while it didn't make me the most popular guy in Springfield, I put an end to it.

When I got to Washington, we saw some of the worst corruption since Watergate. I led the fight for reform in my party, and let me tell you - not everyone in my party was too happy about it. When I proposed forcing lobbyists to disclose who they're raising money from and who in Congress they're funneling it to, I had a few choice words directed my way on the floor of the Senate. But we got it done, and we banned gifts from lobbyists, and free rides on their fancy jets. And I am the only candidate who can say that Washington lobbyists do not fund my campaign, they will not run my White House, and they will not drown out the voices of the American people when I am President of the United States. That's how we're going to end the outrage of special interests tipping the scales.

The most important thing we must do is restore opportunity for all Americans. To get our economy growing, we need to recapture that fundamental American promise. That if you work hard, you can pay the bills. That if you get sick, you won't go bankrupt. That your kids can get a good education, and that we can leave a legacy of greater opportunity to future generations.

That's the change the American people need. While Senator McCain likes to talk about change these days, his economic program offers nothing but more of the same. The American people need more than change as a slogan- we need change that makes a real difference in your life.

Change means a tax code that doesn't reward the lobbyists who wrote it, but the American workers and small businesses who deserve it. I will stop giving tax breaks to corporations that ship jobs overseas, and I will start giving them to companies that create good jobs right here in America. I will eliminate capital gains taxes for small businesses and start-ups - that's how we'll grow our economy and create the high-wage, high-tech jobs of tomorrow.

I will cut taxes - cut taxes - for 95% of all working families. My opponent doesn't want you to know this, but under my plan, tax rates will actually be less than they were under Ronald Reagan. If you make less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increase one single dime. In fact, I offer three times the tax relief for middle-class families as Senator McCain does - because in an economy like this, the last thing we should do is raise taxes on the middle-class.

I will finally keep the promise of affordable, accessible health care for every single American. If you have health care, my plan will lower your premiums. If you don't, you'll be able to get the same kind of coverage that members of Congress give themselves. And I will stop insurance companies from discriminating against those who are sick and need care the most

I will create the jobs of the future by transforming our energy economy. We'll tap our natural gas reserves, invest in clean coal technology, and find ways to safely harness nuclear power. I'll help our auto companies re-tool, so that the fuel-efficient cars of the future are built right here in America. I'll make it easier for the American people to afford these new cars. And I'll invest 150 billion dollars over the next decade in affordable, renewable sources of energy - wind power and solar power and the next generation of biofuels; an investment that will lead to new industries and five million new jobs that pay well and can't ever be outsourced

And now is the time to finally meet our moral obligation to provide every child a world-class education, because it will take nothing less to compete in the global economy. I'll recruit an army of new teachers, and pay them higher salaries and give them more support. But in exchange, I will ask for higher standards and more accountability. And we will keep our promise to every young American - if you commit to serving your community or your country, we will make sure you can afford a college education.

This is the change we need - the kind of bottom up growth and innovation that will advance the American economy by advancing the dreams of all Americans.

Times are hard. I will not pretend that the changes we need will come without cost - though I have presented ways we can achieve these changes in a fiscally responsible way. I know that we'll have to overcome our doubts and divisions and the determined opposition of powerful special interests before we can truly reform a broken economy and advance opportunity.

But I am running for President because we simply cannot afford four more years of an economic philosophy that works for Wall Street instead of Main Street, and ends up devastating both.

I don't want to wake up in four years to find that more Americans fell out of the middle-class, and more families lost their savings. I don't want to see that our country failed to invest in our ability to compete, our children's future was mortgaged on another mountain of debt, and our financial markets failed to find a firmer footing.

This time - this election - is our chance to stand up and say: enough is enough!

We can do this because Americans have done this before. Time and again, we've battled back from adversity by recognizing that common stake that we have in each other's success. That's why our economy hasn't just been the world's greatest wealth generator - it's bound America together, it's created jobs, and it's made the dream of opportunity a reality for generation after generation of Americans.

Now it falls to us. And I need you to make it happen. If you want the next four years looking just like the last eight, then I am not your candidate. But if you want real change - if you want an economy that rewards work, and that works for Main Street and Wall Street; if you want tax relief for the middle class and millions of new jobs; if you want health care you can afford and education so that our kids can compete; then I ask you to knock on some doors, and make some calls, and talk to your neighbors, and give me your vote on November 4th. And if you do, I promise you - we will win Colorado, we will win this election, and we will change America together.

Bamboozler Alert

You may have seen the kerfuffle yesterday that arose when the New York Post published an opinion piece by Amer Taheri in which he reported that Barack Obama was secretly negotiating with the Iraqi government to delay the withdrawal of U.S. troops.

The McCain camp (which is, remember, opposed to the quick withdrawal of U.S. troops) seized on this report, issuing a statement by Randy Scheunemann, McCain's top foreign policy adviser:

If news reports are accurate, this is an egregious act of political interference by a presidential candidate seeking political advantage overseas. ... The charge that he sought to delay the withdrawal of Americans from Iraq raises serious questions about Senator Obama's judgment and it demands an explanation.

If the news reports are accurate, and therein lies the rub. We'll have more on what exactly Obama has said on this issue, publicly, in a bit. But you need to know a bit more about Taheri, who runs in the same neocon circles as Scheunemann.

Taheri was the guy who back in 2006 fabricated the story that the Iranian government was requiring Jewish citizens to wear yellow badges to identify them as such. That story, which also ran in the Post, was completely discredited.

As we reported at TPMmuckraker at the time, Taheri has a long history of such bamboozlement, although it hasn't kept him from advising the White House on Middle East issues.

More soon ...

Late Update: Zachary Roth has the details.

Traits of the creative personality

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's ten paradoxical traits of the creative personality.

Furthermore, people who bring about an acceptable novelty in a domain seem able to use well two opposite ways of thinking: the convergent and the divergent. Convergent thinking is measured by IQ tests, and it involves solving well-defined, rational problems that have one correct answer. Divergent thinking leads to no agreed-upon solution. It involves fluency, or the ability to generate a great quantity of ideas; flexibility, or the ability to switch from one perspective to another; and originality in picking unusual associations of ideas. These are the dimensions of thinking that most creativity tests measure and that most workshops try to enhance.

Some of this seems like foolishness but the rest is a really interesting look at how to channel your creativity into success. (via 43f)

(link)

Doing It Without Much Sweat

In honor of Mo Rivera becoming #2 all-time in career saves last night, here’s a fun list via Baseball-Reference.com’s Play Index Pitching Game Finder - - since 1996, the leaders in saves where the pitcher required 9 pitches or less to nail down the save:

                   Games Link to Individual Games
+—————–+—–+————————-+
 Trevor Hoffman      109 Ind. Games
 Mariano Rivera       93 Ind. Games
 Billy Wagner         57 Ind. Games
 Todd Jones           56 Ind. Games
 Jose Mesa            55 Ind. Games
 Jason Isringhause    51 Ind. Games
 Robb Nen             46 Ind. Games
 Bob Wickman          43 Ind. Games
 Ugueth Urbina        41 Ind. Games
 Roberto Hernandez    41 Ind. Games
 Armando Benitez      41 Ind. Games

Click here to see the extended list.

Note: John Lannan is Cy Young

Last night, the Mets could only manage one hit against Nationals starting pitcher John Lannan.

It’s easy to blame the bullpen, and blame Pedro Martinez, for last night’s loss, but, in reality, last night sits squarely on the offense, who made Lannan look like a Cy Young winner.

In a critical at bat in the eighth inning, with the bases loaded, one out and the Mets down by five, David Wright hit in to an inning-ending double play.

Wright is just 3 for 16 with the bases loaded, and batting .244 with runners in scoring position.

Wright, speaking to reporters following the game, said:

“We’ve just got to forget about this one.  There’s no panic.  We know what’s at stake.  We’re in the middle of a playoff push and we’re going to have bumps in the road.  This is a time when we’ve got to keep them at a minimum.  We can’t allow them to carry over into the next couple of games.”

Wright better be careful, especially with his post-game comments, as, from what I can tell listening to other fans, he is walking dangerously close to being portrayed like Alex Rodriguez, i.e., a fat stat line, but no big hits.

Jerry Manuel may need to start pushing the envelope a bit more, running Jose Reyes more, using more motion, get Daniel Murphy back in the lineup, consider sitting Ryan Church, and ditch Luis Castillo, among other things.

Because this team’s hitters have got to start scoring runs, or else the bullpen will continually be put in a position to fail.

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IBM Atrium Gains an Obkia, Loses a Murakami

2008_09_murakami.jpg

In all the media frenzy that's been surrounding the arrival of New York's first mozzarella bar Obika, some readers may wonder why the Italian chain chose a Midtown atrium for its stateside debut. We have to admit it's a little strange. But if it's any consolation, the IBM Building atrium is one of the nicer ones in Midtown, and even, until yesterday, had a notable sculpture by contemporary artist Murakami. See it being dismantled above as Obika becomes the real star of the show.
· Plywood Invasion of the Chains: Obika, Phillipe Express [~E~]

Note: What Happened to the Magic Number

I removed the Magic Number, because a) it is essentially meaningless when up a half-game in the standings with 13 games left, and b) because I can no longer waste hours upon hours of my day dealing with e-mails like the this:

“SO U PUT UP THE STUPID @#$%& MAGIC NUMBER AGEIN AND WHAT HAPPENS METS BLOW 2 @#$%& GAMES ONE IN THE 8TH NOW IN THE 9TH THE FANS VOTED NOT TO DO IT AND U JUST DON’T GIVE A FLYING @#$%& YOUR A COMPLETE @#$%& I HOPE THEY DON’T MAKE THE @#$%& PLAYOFFS SO U CAN LIVE WITH IT FOREVER YOUR NO BETTER THEN BARTMAN U CAN TAKE YOUR @#$%& WEBSITE AND SHOVE IT UP YOUR @#$%&.”

I know, and you thought I was a bad speller.

Anyway, I do not believe in jinxes. I do, however, believe in hard work and getting things done during the day, which has been nearly impossible when having to field e-mails like the above over and over and over again.

So, while I realize that the majority of this site’s readers wanted the Magic Number to be posted, my inbox needs break.

I hope you understand.

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September 15, 2008

Morimoto's Monkfish

Monkfish are huge, ugly and incredibly tasty. I first came face to face with one in Akita Prefecture last year (more on that below). Today I got to watch Chef Masaharu Morimoto of Iron Chef fame dramatically offer this fish as the sacrificial lamb of his demonstration at the annual StarChefs Congress.

According to the presentation's host, monkfish are a sustainable species, although one that's not very popular in the USA. I've only seen the loin for sale, for instance, very occasionally. In Japan, however, the entire fish is a prized delicacy, especially the liver. For good reason.

With his fish, Chef Morimoto demonstrated his singular cooking, his deftness with his knives -- the hallmark of a Japanese chef -- and the versatility of monkfish, from which he prepared six dishes. Because they're too slimy to cut on a flat cutting surface, the chef hung his on a hook to work on it. He started by tearing off the monfish's skin like he was pulling off a snug wetsuit, then began to butcher with a heavy deba knife.

Like everything else in Japanese cuisine, very little of the monkfish is wasted. As Morimoto broke the fish, his assistants rinsed and blanched the gills and skin, and stuffed the liver into the stomach lining and poached it. Morimoto sliced off the loins, and wrapped one in three long ribbons of forest green ma kombu, like a huge sushi roll.

Morimoto stuck the kombu-wrapped loin in a tray of preheated stones, covering it with more stones, and put the tray in the oven at 500 degrees for forty minutes so the radiant heat of the stones could circulate through the loin.

Once the liver and stomach were poached, he cooled it down in an ice bath. The skin had shrunk by half after blanching. Morimoto sliced it up, and noted that it contains a lot of collagen.

Okay, dish number one: A salad of cubed buffalo mozzarella, red and yellow heirloom tomatoes, sliced monkfish skin and monkfish liver, dressed with pepper, olive oil and shoyu. "Japanese style caprese salad," Morimoto said. He composed the salad on a glass plate and grated a little yuzu peel to finish. Simple and delicious.

Dish number two: Morimoto trimed the monkfish gills, dusted with flour and deep fried. "Very good with beer," he explained.

Dish number three: Slices of the liver and stomach topped with spicy ponzu with red radish and finished with julienned scallion. "Chomuro age" I believe is what it's called in Japan (is that right, my Japanese-speaking readers?)

Dish number four: Monkfish hotpot (anko nabe) with monkfish parts, monkfish liver, dashi with shinshu miso. Morimoto added heavy cream -- yes, thick, white heavy cream, his twist on this traditional dish -- and a touch of sake, before covering and cooking.

Dish number five: Morimoto combined monkfish liver, shoyu, and squeezes of fresh sudachi citrus into a "monkfish ponzu," as he called it. He then sliced the other loin as sashimi, added pieces of skin for texture, and topped it with chives and the sauce. As a finishing touch he spooned hot oil over the sashimi to slightly cook the surface and bring out the aromas of the fish and condiments.

Dish number six: Remember the kombu-wrapped loin inside the hot rocks? Now Morimoto pulled the tray out of the oven, splashed sake on top (producing a nice, dramatic cloud of steam, naturally) and unwrapped the fish. He touched his chopsticks to the flesh then put them to his lips to gauge temperature. He presented it with wedges of sudachi and some of the hot stones.

(Talking to Morimoto's business partner, who happened to be sitting next to me, I learned that this hot rocks technique also works wonderfully with tai, halibut or other white fish.)

Now, what about the monkfish I met in Akita Prefecture last year? While reporting a story on Tohoku, Japan's far north, I spent a few days with a wonderful chef in a tiny fishing port on the Oga Peninsula. He graciously showed me how to break a monkfish -- and then served me the most amazing monkfish hotpot on the planet (sans heavy cream). Here are two videos I took of him in action. Warning: They're not for the squeamish. (Sorry they're shot so terribly!)

From Monkfish Movies

From Monkfish Movies

Make a Note of This

Who would you expect to announce that Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin won't cooperate with the Alaska Legislature's probe into whether she abused the power of her office in Trooper-Gate?

Not Palin herself. Nor the spokesperson for the Governor's Office. Nor the lawyer the state is paying to represent her in her official capacity in the case.

Instead, that announcement was made today by a spokesperson for John McCain's presidential campaign.

Just keep that in mind as this case unfolds.

The Manny Show: A Postscript

In the aftermath of last week’s piece on Manny Ramirez, BP research guru Bil Burke provided me with some data to put Ramirez’s initial hot streak in Dodger blue into context. Through Sunday, Ramirez had 180 plate appearances since being traded to LA, and as good as he’s been–good enough to catapult the Dodgers into first place in the NL West–others have still enjoyed hotter streaks this year. Ranked by OPS:

Player           PA   Dates       AVG   OBP   SLG   OPS
Lance Berkman   180   4/20-6/4   .433  .522  .813  1.335
Albert Pujols   180   7/26-9/11  .393  .492  .813  1.305
Dan Uggla       180   4/19-6/5   .368  .449  .800  1.249
Chipper Jones   180   4/9-5/29   .433  .525  .720  1.245
Manny Ramirez   180   7/28-9/14  .385  .482  .736  1.208

What you’re seeing here for the other four players besides Ramirez isn’t simply one streak apiece, it’s the best of many similar, overlapping streaks from around the same time period. Berkman actually has 102 different sequences between Opening Day (March 31) and June 8 during which his OPS got no lower than 1.241; what’s shown above is the best one. Pujols has 22 different streaks between July 24 and September 13 in which his OPS never went below 1.245. Jones has just six streaks in his range, Uggla two, and Manny just the one, though as I write this he’s 3-for-4 with a double tonight against Pittsburgh and might conceivably give the two men immediately above him a run for their money in one of those interior sequences.

In any event, at a time when Ramirez’s name is beginning to surface in NL MVP discussions, what the numbers show is that his streak is hardly unprecedented this year. It’s been matched or bettered by three guys who can make solid MVP cases of their own, particularly with regards to Pujols and Berkman, whose teams have remained in the hunt into the season’s final two weeks. And that’s not even considering the body of good work that lies beyond their hottest stretches of the year. The MVP is ostensibly about taking a full season of play into account, and by that token, it’s tough to consider Manny’s shortened National League resume on par with those of Pujols and company.

Embrace the chaos.


Adam Nagourney’s piece in the Times this morning about the campaigns and mainstream media struggling to make sense of this new media political environment was simultaneously insightful and infuriating.  It was insightful because it effectively captured the anxiety political elites feel about their inability to control this newly powerful system.  It was infuriating because it completely missed the fact that that’s a good thing.

It’s fascinating to hear that McCain and Obama aides feel lost, unable to effectively propagandize the public and construct the national conversation as they see fit:

It has reached a point where senior campaign aides say they are no longer sure what works, as they stumble through what has become a daily campaign fog, struggling to figure out what voters are paying attention to and, not incidentally, what they are even believing.

But Nagourney doesn’t take the next step and celebrate the fact that those who lie and manipulate for a living are decreasingly able to quantify and control public opinion.

He’s absolutely right that the media ecosystem has changed and power has become less centralized:

The formula was once transparent and established. Voters learned about the candidates through campaign advertisements, what they saw on the evening news, and what they read in national newspapers — like The New York Times and The Washington Post, which tended to influence what the networks covered — but also, even more importantly, on the front pages of local newspapers.

With the addition of so many other sources of information, the old formula, while not quite dead, is no longer so dominant in communicating information and shaping opinion.

But he doesn’t seriously articulate or engage the laundry list of thoughtful criticisms that have been levied against that ecosystem by the organized Left and Right over the last 30 years.

Most importantly, he doesn’t recognize that the reason that people are harder to control and more skeptical and discerning in their news consumptions is that they’re involved. Americans are, this cycle, more engaged than they have been in my entire lifetime.  Not just volunteering or chatting over the water-cooler, but engaging in constant complicated public debate about the issues of our time.

Our public sphere has suddenly been populated by citizens.  And, it turns out, citizens disagree with each other about what is true, about which facts matter and add up to better or worse narratives, about which candidates are more honest or more qualified. Where there was once Buchanan and Begala - two narratives tightly controlled by two political parties/ideologies and somewhat moderated by a relatively small number of mainstream media professionals-  there are now hundreds of thousands of Americans online talking to each other at once.  And it’s sometimes dull, sometimes really ugly, and sometimes engaging and transformative.

Yes, it’s a fucking mess.  But that’s democracy.  That’s a good thing.

News: Brandon Knight will Start on Wed.

The Mets have announced that Brandon Knight will start on Wednesday against the Nationals.

Therefore, expect the following rotation over the next few days:

Tuesday: Mike Pelfrey at Nationals
Wednesday: Brandon Knight at Nationals
Thursday: Johan Santana at Nationals
Friday: Oliver Perez at Braves

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Time Magazine - For Obama, Race Remains Elephant in the Room: Race is the elephant in the room of the 2008 campaign. In West Virginia's primary, one of every four Hillary Clinton voters actually admitted to pollsters that race was a factor in their vote; that may be an Appalachian outlier, but even in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio the figure was a troubling one in ten. It's a tribute to America's racial progress that a biracial man born before Jim Crow died could come this close to the presidency, but if you believe that contemporary America is color-blind, you probably believe the Georgia congressman who recently called Obama "uppity," then claimed he had no idea it was a traditional Southern slur for blacks who didn't know their place.

McCain: Okay I Lied, But Shut Up!!!

Here's an interesting article by the AP's Brendan Farrington in which McCain gets quizzed on various of his lies. He admits some are lies but say it's okay. And in others, well ...

McCain cut off a question about the "Bridge to Nowhere," which Palin claims to have killed in Alaska even though Washington pulled back money for the project before she turned against it.

"The important thing is she's vetoed a half a billion dollars in earmark projects--far, far in excess of her predecessor and she's given money back to the taxpayers and she's cut their taxes, so I'm happy with her record," McCain said.

Opinion: Goodbye Larry, Goodbye Shea

Yesterday was the last day the Atlanta Braves would ever play at Shea Stadium and it brought back a lot of memories for me.  As much as I have hated the Bravos over the years, I am more of a baseball fan than anything and it was bittersweet to see them at Shea one last time.

Despite the heartbreak of 14 straight division titles, the Braves have provided nothing less than high drama at Shea and one can do nothing less than respect them, especially, dare I say it, Larry “Chipper” Jones. For this reason I blasphemously clapped for him as he stepped up to the plate. Don’t worry, I won’t name my son Larry.

It is easier to appreciate the diminished rivalry because the Braves are in the cellar of the NL East, and the Phillies have taken their place. Although my Brave hatred will forever linger, I found it fitting that it’s all but gone this year, just as Shea will soon be too.  Change is the only constant I suppose.

These are the games and the days we need to really try to remember as we get older, because they will remind us of what baseball is all about. The rivalries, the cheers, the boos, the smells - for better or worse - and just the overall experience of attending a game at Shea Stadium.

Is it weird for me to say that I got a little choked up as my 7 train arrived at the ballpark yesterday…or should I say ballparks. Goodbye Larry, and Goodbye Shea.

For a slideshow of yesterday’s events, including the Citi Field Preview area, click here.

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At Grand Central, Sen. Clinton Calls for Funding Mass Transit

clinton_crop2.jpg
Clinton was joined by (l-r) Larry Hanley, of the Amalgamated Transit Union, NYC DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney and MTA chief Elliot Sander

Surrounded by a throng of curious commuters under the clock at Grand Central Terminal last Friday, Sen. Hillary Clinton held a press conference calling for increased federal funding for mass transit, saying municipalities around the country needed a "federal partner to get us over the hump of increased demand."

On August 1, Clinton introduced the Saving Energy Through Public Transportation Act to the Senate; it has already passed the House of Representatives. The bill would provide $1.7 billion, including $237 million for New York, to help public transit systems keep fares down and prevent service cuts in the face of rising fuel costs and soaring ridership (download the bill).

"Across America places that thought there would never be much demand for public transit are now finding that there is," said Sen. Clinton. "We can't keep burdening public transit systems without giving them the money they need to run." Noting that "we are living off the investments of a prior time," Clinton added that "it is unacceptable that [mass transit] commuters would be burdened with further fare hikes and service cuts.... Commuters should not be penalized. They're part of the solution."

Asked how the city could increase the capacity of its overburdened mass transit system, NYC DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan said "buses can be a major component," and spoke of "re-engineering the city's 6,000 miles of streets...to better accommodate buses."

MTA chief Elliot Sander, whose agency is struggling with debt and has already said another round of fare increases is on the horizon, emphasized the need for federal support. "If we don't have a planning process in this country," he said, "we will fall further and further behind."

You can see Sen. Clinton's Sept. 9 testimony on the mass transit legislation before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs here.

Photo: Sarah Goodyear

I Am Spartacus

Lehman

(via

floyd norris

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New Perl Patterns Book

I'm pleased to announce the arrival of Perlish Patterns, my new book responding to the patterns movement, available from my lulu storefront. This book is an expansion of a series of articles I wrote once upon a time for perl.com. In the book, I address every pattern from the venerable Design Patterns by Gamma and others (the gang of four), plus some others. While the gang of four focus on object oriented solutions, I use a richer toolkit to explore other options available in Perl. For a fuller description, see www.perlishpatterns.com. Also availble from my lulu store are a book on the Gantry web framework and a novella about how our corporate overlords could leverage networked computing to become as dangerous to free society as totalitarian governments.

Read more of this story at use Perl.

Marvin Gaye On The 2008 Elections

In 1972, Marvin Gaye was coming off breakthrough success with What's Going On. He moved to Los Angeles and turned his attention to the 1972 presidential election, which pitted Richard Nixon against George McGovern.

Nixon was trying to solidify what's become known as the "Southern Strategy", using racially coded language--crime, busing, welfare, radicalism--to mobilize a "Silent Majority" of white voters. McGovern, on the other hand, was depending on a coalition of anti-war progressives, young voters, and communities of color.

You can guess which side Marvin was on. His "You're The Man" single ripped into Nixon for his lies.









Nixon went on to crush McGovern in the general in one of the most lopsided victories in recent memory. The Southern Strategy's race-baiting politics is now one of the dominant electoral strategies in the country. It's so ingrained in the fabric of post-civil rights electoral politics, we take it for granted.

If you have any doubt that the U.S. is far from "post-racial", just check the latest mini-controversy prompted by Obama Waffles. The entrepreneurs behind these campaign products are so casually racist, it seems not much has changed among hard-line Republicans since 1972.

Many commentators have said that Obama's coalition has many similarities to the McGovern campaign. But there is a key difference. Demographics have shifted strongly away from Nixonland. The rise of young voters and communities of color have completely changed the landscape of politics. In this context, Sarah Palin is an anomaly. Time itself is not on the side of the aging Nixonland electorate. But what happens in November remains to be seen.

Gaye cut another song in 1972, this time with the brilliant, largely unsung Mizell Brothers, called "Where Are We Going?" This one was much less angry--it was more of a mountaintop view of a turbulent and crucial season.

It ought to become the theme song for this historic election as well.










Thanks to O-Dub for the tech assist.

Biden Uncorks Tough Populist Hit On McCain Over "Fundamentals" Line

Joe Biden is currently speaking in Michigan, where he seized on John McCain's claim this morning that the "fundamentals of our economy" are strong in order to unleash an extensive populist attack that pulled together just about every questionable McCain comment on the economy from the entire campaign.

Here's a key excerpt (from Biden's prepared remarks):

Senator McCain has confessed, quote, "It's easy for me to go to Washington and frankly, be somewhat divorced from the day-to-day challenges people have." And he's right, if all you do is walk the halls of power, all you hear are the wants of the powerful.

I believe that's why Senator McCain could say with a straight face, as recently as this morning, and I quote "the fundamentals of our economy are strong." That, "We've made great progress economically" during the Bush years. But friends, I could walk from here to Lansing, and I wouldn't run into a single person who thought our economy was doing well, unless I ran into John McCain.

John McCain just doesn't seem to understand what middle class people are going through today. I don't doubt that he cares. He just doesn't think that we have any responsibility to help people who are hurting.

One other thing: Virtually no mentions of Palin. The entire focus here: The economy, McCain's similarities to Bush, and McCain's decision to run a campaign dominated by nonstop lies and adver-sleazements.

Full text of Biden's speech after the jump.

Eight years ago, a man ran for President who claimed he was different, not a typical Republican. He called himself a reformer. He admitted that his Party, the Republican Party, had been wrong about things from time to time. He promised to work with Democrats and said he'd been doing that for a long time.

That candidate was George W. Bush. Remember that? Remember the promise to reach across the aisle? To change the tone? To restore honor and dignity to the White House?

We saw how that story ends. A record number of home foreclosures. Home values, tumbling. And the disturbing news that the crisis you've been facing on Main Street is now hitting Wall Street, taking down Lehman Brothers and threatening other financial institutions.

We've seen eight straight months of job losses. Nearly 46 million Americans without health insurance. Average incomes down, while the price of everything -- from gas to groceries -- has skyrocketed. A military stretched thin from two wars and multiple deployments.

A nation more polarized than I've ever seen in my career. And a culture in Washington where the very few wealthy and powerful have a seat at the table and everybody else is on the menu.

Eight years later, we have another Republican nominee who's telling us the exact same thing:

This time it will be different, it really will. This time he's going to put country before party, to change the tone, reach across the aisle, change the Republican Party, change the way Washington works.

We've seen this movie before, folks. But as everyone knows, the sequel is always worse than the original.

If we forget this history, we're going to be doomed to repeat it -- with four more just like the last eight, or worse. If you're ready for four more years of George Bush, John McCain is your man.

Just as George Herbert Walker Bush was nicknamed "Bush 41" and his son is known as "Bush 43," John McCain could easily become known as "Bush 44."

The campaign a person runs says everything about the way they'll govern. The McCain-Palin campaign has decided to bet the house on the politics perfected by Karl Rove. Those tactics may be good at squeaking by in an election, but they are bad if you want to lead one nation, indivisible.

I count John McCain as a friend. I've known him since before he was a Senator. If he needed my personal help, I'd go. He served our country bravely, nobly. But America needs more than a great solider, America needs a wise leader.

Take a hard look at the positions John has taken for the past 26 years, on the economy, on health care, on foreign policy, and you'll see why I say that John McCain is just four more years of George Bush. On the issues that you talk about around the kitchen table, Mary's college tuition, the cost of the MRI for mom, heating our home this winter -- John McCain is profoundly out of touch.

Senator McCain has confessed, quote, "It's easy for me to go to Washington and frankly, be somewhat divorced from the day-to-day challenges people have." And he's right, if all you do is walk the halls of power, all you hear are the wants of the powerful.

I believe that's why Senator McCain could say with a straight face, as recently as this morning, and I quote "the fundamentals of our economy are strong." That, "We've made great progress economically" during the Bush years. But friends, I could walk from here to Lansing, and I wouldn't run into a single person who thought our economy was doing well, unless I ran into John McCain.

John McCain just doesn't seem to understand what middle class people are going through today. I don't doubt that he cares. He just doesn't think that we have any responsibility to help people who are hurting.

My dad used to have an expression: "Don't tell me what you value. Show me your budget, and I'll tell you what you value."

By that measure, John McCain doesn't stand with the middle class. He stands with George Bush firmly in the corner of the wealthy and well-connected. He stands with the CEO of Exxon-Mobil, who, while testifying before my Senate judiciary committee swore to me under oath that Exxon-Mobil didn't need the tax breaks they'd been given to explore for oil.

John McCain is so firmly in their corner he thinks the Exxon-Mobils of the world should get an additional $4 billion dollars a year in tax cuts.

He stands in the corner of the wealthiest Americans by extending tax cuts for people making over a quarter million dollars a year, and then adding more than $300 billion on top of that for corporations and the wealthy.

There is simply no daylight - at least none I can see -- between John McCain and George Bush.

On every major challenge we face, from the economy, to health care, to education and Iraq, you can barely tell them apart.

Don't take my word for it, look at the record. Ninety percent of the time, John McCain votes with George Bush.

Here's what that means:

When George Bush called for Social Security to be privatized, John McCain stood with him - he even campaigned for that roundly rejected plan.

When George Bush says that the government has no obligation to re-train or provide extended unemployment benefits for people who have lost their jobs due to trade agreements,

John McCain echoes that view, and has said that Bush is "Right on trade... absolutely."

When George Bush said we shouldn't investigate why the government's response to Hurricane Katrina was so incompetent, John McCain stood with him.

When George Bush initially opposed a new GI Bill that would send a new generation of veterans to college, John McCain stood with him, calling Senator Webb's effort too generous.

When George Bush blocked our efforts to provide health care to another 3.8 million children, John McCain stood with him.

And when, in early 2007, George Bush suggested that the health care benefits you get through your employer should be taxed as income, John McCain stood with him. And now, ladies and gentlemen, John McCain has resurrected that idea, and made it an essential part of his health care plan.

Issue after issue, vote after vote, the story is the same.

In the last 16 years, he's voted 23 times against the renewable energy - wind, solar, biofuels -- we need to free ourselves from foreign oil.

Since he arrived in the Senate over 20 years ago, he's voted more than 19 times against the minimum wage.

In 1994, I wrote and we passed a Crime bill that put 100,000 new police officers on the street, 3,300 of them here in Michigan, provided shelters and security for tens of thousands of battered women, and helped lead to an eight year drop in violent crime. John opposed the crime bill and the Violence Against Women Act it contained, calling them "ineffective" and "ill conceived."

Time and again John voted against increased funding for Pell grants to help families with incomes under $55,000 send their kids to college.

Time and again, John McCain voted to make it harder for women to achieve equal pay for the same work - making it harder to prove, and punish, discrimination. He even voted against a study to determine if there is a gap between what men and women are paid. Twice.

Governor Palin says all senators do is vote. Well, just imagine what the country would look like if John's votes had become the law of the land.

In John McCain's America, we wouldn't guarantee that more of energy would come from wind, solar, and other renewables. The minimum wage would still be $3.35 an hour. There would have been 100,000 fewer police on the beat. There would have been no national domestic violence hotline for the 1.5 million women who were in crisis and needed somewhere to turn.

Over 160,000 members of the Guard and Reserve who answered their country's call and served more than one tour in Iraq or Afghanistan would get no credit towards an education for their additional sacrifice. Fewer parents would be able to afford to send their kids to college. And women who were discriminated against on the basis of pay would more difficulty making their case. Thank God that's not the America we live in.


John McCain recently said: "the issue of economics is not something I've understood as well as I should." Then he proved it by the advisors he chose to surround him - advisors who have further cocooned him from the reality facing the rest of us. People like Phil Gramm. The man who wrote John McCain's economic plan actually said, repeatedly, that we're not going through an economic recession. Phil Gramm says it's just a mental recession. That we're a nation of whiners.

Tell that to my friend who flew jets for the Navy and then went to work for a commercial airline for over 20 years - only to see his pension wiped out while his CEO got a golden parachute. Don't tell me that he is a whiner.

Don't tell me that the woman I met in Missouri who worked for the Chrysler plant for 13 years making minivans and lost her job when production moved to Canada is a whiner.

Don't tell me that an engineer who sees his job go overseas because his company has been given a tax break to leave instead of one to stay is a whiner.

Don't tell me that these people, people who are our nation's heart and soul - deserve to be treated as economic scapegoats.

These people worked hard, they did everything right, and they're willing to work hard again. But instead of their government supporting them, their government walked away from them. Nobody stood up for them.

Barack and I will.

What is John's response to the state of the economy? Let me quote him: "A lot of this is psychological." Let me tell you something: Losing your job is more than a state of mind.

It means staring at the ceiling at night thinking that you may lose your house because you can't get next month's mortgage payment. It means looking at your pregnant wife and not knowing how you're going to come up with the money to pay for the delivery of your child, since you don't have health care anymore. It means looking at your child when they come home from college at Christmas and saying "Honey, I'm sorry, we're not going to be able to send you back next semester." It's not a state of mind. It's a loss of dignity.

When you and your economic advisors are so out of touch, it's no surprise that your economic policies ignore the challenges that normal families face.

Let me just give you one more example. In the midst of this housing crisis, John McCain said, "I will fight for those that lost their... real estate investments." He went on to say, "It's not the role of government to bail out big banks or small borrowers." What about small borrowers? What about homeowners? What about the people who don't invest in homes, but live in them? There's an important distinction between the predators and the preyed upon.

I heard that a Republican County Chairman right here in Michigan said that they're keeping a list of foreclosed homes, suggesting that if you've lost your home, you should also lose your vote. I have a different idea. I think that if you're worried about losing your home, you should vote for the guys who are going to help you keep it!

Whatever happened to the guy, who once denounced tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans in a time of war as immoral.

When someone running for election changes his views to satisfy the base of the party, that's not change, that's just more of the same Washington game. The problem is that in the Washington game today, the American people are losing.

Ladies and Gentlemen, as of today, there are 50 days until Election Day. That's just seven more weeks to talk about the direction we're going to take this country, to talk about the issues of concern in your lives, to talk about you. But as his campaign manager has said, and I quote, "This election is not about issues."

When Senator McCain was subjected to unconscionable, scurrilous attacks in his 2000 primary campaign, I called him on the phone to ask what I could do. And now, some of the very same people and the tactics he once deplored his campaign now employs. The same campaign that once called for a town hall a week is now launching a low blow a day.

Barack and I can take it. That's not what bothers me.

It bothers me that -- as one media watchdog put it -- John's recent commercial is the, "latest in a number that resort to a dubious disregard for the facts." As another news organization put it: The wheels have come off the straight talk express.

But what really bothers me, is that every punch thrown at us --- is an attempt to distract you. And they can be plenty distracting.

Like the McCain advertisements that misrepresent a vote by Barack Obama to protect young children from sexual predators. Like Senator McCain's effort to obscure the fact that Barack Obama's tax cuts will benefit 95 percent of all working people. Like John McCain's attempt to cloak himself in reform by misrepresenting his running mate's record.

It's disappointing to me to think that John McCain really does approve this message.

Every false debate we're drawn into is a real conversation we don't have with the American people. Character attacks get media attention, but they make this election about us when it really needs to be about you.

Barack Obama believes that progress in this country is measured by how many people have a decent job where they're shown respect. How many people can pay their mortgage. How many people can turn their ideas into a new business. How many people can turn to their kids and say "It's going to be okay" with the knowledge that the opportunities they give will be better than the ones they received.

That's the American dream. That's what the people in my neighborhood grew up believing. And I want our kids to have the same dream.

Barack Obama starts from that vision of progress and will do what it takes to get us there.

That's why his tax cuts - benefit the middle class. That's why he'll make it easier for families to afford college for their kids. That's why he says everyone should be able to have the same health care that members of Congress have. That's why his energy plan will reduce our dependence on foreign oil, bring down gas prices, and, in the process, we'll create five million new green jobs. Those are the changes we need.

Yes, this campaign is about change, but it's about even more than that. It's about what we value as a people. It's not just about a job, it's about dignity. It's not just about a paycheck. It's about pride. It's not just about opportunity. It's about respect. That's why Barack and I are in this race.

We know we need change if we're to restore dignity, pride, and respect. We know America's best days are ahead of us, and we know why we're here.

We're here for the for the cops and firefighters, the teachers and assembly line workers, the engineers and office workers, the small business owners and the retiree.

All of the folks who play by the rules, work hard, and do what is asked of them. They deserve a government as good and an economy as strong as they are.

We're all are Americans. There has never been a challenge too great. The stakes have never been higher.

My father always told me, "Champ, when you get knocked down, get up. Get up." It's time to get up. It's time to trust the grit and determination of the American people.

America is ready. You are ready. I am ready. And Barack Obama is ready. Our best days are yet to come.

May god bless America and may God protect our troops.

The Big Press Story of the Campaign

As I noted below, the big press story of the campaign is shaping up to be how reporters are and will react to McCain's deliberate strategy of full-court-press lying. The corrupt, though normal, approach is for reporters to try to dig up whatever Obama exaggerations they can find to try to balance the coverage. If that doesn't work, then they will try to hang the charges on Democrats -- i.e., "what Democrats are calling 'lies'" etc. And of course using the dictionary term -- "lies" -- for repeated and intentional misstatements of fact is almost always forbidden.

But the lying is so extreme in this case that a few reporters are beginning to actually report the story accurately.

So keep an eye out for examples in both categories -- egregious refusals to identify McCain's lies properly and instances where reporters actually decide not to mince words and accurately report the story before them. If you find them, send them in and we'll start keeping a list.

Brute Force Lying

Palin repeats the Bridge to Nowhere lie this morning in Colorado ...

You'll note that while Palin is continuing to restate the lie, there's a tone of defensiveness in her voice this morning, since they clearly know they've been caught.

damien hirst skips dealers to sell work at sotheby's


illustration by tom fecht for the new york times

in an interesting art world note, the always-controversial damien hirst is grabbing headlines not for the
content of his new work, but how he plans to sell it. tonight at sotheby’s london auction house, hirst will
be selling 223 pieces from the last two years in the titled auction ‘beautiful inside my head forever’.
this is a risky move in the high stakes art world since hirst will, in effect, be cutting his art dealers out
of the deal. sotheby’s put on a public viewing of the works and renovated their space specifically for
the size and weight of hirst’s work. critics wonder if this is a smart move, but all are holding off until
the auction takes place tonight.

read more
damien hirst’s next sensation: thinking outside the dealer


‘the physical impossibility of death in the mind of someone living’ by damien hirst, 1991

They Go There

A new TV ad by Democratic independent groups touches the untouchable: John McCain's POW status and fitness to be President.

Zemanta

We've invested in a number of blogging related applications and services; Adaptive Blue, Delicious, Disqus, FeedBurner, Outside.in, Twitter, and Tumblr. We've been attracted to this sector for a number of reason; because an increasing amount of content is produced with these kinds of tools and services, because traditional media is increasingly adopting these tools and services themselves, and because our personal usage has given us a deep understanding of these tools and services.

Today we are announcing yet another investment in this sector, a small company in Slovenia and London called Zemanta. Zemanta is a service that's focused on helping the blogger/content creator make the process of creating their content simpler and easier. As you write, Zemanta processes all of your text (like a spell checker in a word processing program does) and suggests things to you. Currently, Zemanta suggests stories/posts/research you might want to read as you compose your post, images you might want to include in the post, words you might want to hyperlink out with, and tags for search engines and other services to use to discover your content.

A number of us at Union Square Ventures have been using the Zemanta service for several months and we universally like it and have found that we feel less equipped when we try to blog without it. Currently you can get the Zemanta service as a free plugin for the following applications and services; Firefox, Internet Explorer, Microsoft Live Writer, WordPress, Moveable Type, and Drupal.

Like many of the services we invest in, Zemanta's initial value proposition is significant and has allowed them to reach a critical mass of bloggers. But the potential for Zemanta goes way beyond recommending links, images, and tags. If you think about it, Zemanta is "adwords for content creators". And we are eager to see them open up this contextual recommendation engine to other web apps and services that content creators might like to add into their posts at the time of creation. The obvious things would be monetization services (affiliate links, text ads, and even graphical ads), widgets and badges, video, quotes, and music. But honestly the potential for this sort of thing is quite significant and we certainly cannot know for sure where it will ultimately lead.

We were invited to join existing UK investors Eden Ventures and The Accelerator Group (TAG) as seed investors in Zemanta. Zemanta was the winner of last year's seedcamp program in London, which is kicking off again this week in London. We are very pleased to be joining a couple of top notch early stage investors in London in this deal and we are equally excited to add a seedcamp company to our portfolio.

This is our second investment in Europe and it is possibly the first investment in a Slovenian tech company by a US venture capital investor. So we are making a bit of history here and that's exciting too. The founders of Zemanta, Boštjan Špetič and Andraž Tori, are leading members of the Slovenian tech community and have built an amazing team of developers. Our investment will fund the development of a US-based business development team and we are looking for candidates in the bay area and metro NY to join the company. If you are interested, please let us know in the comments or via email.

Lehman, Merrill and Tech Spending

We're right across the street from Lehman's headquarters. I remember when the building was being built (For Morgan Stanley, which decided to move more people out of NYC instead).

Right now, the place is a circus. It's become another Times Square attraction, but this time for the news media and people from other banks, who are stopping by to just wonder at what's happening.

For tech, what's happening is that the potential buyers of software, computers, Blackberries and back office systems are consolidating. Financial Institutions are the biggest spenders on technology and now that spending is going to get smaller, especially since the bet is that other financial groups are in trouble.

It's bad timing that's made worse by the strengthening dollar, which analysts expect to start crimping overseas demand for U.S. tech. It's a firesale in one industry and the end of one in another.

Ubiquity

Right now I am here, but soon I may be somewhere near you! Let's see where I've been lately, and where I'm going to be:

Across the internets, Choire asked a ridiculous question of mine to Wendy and Lisa when he interviewed them for the LA Times. Michaelangelo picked this up on Idolator, and I think my work is done here.

Absurdly, an offhand comment about Rudy Giuliani, the former Mayor of New York City who likes to mock people for being "too cosmopolitan", got quoted on the Playboy blog. Did you know Playboy has a blog?

And my presentation from the Mediabistro Circus back in May is now available on video, confirming once again that it's incredibly painful to watch oneself on video.

I'm also looking forward to a bunch of upcoming events.

  • I'm proud to have helped out a little bit with Web 2.0 Expo New York. Frankly, we have an amazing tech scene here in NYC (Six Apart is hiring!) and we haven't done enough to get recognition for it from the tech world at large. That's why I'm quoted on the Expo site saying, "Well, it's about time." Heh.
  • Next weekend in Las Vegas, I'll be joining Chris Alden, our CEO at Six Apart, in a keynote presentation at Blog World Expo. If you'll be there Saturday morning, come see us, or find me at the event before or after.
  • Finally, next month, I'll be in Greensboro, North Carolina for ConvergeSouth. I am sure there will be many interesting things to do and see there, but my first priority is to get some barbeque. I'm sure y'all understand.

Opinion: You are Not a Jinx

Last week, I ran a poll asking people when I should post the team’s Magic Number on MetsBlog.com – and, since 56 percent of you said, ‘Post It,’ I did so.

Initially, I worried that you guys might be jinxing the team, since the majority said to ‘Post It,’ but that is decision that the majority of you made – and now we must live with it, like it or not.

Personally, if it had been solely up to me, I probably would have waited until the final week of the season to ‘Post It,’ but you voted, the people spoke, and who am I to stand in the way of what the majority of this site’s readers wanted.

That said, I was sent over 300 e-mails this weekend calling me a jerk, an idiot and a jinx, among other things.  I even received a letter to my home, which is rather sad, not to mention scary.

In reality, the fight in this site’s comments section should be between me and fate, it should be between the 56 percent who wanted the Magic Number posted, and the 44 percent who did not.

By the way, while we’re on the subject of jinxes, lots and lots of websites, including Yahoo!, have been posting every team’s Magic Number since early last week.  Are they jinxes, too?  If so, how many jinxes can you have?  I wonder at what point do they start cancelling each other out?

Also, are they ‘homers,’ trying to rally support for the Mets, as I have also been accused of?  These other outlets are listing Magic Numbers for every team in first place – so, are they jinxing those teams, too?  If so, how would any team ever win a division?  At that point, wouldn’t they all be jinxed, meaning no team could ever win?

The thing is, you shouldn’t worry.  You are not a jinx.  If the Mets do not make the playoffs, it will not be because most of you wanted the Magic Number to be posted.  Trust me, it will be because the team’s bullpen didn’t do its job, or because the bats went cold, or because the Phillies just played better baseball.  It will not be your fault, just because the majority of you asked me to post the Magic Number. 

Instead, it will be the team’s fault, because there is no such thing as a jinx – at least I hope there isn’t.

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Fresh Stuff From DAN in Bristol UK

DANfresh.jpg

Jill Greenberg vs. John McCain (vs. The Atlantic)

Shared by Jake Dobkin
even if you hate mccain, that's a dick move.

The story: Photographer Jill Greenberg is hired by the magazine The Atlantic to take a portrait of Republican presidential candidate John McCain for the magazine's October issue. "After getting that shot, Greenberg asked McCain to 'please come over here' for one more set-up before the 15-minute shoot was over. There, she had a beauty dish with a modeling light set up. 'That’s what he thought he was being lit by,' Greenberg says. 'But that wasn’t firing.' What was firing was a strobe positioned below him, which cast the horror movie shadows across his face and on the wall right behind him. 'He had no idea he was being lit from below,' Greenberg says. And his handlers didn’t seem to notice it either. 'I guess they’re not very sophisticated,' she adds." (source; let's keep the "not very sophisticated" in mind!).

Needless to say, the results of that photo shoot are less than flattering for McCain (see the raw shot here). Greenberg then used her Photoshop skills to create imagery like this one, while "hoping to license that image to some other magazine" (ibid.).

It seems like there are quite a few issues here, and I don't think I'll manage to wrap my head around all of them. There's an excellent discussion of some of the issues over at Mark Tucker's blog, in the form of fourteen questions, plus links to various websites discussing Greenberg's art work (note I'm extremely generous with the meaning of the term "art work" here).

When I first heard about this, my immediate reaction was to laugh about Greenberg's comment that McCain's "handlers" were "not very sophisticated". Hearing someone who thinks it's a valid political statement to create a Photoshop image with a monkey taking a dump on McCain's head (no, I'm not making this up, see it here) describe other people as "not very sophisticated" is rich. But then, that's the same photographer who thought that selling images of crying children in an art gallery was a meaningful statement about the re-election of Bush in 2004.

My second reaction was to simply be appalled, and most of what I thought has been neatly summed up by Jeffrey Goldberg (who wrote the article in the magazine in question): "Suffice it to say that her 'art' is juvenile, and on occasion repulsive. This is not the issue, of course; the issue is that she betrayed this magazine, and disgraced her profession." Goldberg also quotes Atlantic editor James Bennet as saying "'We feel totally blind-sided,' he said. 'Her behavior is outrageous. Incredibly unprofessional.'"

Needless to say, I think that every person (every photographer, every blogger, ...) is entitled to her or his political opinion. But there's quite a huge difference between asking John McCain for a portrait session, telling him the photos are going to be defaced, and taking those photographs under the cover of a photo session for a well respected magazine, not telling McCain some of the photos are going to be defaced. The former, of course, did not happen, whereas the latter did. Regardless of what you think about McCain and his campaign, Greenberg's actions are simply incredibly disgraceful and unacceptable. And, yes, you can find them disgraceful and unacceptable even if you do not agree with a single thing McCain has said recently.

Frankly, I'm still baffled how Jill Greenberg could even think that her actions were in any sense a meaningful political statement that would be taken seriously. It's mind-blowing. It degrades political discourse to levels that even the worst cases of political mud throwing thankfully only rarely reach (a recent example is provided by McCain's ad about how his Democratic opponent Barack Obama supposedly wanted kindergarten kids to know about sex - whereas in fact the bill Obama supported was designed to protect those children from sexual predators).

"i'm f*cking matt damon" wins emmy

sarah silverman
photo credit: adriana m. barraza


This past weekend Sarah Silverman accepted two Emmy awards for the internet video sensation, I'm Fucking Matt Damon, which she had made for then boyfriend, talk show host and comedian, Jimmy Kimmel.

The video, which although premiered nationally on Kimmel's late night show "Jimmy Kimmel Live!," really went crazy when it hit the web -- racking up over four million views on You Tube alone.

The video racked in awards for Best Original Music and Lyrics and for Picture Editing.

» This article continues

Obama Campaign Launches Ad Hitting McCain's Lies As "Dishonorable"

We've been waiting for it, and here it is: The Obama campaign launches its first ad hitting McCain for his lying and his mendacious adver-sleazements and slamming his campaign as "disgraceful" and "dishonorable":

The ad will air on national cable and in key battleground states. Though the ad describes McCain's campaign -- not McCain himself -- as "dishonorable," the response, without question, will be POW POW POW.

I'm On The Computer

Way back in the 1950s, sociologist Erving Goffman proposed in his study The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life that the very warp and woof of the social world consists of carefully constructed dramaturgy, albeit of a manner that most performers were unconscious. Our daily lives and cultural rituals provide all the settings, costumes, props and scripts we need to take our roles. The same logic underpins our movement through digital spaces and online communities, but unhinged from the necessities of physical limitations, and with a greater promise of self-transformation -- the dream of a complete rebooting of the self. Such notions may emerge at "Avatar: the New You," an exhibition at the Australian Centre for Photography that mixes the Web 2.0 vernacular of user-generated images with parallel but more self-critical art projects. The show includes fan-created screenshots from massively-multiplayer games like World of Warcraft, Habbo Hotel and Second Life and documentation of SimGuys.net, a virtual emporium of fashionable dude wear for Sims characters, but also media installations by artists Claudia Hart, Myfanwy Ashmore, Melissa Ramos and Rhys Turner, and Tobias Bernstrup, as well as photography by Daniel Handal and performance documentation by Justin Shoulder. Two artists' works that themselves gained a foothold in greater internet culture are also included: screenshots from Tale of Tales' gentle multiplayer game The Endless Forest (2006), in which players take the roles of deer, and Aram Bartholl's First Person Shooter (2005), a pair of custom specs that give you the look of Doom. - Ed Halter


Image: Arahan Claveau, Lupus Delacroix, Second Life 2008

The Government Stood Firm. Was It the Right Call?

The decision not to risk taxpayer funds to save Lehman Brothers this weekend came just as the political appetite for bailouts had reached its limits in Washington. Whether Treasury Department...

September 14, 2008

Photo



Sarah Silverman Wins A F*cking Emmy; Thanks Jimmy Kimmel

sarahsilveramn1.jpg

Looking extremely demure, the hysterically funny Sarah Silverman picked up an Emmy for her tune/video about getting it on with an Oscar winner.

Sarah's "I'm F*cking Matt Damon" won two awards, best original music and lyrics and a picture-editing award, at Saturday's Creative Arts Emmy ceremony. But it wasn't Matt who she was giving credit to in her acceptance speech -- it was ex-boyfriend, Jimmy Kimmel, whose show featured the video.

"Let's be honest, Matt Damon had very little to do with this being popular," Sarah said on stage. "Thanks to the person for whom this whole video was made: Jimmy Kimmel, who broke my heart – ohh, who'll always have a place in my heart," she joked (sort of).

That just makes me sad. Sarah and Jimmy belong together! Work it out, people!

Gibson and Fey

UPDATE: This should be essential reading. The Mark Levin Show has posted ABC's UNEDITED trnascript of the Palin interview. All of the best quotesfrom Gov. Palin, especially on foreign policy, were edited out!
-----
Well, a lot has happened in the past few days, notably Gov. Palin's interview with Charlie Gibson and the debut of the Saturday Night Live version of Sarah Palin (played by Tina Fey). Both of these are important developments that I want to talk about.

First, let's talk about the Charlie Gibson interview (click here to watch). I've heard a lot of debate over whether Mr. Gibson's line of questioning was fair, and I personally don't think it was. It was definitely a good idea for him to ask tough questions on foreign policy (I specifically likes the questions about Georgia and NATO), but I do think that the question about the "Bush Doctrine" was out of line. Here's why, there is no set definition of the "Bush Doctrine", a term which has been applied to any number of different policies and which Charlie Gibson clearly not studied. I would highly recommend Charles Krauthammer's column on the subject, which clearly outlined a number of different definitions which have been applied to the term "Bush Doctrine". Here's what I thought to be the "money quote" from that article:

Yes, Palin didn't know what it is. But neither does Gibson. And at least she didn't pretend to know -- while he looked down his nose and over his glasses with weary disdain."

Krauthammer also brings me to my second point, which is that Mr. Gibson spent the entire interview LITERALLY staring staring down his nose the next Vice President of the United States. He seemed to have no interest in what she had to say, and premised all of his questions (on everything from the "bridge to nowhere" to "Troopergate") on the idea that she was lying to him. If he didn't get the answer he wanted, he simply got angry rather than trying to understand what was being said. All in all, I think that Gov. Palin did a good job, especially considering the biased line of questioning.

Now, on to Tina Fey of Saturday Night Live (click here to watch). While SNL may not be horribly relevant, it is widely watched an fun to discuss. Personally, I had been wondering for quite some time who would play Gov. Palin if we succeeded; Fey was certainly the natural choice, but I didn't actually expect SNL to bring her back to the program just for the purpose of portraying Sarah Palin. I'm glad that I was wrong, and for my two cents, I thought that her Palin was fantastic. As someone who has had to watch every TV appearance by Gov. Palin for the last year an a half, I laughed my head off at all of the little quirks that Tina Fey managed to pick up (licking her teeth, the way she waved, facial expressions, everything)....and on a side note, it creeped me out that I knew so much about the minutia of Gov. Palin's facial gestures. Oh, well.

Next time, I'll be taking on the experience issue by comparing the credentials of Sarah Palin with the pre-Presidency resumes of two heroes of the Democratic Party: Bill Clinton and Woodrow Wilson.

Jill Greenberg vs. John McCain (vs. The Atlantic)

The story: Photographer Jill Greenberg is hired by the magazine The Atlantic to take a portrait of Republican presidential candidate John McCain for the magazine's October issue. "After getting that shot, Greenberg asked McCain to 'please come over here' for one more set-up before the 15-minute shoot was over. There, she had a beauty dish with a modeling light set up. 'That’s what he thought he was being lit by,' Greenberg says. 'But that wasn’t firing.' What was firing was a strobe positioned below him, which cast the horror movie shadows across his face and on the wall right behind him. 'He had no idea he was being lit from below,' Greenberg says. And his handlers didn’t seem to notice it either. 'I guess they’re not very sophisticated,' she adds." (source; let's keep the "not very sophisticated" in mind!).

Needless to say, the results of that photo shoot are less than flattering for McCain (see the raw shot here). Greenberg then used her Photoshop skills to create imagery like this one, while "hoping to license that image to some other magazine" (ibid.).

It seems like there are quite a few issues here, and I don't think I'll manage to wrap my head around all of them. There's an excellent discussion of some of the issues over at Mark Tucker's blog, in the form of fourteen questions, plus links to various websites discussing Greenberg's art work (note I'm extremely generous with the meaning of the term "art work" here).

When I first heard about this, my immediate reaction was to laugh about Greenberg's comment that McCain's "handlers" were "not very sophisticated". Hearing someone who thinks it's a valid political statement to create a Photoshop image with a monkey taking a dump on McCain's head (no, I'm not making this up, see it here) describe other people as "not very sophisticated" is rich. But then, that's the same photographer who thought that selling images of crying children in an art gallery was a meaningful statement about the re-election of Bush in 2004.

My second reaction was to simply be appalled, and most of what I thought has been neatly summed up by Jeffrey Goldberg (who wrote the article in the magazine in question): "Suffice it to say that her 'art' is juvenile, and on occasion repulsive. This is not the issue, of course; the issue is that she betrayed this magazine, and disgraced her profession." Goldberg also quotes Atlantic editor James Bennet as saying "'We feel totally blind-sided,' he said. 'Her behavior is outrageous. Incredibly unprofessional.'"

Needless to say, I think that every person (every photographer, every blogger, ...) is entitled to her or his political opinion. But there's quite a huge difference between asking John McCain for a portrait session, telling him the photos are going to be defaced, and taking those photographs under the cover of a photo session for a well respected magazine, not telling McCain some of the photos are going to be defaced. The former, of course, did not happen, whereas the latter did. Regardless of what you think about McCain and his campaign, Greenberg's actions are simply incredibly disgraceful and unacceptable. And, yes, you can find them disgraceful and unacceptable even if you do not agree with a single thing McCain has said recently.

Frankly, I'm still baffled how Jill Greenberg could even think that her actions were in any sense a meaningful political statement that would be taken seriously. It's mind-blowing. It degrades political discourse to levels that even the worst cases of political mud throwing thankfully only rarely reach (a recent example is provided by McCain's ad about how his Democratic opponent Barack Obama supposedly wanted kindergarten kids to know about sex - whereas in fact the bill Obama supported was designed to protect those children from sexual predators).

Eiffel Tower Sunset

kakutani on dfw

Michiko Kakutani on David Foster Wallace:

Much of Mr. Wallace’s work, from his gargantuan 1996 novel “Infinite Jest” to his excursions into journalism, felt like outtakes from a continuing debate inside his head, about the state of the world and the role of the writer in it, and the chasm between idealism and cynicism, aspirations and reality. The reader could not help but feel that Mr. Wallace had inhaled the muchness of contemporary America — a place besieged by too much data, too many video images, too many high-decibel sales pitches and disingenuous political ads — and had so many contradictory thoughts about it that he could only expel them in fat, prolix narratives filled with Mobius strip-like digressions, copious footnotes and looping philosophical asides.

Fire Away

Tim Lincecum threw 138 pitches against San Diego last night.

Let me make this as clear as I possibly can.

That is utterly, completely, and colossally reckless, stupid, arrogant, and just plain lazy.  Send in all the nasty emails calling me a geek who’s never played you like.  Feel free to point out that Lincecum’s “just different”,”rubber armed”, or a “freak of nature”.  It’s still mind-blowingly stupid, risky behavior.  A couple of undeniable facts:

(1) People I respect have told me “Lincecum’s just different.”  Perhaps.  But the truth of the matter is that you don’t know that.  No one can tell me they know, with any reasonable degree of certainty, that Lincecum can stand up to mindless, pointless abuse better than anyone else.  He might be less capable of doing so.  We just don’t know.

(2) The gain for the Giants having Lincecum throw those extra pitches last night was zilch.  Perhaps less.  The Giants were 15 games under .500 going into last night.  If they win out, they could end up .500.  Those pitches could have been thrown by Carol Channing for all the real world value they had.  For that matter, one of the kids could have been thrown out there and perhaps learned something.

So why take *any*risk under the circumstances?  So Lincecum could have a shutout for the CY race?  Seriously?  That outweighs the strategic risk of exposing your only potential franchise cornerstone to injury that could instantly destroy his ability to perform at an elite level?

If Giants fans wonder why their team is in such dismal shape, last night was a microcosm of it.  This organization hasn’t shown any ability to look past a single game, much less past a season and towards, say, potential stability and success.  Last night wasn’t even a joke.  It was a farce.

To those of you who will feel compelled to write in and say “Tim didn’t want to come out,” my response is pretty simple…My four year old wants to eat a bunch of ice cream too.  It’s kind of my job to make sure he doesn’t.  And it’s kind of Bochy’s, Sabean’s, Baer’s, and the entire occupancy of the Giants front office’s job to keep completely moronic things from happening.

Clearly, they’re not up to the task.

Read: Thank the Yanks for Johan and Beltran

In Game 1 yesterday, Johan Santana pitched in to the eighth inning, and was charged with two runs on nine hits while striking out four.

He left with the lead, though the team eventually lost.

…it seems to me every that time jerry sends santana back out for that extra inning, santana leaves to a standing ovation, but with no outs and runners on base – just like yesterday

In a win during Game 2, Carlos Beltran had three hits, including a home run, extending his hitting streak to 11 games.

Beltran is now batting .285, with 103 RBI, 38 doubles, 21 stolen bases, and a .374 OBP.

According to Kevin Kernan in the New York Post, the Mets should thank the Yankees for passing on Beltran and Santana, thus allowing them to end up on the Mets.

or, maybe, the Yankees made an offer to the Twins for santana and to Scott Boras for beltran, and both the Twins and boras preferred the Mets package instead…you know, the Twins and Boras made the choice, on their own, to pass on the Yankees and go with the Mets, who ultimately made a more lucrative offer…

…i guess it just depends on how you look at it…

…nevertheless, forgive me if i do not send Brian Cashman a thank you card at the end of the season…i’m sure he’ll understand

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