Posts in Category: General

Seen One, Seen 'em All 

Ever wonder why today's movies have begun to all seem to boil down to essentially the same experience? Why you feel like you're watching clones of the same movie over and over again with every new release? This article offers a convincing explanation that a dominant screenwriting formula is responsible for cinematic dejà vu

". . .Snyder’s beat sheet has taken over Hollywood screenwriting. Movies big and small stick closely to his beats and page counts. Intentionally or not, it’s become a formula—a formula that threatens the world of original screenwriting as we know it."

Save the Movie!

02.Aug.2013 Categories: General

Tis an Ill Tide . . . 

This NOAA online tool offers a look at how extensively sea level increases may impact coastal property. Pair this up with the dire forecasts in a recent HuffPo blog "Coastal Cities are Doomed!" and you might just decide to pass up that deal on a timeshare near Cannon Beach.

So, Boston, NYC, and Miami are doomed. Bad news for sure! But "'tis an ill wind that blows nobody good," and according to NOAA's hokey visualization (zoom in to see the visualization icons), the Toledo Oregon Skateboard Park is destined (at 6 ft. above mean higher high water) to become a rather inviting-looking water recreation area.

The Egyptian Theater at Coos Bay is apparently a lost cause, however.

Sea Level Rise and Coastal Flooding Impacts

23.Jul.2013 Categories: General

LOLCats, the Enduring Legacy of Our Time? 

I kind of look at it this way. In eras past, the intellectual and material wealth of a civilization inhered in its achievements--its "great works." Today, however, we are somewhat more fair and egalitarian and such.

So, instead of giving one lady a Taj Mahal, putting up one guy's Great Pyramid, or interring one big shot's massive terra cotta army, we give more or less everybody a shot at an SUV, a smart phone, and a venti non-fat caffe caramel macchiato -- Did I say that right? -- (and we have pretty much determined that it's not a good idea to try to "consume" all of them at the same time).

Mass-produced consumer goods instead of unique Wonders of the World. Paradigm shift. Different measures of value.

What if Shah Jehan had said to his twenty-thousand artisans, "Hey guys, instead of building a monument for the eons, why don't you take all these materials we have assembled, the finest gems and stone gathered from all over the continent, and each of you just do something to amuse or impress your friends?" What if Khufu had commanded his 7000-strong labor force to render the giant limestone blocks into small representations of whatever was on their mind at the time? What if the master builders of Chartres had said, "Hey, you village peasant-types, here are some pieces of stained glass. See how many cute pictures of kittens you can make out of them."

Yeah, the historians of the future are going to have to adapt their discipline's techniques to include a robust capacity for intellectual waste management.

Hey, there may be some things of relative value in there, though. Who (except the historians of the future) can tell? Perhaps it's like that infinite monkeys and infinite typewriters theorem..Except that we are now dealing with around two billion . . . umm "monkey surrogates?" . .  and maybe about the same number of social media content input interface instances.

So yeah, it could take a quite a while before anything really valuable shows up.

Oh yeah, and what if the Ming Emperors, weary of many decades of costly maintenance, had opted for an ad-based funding model for the Great Wall of China? Just asking you to think about it.

Historians of the Future, Sorry About All My Photos Called DSC987234534.jpg or Whatever

 

23.Jul.2013 Categories: General

Unyielding Penchant for Misinterpretation? 

Not to deny that Americans' political predispositions color their responses to issues raised in public policy, but I find this article's interpretation of research on attitudes toward government surveillance disturbingly shallow. 

First, it looks to me as though the overall percentages did not change much between 2006 and 2013. That is--the number of Americans opposed to government agencies snooping on them (regardless of their party) remained roughly the same. Similarly, the number of folks accepting the surveillance stayed about the same.

The article's characterization of the data as indicating a "virtually unyielding preference for partisanship over principle" seems purely a matter interpretation. Framed in another way, the data might be used to provoke interest in why the snooping-opposed faction tended to identify more as Democrat back in 2006 and more as Republican in 2013 (and vice versa). In that light, we should be grousing about our population's fixation on single-issue politics over party loyalty, or some such thing.

Second, a lot of variables underwent change between 2006 and 2013--not just the party of the US President. For one thing, the iPhone hit the market in 2007. Could it be that some folks just started becoming real introspective about government eavesdropping after realizing how much of their daily lives they were pumping through the aether with the mobile playthings they find so addictive?

I don't think the data this article cites means what they say it means.

NSA Confidential: We Love Big Brother If He's Got the Right Party Affiliation

18.Jun.2013 Categories: General

What does Soylent Green have in common with state legislatures? 

"I am the senator.
You are the citizen.
You need to be quiet."

Although he disputes it, North Carolina state enator Tommy Tucker is reported to have uttered this rejoinder to a challenge from a local newspaper publisher.

There was a time when we thought our society was engaged in preserving a "government of the people, by the people, for the people." Perhaps that is still true, but it is disappointing to be confronted with the possibility that some of these "of the people" people no longer consider themselves just people.

Tommy Tucker . . . Confronts Publisher . . . 

19.Apr.2013 Categories: General

There's no place like the movies 

Oz the Great and Powerful is an entertaining and visually captivating "unofficial" prequel to The Wizard of Oz.  Although the scary parts are probably too intense for the very young, most everyone else should find plenty to enjoy in this $215 million Disney spectacle.

Rachel Weisz provides a particularly well-nuanced performance as Evanora, a malevolent and deceitful Wicked Witch. Michelle Williams is guileless and charming as Glinda the Good Witch, a role for which she seems utterly perfect. Mila Kunis is at first winsome, and later ruthlessly implacable, as the grievously betrayed Theodora, Wicked Witch of the West.

James Franco, adept at insincerity, seems a bit off-key in those moments when the plot doesn't call for it. Bruce Campbell is wasted and mostly unrecognizable as an over-costumed Winkie Gate Keeper. 

In the end clever contrivance and showbiz spectacle trump real but strangely artless black magic--an unsurprising subtext affirming entertainment industry sensibilities and bemeaning the threat of true wickedness.  

Oz the Great and Powerful

13.Apr.2013 Categories: General

More artless dissembling in Topeka 

Ever dedicated to addressing the issues of greatest significance to Kansans, the Senate has passed a bill removing switchblades from the state's list of banned weapons. Jayhawkers have long been disadvantaged by the inability to legally own bladed cutting tools that can be opened with a single free hand  It is truly touching to know that our state legislators have persevered in this important work, despite the hardship of not being able to differentiate deadly blades from women's shoe heels.

"He said committee members also had a hard time defining what a stiletto is because the company that manufactured knives under that name has long since gone out of business and the word stiletto is also used to describe a type of heel on women’s shoes."

When it comes to debating firearms legislation issues, the variety of possible meanings of "gun" must certainly represent an insurmountable obstacle for the definition-challenged solons of the Sunflower State.

Shinola is an obsolete brand, too. Let's hope that future Kansas legislative agenda do not entail adducing the distinction between it and certain animal husbandry by-products. 

Bill legalizing switchblades passes Senate

06.Apr.2013 Categories: General

Old tech junk makes much waste 

"The [US] federal government, which is among the world’s largest producer [sic] of electronic waste, disposes more than 10,000 computers a week on average."

We've been manufacturing a lot of tech stuff that we have no idea what to do with when we don't want it any more. Abandoning it in large piles turns out to be unhealthy and unwise. Economic incentives to recycle have largely vanished.

"A little over a decade ago, there were at least 12 plants in the United States and 13 more worldwide that were taking these old televisions and monitors and using the cathode ray tube glass to produce new tubes. But now, there are only two plants in India doing this work." 

Should consumers/end-users bear any of the burden of this "glass tsunami?"

Unwanted Electronic Gear Rising in Toxic Piles

19.Mar.2013 Categories: General
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