Showing posts with label Misc.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Misc.. Show all posts

Thursday, March 7, 2013

The View from my Window 2013

I've said before that if I look out my office window and crane my head to the right I have a beautiful view of the Gateway Arch and the Mississippi River . But if I just look out my window straight, this is what I see:

Not quite so pretty huh?   You can see a bit of the Arch grounds over on the far right and one of the bridges in the background.  But mostly I just see buildings. 

But today I had something to watch.  The building with the "KMO" on top is actually the KMOV television building.  It used to be known as the KMOX radio building, even though KMOV was also in there, and it had no letters on it to identify it.  But KMOX radio moved to a new building so I guess KMOV gets to call the shots now. The workmen were putting the letters on top of the building today and it took them most of the day.  Actually they put the "K" up yesterday and the rest of the letters today. 

Here they are hoisting the final "V" up the building:







And here is the final "KMOV" in place:



It doesn't really improve the view.   If I look over to the left I can see the dome of the Old Courthouse.  I'll take a picture of that some day and post it.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Japan

Like most of the world I’ve been following what has been going on in Japan.  I don’t really have anything profound to say about it.   It’s hard to have words for such a disaster.  A 9.0 earthquake seems bad enough, the Tsunami is like a bad dream on top of it.   But now the nuclear crisis? 

I’ve really avoided watching much television footage.  I don’t want to become numb to the images from seeing them over and over.  Because seeing the images isn’t the same thing as being there and knowing that people you know and, maybe love, are gone forever and worrying about the basics of survival and hoping that, on top of everything, there isn’t a nuclear disaster.

So, like the rest of the world, I will only send thoughts and prayers to and for the Japanese people.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

The UnBEARable Liteness of Blogging

via law professor Ilya Somin at The Volokh Conspiracy, I found this delightful little blog post comparing English Bears and American Bears.

Bear with me as I take a bearly deserved break from serious blogging.

On the English side, we have one of my favorites,  Winnie-the-Pooh.

Pooh is first presented as highly imaginative, if somewhat absent-minded. In the first story he tries to fool a hive of bees by disguising himself as a small black cloud in the sky. But he is worried that he still looks like a bear covered in mud and holding a blue balloon, so he asks Christopher Robin to help by holding an umbrella. "Well, you laughed to yourself, 'Silly old Bear!'" says the narrator, addressing Christopher Robin, "but you didn't say it aloud because you were so fond of him."
Soon, however, Christopher Robin loses any reservations about calling Pooh a silly old bear. Sadly, Pooh internalizes the characterization. Their eventual dynamic is summarized when Christopher Robin is dragging him down the stairs by one paw …

hmmm.  I can bearly bear to think of pooh bear being abused.  Silly old bear.

On the other hand, are American Bears really more more assertive and autonomous than English bears?  Or just more brazen?  Here’s one of my favorite American bears:

Also (overly?) self-confident is the muppet Fozzie Bear, who is pursuing a career as a stand-up comedian, despite the fact that people often throw rotten tomatoes at him.

Fozzie gets by with the bear minimun of talent,

I think I agree with Ilya Somin, who says: “The definitive study of Anglo-American literary bears remains to be written, even as its absence gets ever more unbearable.”

And here’s a little music to make your day more bearable:

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Laptop Problems

Well, my laptop decided to melt down or something so I'm writing this on my iPad. But even though I like my iPad, it isn't great for CREATING things. It's mostly good for consuming.

So posting will be even lighter than usual for a while.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Amen

Reading Digby today, I was reminded of the words of Robert Kennedy, spoken at a time of great national shock and sorrow.  Looking at those words again, I find it hard to imagine that he could speak so eloquently and with such kindness and hope, when speaking more or less extemporaneously. 

These last few days have reminded me of being a child, when political violence happened regularly.  A few years ago, a colleague of mine, who is the same age as me, tried to explain to the “young people” at our office what it was like to be a child in the 60’s like we were.  What it was like to assume that anyone who rose in public office was liable to be assassinated.   How we simply took it for granted.  And how, looking back at that attitude, how crazy it seems today.  Hopefully it will not come to that again.

Senator Robert F. Kennedy
Indianapolis, Indiana
April 4, 1968

This is the text from news release version.

I have bad news for you, for all of our fellow citizens, and people who love peace all over the world, and that is that Martin Luther King was shot and killed tonight.

Martin Luther King dedicated his life to love and to justice for his fellow human beings, and he died because of that effort.

In this difficult day, in this difficult time for the United States, it is perhaps well to ask what kind of a nation we are and what direction we want to move in. For those of you who are black--considering the evidence there evidently is that there were white people who were responsible--you can be filled with bitterness, with hatred, and a desire for revenge. We can move in that direction as a country, in great polarization--black people amongst black, white people amongst white, filled with hatred toward one another.

Or we can make an effort, as Martin Luther King did, to understand and to comprehend, and to replace that violence, that stain of bloodshed that has spread across our land, with an effort to understand with compassion and love.

For those of you who are black and are tempted to be filled with hatred and distrust at the injustice of such an act, against all white people, I can only say that I feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. I had a member of my family killed, but he was killed by a white man. But we have to make an effort in the United States, we have to make an effort to understand, to go beyond these rather difficult times.

My favorite poet was Aeschylus. He wrote: "In our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God."

What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence or lawlessness; but love and wisdom, and compassion toward one another, and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether they be white or they be black.

So I shall ask you tonight to return home, to say a prayer for the family of Martin Luther King, that's true, but more importantly to say a prayer for our own country, which all of us love--a prayer for understanding and that compassion of which I spoke.

We can do well in this country. We will have difficult times; we've had difficult times in the past; we will have difficult times in the future. It is not the end of violence; it is not the end of lawlessness; it is not the end of disorder.

But the vast majority of white people and the vast majority of black people in this country want to live together, want to improve the quality of our life, and want justice for all human beings who abide in our land.

Let us dedicate ourselves to what the Greeks wrote so many years ago: to tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of this world.

Let us dedicate ourselves to that, and say a prayer for our country and for our people.

 

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

What’s the Plural of Prius?

Yeah, that’s a new Toyota ad campaign.  I’m going with Prii (pre aye).

I got myself a Prius last summer and so far I’m loving it.  And it doesn’t drive any worse in the snow than my Corolla did.  I get great gas mileage (although not as great in the winter as when it was warm).  It’s comfortable.  I didn’t get all the bells and whistles, just a basic model.  The only extra I sometimes wish I’d gotten was the leather heated seats.   But I only wish that on really cold days.    

There are a few things I would change that all are design flaws but wouldn’t make me not buy the car again.  I find it hard to back up straight.  I don’t know why (I had a hatchback long ago as my first car and had no problem) but I’m thinking it has to do with the location of the back windshield wiper.  It creates a false center for the back window.  I’d fix that if it were up to me.

I can’t see the front of the car so I never know if I’m going to run into the wall in the parking garage when I’m parking.  I stop right before I’m sure I’m going to run into it.  Then find I’m a good foot and a half away.  It’s also hard to judge the back of the car, but not as bad as the front. 

There’s no place to store change.  Truly I find this the most annoying design flaw since my Corolla had at least 3 places to store change, two of which were designed for change.  What gives Toyota?   

But on the whole I like it.

Now.  Sing along … what do you call one when it turns into more … Smile

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Resolved …

Actually I don’t do New Year’s Resolutions, I always seem to make resolutions in September. The start of the school year. Even though I haven’t been in school for years.

But I liked this slide show. (Which does not seem to want to embed but just gives a link. Oh well.)

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Folding a Fitted Sheet Could Drive You Crazy

Maybe it’s just that time of year when people need a laugh, but I’ve seen a lot of funny lists going around.  One of my sisters sent me one today and #5 on the list was “How the hell are you supposed to fold a fitted sheet?”

Well … via Kottke I had learned the answer to that just the other day:

That should save your sanity.   Which is good because you don’t want to be a crazy person.  Or, maybe you do.

What none of us want is to have to deal with a crazy person.

One of the best lists I’ve seen lately was in a blog post from Judge Larry Primeaux of the 12th Chancery Court of Mississippi called “Dealing with Crazy Clients” was very practical and not necessarily limited to Crazy Clients:

1. If you don’t have to deal with a crazy person, don’t.
2. You can’t outsmart crazy. You also can’t fix crazy. (You could outcrazy it, but that makes you crazy too.)
3. When you get in a contest of wills with a crazy person, you’ve already lost.
4. The crazy person doesn’t have as much to lose as you.
5. Your desired outcome is to get away from the crazy person.
6. You have no idea what the crazy person’s desired outcome is.
7. The crazy person sees anything you have done as justification for what she’s about to do.
8. Anything nice you do for the crazy person, she will use as ammunition later.
9. The crazy person sees any outcome as vindication.
10. When you start caring what the crazy person thinks, you’re joining her in her craziness.

Good advice.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

A Silver Bullet for Making Math Education Work

As presented by the guy from Wolfram and Hart, who should know a thing about avoiding silver bullets:

Oh wait.   He’s not from Wolfram and Hart, he’s from Wolfram Research. 

Never mind.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

How I Balance the Budget

I know, I know.  I don’t blog about politics.  But the NYTimes has this nifty little gadget that lets you balance the federal budget.   So I did it.

First, let me say that I agree with Felix Salmon’s analysis of the budget tool -  that it makes it both too easy and too hard.  But it was hard to resist playing with it.

I also agree with Kevin Drum’s analysis of most deficit reduction plans -  that no proposal for balancing the budget can be serious if it doesn’t deal with the rising costs of Medicare over the long haul.  As Salmon and Drum point out, these costs will go up no matter what because ALL the baby boomers will be retired (and not paying in), they will ALL be aging and, thus needing more health care (thus taking out) and the cost of end of life care will continue to increase.   As Salmon points out, that effectively means that the NYTimes’ budget selection for controlling Medicare costs (a cap) will not, in the end, work.  Why?  Because when the rationing starts and all the Old People Who Vote In Great Numbers complain – well, you can guess what will happen.  And in fact, the amount budgeted might not be a realistic number based on those rising costs.

But, leaving aside that I think this is a pointless exercise, it was fun.  The goal is to close the budget gap in 2015 and in 2030 with a combination of increases to revenue and decreases in expenses. The 2015 budget shortfall is $418 billion and the projected 2030 budget shortfall is $1,355 billion.

On the expense side, I wanted to be sure to do the least harm to individual people whose lives aren’t as good as mine.  I’ve seen a number of people want to increase, for instance, the age at which SS and or medicare is received.  That’s probably fine for people like me who have a desk job but it isn’t ok for people who are in jobs that are hard on the body.  And people who weren’t as lucky as me to have healthcare their whole life may end up with big health problems earlier due to lack of care.  And finally, this economy sucks and the people being laid off who are over 60 aren’t going to get good jobs with healthcare again, no matter how hard they try.

On the other hand,  I think we spend way to much on our military industrial complex and we could be just as safe for less money. So those are cuts I want to make even without a budget crisis.

So, with that in mind I eliminated earmarks ($14 billion), reduced the nuclear arsenal and space spending ($38 billion), cut our US military presence in Europe and Asia and the size of our standing army ($49 billion) and reduced the number of troops in Iraq/Afghanistan to 30,000 by 2013 ($169 billion).  I decided I could enact malpractice reform ($13 billion) mostly to make conservatives happy but also so that the lawyers could wail with the doctors who make less money when I cap Medicare growth starting in 2013 ($562 billion). 

I like that series of cuts and most of them I would make anyway even if the budget was in balance.  My cuts would reduce our supply of nuclear warheads to 1,050, from 1,968, which seems to me quite enough to blow up the whole earth. My theory is that we only need enough missiles and military r&d to figure out how to protect ourselves and we can stop being the policeman for the world. And the cuts to the military personnel would only take it back to where it was pre-Iraq/Afghanistan. If it were up to me, I ‘d make it even smaller but that wasn’t an option.  Finally the sooner we get out of Iraq/Afghanistan the happier I’ll be. 

Of course the elimination of military personnel and the cuts in military spending mean that a lot of people are going to have to get non-military jobs.  So the economy had better pick up  which is why I didn’t want a lot of the additional taxes that are proposed – at least not right now.  I realize that most of those possible taxes wouldn’t affect most businesses, but it’s easier to pass MORE taxes when people are doing better.  I mostly want to go back to the Clinton era on estate taxes ($104 billion) and investment taxes ($46 billion)  and also on personal income taxes except that I’d keep the Bush level taxes for people making less than $250,000 ($115 billion).  I’d subject some income over $106,000 to the payroll taxes ($106 billion).   The big tax bonus is the $315 billion I get from from eliminating loopholes without lowering taxes.

Again, there were options I’d take that weren’t given.  If it were up to me, I’d eliminate the cap on the payroll tax entirely for individuals but cap the employer’s half.  That would probably allow for lower rates which would be better for the economy because it would put more cash in the pockets of people with lower income – and they would spend it. But they didn’t give me that option. 

So I solved the budget problem.   I balanced the budget using a 49% increase in revenue (i.e. taxes) and a 51% decrease in expenses (i.e. budget cuts). And other than raising the bar on the the payroll tax, I didn’t take anybody’s taxes up higher than they would have been in the 1990’s.   I think that makes me pretty moderate. 

Of course, I have my doubts.  I’ve never been sure how earmarks are a problem since they aren’t new budget items but rather the direction that already budgeted items are sent.  I believe that for every loophole closed another one will open.  And as I said above, I don’t think a cap on Medicare will work.  But these were my options so I took them and that’s why I thought I should budget for a surplus – in case the projections are wrong. 

Yes, I created a surplus.  It gives me some flexibility.  As I said, it might turn out that the projections are wrong – and if so we’ll still be in pretty good shape. Of course, I didn’t have to budget for a surplus.   I could take back all my reductions of military spending EXCEPT the reduction of troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and still have a balanced budget. And if I put that spending back in and I went with President Obama’s more moderate estate tax plan plan  instead of President Clinton’s I would STILL solve the deficit. 

But I would rather cut unnecessary military spending and go back to the Clinton era on taxes and try to have a bigger surplus.  Why not give the kids a hopeful future?  That’s where I thought we were in 2000, before the era of  BIG spending and lower taxes kicked in and put us in this predicament.   Again. 

Now, who is going to make me King for a Day so I can do these things?   Here’s the link to my plan.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

This and That

This is my mother’s favorite ride at Disneyworld.   Seriously.

I just heard that they cancelled Caprica.  Not a surprise but I still thought it had potential. 

I’ve pretty much stopped watching SGU.  The women characters are so terribly written, I just can’t take it anymore.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

A Sense of Place

I’m from St. Louis and, although I’ve never lived in the near-suburb of Webster Groves, I  know Webster Groves.  I spent a great part of my life in Webster Groves.  My mom’s family lived in Webster Groves when she was in high school.  I have always had family who lived in Webster Groves. I went to a high school in Webster Groves. I attend the theater in Webster Groves.   I have lots of friends who have lived, and some who still live, in Webster Groves. My favorite independent book store is in Webster Groves.  I live close enough that I could walk to Webster Groves if I had to.  It would be a long walk (2-3 miles) but I could do it.  So, I feel qualified to say that I know Webster Groves. 

If I had to describe it I would say it blends a friendly small town atmosphere with the benefit of living in an inner suburb with an easy commute to downtown and other places where people work.  It’s a good place to raise a family.  If I was raising a family I’d probably be living in Webster Groves.  When I was younger and sometimes imagined myself grown up and married with children and dogs, I imagined myself living in a house in Webster Groves.  When I dreamed big I dreamed of one of the big old three story frame houses with a wrap-around porch. When one of my friends got married and bought a home in Webster Groves, I walked in the front door and said “You are living my dream!”

Apparently a lot of people who have never set foot in Webster Groves feel that they know it too because of a CBS documentary aired in the 1966 called 16 in Webster Groves.  I’ve never seen it, although I’ve seen snippets.  It didn’t seem to describe the Webster Groves that I know, it made it seem snobby.  But I’ve never thought too much about it.  It aired in 1966 and when I was a child that might as well have been 1866.  I was all of 6 years old at the time.  By the time I was hanging at the McDonalds in Webster Groves after work, or going to the Imo’s to pick up a pizza to bring back to school, or walking past Music Folk looking at the guitars in the window, it was ten years later.  I had no interest in ancient television programs. Neither did my friends.  Or their parents.

But I have had conversations with out-of-towners about it.  Which always confused me.  If people my age who live here haven’t watched it or cared about it, why do other people my age or younger from out of town give a rat’s ass about it?  And why on earth do they think that they can judge whether a depiction of a place in 1966 was accurate at the time?  I’m from her and I couldn’t.  Not when I was 6 years old at the time.  And why do they think it would be accurate today?   The whole thing just seemed weird to me.

So I was interested to read this blog post in the LA Times by Sam Tanenhaus entitled Franzen in Webster Groves.  Author Jonathan Franzen is from Webster Groves and he is just about my age.  It occurred to me that we were teenagers hanging out in Webster Groves at about the same time.  But as far as i know, we never met. 

According to this blog post, 16 in Webster Groves was used during the 70’s and 80’s in sociology curricula and that’s why so many people my age or younger have seen it.  Well, that explains it. 

The rest of the post was strangely annoying.  As I said, I don’t know Jonathan Franzen.  I’ve never read his books (or, at least, I’ve never finished one of his books. I started one once but put it aside to read at a later time.)  I don’t have any inherent sympathy for Franzen.  But I was annoyed on his behalf by this blog post.  Which was supposed to be about him but was, in fact, about a television show that aired when he was seven years old.

Franzen must get tired of being asked about it.  He gamely talks about it but it must get old for him.  But Tanenhaus doesn’t seem to catch on to that.  Tanenhaus’ attitude seems to be that since Franzen is from Webster Groves that television show MUST be discussed. He even goes so far to say that Franzen may be “the only major novelist whose idea of the East-Midwest divide was shaped profoundly by a single television program”. 

Wow.  I thought.  Franzen’s idea of the East-West divide was shaped by what was in this show?   I’m the same age as Franzen and the television program wasn’t even part of my consciousness growing up.  Not in any real way.  And we were both little kids when it aired.  Franzen and I must be really different.

But, if you read what Franzen is actually saying, you will find that Tanenhaus misses the point.  Franzen says that people who have seen the TV show always try to explain to him the type of community he comes from.  But, as he says, all of them collectively, have spent less than 20 minutes in Webster Groves. He says he tries to “explain that the Webster Groves depicted in [the television show] bears minimal resemblance to the friendly, unpretentious town I knew when I was growing up. But it’s useless to contradict TV; people look at me with suspicion, hostility or pity.”  (emphasis mine)

Hmmm maybe Franzen and I really do see things the same way.  The chasm between East and West?  How about the chasm between people who are shaped by television and people who are shaped by reality? 

And the mere fact that Tanenhaus insists on writing an entire blog post that ends by comparing people’s negative perception of Franzen to people’s negative perception of Webster Groves as it might or might not have existed in 1966 indicates to me that he falls in the first category. 

Thursday, July 22, 2010

A Hammock Sounds Good About Now

I haven’t been around much and things are going to get worse.  But until I can get back on track here’s a video of a Black Bear in a hammock.   It just seems appropriate.

Monday, June 7, 2010

How do you use your surplus time?

My reading list for the summer includes Clay Shirky’s new book: Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age.  I probably won’t get to it until I head off to the lake on vacation later this summer but I already know where Shirky is starting from because he has been giving talks and writing about it for the last couple of years.  In a Wall Street Journal essay called Does the Internet Make you Smarter? he recently responded to the pessimists who claim we are getting dumber with this:

… the rosy past of the pessimists was not, on closer examination, so rosy. The decade the pessimists want to return us to is the 1980s, the last period before society had any significant digital freedoms. Despite frequent genuflection to European novels, we actually spent a lot more time watching "Diff'rent Strokes" than reading Proust, prior to the Internet's spread. The Net, in fact, restores reading and writing as central activities in our culture.

This idea that we spent the last fifty years watching television is something Shirky has been talking about a lot.  In one of his talks he tells the story of a television executive who said to him, about blogs and facebook and other internet activities, “I just don’t know how people find the time.”  And Shirky responded that NO ONE in the television industry is allowed to wonder that.

To be clear, I don’t think Shirky will necessarily bash television in his book.  I think he is simply pointing out that all of the time saving devices invented in the 20th century left us with a lot of extra time and we needed to figure out what to do with that time.  For a significant number of people, that time was filled by television.  I’m not sure that Shirky is saying there is something necessarily wrong with that per se, but there are now other options. One can now spend one’s time writing wikipedia entries if one wants. 

I’ll wait until I read his book before judging it.  But, like him, I do think the internet has restored reading and writing as central activities.  I certainly didn’t spend any time writing for pleasure in the 1970’s and 1980’s but the advent of easy blogging changed that.

I watch less television now than I did in the 1980’s but I also enjoy the television I do watch much more than I did in the 1980’s.   In general I’d rather read a good book than watch television but today some shows are as good as a book.  I recently (finally) finished watching the last season of David Simon’s The Wire.  I was watching it at the same time as some family members who live out of town and also the girlfriend of one of my cousins who lives here.  Talking about The Wire with them was like talking about a book.  The characters were as real to us as characters in a novel.  If anyone had told me that I’d be broken up by the death of a drug dealer, I would have laughed at them.  But I was. And I was heartbroken to see what became of three of the four middle schoolers we followed in Season 4. 

Why do we let ourselves spend our free time getting wound up in the lives of people who don’t exist? This isn’t a new phenomenon.  We’ve done it for a long time.  Before the advent of television people cried at the death of Little Nell.

Paul Bloom, a professor of psychology at Yale, writes in the  Chronicle of Higher Education about why we like to spend time with fictional people.

First, fictional people tend to be wittier and more clever than friends and family, and their adventures are usually much more interesting. I have contact with the lives of people around me, but this is a small slice of humanity, and perhaps not the most interesting slice. My real world doesn't include an emotionally wounded cop tracking down a serial killer, a hooker with a heart of gold, or a wisecracking vampire. As best I know, none of my friends has killed his father and married his mother. But I can meet all of those people in imaginary worlds.

Second, life just creeps along, with long spans where nothing much happens. The O.J. Simpson trial lasted months, and much of it was deadly dull. Stories solve this problem—as the critic Clive James once put it, "Fiction is life with the dull bits left out." This is one reason why Friends is more interesting than your friends.

Finally, the technologies of the imagination provide stimulation of a sort that is impossible to get in the real world. A novel can span birth to death and can show you how the person behaves in situations that you could never otherwise observe. In reality you can never truly know what a person is thinking; in a story, the writer can tell you.

So spending our free time in the worlds of fictional characters isn’t necessarily a waste of time.  Of course, Diff’rent Strokes is not The Wire.  Episodic television tends to be pure entertainment and spending half of my waking hours on pure entertainment that I forget the minute it is over isn’t something I want to do.  Sure, I like The Big Bang Theory, but it’s one half hour of television a week and it occurs on Mondays when I need to spend time NOT thinking too hard.  It has its place in my life. 

I like to think that serials are less of a waste of time, especially when I can talk about them with other people and analyze them.  I’ve found it frustrating to read books that no one else has read and have no one to talk to about.  I’m more likely to find someone else who is watching Caprica than I am to find someone who read The Children’s Book.   Part of me looks wistfully at tales of how people used to wait for the next episode of a Dickens story to come out.  Now people talk about Lost – which I wasn’t watching.

Richard Beck, at N+1 Magazine, recently wrote about the connection between the serial novels of the 19th century and serial television. 

In the nineteenth century, serial novels worked hard to accommodate themselves to industrial daily life. As the bourgeois workday rigidified into something like a nine-to-five, leisure time became repetitive as well. Serialization allowed people to set aside time for reading at evenly spaced intervals, and thus helped to keep the alternating sequence of work and leisure running smoothly along. Interruptions in the publication of a serial work could be very upsetting. When Dickens failed to produce an installment of Pickwick in June 1837, his publishers sent out notices all over, and the July number included an explanation refuting rumors that he had gone insane and died. Apparently, readers could not have imagined a less catastrophic explanation for the interruption of their favorite novel.

Beck points out that we have now legitimized all of the Dickens serialized stories by thinking of them only as novels; perhaps we are starting to do that with serialized television too.  Beck doesn’t say this but I think that the evolution of the television series DVD, where a person can watch the series in its entirety, helped  this along.  But also, the serialized form in television has evolved.

…  it’s only in the last decade that critics and viewers have begun to think of artistically ambitious dramas as natural to the medium. We no longer treat them as miraculous aberrations. A change began to occur at the end of the 90s, as producers and writers went consciously looking for the internal limits of the serial form. They began to investigate the extent to which certain traditional elements of realistic fictional narrative—plot, the representation of individual characters and social worlds, etc.—could be developed in a multi-season work, and they won acclaim and got their shows renewed by advertising their ambition to anyone who would listen. Those series that actually did find what they were looking for, that managed to articulate one or another facet of televisual narrative to the fullest extent, brought the contours of the form itself into view for the first time. Three of those series are The Sopranos, The Wire, and Lost.

In our discussions about The Wire, my co-watchers and I agree that it was possibly the best thing that was ever on television.  But there is no doubt that it took up a lot of time to watch.  Far more time than reading a book. As Beck says:.

Even slower readers are unlikely to need eighty-six hours to get through Anna Karenina or Ulysses, but that is how much time Tony Soprano spent explaining himself to millions of people.

If this is how we want to spend part of our cognitive surplus, the time we have when we aren’t consumed with doing the things necessary to survive in life with an adequate standard of living, what’s the harm?  For those of us stuck in offices all day, going home to our upper middle class lives, spending time in the fictional world of The Wire is fulfilling for all three reasons that Professor Bloom gave us above.

… [David] Simon got a whole city into sixty episodes. Each season focused on a new professional group—first cops and drug dealers, then longshoremen, city politicians, teachers, and finally journalists—and then used dialogue to arrange them into coherent structures. The Wire has more than 200 named characters, and by the series’ end all of them seem to have talked to one another.

And if you get too wrapped up in the world of serialized drama, according to Beck, you can be brought down to earth by the modern comedies on television:

To the dramas that said you could find satisfaction and dignity in your underpaid government job, The Office said No: You actually work at a paper company in the internet age, and your coworkers are mostly irredeemable psychos. (30 Rock has similar thoughts on coworkers.) To the dramas that went further, that claimed your coworkers were now your family, Arrested Development had an even better answer: Fine. But your family? These people are psychos too—in jail, in debt, in league with Saddam Hussein, even—and now you must also live with them, all the time.

Of course if you get tired of the world of fiction, you can turn off the tube and use your surplus time for something  else that you find entertaining.  Like surfing the web, sharing on Facebook or blogging.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Fresh

I recently had a birthday.  I thought I’d celebrate by giving myself a fresh, new template.  I wanted to give myself a new Prius but then Toyota went and screwed things up on that front.

A new template isn’t as nice as a new car but it’s a lot cheaper (especially when it is free).  And if I don’t like it I can switch to something else. 

I was going to have a new one in place on the actual day of my birthday but I found myself unable to decide.  And then I got frustrated at my inability to decide.  I should have known better than to set an arbitrary deadline for something that didn’t matter.  I have enough real deadlines in my life, I don’t need the stress of arbitrary deadlines.

In the midst of my frustration, when I was berating myself for not even being able to decide on a new template, I decided I would do something I’m really good at.  I would just walk away.  Walking away is one of the things I do best in life.  

I would like to have walked away from my birthday.  But that’s not possible.  So I walked away from the easiest thing I could.

I’ve always been a person who loved her birthday.  But not this one.  And I was getting really tired of people telling me “it’s better than the alternative”.  I started answering, “Is it?  Really, how do you know?”  That shut them up.

I feel bad about that now.  I went to a funeral yesterday.  One of my cousins, only a couple of years younger than me, died after a long fight with luekemia.

At the funeral, I watched her family and thought that the phrase “It’s better than the alternative” is really meant for the other people.  The people left behind.  For them, it was going to be hard. For her, it was probably a relief to be out of pain and suffering.  She put up a good fight.  But she would probably have liked to have celebrated the birthday  I just celebrated.

When I was young I had a deep superstition that I was going to be dead by the time I was 35.  I knew it was a superstition so I made plans and laid the groundwork for a post-35 life because that was the rational thing to do.  I went to law school, etc.  But deep down I was sure I was going to be dead by the time I was 35. 

And then I wasn’t.

And I suddenly had to face the fact that it was possible that I could live a very long time and what the HELL was I going to do with all that time?

I’ve never had an answer for that. 

Don’t worry, it’s not like I set myself a deadline for figuring it out.

But I think I decided that if I was going to be forced to have birthdays I might as well enjoy all those unanticipated post-35 birthdays.  And I have.  I never had to pretend.  I really did enjoy them. And I liked having the celebrations go on days and days.

Until this year.

It took every bit of energy I had to get through all the celebrations.  And I’m so glad it’s over and I don’t have to pretend anymore.

And once all that stress was removed from my life I found it was easy to pick a new template.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

And the winner is …

Wolf Hall by Hillary Mantel has won the 2009 National Book Critics Circle prize for fiction.   I blogged about it here.  

Prizes are always nice for authors.  And it is always nice when a novel I enjoy wins a prize (this one also won the Booker Prize last year).  I thought it was beautifully written and certainly prize-worthy.

On the other hand, 2666 won the 2008 National Book Critics Circle prize.  And I just don’t see it.   So what do I know?

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Iceberg Ahead!

Have you been following the story of the huge iceberg that is headed toward Australia?  It’s really big.    Big as in 144 sq. kilometers big (that would be 54 square miles big).

If you’re not sure how big that is, then think on this: Manhattan is 88 sq km. It would fit comfortably inside that iceberg.

Wow. 

And the worst thing about it?  I now have that Celine Dion song from Titanic in my head and it won’t go away.   

Middlemarch by George Eliot

Middlemarch, A Study of Provincial Life by George Eliot is one of those classics of English Literature that show up on most "you must r...