
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
John's Commitment to Posting

A Cartoon Ethnography

First out of the box with this concept was Disney with their Silly Symphonies series (1929-1939). Knowing a good idea when they saw it, Warner Brothers followed suit a year later with Looney Tunes (1930-1969). And here's where it gets interesting. Warner figured they would extend the concept of a musical short to live action - essentially a pre-curser to today's (or yesterday's) music video. The result was Spooney Melodies (1930-1931). However, the idea didn't take and was subsequently converted to another animated musical shorts program, Merry Melodies (1931-1969). MGM was substantially late to the party with their also-ran series, Happy Harmonies (1934-1938). Further muddling matters, Warner opted to reissue some of their older Merry Melodies in the 1940's under the name 'Merry Melodies, Blue Ribbon Classics' (in case you ever wondered what the blue ribbon in the title sequence was all about). Perhaps Warner Director Fritz Freleng said it best: "I never knew if a film I was making would be a Looney Tunes or a Merrie Melodie, and what the hell difference would it make, anyway?"
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
I Demand A D.C. Bottle Deposit
Friday, May 25, 2007
Music Friday: Music and Your Friends
Artist: Plan B
Person I know Who Will Like Him But Doesn't Know It Yet: my younger brother
Reason: This review pretty well sums it up: "Much of the CD is pretty unpleasant, with bleak music that sounds less than innovative and a load of self-important shock rhymes that try too damn hard, as on the murder ballad "Sick 2 Def," which rhymes "cum in a biscuit" with "sadistic". Bear in mind, this kid was also a huge Limp Bizkit fan.
Artist: Amy Winhouse
Person I know Who Will Like Her But Doesn't Know It Yet*: high school friend Stacy
Reason: The drunken, trainwreck persona, the song about the glories of refusing rehab etc. This one just fits - while Stacy doesn't, to my knowledge, hang out with Amy Winehouse, she's made a life-long habit of hanging out with people who aspire to be like her. (*In fairness, it's likely Stacy has already heard of, and fallen in love with Amy Winehouse)
Artist: KT Tunstall
Person I know (of) Who Will Like Her But Doesn't Know It Yet: Hillary Clinton
Reason: Her song 'Suddenly I See' is already making a play at becoming her campaign's theme song via an online 'you pick it' contest at Clinton's website. While I'm sure Clinton has yet to fully familiarize herself with it, this ode to chick-power is sufficiently not-related-enough to the point at hand to become a stone-cold campaign trail classic ('Beautiful Day' anyone?)
Thursday, May 24, 2007
The View From Your Law Firm

(Above: Cirroc [ki:'rok])
Commitment to Posting
In my review I promise to link to your blog. You are not required to reciprocate.
I will review anything, however, if your blog is NSFW let me know so I can look at it while I am not at work. I promise to review these posts two a day until they are finished. If I get no requests starting tomorrow I'm not sure what I will do.
Disaster Merchandise

Unintended Consequences
"On Monday, [Virginia] Tech president Charles Steger told the panel [investigating the Virginia Tech shootings] that federal privacy laws effectively gag school officials from disclosing personal information about students. Even more troubling, they prevent medical professionals from sharing critical information about students with school administrators."
But consider this case of a straight-A sophomore at George Washington University who sought emergency psychiatric care for depression. "When they [GWU administrators] learned of [his] hospitalization, university officials charged him with violating the school code of conduct, suspended him, evicted him from his dorm and threatened him with arrest for trespassing if he set foot on university property." All of which lead the Washington Post to ask, “[s]ince when does being sick constitute a disciplinary problem?” The answer is, unfortunately, when liability to the university attaches - which it most certainly will under Dougherty's approach.
A recent example is the tragic case of the MIT student who made use of the university counseling service before setting herself on fire. "The Massachusetts Superior Court recently allowed her parents, who had not been told of her psychological deterioration, to sue administrators for $27.7 million. The case was settled for an undisclosed amount."
The bookends of these two incidents make for a pretty complicated problem for universities that leads to just one solution: mandatory reporting requirements from health officials to universities and from universities to parents (and potentially in the reverse order). But do we really want to revert to a kind of in loco parentis approach that exceeds even the rights of parents? While I sympathize with Dougherty's sentiments, the solution, whatever it might be, requires more than just a cursory examination of who does and doesn't 'deserve' privacy rights.
While We're Waiting...
1. WINDOWS! No meeting can or should take place in a room without windows. Casinos make use of this tactic to great effect, but your office shouldn't have to resort to sensory deprivation to get you to stay on task.
2. Round Tables: A nice egalitarian touch that says I'm no control freak. Famous adherents include the aptly named Knights of the Round Table (no head nor foot to reflect the equality of the members).
3. Coffee: Preferably at a sideboard or somewhere that makes participants get up and move a bit throughout. I think this makes the experience less funeral-like. Also, if people are getting up occasionally, it'll make it less awkward for you to get up if you have to pee during the middle of it.
Open Question
My Absentee Co-Blogger
UPDATE: Here's six ways to calculate the value of the dollar. (Note - I didn't use the GDP deflator option as it only goes back to 1900, and I didn't use a Consumer Price Index as (1) it wasn't started until 1913 and anything prior to that is a reconstructed guess and (2) CPI data is generally considered of lower quality the further into the past you get.
my eight cents
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
She's Like the Anti-Rachel Ray
Technology and My Attention Span
Is English Efficient?
"For example, what information is encoded in the English "my nephew"? For sure, it's a male person. But (as Harrison writes) "is he related to me by blood or marriage? Unclear. Is he older or younger than me? Unclear. Is he the son of my sister or my brother? Unclear. Is he the son of an older sibling of mine or a younger sibling? Unclear. Is he a boy or a man? Unclear." Taken in absolute terms, English isn't so efficient: we'd need a separate book to list all its major inefficiencies."
The Forgotten History of the Jake Leg
Monday, May 21, 2007
Glory Fades

Roses Speak for Themselves, But These Guys Provide a Megaphone
Know Your Rules of Succession
Top Ten Remittance Recipients
Mexico: 9,920
India: 9,160
Philippines: 6,366
Egypt: 2,911
Turkey: 2,786
Bangladesh: 2,104
Jordan: 2,011
Dominican Republic: 1,982
El Salvador: 1,925
Columbia: 1,784
(Source: International Monetary Fund, Balance of Payments Yearbook 2002.)
Old School Luxury

Friday, May 18, 2007
Music Friday Part II: Yglesias Is Right, Alanis I Am Sorry
- It's a black fly in your chardonnay (a waste of $5 if you're fussy)
- It's a death row pardon two minutes too late (bad luck, bad phone connection, bad governance? In any case, more like a very special episode of Benson than irony)
- It's like rain on your wedding day (unfortunate)
- It's a free ride when you've already paid (dumb on the payers behalf)
- It's the good advice that you just didn't take (again, dumb. Always take good advice - even a 1st grader knows that.)
- It's a traffic jam when you're already late (the word here is frustrating, not ironic)
- It's a no-smoking sign on your cigarette break (just go outside, really)
- It's like 10,000 spoons when all you need is a knife (I don't even know where to start here - where are you and what are you doing when this comes up? In any case, it's weird, not ironic)
Cautionary Tales

Music Friday: The Happiest Guy on Youtubes
Of Cruelty, Canada and Caning
"One 10-year-old boy, committed on 4 May 1845 for a seven-year term, was publicly lashed 57 times in the space of eight and a half months. His offences were staring and laughing, which although in contravention of prison rules, were normal behaviour for a boy of that age. An eight-year-old child, admitted on 7 November 1845 for a three-year term, received the lash within the first week of his arrival. Over a nine-month period he was similarly punished 47 times. An 11-year-old French-Canadian boy received 12 lashes on Christmas Eve 1844 for speaking French."
Cell Phone Society
Music Friday Part I: There Was No Bruce

(Above: Not Bruce)
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Tied House Rules
Things in Singapore: Part 1
Academic Abstract of the Day
The current study presents the results of a content analysis conducted on the verbal aggression found in 36 hours of televised professional wrestling. The coding scheme was adapted from the National Television Violence Study and past research on televised verbal aggression. The results show that an abundance of verbal aggression is present in televised professional wrestling. In particular, swearing, competence attacks, and character attacks. Notably, these forms of aggression are committed most often by perpetrators with no clear dispositional characteristics, and without any apparently justifiable reason – most often done seemingly just for amusement.
Informal Google Hierarchy of Aggression - Sorted by Profession
"Aggressive cop" yields 2,350 results.
"Aggressive doctor" yields 691 results.
"Aggressive preacher" yields 238 results.
"Aggressive poet" yields 169 results.
"Aggressive cab driver" yields 141 results.
"Aggressive mathematician"yields 6 results.
"Aggressive astronaut" yields 3 results.
Freedom of Contract?
Ladies Love Bean
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Anti-Commercial Norms in America?
Sloth Makes All Things Difficult

Boredom Comes From the Spleen

Cops Gone Wild: Spring Break DC
"The resident said that at 10 p.m. Sunday, more than a half dozen officers were gathered around a maroon van with New Jersey license plates at the corner of H and Fifth streets in Northwest."
"At 12:50 a.m. Monday, the resident called a police substation to report a female officer giving lessons in riding Segways and people riding Segways at high rates of speed while chugging beers, she said. She also said she saw a patrol car drive by, but no officers exited the vehicle to talk to the out-of-town police officers, and the resident again called the substation."
And that's all on tape. . .
HA HA HA!
Then again, maybe these are the same cops that turn a blind eye to my own public crapulence, etc. Plus, hard to fault any crew that'll cruise the maroon econoline down from AC for a tailgate at 5th and H.
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Causation?
But as the Prostate Cancer Foundation indicates, there has been ongoing debate as to whether these very supplements (selenium, beta-carotene, and zinc) might actually decrease prostate cancer risk. My guess is that the guys in this study that were taking these supplements did so precisely because they perceived (and acted on) an increased risk of prostate cancer not captured by the screen. Thus, the very vitamins and minerals extolled as beneficial come to look like carcinogens.
Why Beer is Light, Not Diet

Monday, May 14, 2007
Google For Real Life
Today, I can pick up about 1Gb of FLASH memory in a postage stamp sized card for that much money. Fast-forward a decade and that'll be 100Gb. Two decades and we'll be up to 10Tb. 10Tb is an interesting number. That's a megabit for every second in a year... enough to store a live DivX video stream... of everything I look at for a year.... It's a life log; replay it and you've got a journal file for my life.... Why would anyone want to do this?... Initially, it'll be edge cases. Police officers on duty: it'd be great to record everything they see, as evidence. Folks with early stage neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimers: with voice tagging and some sophisticated searching, it's a memory prosthesis. Add optical character recognition on the fly for any text you look at, speech-to-text for anything you say, and it's all indexed and searchable. "What was the title of the book I looked at and wanted to remember last Thursday at 3pm?" Think of it as google for real life.
Friday, May 11, 2007
Thursday, May 10, 2007
Smarter
So my question is, would you opt for the bleeding-edge technology and early adopt? Or would you hold out for the more polished version 2.0? Personally, I would go out and purchase the upgrade immediately. I don't think that I could bear to have people walking around that much more intelligent than I am. Plus if someone was thirty times smarter than you wouldn't you pretty much have to defer to them on just about everything? My self esteem can't handle that!
On the other hand, if I had been augmented it would be difficult to hang around with you dolts. At best you would probably suspect I was patronizing you all the time. That is unless I also developed some advanced state of sympathy.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
He has the Power?

The Sun is reporting that Brad Pitt is being considered for the upcoming role of He-Man.
I remember that as a kid, He-Man was one of the first in a series of many programs that I did not get to watch since my family lacked even the most basic cable. Unlike many parts of the country, not having cable where I grew up was pretty much unheard of (I only knew one person and I didn't meet her until 7th grade).
This cable t.v. rejectionism that my parents subscribed to, (no pun intended) was not so much a financial issue, but rather some sort of confluence of neo-aesetic Catholicism and progressive 70s era child psychology. My mother is not a big believer in the idea that having fun is in and of it self a virtuous pursuit and in fact once when I pressed her a couple of years ago she readily admitted that she felt suffering to be a very critical part of the human condition.
Anyway, for some reason after pleading for months my parents gave in and bought me the Castle Greyskull (sic?) for Xmas. It even came with a Man at Arms (which apparently was the guy's actual name). Anyway, the thing cost $100 from what I recall, and I played with it for about an hour.
Can any of you guys remember what He-Man's alter-ego's (pictured top left) name was?
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Friday, May 4, 2007
U.S. to "clarify" WTO commitment
"[Deputy United States Trade Representative John]Veroneau said that the US commitment to free trade in "recreational services" was not intended to included Internet gambling, which did not exist at the time.
The commitment to opening up recreational services "doesn't explicitly include gambling nor does it necessary exclude it," Veroneau said.
"It didn't occur to us that this could include gambling until Antigua brought this case in 2003."
"Clearly that was an oversight in the drafting," he said.
"The process we are starting today would allow us to clarify our schedule and make clear that we did not intend and do not intend to have gambling included in our services agreement."
Not having read the actual agreement it is hard for me to comment except to say that the term "recreational services" sounds like it was adopted precisely because it is broad enough to create a normative way of treating new services in the future that have not been invented at the time the agreement was implemented.
But there is a broader reason why Veroneau is being deeply disingenuous when he pleads that the U.S. signed on to these agreements ignorantly. I think the most important thing to keep in mind, is that from my understanding, countries in the WTO are allowed to ban certain kinds of trade that they already ban within their own country. This rule was included to allow less liberal trading partners the ability to keep out what they viewed were some less desirable American products (liquor being a good example). This was allowed provided the country did not then go and allow the sale of liquor within the country. In other words, you are not allowed to save the liquor market for your domestic producers while shutting out all foreign competition.
Obviously the United States does not ban gambling. As a matter of fact, in the law that was passed last year penalizing banks for processing money transfers between customers and internet sites, Congress specifically inserted language in the law exempting certain gambling activities (horse racing and fantasy sports come to mind) for the law.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Here be Anthropomorphic Dragons
Should I be embarrassed that I pretty much know what the entire thing means?
Modern Political Art Sucks!!!
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Dear Sir
thanks again,
John & Josh