blowing smoke: a blog
 

Monday, March 26, 2007

I actually received a spam email with the title "Fraudulent Spam." And the filter let this into my inbox - I don't know if it was rewarding honesty or what.

Team of Rivals continues to amaze. Best nonfiction I've read in I can't remember how long. Speaking of inspirational non-fiction, I watched "Good Night and Good Luck" today - the only black and white movie I haven't fallen asleep during (yes that includes Casablanca). Excellent story. My first instinct is to lament the apathetic American mind that allowed TV to turn from harbinger of truth into a somewhat-censored Girls Gone Wild loop, but I haven't flipped to PBS pretty much since Sesame Street. My Tivo programs are all entertainment, and I rail against the injustice of a Presidential address messing up that programming (in self-defense, I don't consider most presidential speeches to bear any more resemblance to the real world than Heroes, and I usually read them online - I just hate the canned Congressional applause and similar trappings). What's the right balance? How can I make better use of my moving-picture box? Too many questions, never enough time to answer.

I don't believe I have much else to share tonight. 107 days until Harry Potter 7!

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

I'm watching Peyton Manning on Saturday Night Live. I now know I'm not the worst dancer in the world.

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Well, the cold lingered through Wednesday, but I'm finally more or less well again. Of course, that means Wife has picked it up and is enduring a long weekend. Hopefully it won't keep her down as long.

March Madness is boring - almost a cosmic payback for watching an 11-seed wipe out brackets when it went to the Final4 last year. Good games - just no good storylines. Which will make this very forgettable unless there's still a Duke-Kentucky 1992-level game still to come.

Still reading Team of Rivals, which gets better with every chapter. I was interrupted this week by a push to get a release done at work that kept me up until 4AM. Oy, but it's past, from all indications. The book's pretty inspiring with its early-life biographies of Abraham Lincoln, William Henry Seward, and Edward Bates (Salmon Chase has admirable qualities, but is not one to be imitated). Lincoln carried books around all the time to read in whatever timespans he could. Yeah, probably a lot of people did that I wouldn't want to be similar to, but I'll be selective.

It's also interesting to read over the politics of the 1840s and 1850s. I remember most of the names from middle/high school, but it's interesting to look at it all from a perspective that's not intended to indoctrinate. Henry Clay and Daniel Webster's compromises on slavery that only kept the pressure bottled up longer, John C. Calhoun's decades-long work towards undermining the Union, and the different motivations and effects of the anti-slavery movements.

Slavery came into play in so many seemingly unrelated issues, makes me think what it could be now. Maybe the mixing of church and state. I try to live my life in line with the precepts of the Bible (I'd love to claim it as a literal roadmap but it doesn't take much effort to find contradictions), but religion is a choice, and shouldn't be imposed by society. Period.

I'm also afraid the Constitution is becoming holy writ. I consider the Constitution the best societal contract ever written, and itwas ahead of its time, but not ahead of all times. Part of Lincoln's greatness was adapting the Constitution to stamp out slavery, and establish a more federal republic. I don't think ignoring the Bill of Rights as the Bush administration is the right direction for Constitutional change, but saying we never want to do things differently than rural English farmers did 200 years ago - well, that doesn't make sense either. I wouldn't mind another Constitutional Convention - I just wonder where you'd find a Washington, a Franklin, and writers like Madison and Monroe who try to generate a just system for all rather than enhancing their position. I know many of the Convention delegates were sectarian, but the leaders had a sense of the greater good and the gravitas to bring most of the partisans to compromise. Can you think of anyone to put in that role?

Partially as a result of this reading, I am going to try to learn more. Not just reading, but actually learning and remembering stuff. As an initial experiment, I'm trying to get back the 50 states and their capitals. I've got all the states, but Hartford keeps eluding me until I give up and check it. Any suggestions for good sets of facts to start with? I'm thinking countries w/capitals, seas and significant lakes, get geography down, then maybe hit historical lists.

Yes. I am a dork. Never claimed otherwise.

It's amazing how little movies have interested me in the last 6 months. Many I wouldn't mind seeing, but none that got me to the theater at my own instigation. I'm kinda looking forward to this summer: Harry Potter 5, Transformers (although the most recent trailer suggest Michael Bay has replaced any magical nostalgia with over-effected crap), Spider-Man 3, Dragonlance (that one's actually in the fall). I think there's a couple more, but I can't think of them. And still nothing entrances me more than thinking about the Harry Potter book in July. 748 pages of narrative goodness.

Hehe, to give an idea of how little I'm interested in March Madness right now, I'm watching the beginning of The Day After Tomorrow. Horribly-written movie, but great fun effects.

As always, I appreciate any and all comments.

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Saturday, March 17, 2007

The Long Tail was a great read - I definitely recommend it to anyone interested in this newfangled Internet economy. One of the sales guys at my company sent a summary of a speech he'd heard about the new economy at a Web retail convention, and well, I hope the speaker acknowledged Chris Anderson, because it was basically an outline of the book. First book I've read in a long time that seems currently relevant. :-)

Already moved through an interesting novel - Finity. It's based on the quantum multiverse theory that whenever more than one thing could happen, reality splits into as many pieces as it takes for each outcome to happen in one universe. Don't want to ruin the plotline, so I'll just say it's interesting if you like conceptual sci-fi.

And my next book is Team of Rivals, about Lincoln's cabinet. Only 2 pages in, but already I have trouble putting it down.

Er, or I would have trouble putting it down, but it's March Madness time. :-) Only got 24 of 32 in my bracket for the first round, but if Texas beats Florida in the final, I think I still win. Right now I'm watching Xavier launch enough 3s to be up on Ohio State by 8 with 8 minutes to go. It would mess up my bracket, but it would mess up everyone's bracket, so I'll root for chaos. My only regret would be that I'd love to see Kevin Durant show Greg Oden up face-to-face before the draft. Oh well there will be many years of NBA dominance for Durant, and I'll be a fan of his team just like I am of the Tennessee Titans.

Do you think anyone on the selection committee fills out a tournament bracket? If so, do they pick any upsets?

This week I've also had my annual spring-is-coming chest cold. It's more of a sore throat/coughing kinda thing, but the doctor said it's just congestion from the sinuses all the way down the throat. No bronchitis yet - I really prefer to avoid that when I can.

That's about all I've got. It's been a week full of disease, work, basketball, and the patience of the oh-so-kind-and-lovely Wife (I really am a lucky man).

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Saturday, March 10, 2007

Finished the French book - it was pretty good. Definite non-fiction recommendation for anyone who might be interested in how a culture in the Western European tradition could be so markedly different from ours, and yet still valid based on its own reasoning.

Now I'm reading The Long Tail, about how numerous niches are replacing manufactured hits in modern media, thanks to the Amazon/YouTube-style commerce where there are no physical limits (shelf space, square footage, etc) to how many titles can be offered. Very interesting so far.

10 years ago today, the first Buffy the Vampire Slayer aired. In honor of it (and, let's face it, to make obscene profits), Alamo Drafthouse is having a birthday party tonight from dawn to midnight. They're showing one episode per season, including (or in addition to) their sing-along with the musical episode. At this point, it appears my adult responsibility is winning out, and I will not be attending. But this got me thinking what episodes I would choose.
Season 1: The Puppet Show - not many great moments this season, but this barely won out over Angel and The Pack
Season 2: Passion - only because What's My Line, Surprise/Innocence, and Becoming are 2-parters
Season 3: Band Candy - funniest episode ever leading to the best scene with Giles at the end of Earshot
Season 4: Hush - simply awesome, although the Yoko Factor might be Spike's high point and Something Blue/Pangs were hilarious
Season 5: The Gift - great conclusion for the series-to-this-point - I wish the DVD had included the "Previously on Buffy the Vampire Slayer" montage that recapped all 5 seasons
Season 6: Once More, With Feeling - just to show that others share my combination of fandoms, check this out
Season 7: Chosen although there are a few others

To choose a top 7, I'd probably dump Seasons 1 and 7 to be replaced by Surprise/Innocence from Season 2 (although there would be many options).

Yep, this is what I think about.

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