> Enter text here. > Enter text here.

Monday, September 28, 2009

I'm really bad with titles . . .

A few nights ago I had an as-of-recently rare evening with no social or scholastic obligations. Whenever I find myself with several hours and nothing to do, I invariably turn to my terabyte external hard drive, which houses a modest collection of about 350 movies.

The movie I chose to watch was "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," a movie that I've seen several times, though not for at least a year. I chose this title for no particular reason, and even debated whether or not I wanted such a dramatic and tragic film to help me relax. For the most part, it is the film's ending that brought me to write this post. I'm not sure how many of you have seen this movie, or what you remember of it, but the last scene is one that I find incredibly disturbing on a level that extends well beyond the actual moment. (I'm afraid to write spoilers, but I'm sure that if you don't know what I'm talking about you're intrigued enough to seek out the movie and see it for yourself.)

To get to the point of my post, this ending has a strong effect on me every time I watch it, but my reaction now is not nearly as overwhelming as it was the first time I saw it. My initial viewing of the movie left me in tears for hours, and I was so disturbed and sickened by the fate of McMurphy that I actually vomited. (The base of my reaction was much deeper than simply seeing McMurphy, but to philosophize on that would take more time than I can give at the moment.) As I said, I no longer have such reactions to the film. I cry, of course, but only for a few well-controlled minutes, which I think is probably the normal reaction. But watching it a few nights ago made me think of that first time and also made me wonder if any other movie had elicited such an intense and consuming reaction from me.

I couldn't think of any, but I wonder if any of you have had any similar responses to anything in movies, or other media for that matter. I don't mean similar as in necessarily negative, but similar in terms of intensity. Has anything you've watched in movies, read in literature, seen in art, or heard in music struck you in such a powerful and particular way that you are forced to succumb to (what was for me) an uncontrollable emotion?

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Er...what?

Nancy Cartwright is the voice of Bart Simpson. Nancy Cartwright is from Kettering, Ohio. Nancy Cartwright is a Scientologist. Nancy Cartwright is coming to a local high school, Ohio to do a radio theater play with the high school's thespians to support the school district

The play they are performing is "If I Were You" by L. Ron Hubbard.

Maybe he was a great science fiction writer. Perhaps this particular text has absolutely nothing to do with Scientology.

I still have a big problem with this.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

On Bodies

I like watching volleyball. It's only minimally because I like the sport.

So, the AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Tour plasters temporary tattoos of its corporate sponsors on the athletes' bodies. Shoes, energy drinks, sports medicine, fruit juice, rum, and hotel chains. I find this disturbing. I understand that volleyball players are more scantily-clad than most other athletes, and the lack of clothing offers less ad space. Putting your company name on a jersey you made or provided money to make is one thing. Branding athletes is another. I just feel like bodies should be off-limits.

Oh, and also, I was just informed I'm watching The "2009 AVP CROCS™ CUP CHAMPIONSHIP KENTUCKY GRILLED CHICKEN™ CHICAGO OPEN."

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Why I hate the internet (and the world generally)

I will partially reproduce with comments this conversation below I happen to be in a similar situation currently:
1) Is is possible to run the Windows version of R across all four processors?

2) I was under the impression that R for Linux supported multi-threading by default. Am I correct in this assumption? If not, is it possible for Linux R to multi thread, and how do I go about configuring this?


It seems reasonable to be asking an R reading list questions about whether or not the R framework can work in parallel, but we get this response:
> 1) Is is possible to run the Windows version of R across all four
> processors?

No.

That's it. I'm not truncating here for the sake of proving a point. The guy just disregards the question entirely.

Continuing the response:
> 2) I was under the impression that R for Linux supported multi-threading by
> default. Am I correct in this assumption? If not, is it possible for Linux R
> to multi thread, and how do I go about configuring this?

Your impression/assumption is wrong.

Taking someone's obviously false misconception and ignoring the obviousness of the question but instead, INSTEAD, throwing it back in their face with an assault on their reasoning ability! BOOYAH!

A few emails later (after an interesting argument about how C works):
> Will snow be anyway useful for this, or multithreading must be made
> explicit (I don't know how) within the C code, or there is nothing we can
> do?

Please do your own homeork on what snow (etc) do, and how multithreaded
BLAS work (and the ones I am familiar with are C code and use pthreads --
OpenMP is another possibility).


I get it that he's British. I get that he's a stats prof. I get that he works at Oxford. But seriously, why does he insist on reading the R boards and then only respond with asinine remarks? If you're too busy to help people find information about this software package, maybe you shouldn't spend the time to get on and flame them. Seriously, that last email was basically "I'm emailing you to tell you I can't email you."

I hate trolls. Here's the closest thing I've come to understanding them:

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Ridiculous




THATS A NEW ONE!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Murder in my neighborhood?

Now I have told one of you about the news from a few streets over. Just incase you don't get local news- THIS-is all anyone can talk about. In the news, it sounds like a guy killed his wife and hid the remains in the garbage, using bleach to clean up, and also reported his wife missing to make himself look innocent.
Here is my question, is this media bias towards sensationalism? Probably. Should friends and neighbors assume the wife is dead because she is missing, and remains ( thought not publicly proven to be hers have been found) Does suspicious evidence like bleach bottles mean that he used it to destroy evidence. As of last night, the man in question was not held on murder charges, but harming official business and the like. So should we read into what the news says and form our own opinion, or should we try to wait and see what the evidence shows. I keep thinking in my head, innocent till proven guilty. However I may try I am finding it very hard to hope this is not the way it looks. I keep hoping the wife will turn up, and everything will be fine. that area has one large cemetery near by and a smaller one. Who knows what may or may not have happened.
As if trying to hope of a good out come and believing the best in people is not enough, there is the chilling fact that this is just a few streets over, for those that know, on the other side of the park from me. My grandpa is buried in the cemetery down the street, I drive the street in question and pass that house at least once a week. Violence is common in our world. Murder rates are high in cities. And while i did not know these people personally, it is forcing me to realize just how much we can never know or guess about others and the human condition.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

I get a lot of songs stuck in my head*. It happens a couple of ways. One is that the lyrics and music will repeat themselves in my head, like I'm subconsciously singing it to myself. The other way is that I will actually hallucinate that I am hearing the song. It's happening right now. It doesn't happen in silence, but when there's white noise around. I'm really hearing something, but my brain molds those sounds into this particular song I was listening to a few minutes ago.

How did that song get stuck in my head? It popped into there because I saw the word "recompense." That threw me into the line "If it's time to recompense for what's done." Do you recognize it? I didn't. It's a Nick Drake song. From The Royal Tenenbaums. I don't have the song, but it's prominent in the movie and easy to hear.

Oddly enough, I don't usually notice the music in movies unless it's in the forefront or my attention is artificially drawn to it. I suppose you generally shouldn't notice the music, or at least the score, unless the filmmaker does it deliberately to add meaning. I don't know, I've never studied film.

However, in the course of my detective work in trying to figure out what song it was, I found this website which discusses the music in that film and the extra layer(s) of meaning it provides. I happen to love the film, and if you don't that's okay, but the way music is selected to provoke exactly the right emotional reaction has always fascinated me, and it's sort of about that.

* Obsessive-compulsive to the max, but at least there's always music in my life.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

UM?

Harry Potter and the amazing girls who saw it

since at least 3 of us have seen harry potter i thought all would enjoy this article. its the wired story of the special effects used. its pretty frickin sweet.
post out.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Necissity, need and the cost of value

Recently, I went shopping. I needed dress shoes for 2 weddings coming up in my family. So I decided I wanted something pretty and comfortable, as well as well built. Most of my shoes that I do own are really cheap. So I proceeded to be seduced, there really is not another word for these 4 inch leather heels by Ralph Lauren down from 90 to 60. blinded by beauty, craft and overall comfort, I purchased them with little thought.
It was only when I came home I realized i paid 70 with tax on a pair of shoes. 70, when I am desperately saving for a new( er) car before fall. ( long story but the car I'm driving now doesn't have a defroster/ working air vent)
After much panic, guilt, and almost crying; mostly at Amanda, I realized these are just a pair of shoes, and I can take them back, get a full refund and have no problem. Then, I found some spare cash that almost equaled the cost of the shoes. Now, the thought is to deposit this into the bank and use it to pay the bill for them, thus rationalizing the cost and value of the shoes.
Now, I find it terribly amusing that finding cash I didn't know I had ( I love when this happens, don't you?) can be justification to keep something I had prior decided as not worth the cost. What gives something value? Is it craftsmanship, want, desire, aesthetics, or is it something else all together?
What can we use to assign value? And where is it just impulse purchases or when is it an investment. Is Pleasure of object or ownership quantifiable?

Thursday, July 2, 2009

the origin of love

I haven't seen this movie in about four years, but earlier today someone who had never seen the movie was explaining this "origin of love" story to me, and I had to direct her to this video:




It's such a compelling story, and I actually saw it in this move before I really knew anything about Plato, but the fact that it's been around for at least 2300 years makes me like it more. It reminds me of why humans created mythologies in the first place. Also, I'm very, very glad the Phonecians gave the Greeks an alphabet so they could write things down.

Also, Hedwig's hott. I'd forgotten.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Can you guess what's wrong here?



Alright, a little bit closer, then:




Oh, Windows. All this time I've been supporting you... and now this?

Thursday, June 25, 2009

no me alcanzará la vida

He terminado de leer Crónica de una muerte anunciada por Gabriel García Márquez en español. Lo recomiendo.

I've finished reading Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel García Márquez in Spanish. I recommend it (in translation if you must). It's quite short--little more than 100 pages.

Reading a book in a second language is like unwrapping a present on Christmas morning. Very very slowly...bashing it open forcefully with a dictionary. Or, if you're Forrest Gump, it's like putting an unknown chocolate in one's mouth. There are surprises, and they're even more thrilling because of the work one must put in to understand what's happening. My favorite little gift of a passage so far:
Magdalena Oliver had come with him on the ship and could not get rid of the image. "He looked gay," she told me. "And it was a shame because I wanted to smear him with butter and eat him up alive." She was not the only one to think it, nor the last to realize that Bayardo San Román was not a man one could know at first sight.
Incidentally, it appears that Spanish has at least a half dozen words for "dawn," and I like it. Also for "fear."

I suspended disbelief while I was reading it, but now I don't have to anymore. I must point out that the entire plot of the book hinges on a few facts:

1. All women have hymens.
2. A woman without a hymen is not a virgin.
3. Bloody sheets or it didn't happen.

Fuck virginity. But it was still a good book.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Another True Story

As some of you may or may not know, I'm taking several courses for summer school to get some requirements out of the way. All of them are at Miami Middletown, for no reason other than that the classes I wanted were not offered anywhere else. All of my three classes are introductory courses and very small with no more than 10 students in each. In all but one of these classes I am both the youngest member and the only student with Oxford for a home campus. Based on conversations I have heard and had with my classmates, I also seem to be one of the only ones who doesn't smoke two packs a day, doesn't have a family member in jail, and doesn't have at least one child. In my history class, one woman gets up every 15 minutes to light a cigarette, one woman doesn't vote because she "was brought up being taught that women shouldn't be allowed to", one 24-year-old has three children with three different men, and one man doesn't work because the money he receives from Social Security for his son's cancer is "enough to get by". We were discussing Andrew Jackson's "spoils system" today, and the instructor mentioned "aristocracy", and we proceeded to spend 15 minutes discussing the word because no one in class knew what it meant. Some didn't know what a passport is, or that Obama is a Democrat.

Am I a bad person because I judge these people? Because I see myself as a better person? I know hardly anything about them, and certainly nothing about the context of their situations, but even if I did, would it be right to judge them? My family is affluent, we speak properly, we don't have bad habits, we're intelligent and sensical, we respect each other, we take responsibility, we seek out knowledge, and we know about and participate in a world that extends beyond our backyard.

But does that make us better or worth more as people? Does anything make one human better than another? Is this perhaps a topic better suited for a face-to-face conversation?

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

fascinating

This is interesting. It's a visual representation of job loss/gain since January 2004 in major cities all over the country.

Caution: it's the diameter of the circles, not the area. It's potentially visually misleading.

True Story

Let's jump right in:

In Ancient Greece, there were no lawyers. So if you wanted to sue someone, you had to present your case yourself after taking a class on "how to argue". A student decides to enroll in such a class, even though there is no one he wants to sue, even though he is not being sued, and even though he has no money to pay the instructor. The student approaches the instructor with this offer: "I will pay you your fee when I win my first case." The instructor accepts the offer, and proceeds to provide the student with the necessary information so that he may learn how to argue.

The lessons come to a close. The instructor teaches the student all he needs to know about arguing and sends him on his way with a friendly reminder of his promise to him: "Remember, our deal was that you will pay for my services when you win your first case."

Several months go by. The student has yet reimburse the instructor, not because he has lost every case, but simply because he has not had one yet. He has not taken or been taken to court. The instructor, growing impatient and suspicious, confronts the student. "It has been months and you have yet to pay me. I need your fees right now. If you refuse to pay me, I will take you to court, and regardless of the court's ruling, you will be required to pay me."

"What's your reasoning?" asks the student.

"Well," replies the instructor, "if I take you to court and the court orders that you pay me, then by law you are required to do so. But if the court does not order that you pay me, then that means you have won the case, and based on our agreement, you have to pay me."

The student laughs. "On the contrary," he says. "If you take me to court and the court orders that I don't have to pay you, then I am free from any obligation. But if the court does order me to pay you, then you have won the case and I have lost it, and since I have lost and not won, per our agreement, I am not required to pay you."

I realize that this conflict is easily resolved, but I love paradoxes. And you should, too.


Monday, June 15, 2009

I need some help with this.

I've seen this at least twice now:


If we keep the American convention of writing the time hh:mm:ss and the date mm/dd/yy, we'll have 04:05:06:07:08:09 and
05:06:07:08:09:10 and so on until
09:10:11:12:13:14
Then, we have to wait until
01:02:03:04:05:[21]06

Exactly the same sequence in the picture above will reoccur at 5 minutes and 6 seconds after 4 am on the 8th of July in 2109.

Also, why not list date/time in either ascending or descending unit size? i.e. ss:mm:hh, dd/mm/yy

Then, it's 5 minutes and 4 seconds after 6 am on August 7th, 2009. 04:05:06 07/08/09

or yy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss on 10/09/08 07:06:05

or the non-American hh:mm:ss dd/mm/yy -- 04:05:06:07:08:09 at 5 minutes and 6 seconds after 4 am on the 7th August 2009.

Not to mention it happens every hour on those dates given enough time zones.

Am I mistaken? Have I been taking crazy pills? Do people think when they read?

Monday, June 8, 2009

J-to-the-HOVAH

Yesterday I was at a laundromat reading My Name is Red (great book, go read it), when a man who was a bit overdressed for a laundromat walked in and said good morning to me. I said a cheerful good morning back, and then he offered me "something to read" that "might be interesting." I almost reached for it, but when I saw that it was a Watchtower, I recoiled in horror.

Another day, I might have politely accepted the proffered proselytization and then promptly thrown it away, but yesterday morning I decided I wasn't going to take it lying down, so to speak, and protested proudly, "No, Thank You."

He looked at me suddenly, surprised and slightly offended. "Well, thank you," he replied with a curious amount of emphasis on the last word. I think "thank" might have been a euphemism here. After that, he left.

Oddly enough, it was my first encounter with a Jehovah's Witness not in my family (afaik). Do you all have any interesting proselyte stories? Any opinions about the best response to these people and their gods?

EDIT: OMG I just spent about an hour tracking down a video. All I could remember is that I had seen a scene somewhere of two cops harassing Jehovah's Witnesses, and I couldn't even remember which sketch comedy show it was. Turned out to be Reno 911. I can't find an embeddable link. Season 1, Episode 2 for anyone who wants to look for it.

Friday, June 5, 2009

I've been journaling, in a real hard bound journal. A lot. my fingers are stained with ink. Its refreshing writing that much by hand. I don't think I have that much since highschool. Now as it is me, its full of nonsense, non narrative prose, full of doodles flourishes with pen and ink, and not a little blood from paper cuts.
I really like blank pages to write in, even if it is just paged and paged of words. Lined paper always makes me sad. When ever I go to a book store, I check out their journals, and look for blank ones. so far in my life I have filled 5. right now it is a bright blue book hand made in nepal. the paper is bumpy and a delightful shade of sandy buff with swirls of white matter. I like it. i think it makes me think of things differently, than say if it was just a composition notebook.
Also I can write in perfectly straight lines with ink and quil on a pillow on my bed and not spill a drop.
I need to write some more plans and thoughts. Get ideas out of swirling in my head to somewhere else.
back to the book? or back to bedlam?

Thursday, June 4, 2009

go find this movie (wiki) and watch it immediately.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Videogames as art

I've wanted to write about this for quite a while, but a few recent events have spurred this post.

Without attempting to argue specifically what constitutes the various forms of art, I think videogames are quite possibly the most modern medium. It is not uncommon for those in the graphic art field to transition to being texture artists or interface designers. Texture artists are effectively statue painters - if those have ever existed corporeally - and I have a tremendous amount of respect for these people. Being able to take a plain-grey textureless object and make it lifelike is a very difficult and time consuming process.

The question to me, then, is where is the line drawn? Who on the development team of a videogame is not an artist? Even I wouldn't be so bold as to claim that the management team or HR staff deserves this title, but surely those story writers and anyone generally making creative decisions.

I'll be the first, though, to ask - are programmers artists? Does modeling human (or other) behavior qualify as art? What about interface programmers? Is simply working on a creative team a qualification for being an artist? I am too involved to answer this question with no bias, but maybe the comments can take that on, though I can say that although my current project only deals with statistics and has almost no visual properties, I do think of myself as crafting something in a field (programming) that will in general, at some point, be considered a field of art in the same way that writing a novel is considered.

Here's one question that comes up eventually: What is an 'artistic' game? Arguably on a micro view, the individuals working on a game can be considered artists. But, what games are genuinely deserving of being called art as a whole? To illustrate this, consider Madden 2010. Madden is a series of videogames that emulates the (American) National Football League to the T. It is quite possibly the most complicated videogame in existence with hundreds of plays to call, and gameplay features I'm sure I don't even know about. One intoxicated night, we were unable to simply initiate a game - the interface leaves something to be desired (though it may be a safeguard from allowing those that are too intoxicated from actually playing). I encourage those who have not been exposed to this game to give it a look, as the visuals are pretty superb.

However, I bring up this specific game because of its *ahem* un-artistic qualities. The Madden series is released on an annual basis to reflect the changes in the NFL - player swaps, new stadiums etc. - much in the same way that a magazine is released. Additionally, for reasons that I won't support here because of their anti-capitalist didactic nature, EA is probably the least artistically free videogame company around. They release Madden probably more for the fact that each year they have a guaranteed seller - selling upwards of 4 million copies in recent editions.

Speaking specifically about the Madden series, does the financial premise for producing it, its rigid simulation of an existing system, and its repeated release disqualify it from being considered artistic?

I think it's interesting that society generally disregards games as being childish and uncreative. It's an unfortunate trait that most are manufactured to be sold to individuals who are incapable of understanding the artistic capabilities of the systems they enjoy. This of course results in a widespread objectification of women (I won't argue that, alm) and generally a dumbing down of culturally relevant material. You're more likely to encounter an explosion in a videogame than an accurate portrayal of modern life. Pointedly, even The Sims enables irreverently unrealistic possibilities such as becoming President, or an astronaut.

You've probably realized that I've formulated opinions of most of these questions already. So, in support of what I believe is an artistic videogame, I provide a truncated list of my favorite artistic videogames, all of which I recommend you survey them if only to get an idea of what they (and I) are trying to convey:

•The Myst series of games (Myst, Riven, Exile, Revelation, and End of Ages)
Passage
Portal
Fable
•WarioWare: Smooth Moves (I think we have all had the glorious opportunity to play this fine example of artistic videogames)
Pretty much anything by Introversion

Ultimately, I think society will come around to considering this as a legitimate medium for creative works. As usual, here are some (more relevant than last time) videos for those that made it all the way down here (stop cheating rubenssw).

The Beatles: Rock Band Cinematic - Honestly I want to write so much about this but I simply cannot. Perhaps one of you can get smkndy to comment on this and shed a little more light. This is one of the catalysts to this post as it was released recently at E3. I realize the HD is large, but wait for it, it's totally worth it.

•Though this is not yet released, and this is a technical demo, here is what I believe will take the "Most complicated videogame" once it's out.

Monday, June 1, 2009

MultiScape + Planars = teh secks




yeah, that's right. its like im in chicago. all the time.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

some days i hate the world more than i love it

This has me in a bit of despair. Sometimes it's truly difficult not to give in to nihilism. A news story like this solidifies my conviction, but I don't want to make this man a martyr. I don't know anything about him other than his profession, and probably neither did whoever killed him.

I don't watch television, including the news anymore, but nearly every blog post in my google reader today was about that. So I'll assume you've already heard about it. I simply don't have anyone else to rant about it to. :-/

Something else was in my google reader today, too, and it's important.

Abortion is universally illegal in Chile, with no exceptions. We should learn from others' mistakes. from here.
"So what do women in Chile do in these circumstances? If they have money, they go to private clinics or doctors who practice abortions in safe, sanitized conditions. Or they may even pay for an air fare to the United States or a country where abortion is legal. Most, however, resort to unsafe clandestine abortions performed by people claiming to be midwives or doctors, paying anywhere between $500 and $1,000. And then there are those who concoct homemade solutions, using celery sticks, clothes hangers or knitting needles to provoke the loss of the fetus.

Of course, many of the women end up in the hospital. And that’s when doctors are faced with a dilemma: Should they preserve their patient’s confidentiality and privacy, or turn them over to the police as they are legally bound? Few call the police. Nonetheless, about 200 women have been arrested for having abortions in the past few years and are now on parole. A dozen are imprisoned."

Do these people have any idea what they are advocating for? Have I been taking crazy pills?

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

I believe the children are our future. Teach them well and let them lead the way. Sexual Chocolate. SEXUAL CHOCOLATE.

I got my first ever marriage proposal today: "Amanda, I want to marry you!"

"Maybe when you're older, George."

George is an adorable 4-year old boy. The son of a student. He's probably my favorite young kid. I guess my usual blanket statement "I hate kids" isn't strictly true. I get really annoyed when people say, "I love kids," as if they're dogs or a food or something. What a gross generalization! I'm starting to realize that kids are people, and every person is different, and some are great and some are average and some are assholes.

A few months ago, the same boy asked me, "Amanda, are we married?"

I said, "No, George, why do you ask that?"

He said, "Because we're happy and being married means being happy."

I'm a cynic, but god. How fucking cute.


p.s. name the movie the title of this post comes from and I'll give you a brownie.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Schrodinger's Dog

It's a bit hokey, but its awesome:

in which I leave facebook or, I am not stuck anywhere and do not need your money.

UPDATE: Problem solved. The original security email was, in fact, from facebook. They changed my password and everything is right with the world....sigh.

So, my facebook account was disabled. Today, I think. Earlier today I received this email:


And now when I try to log in to facebook, I see this:


Clicking the "faq" tells me that my facebook was deactivated because I violated the terms of use. Maybe my profile picture was a copyrighted image. I did change the spelling of my name to a phonetic mis-spelling. Does that mean I was impersonating another person? Was that huffington post article about celebrity breast implants considered "pornographic"? Or is that what happens when your account gets "compromised"?

I didn't reply to the email asking me for my first teacher's name. Facebook was acting strangely yesterday. Like fb chat would suddenly be open, when I'm always offline because I hate that feature. And the status message I posted last night mysteriously and suddenly disappeared. I thought I had mis-clicked.

What do you think? Should I reply to the "facebook team" email? Should I fight to get my stupid social networking profile back? Should I bask in a simpler life uncorrupted by silly online stalking?

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

on movies

After a bout of probable depression in which I predictably lost interest in my usual activities, I am back to watching movies again. And there are a couple I wish to tell you about.

1. Synecdoche, New York. It's a Charlie Kaufman movie, so obviously it's fucking weird. It stars Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Catherine Keener (both of whom I love) and a few other recognizable faces. Synecdoche means referring to the whole of something by referring to a part of it or vice-versa. Like "mouths to feed" to mean "hungry humans" or "ivories" for "piano keys" etc. It's fucking weird, but I recommend it. I can't even begin to tell you what it's about. It's about living, and what that means, and it's about a guy who makes a real-time play about real-life people in an actual-size model of New York in a warehouse in New York. It's about a play starring hundreds or thousands of people, none of whom are extras. You should watch it.

2. Bedrooms and Hallways. Less cerebral, more gay. Okay, so gay movies are, more often than not, terrible. For several reasons, I'm sure, but the one I can readily make up on the spot is that sexuality is still an unfortunately controversial issue that large studios don't want to cough up lots of money to make movies about. So the production values usually suck and all that. That's Hollywood, at least. I think some of the best gay movies I've seen have tended to be foreign. Which brings me to this movie I watched today. Let me tell you who's in it. I'll point out that nearly everyone in this list is a) attractive and b) a great character.

Lord Cutler Beckett from POTC:AWE and Mr. Collins in the Universal Studios (bad) Pride&Prejudice (Tom Hollander)
Dr. Owen Hunt from Grey's (Kevin McKidd)
Edward, Black Prince of Wales from A Knight's Tale (James Purefoy)
Gareth from Four Weddings and a Funeral (Simon Callow)
Fanny Farrars Dashwood from Sense and Sensibility (Harriet Walter)
Elizabeth from the BBC (good) Pride and Prejudice (Jennifer Ehle), and
Elrond/Agent Smith/V (Hugo Weaving) [playing a seemingly straight-laced, smugly high-maintenance, surprisingly sexy, sexually aggressive gay man (who has sex with Cutler Beckett).]

I love watching movies in which all/most of the cast is recognizable, not because I know everyone's name, but because I have seen everyone in some other movie I like.

ADDENDUM: JESUS H CHRIST the fucker goes hetero in the end. I hate those movies. The rest of the movie is excellent, though.

WWM

check it

Monday, May 18, 2009

this is EXACTLY what we need

* enter tina turner's " we don't need another hero"*
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Da1ADqPplQ4

once again, someone better than myself seems to have said it better than i could

go read this and then let's all go out and live our goddamn lives.

"Of course I am playing tricks with the idea of luck, putting the cart before the horse. It is no accident that our kind of life finds itself on a planet whose temperature, rainfall and everything else are exactly right. If the planet were suitable for another kind of life, it is that other kind of life that would have evolved here. But we as individuals are still hugely blessed. Privileged, and not just privileged to enjoy our planet. More, we are granted the opportunity to understand why our eyes are open, and why they see what they do, in the short time before they close for ever."



p.s. I am weirdly attracted to Richard Dawkins.

A Brief and Hilarious Interlude



That is all. Please continue your normal activities.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Would you demolish this building?



What if I told you it was by one of the defining architects of the 20th century?

Read the main article.

Personally, I think this amounts to needing to needing to scrape off a van-gough early (ie not famous) painting in order to use the canvas for another painting. Can't this be moved or something? It needs to be demolished for the subway? What?

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Warning: Addictive Clicking May Ensue

This is one of the coolest sites I've seen, at least in a long while. I didn't watch every video, but came damn close to it. They're all really clever and most of them are pretty funny. I feel like some of the videos are familiar, though, so it's possible this is old news to you all and some of the videos have been posted here already . . . I know I've seen Fireworks before, and you will recognize the Coinstar commercial, I'm sure. 

I think my favorite is Roof Sex. :D

font fight

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

With Apologies to Milton Friedman

This is ridiculous. Here's the transcript (I don't think context is too necessary).

I received this to start:

On May 10, 2009, at 4:36 PM, Dustin wrote:

I ran across these recent articles about the bailouts One, Two. Although I am not all that familiar with the author, I feel that his paper relates the general consensus of the alternative viewpoint quite well. These articles just barely scratch the surface and should be used as a jumping off point for further research.


I believe in freedom of thought, but seriously, send that to anyone who's remotely knowledgeable in economics and you are just going to get a laugh. I was composing my response to his email while reading the article and at some point I threw up my hands and said fuck it, this is going to take forever. The saner among you won't need the econ knowledge to appreciate the mile-wide breadth of the article and inch-deep explanations given.

So instead, I wrote this:

On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 12:45 AM, David wrote:
I would love to pick the articles apart piece by piece, but the fact is that whoever wrote this doesn't have the slightest actual knowledge of economic history or why certain events took place.

Seriously. Some of these conclusions are totally backwards. The articles mention actual events, but use them as backwards causality or false inference.


His response:

On May 11, 2009, at 12:56 AM, Dustin wrote:
If you do not want to explain yourself, could you point me to some sources that you trust that outline the paradigm that you support. Thanks!


Sure! okay, he wants to know more about economics during the great depression. I can supply sources!

On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 1:00 AM, David wrote:
A lot of the current system came out of the Great Depression, including the general consensus of how the Fed should act. A good place to start is a book by John Galbraith called The Great Crash. obviously a lot of his book is oriented around black tuesday, but it gives a lot of back story as to how the Fed got to be the way it did. From there, it might be worthwhile to look into the fundamentals of international economics (bretton woods, smoot-hawley etc) though I don't have a particular recommendation as to a secondary or compiled source.

honestly a lot of the stuff in the article could be refuted by just looking at data.


Instead:


On May 11, 2009, at 1:41 AM, Dustin wrote:

I'll buy you lunch if you can refute just a handful of the quotes, financial numbers or other facts, I'm sure there must be a couple easy straw men you could knock down in there somewhere!

Opinions are one thing, we're all entitled to our own, but to simply say you could refute something with ease, without actually doing so is intellectually lazy at best. I already know you don't know about the real system, the secretive elite round table groups and think tanks, i.e. the bilderbergers, club of rome, The council on foreign relations, etc... If you didn't even recognize most of their names, how would you know of their membership, their agenda, and the power they wield over the market place?

Anyway, in the meantime I will attempt to prove many of the points the author made and expand upon them by simply using offical government or think tank documents and speeches etc...

Oh, here's one, let's start with Ben Bernake's speech at Milton Friedman's 90th birthday party(which I watched live on C-Span when it happened btw) where Bernake essentially apologized for the great depression on behalf of the federal reserve by wrapping up his speech with the following line:

Let me end my talk by abusing slightly my status as an official representative of the Federal Reserve. I would like to say to Milton and Anna: Regarding the Great Depression. You're right, we did it. We're very sorry. But thanks to you, we won't do it again.

(Note the irony) The speech itself covers all the details of course, and if you want to debate Bernake's redition of events, by all means, have at it.

Anyway, it's getting late, I'll shoot you a few more goverment docs in the coming days.

Night!


Wow. Lazy huh? Yeah, I'm lazy for spending four years studying a subject and then not wanting to waste my time refuting THE INTERNET. Especially when GenReg is burning up.

So I chose to ignore the insult and respond to what I think is a pretty reasonable and short explanation:

On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 10:26 AM, David wrote:
Bernanke was right to apologize for the Fed's actions during the great depression. a lot of their actions were counter to what should have been done. however, to infer that that somehow meant anything but a lack of knowledge on how to act (macro econ is still a mostly gray area) is silly.

I'm not talking about refuting the stuff about the illuminati. of course i cant refute that if i dont know about it. I was talking about the causal inference as in the above. You heard bernanke say something like that and adapted it to your knowledge of the situation.

Friedman was a pioneer in macro (along with names like Galbraith, Keynes etc) and it seems appropriate to thank someone for their work in such an important field. Im not sure its rational to instantly infer that he's talking about some secret society.


NEGADOG!


On May 11, 2009, at 12:41 PM, Dustin wrote:

I wish it was easy to understand and explain the Illuminati, but its not. There is nothing I can really say to help you see it more clearly, but I can point you to books that are considered to be excellent primers amongst the alternative research crowd, many of which are written by members/servants of the Illuminati.

What do you know about Edward Bernays? I've attached his well known book on propaganda.

How about Zbigniew Brzezinski? I must admit I wasn't very familiar with the guy until I saw this clip during my research of the events of 9/11 several years ago.


At that point I just laughed it all off and decided to not respond.

So there you have it. People really do think like that.

Why would anyone do such a thing?


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1231277/

I guess I'm a little curious. Maybe.

Friday, May 8, 2009

fuck da police.




via

This isn't even about censorship. It's about a man who personally possesses way more power than he knows how to responsibly use.

"I'm not going to serve you because something about you offends me" doesn't fucking work. Especially not if you're a 911 dispatch. But equally well if you're, oh, I don't know, a Catholic pharmacist. Or a homophobic gynecologist, or what the fuck ever.

Do your fucking job.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Godzilla.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Beat this Nigerian Princes, this single dad promises me a SMILE!


now, ive never gotten a really good scam or phishing email. i get the russian penis or watches emails, or at least  i used to.
but this really takes the cake. hes right, i did smile. his awful attempt at scamming me my money did amuse me, and i did not have to give him my phone number or place of employment.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Infographics, The Electrical Grid and Internet Backbones, and Napoleon's Failed Invasion into Russia

Yes. these things are all related.

Of recent, I've been fascinated by the oddly developing state of the nation's power grid. The interest started some time ago as I'm sure you'll all remember this event once reminded: Nor'easter Blizzcon '03. Apparently all you need to take down the entire Ohio-Maine power network is get a plant to go offline, and get the operator to fail to restart the machine after introducing new data.

"Would you like to restart now or later?"


When one plant shut down, power was diverted to the affected (or is it effected?) area by bringing online hydro and nuke plants, certain high-voltage lines (the kinds that are so high they have to go to a transformer station that can take up a city block of space OR MORE!!!11!ONE!1) got destroyed by some trees. Since these lines were offline, they had to divert around them, eventually tripping automatic controls in place. Eventually, large areas were dropped from the grid, instantly reducing demand and causing the voltage to overload nearby systems, which, as they failed, only continued the problem.

One sec, I think I need to hear the explanation for why the Modest Mouse song Lives has those lyrics "It's hard to remember..."

ANYWAYS...

My HeroThe interest in the electrical system was added to when Leigh Tesfatsion came to talk about her paper regarding the way power is traded in the U.S. Can't hurt that it was agent-modeling that helped investigate the issue.

It's all very interesting stuff, I assure you.

A little while ago, Maria was almost affected (or is it effected?) by the huge internet outage orchestrated (probably) by some lame-ass phone workers who had been laid off.

So flash forward to today, and this (via) is sitting in my Reader inbox.

Your new best friend!I'll let you play with that for a little bit. If you click on the "Power Plants" tab you can see the "East Lake" generator near Cleveland that was one of the factors causing Static Shock to visit the northeast.

But check out the "The Grid" page and you'll get where I'm going. Compare that map to some on this website of internet backbones. Pretty similar, huh?

So I think all of this interests me because I have interests in a lot of the background elements of these networks. I love map making as anyone who remembers my prototype webpage that essentially geo-located where I took certain photos. It was all in static html, but what more do you want from an essentially proof-of-concept idea?

Add in a model which can be easily implemented in an agent-based paradigm.

Give it a human-like network quality capable of cascading failure (geeze it just feels like that should have a movie about it), and you have a winner.

Most importantly though, make the graphs fucking awesome. I mean even the bad ones on the backbone page are pretty cool. I'd love to have been able to design ANY OF THESE.

Saving the best for last, I'm always drawn back to this image. An econ prof showed it once in class as a demonstration of excellent data representation.

Awesome.

So, for those of you that made it all the way down here, here's some crazy delicious videos I've been jonesin' on lately:

<<<<<<<>SORRY THIS ONE HAS EMBEDDING OFF.<>>>>>>>>>
Jeremy Clarkson Road Test Ford Fiesta 1/2



I don't know if this is a joke or if he's genuine. The Fagina Is Full of AIDS.


And the reprise:


The (angry gorilla) setup:




More BarelyPolitical:


TTFN, have a good weekend.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Skeptic's Dictionary

It wouldn't surprise me if I were the last person here to find this, but I just came across it a few days ago. I didn't even know some of these ideas even existed. People were/are/will forever continue to be cuckoo. 

Sorry I post here so often...er...sorry you all DON'T post here so often?

So, today I took a poll (via pharyngula, of course) about whether homeopathy can cure the swine flu. My answer ("no") was greeted with possibly the most passive-aggressive "thanks-for-voting-in-our-poll" message I've ever seen:




Tuesday, April 28, 2009

alhamdulillah

thank allah i wasn't born in afghanistan.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

i can haz nitemare

















I see a strange similarity here...minus one incubus.

Monday, April 20, 2009

How I spend my time sometimes

This was our "skit" about Dayton for our Literacy*AmeriCorps conference. I'm soo enthusiastic. All the awesome video effects were Alyssa's doing. Enjoy.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Capitalism meets... short term memory loss?

The first publicly traded Marijuana mfg

Gay Marriage and Religion

This is a great little discussion of the legal issues involved with the intersection of religion and gay marriage. I'm fascinated by this sort of thing, but I understand if you're not.

It brings up a couple of really good points, though. The institution of marriage is both religious and secular. The religious folk are free to put whatever restrictions upon marriage they would like--there is no guarantee of equal opportunity in religion, and there never has been. And probably never will be. They are allowed specific first-amendment protection against being forced to do things they don't want to do. Catholicism is free to keep women and married men out of the priesthood, for example.

I personally have never heard the argument that if GLBT folks are afforded the right to marry then churches will be forced to marry them against their beliefs. I agree with the response that it would never happen. But it's a great argument if you want to get even socially moderate religious people to vote against allowing that to happen.

Secular institutions (like the courts and the law) have an obligation to serve all people equally. When it comes to the law, people should be equal. And I think someday they will.

Its all in the Titles

So i was looking at the tv today,on the second channel of abc, ( the weather / news update thing). its cold and rainy looking outside, but the radar showed nothing. This did not grab my attention. Two "breaking" stories on the bottom of the screen did however.
Arrest made in Rage against the Vending Machine. Pretty weak joke if you ask me, and also
Tree grows in Man's Lung
something tells me that this is more important than vandalism at a vending machine, hmm wait, its Russia.
Also, little fish was found dead this morning. I never got a chance to get him some medicine, nor a name.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

on a brighter note

this made me giggle, i thought y'all would appreciate it.

Stephanie:oh i moved almost everything in my room around
Stephanie:sooo its very different
Sara:kinky
Sara:I like switching it up
Sara:keeps things from getting dull
Sara: :P
Stephanie:wait are we talking interior decoration or bottoms and tops?
Stephanie::P
Sara:both?
Stephanie:well when does one not include the other, i mean really?

Miami Lost

Fuck this sport

Friday, April 10, 2009

you, too, might be turned into pillars of who-knows-what-spice

Has anyone else noticed that gay marriage legislation seems to be snowballing lately? New Hampshire, Vermont, Iowa, D.C., and Colorado have all recently passed positive legislation either legalizing same-sex marriage or protecting the rights of same-sex couples who are unmarried or married in other states. Well done.

Of course, this has all the religious nutjobs waving their desexing sticks most unsexily. What are the crazies going to do when it doesn't rain fire and brimstone?

p.s. there are crickets chirping around here. What's up with that?

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Openmindedness

I'm beating amanda to the punch on this one.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

um

Okay, this is officially the most a-fucking-dorable thing I have ever seen.





Apparently, children + French is like Kryptonite. I would consider childbirth if you could guarantee I'd have a little girl who speaks French. This is how serious I am.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Ethical question:

Imagine: You are planning to attend a event of some sort, that coincides with three hours of work. You have obtained permission to miss those hours of work to attend this (non-work related) event.

At the last minute (say, 8 hours ahead of time) This event is canceled. You could go to work; it is no longer necessary to miss it.

Question: Are you ethically obligated to go to work for those three hours?

Friday, March 20, 2009

Kate Beaton does Overcompensating

I know some of you like Kate Beaton, so head on over to Overcompensating today to see her guest comic strip.

Friday, March 13, 2009

redecorate

This is really interesting. It's like paint swatches, but with dress codes of social groups.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

my favorite webcomic ever - sorry xkcd

soooo most of you know of my "little "love of history.
it just got a lot more funny
1. go visit http://harkavagrant.com
2.press random
3. look up people on wikipedia
4.enjoy!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

whois

Who is "Living Below"?

Monday, March 2, 2009

Beware: Rambling

The other day, Ashley and I were talking, and we had a dialogue something like this:

Me: I thought to myself--
Ashley: "Self"?
[we laugh]

Because how many times have you seen, in movies, tv, comics, etc., a character say: "And I thought to myself: 'Self, blah blah blah.'"

Nobody actually speaks to him- or herself as a third-person direct address using the word "self." Nobody. But somewhere along the line, someone made it into a punchline. And it's a funny one because it resonates with everyone. Everyone does "think to themselves." However, now that punchline has become something that I (and apparently Ashley) can't help "thinking to ourselves" sometimes. Ironically, yes, but we think it.

Today, it also occurred to me (via dinosaurcomics, my muse) that we might have lots of cultural things like this. For example, the dream that you're at school or somewhere public without your pants. Or naked. Or whatever. It's probably been done on at least 40% of television shows (statistic completely made up on the spot, right now, by me). It's a cultural meme, right? It came from somewhere and then got imitated and reiterated until it's just a part of us. A stupid, hackneyed part, but it's there. Have any of you ever actually had that dream? I certainly have not.

It's life imitating art, I suppose. "Art" is used loosely, and really might just mean "media." But I'm sure there are more examples of things which are part of the lexicon, or pop culture, or whatever, and which, instead of actually representing what real life is like, have become so popular and widely used that they cause themselves to be lived out in real life, even if only as an ironic reference to a banal cliché. They've etched themselves into us to some extent.

/ramble

Friday, February 27, 2009

One more for the cabin

Hi all
I want to use this post as a middle ground to get the trip organized. the occupants for the weekend I believe will be (in no particular order):
-ash
-amanda
-steph
-sara
-scott
-dave

for my part, im bringing my own clothes and furnishing the occupancy. I've informed scott of the sleeping situation, so he's bringing stuff for that for himself. a list of the stuff that is included is here:
http://www.huestonwoodsresort.com/two-bedroom-family-cottage-supply-list-914.html


We need to figure out who is bringing what. I'm not opposed to going to K-roger after K-ona, but for things like lawn chairs for around the fire, or firewood that might be less than practical.

So please discuss what we need to bring for the weekend in the comments and if you can't bring it down, maybe someone will else take it.

ONE WEEK AWAY FROM TOTAL SANITY.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Ready for this?

THIS is the kind of shit I have to deal with in my intro-to-poetry class.

So is THIS.

And THIS.

And let's not forget THIS.

(And there's more where that came from.)

Monday, February 23, 2009

In Which A Young Man Tries To Pick Me Up At A Library.

Today, a young man tried [failed] to "pick me up," as they say, at a library. For reals.

1. That never happens.

2. It's a library.

3. I will forever associate this memory with Love in the Time of Cholera. [the book I was trying very hard to read]

It begs the question [sidebar: I recently found a web page entirely devoted to preserve the original meaning of "beg the question" which is not at all how I used it just now. see http://begthequestion.info/] : Any bad pickup stories? Ladies? Or gentleman? Out with it!

Saturday, February 21, 2009

sorry sorry sorry

but this is soo fucking cool!

same principle as 3-d glasses, but without the hardware. sort of like those magic-eye books from when we were kids. neat!

Liberty

This is nice.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Hueston Woods

Just booked a cabin big enough for us (maybe 5-6 people) for March 6-9. If you can't make it, I think we'll try to get to Oxf for Kona that evening if it works out with my flight.

I hope you guys can make it.
Dave

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

In a lame effort to curb neglect of the FLC . . .

How is everyone? And if you don't read Gawker and their branch sites, you probably should.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences

This is seriously cool.

Some Favorites:
The prime numbers
Fibonnacci Sequence

And how's this for cool: You can go to their main welcome page and type a series of integers to see what sequence it belongs to!
CRAZY DELICIOUS

Monday, February 9, 2009

SIMULATED IMAGERY. RESULTS NOT TYPICAL.

I want to tell you that the above imagery has been simulated. The results are not typical. Your results may vary.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

progress- ive?

So I'm sure ive told some of you at one point or another that I am beginning to write a story, whether it is a novel or a short story has yet to be seen by lenght, but I am aiming for novel. Names of the characters are subject to change, these in the below section are inspired by conversations with my Sara(h)'s.
this is just one of a few scenes i have thought out with dialogue and a tiny bit of plot. all you need to know is it takes place in a faux maimi, where things are not nearly as boring as ox.

so feel free to rip apart or say, hey that sounds not awful:P much luvs

“What were you thinking? Did you not put your head on before your balls this morning?” Martín growled at Maximilian.
Max looked at Martín with earnest eyes, “I had to, and you did too, did you not see her, she’s like a wisp of air; she’d never survive. I’m amazed she survived the predators at the party. Did you see the way they were looking at her, like she was something to be pillaged or conquered?” his eyes getting desperate at this point. “She’s not an easy lay or fresh meat.” he added firmly.
Then thinking for a quick moment he hinted “And, I saw you looking at her friend,” he finished with sly look. Martín scoffed.
“They’re freshman, we are supposed to look at them like that.” He bit back a laugh.
Max glowered at him, much liking the idea of giving him a few more good cuts to join the bleeding trickles in Martín’s shoulder. After a few seconds Martín sighed “Yes, I saw her at the party, I saw you staring at her like there was no tomorrow. And her friend wasn’t that hot.”
Wasn’t she? Did you or did you not offer her twice to get a fresh beer?” Now Max was incredulous, almost having to hold back a giggle, the first since he saw the black haired girl in the crowded room of the party.
Martín was flustered for a second, “That’s not the point, you should not have interfered with them, we should not have gotten in the way, and I …” he said with a sort of malice, “should definitely not be fucking bleeding! You owe me a new shirt.”
“Oh shut up, think of it as battle scars, and think of all the ass you’ll get if you tell chicks it’s from a rock slide or something else wicked.”
“They won’t believe that, even if I told them the truth.” Martín dusted off his jeans, then considering the street lamp for a moment and then said “They might have seen us, really seen us, you might not be able to protect her every move, she might not want you nearby.” he finished coolly. He looked at Max. His hazel eyes seemed to already drooping in the knowledge of this fact.


i followed sara's example and posted small, so you might actually read some.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Sproing Breaks

I'm going be in ohio from March 6th at 3:20 PM until March 15th at 6:55 PM.

Im going to be in the mood for some serious decompression. Anyone want to get a cottage for a few days at Hueston? they have a 3-days-for-the-price-of-2 special going on...

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

How I love PBS: Let Me Count the Ways

Today I decided to come home for lunch, because I actually had some food in my refrigerator. I turned on the TV for some background noise, and since I don't have cable, my options were rather limited. Unless I wanted to watch soap operas or children's shows, the natural choice was pbs.

I adore pbs. It has sponsors, of course, but it is the only kind of (free) television that isn't completely overwhelmed by capitalist corporate greed. Gone are the days when a television show would simply politely pause for a moment, "for this word from our sponsor." The sponsors are in the fabric of the program now, their logos are pasted all over the screen, their products are props. I didn't watch Superbowl XLIII Presented by Cadillac, but I did catch the last few minutes (waiting for the Office to come on afterward). I noticed that at one point an announcer said something like, "These post-game aerial shots are brought to you by Budweiser." I imagine Budweiser was an overall sponsor of the event, but somehow it warranted mentioning that something as specific as the post-game aerial shots were being shown to us thanks to Budweiser. I can't help noticing that sports games these days are, more often than not, played in places called "The Nabisco-Budweiser-Axe Stadium" or something similar. I'm surprised sports teams haven't started to be called "The Nike-ExxonMobil Pittsburgh Steelers" or the like. We're living in a bit of an Idiocracy.

Have you ever watched a commercial for pbs? They're intense, and frequently heart-wrenching. Robert Redford encourages you to support pbs because somewhere, there is a child with great ideas whose voice should be heard, and pbs is a place for that voice. Pbs seems unspoilt. It feels comforting, like your grandparents' house. You're going to watch your grandmother knit, your grandfather might show you how to build a cabinet, and then you're all going to bake a nice pie. The voice of Bob Ross washes over you like a warm breeze, comforting and reassuring you that you can put that happy, fluffy little cloud anywhere you like because your life is your painting. There's no need to worry so much. You can paint a new day tomorrow.

And then there are the documentaries. I love documentaries. Which brings us back to today at lunch. There was a documentary on called "The Truth According to Wikipedia." (That's youtube. It doesn't have a wikipedia page, which just feels wrong.) I didn't get to see very much of it, but what I saw was fascinating. Lunch time today is at the heart of why I love pbs: I watched less than a half hour of television, but what I saw there was a discussion of what truth is. What is knowledge? Who creates knowledge? Who should be the gatekeeper of truth, assuring accuracy and quality? Can truth be created democratically? Are there individual truths? Is the sum of these individual truths as meaningful as validated, reliable expert opinion? Stuff that you can really sink your mind's fingers into. Meaty, important, thoughtful questions.

It was so cool. I love pbs.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

how smart are you?


Im smart enough to realize that something is not right here.....

Lives Column

For my non-fiction workshop this semester, our assignment was to write a short piece in the style of the "Lives Columns" in New York Magazine. The guidelines dictated that the work be centered around a single event that changed you as a person, written in less than 1400 words. I was hard pressed to remember a life changing event that could be properly recounted in such a small word limit, but I managed to find one. I've pasted it here, in really small print so it looks like you have to read less . . . Aren't I tricksy?

Anyway, I like sharing this stuff, so here goes. (This is a pretty rough draft, so any cold-hearted bashing and/or lovable praising would be appreciated.)

One of the biggest mistakes I ever made was getting a perm. Like most teenage girls surrounded by media where image is everything, there were more than a few things I was self conscious about. This included my hair, which was so straight and thin that even an industrial sized can of hairspray couldn’t help it hold a curl, and no amount of mousse or teasing could give it any volume. For as long as I could remember my hair had been the bane of my existence, unremarkable and unchangeable. It was the summer of my sophomore year in high school that I decided to take a stand.

I did extensive Internet research, browsing sites that asked “Is A Perm For You?” and listed steps to “Getting a Good Perm” that armored me with some knowledge of the process. I saw photos of women with beautiful, thick, and bouncy ringlets framing their faces, piling and curling into the endless volume that I so craved. Their permed curls bounced off the page, reached out to me and told me that a perm could solve all my problems.

I convinced my mother to come with me on that fateful day, and we drove a short distance to the Paul Mitchell Academy, a cosmetology school where beauticians and hairdressers learned the tools of the trade. A perm there cost $15, which was a much more appealing price than those upwards of $75 at salons where the employees were already established and skilled. We were told that the student performing on my hair would be accompanied by a professional, so there was nothing to be afraid of.

My mother and I entered the building and signed in for my appointment at the desk where a heavily made-up receptionist told us that Tracy would be over shortly. A few minutes later a young woman greeted me and led me to my seat, draping a billowy cape around my shoulders.

“Is this your first perm?” she asked with a nasally sweet voice. I nodded with an affirmative smile. “Well then this will be new for both of us!” she said happily. “I’ve never done real hair before.”

After a short consultation where I should have realized that this girl (who was hardly older than myself) had no idea what she was doing, and where she should have told me that my hair was too thin and long to hold a proper perm, we began the two-hour process.

With the help of a professional instructor named Jan who looked like she couldn’t have cared less (and who, my mother said later, she wouldn’t have let near her own hair), Tracy began the arduous task of wrapping small sections of my long hair around tiny rods and pinning them to my scalp. “Your hair will conform to these rods when I put the chemical on,” she said.

Then came the perm solution, which Tracy violently dabbed around my head, drenching each rod with the smelly, acidy formula. There was so much of this mixture on my scalp that I started dripping and could feel the little liquid beads slide along my neck and the sides of my face into my t-shirt collar. Two rods dangling by my ears sent the chemical dribbling into the tiny fissures. The ammonia seemed to singe my nose hairs. In the harsh light of the salon mirror, with all those rods poking up off my head, I looked terrifying.

“Okay,” said Tracy, her nostrils flaring at the smell, “now we let this sit for about 25 minutes, I think. 25 minutes, right Jan?” she shouted across the salon to confirm her estimate.

“Yeah, I think that’ll do it,” came the hoarse reply.

Tracy placed a shower cap over my head, mumbling something about the trapped heat making the chemicals move faster, she thought. I sat for 25 minutes under that shower cap, feeling like my head was being microwaved under the poofy dome of heat and moisture that was collecting. My despairingly incompetent hairdresser came to check on me every few minutes, always reinforcing the cap around my head and turning with a quick, “It’s looking good sweetie!” Once she came over with Jan, who circled me and grunted in approval before waddling off. The last of these visits finally led to the removal of the cap, which caused the built up steam to explode off my head and right into Tracy’s face in a cloud of acidic moisture. I couldn’t help but chuckle as she stood blinking out the sting of ammonia.

We rinsed out the perm solution, and I relished the relief of the cool water running across my burning scalp. We then returned to the chair where Tracy proceeded to douse me in neutralizer, once again reassuring me with her usual knowledgeable comment.

“I’m not sure what this does exactly, but it’s the next step.”

After five minutes, we returned to the sink for a final rinse, then back to the chair for the unrolling of the rods that had been biting at my head for the past 45 minutes. I must have counted over 50 red flags from the moment I walked in the door to the moment Tracy removed those rods, but said nothing while my poor follicles fried. At that point, my excitement and anticipation outweighed any reservations I had about the disaster happening on my head. I just wanted those curls!

Tracy slowly began to unroll my hair, each little rod unwinding and dangling sadly at the ends. I wanted to close my eyes so I could see the final result all at once, but the anticipation was too tempting. After the first rod, I kept watching as my hair fell to my shoulders in limp, crinkled sections. Predictably, the perm was not what I expected, and certainly not what I wanted.

“How long did you say it would last?” I asked nervously as I looked at my once straight, perfectly fine hair that now resembled thin, twisted roots sprouting from my head. I could feel tears welling in my eyes and quickly told myself to calm down to keep from bawling at the irreversible damage, which I did promptly upon returning home.

“A few months,” Tracy said, her brow knitted in concern, avoiding eye contact. Clearly the outcome had surprised her as well. An uneasy smile spread across her lips and she whipped the cape off me and walked me to the lobby where shelves and shelves of hair products stood in perfectly lined, color-coordinated rows. She picked up a bottle and tried to tell me that this would make my hair look better. “Give it a few days,” she said, as if I had a choice.

            Well, I did give it a few days, I gave it months, in fact, and my perm never developed into what the pictures and hairdressers had promised me. For months my hair was nothing but a mess of uncontrollable frizz. It still wouldn’t curl, and attempting to straighten it proved just as impossible. I had no choice but to wear it tied back everyday, and I eventually cut most of it off in a desperate attempt to eradicate the permed hair as soon as possible, which ended up taking a couple years to grow out. It became routine for me to check the mirror everyday for signs of my straight hair growing through, straight hair that I missed greatly.

In spite of all this, I managed to make it through those years with my head held high, finding some sort of confidence in my awful decision, being brave enough to face my peers and the public without being overcome by my locks of chemical devastation. And today, whenever I curse my hair or any other part of me that isn’t exactly what I want, I always remember that botched perm and its aftermath: results of the decision that taught me to recognize the difference between the things that I have the power to change and those that are probably best left alone.