Apparently, yesterday was Bourbon Day.
Abu Dhabi Quiz!
Heathen nation, which of the following do you think was hardest for me to acquire in my stay here in the capital emirate?
A. Kentucky Fried Chicken, Hardee’s, and Popeye’s B. Laphroaig C. Bacon D. Air conditioning E. A beach
Well, hell.
The Supreme Court on Monday let stand a lower court decision that said federal officials cannot be sued for damages for the torture of Americans on U.S. soil.
In other words, the Feds can waterboard the hell out of you while holding you secretly and without trial, and you have no legal recourse.
Someone needs to explain to me very quickly how this doesn’t make it legal for the government to disappear people, a la Pinochet.
Today in Adorable
This guy decided hide and seek, his toddler, and his head-mountable video camera made for a great combination.
Via MeFi.
Things I Did Not Know
It turns out that the super awesome travel speaker I use and the new fancy pastel-colored Jambox from Jawbone are very nearly exactly the same device under different branding.
(I actually don’t have the Bluetooth model, but other than that…)
Dept of things you really ought to read
The May 28 New Yorker has a fantastic (and long) story on the extraordinary exploits of William Alexander Morgan, the American ne’er do well and wanderer who became the only American Comandante in the Cuban revolution (there was, apparently, only one other foreigner with that title).
We likely forget that there was a coalition of forces united behind Castro thanks to the excesses of Batista’s regime. Morgan joined a band of revolutionaries who were also ardent anti-communists; his star fell as Fidel moved to the left and the same sort of totalitarianism that doomed Batista, with predictable results, but the man’s story reads like something Hemingway could’ve written.
(Know anything about this cat, Gar?)
No, really.
I promise lots of UAE trip material, but work here has been such that I’m barely seeing anything but my laptop so far. Case in point: 21 project hours logged today. Put another way, when I called Erin just now to say I was finally going to bed and therefore ending my workday, she was also getting home from work and ending hers.
Houston is nine hours behind Abu Dhabi.
“Ya hair look good, Snoop.”
David Simon has seen the Wire musical thing, and loves it.
Omar Comin’ . . . and he *dancin’!*
The Wire: The Musical!, with Michael K. Williams, Andre Royo, Sonja Sohn, Felicia Pearson, and Faizon Love as Stringer Bell.
Stay with it through the chess scene, at least.
Think on this while I’m away
Hear the word of Batman.
“Maybe after the ceremony, you could get one of the fourth graders to come in and show you how to use the intercom”
Mrs. Landingham — known outside the West Wing as Kathryn Joosten — has [passed on](http://www.metafilter.com/116582/You-know-I-could-beat-you-up-anytime-I-want-sir]. She was 72.
Dept. of Phrases Not Ordinarily Uttered
“Completely Awesome Ventriloquists”. No, seriously. Longtime Heathen may recall she’s appeared here before (though, sadly, that video link is dead — she’s the one with the monkey), but Nina Conti is back with a ridiculously entertaining new bit of meta-ventriloquism. Enjoy.
I’M NOT DEAD
Just busy busy busy. And traveling. And going to Dubai later. And buying a new air conditioner. and watching Willie Nelson and Snoop Dog. And not making any of this up. I swear.
Today’s Winner In Batshit Insane Southern Legislation
North Carolina, fresh on the heels of their gay-hatin’ work of the last month or so, have now decided on a novel way to solve the issue of rising sea levels caused by global warming: they’ll make it illegal.
There is utterly nothing not to like here
Nicolas Cage performs John Cage’s 4’33”.
(Widely linked.)
File under “911 as a career”
Meet Magnus. He’s got a little obsession with the most beautiful cars in the world. Enjoy.
h/t: Agent Triple-F.
The good news about Florida
If you, as I, have crossed into 40 and that vast middle of life, and find yourself no longer the youngest guy in the room, well, Florida will fix that.
Mad Men Redux
The excellent Mad Men Unbuttoned blog points out two bits you may have missed:
- Joan wears the fur Roger gave her on her “date”; and
- It turns out Lane’s commentary on Pete — a “grimy little pimp” — was a bit of foreshadowing.
Why, yes, I am from Mississippi
Why do you ask?
(Electrical tape, natch, because the yard’s too small to put anything up on blocks.)
For Heathen of a certain age…
MeFi points out that the entirety of Siouxsie & the Banshees’ 1983 concert and film Nocturne is available on YouTube.
You may or may not recall that, during this period, the Cure’s Robert Smith was part of the lineup.
Dept. of Tumblr Excellence
It is possible that you are unfamiliar with the activities of Maddie the Coonhound. Let’s fix that.
Direct from MeFi: Bill F-ing Murray
Seemed like a good idea at the time…
What You Need To Do
Go see American Falls by Miki Johnson, over at DiverseWorks.
Mrs Heathen and I have just come from opening night, and I’m still processing it, but I can say this: It’s one of the most affecting, beautiful, amazing things I’ve seen on stage. It’s truly remarkable. I see lots and lots of plays. I see lots of plays with these people in them. I don’t see many plays that leave a lump in my throat or my eyes wet. This one did.
I’m going back tomorrow, because that’s the only time I can. Show runs through June 9. Don’t miss this. When people talk about what’s amazing about Houston’s arts community, it’s work like this that they mean.
Trust me. I know things.
JUST WATCH IT
(Via MeFi.)
Egan on Twitter: It’s like your grandpa trying to rap
Last year, I read the otherwise brilliant A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan. It’s a fine (and interestingly structured) novel of modern life, but it’s marred pretty seriously by a hamfisted stab at “modernity” or “experimentalism”: Egan renders one chapter as a PowerPoint-style presentation (presumably because in her life as a writer she’s never really exposed to the horror that is PowerPoint in American business life).
No, I’m not kidding. It’s the sort of overly precious goofball conceit you sometimes see in experimental writers (and Egan has certainly got some metafiction DNA), but not really in good ones. Frankly, I completely support attempting something like this — I mean, why not? — but part of being “experimental” is knowing when to wash your attempts down the lab drain instead of foisting them on a reading public.
Obviously, opinions vary on this — Goon Squad won big awards — but as a veteran of an English department I know all too well that some writers’ shit doesn’t stink, and that authors with the reputation Egan has can get away with things that others couldn’t. Sometimes, they’re even praised for it. Inshallah.
Anyway, fresh off the goofball presentation chapter, we find now the news that Egan will tweet a short story for the New Yorker. What’s hilarious, sad, and graspy about this is that Egan has no real Twitter presence today. There’s nothing linked on her site, and a Google search turns up only an account (@EganGoonSquad) presumably started to promote her last book, and probably not run by her at all. It hardly matters; there are only 7 tweets spread between August 2010 and the day before yesterday.
What this suggests is that, like the PowerPoint gimmick, this will be a nonnative usage of an established form by a writer mining for novelty, not narrative or story or character. Egan is not a digital native. She has no real online presence, nor any real engagement with social media or blogging or anything of the sort. Consequently, what’s likely to happen is that she’ll chop a story into 140-character bits, have an assistant type it in, and bask in the glow of an “experimental short story” that’s essentially free of any experimental character; after all, serialization is a 19th century technique.
If she or her editors had any grasp of the culture of Twitter, this might’ve been interesting. Twitter is not a broadcast medium; Twitter is a conversation. Chopping an otherwise unremarkable short story into 140-character pieces isn’t particularly inventive, and is unlikely to include anything unique to the form.
Further, Egan’s little stunt overshadows the countless inventive uses of Twitter already happening — there’s fiction there, and character-based commentary, and a whole host of other genuinely novel expressions that Egan apparently knows nothing about.
What we’re left with, then, is an old-school magazine (which I love) and a Boomer writer establishing in a very public way how little they understand about the online world. Again.
Unfollow.
You can stop now. Someone has WON the Internet.
Over at NothingsGonnaStopMeNow.com, there is a Flash-based video game based on Perfect Strangers.
It is awesome.
I am not making this up.
Dept. of Missed Opportunities
The iPad is now in its third year, and it’s difficult to overstate the impact its had on computing, especially portable computing. I know it’s certainly changed the way I interact with the richness of the web, for example, and has made it vastly easier to have a ridiculous amount of information just a few taps away — and on a big screen. I love that.
Because I am a giant literature nerd, though, one of the most exciting developments on the iPad was, at least for me, this edition of The Waste Land, T. S. Eliot’s masterwork. Dense with allusion and reference, it’s a poem that’s launched a thousand dissertations and annotations. And the folks at TouchPress realized they could bundle the text with reams of backing information, readings, annotations, and reference material in a single beautiful package on the iPad.
(Older Heathen will remember that there were attempts at this sort of rich publishing model in the initial CD-ROM boom, but the iPad gives us a much richer experience.)
I hoped that the warm reception (and immediate financial success) of The Waste Land app would mean we’d see similar treatments of important works — and especially important works that were logistically hard to carry around. The two that I’d most love to see are Ulysses and Infinite Jest, which also happen to be two of my favorite novels. In either case I’d gleefully pay for a work again just to have a bundled experience of the quality delivered with The Waste Land.
And yet: Nothing. And I’m not the only one who’s noticed, either. Won’t someone make this happen?
LOLMEERKATS
Dept. of Crazybats in Houston
Local shutterbug and tech guru Jay Lee cuts a relatively wide path in Houston between his column at the Chronicle and his radio show over at KPFT. He’s also been investigating just how often his (quite good) photography is being used illegally by other sites.
This story of what happened when GoDaddy (correctly) shut down one offending site is pretty amazing. tl;dr? The site owner — some local lawyer named Candice Schwager — went full crazybats on him, accusing him of being in cahoots with her political enemies, threatening to sue, and the whole nine yards. Seriously wackdoodle stuff.
For maximum lulz, read her account and compare it to Jay’s. We’re not friends, but we have lots of friends in common; he’s a nice, friendly guy who would just prefer folks not view his Flickr stream as a stock photo catalog, and he’s within his rights to feel that way.
Well, Candy, welcome to Google.
Update: Jay had to take down the post, but there’s a mirror here, which happened after the post made it to Slashdot. Meanwhile, the attorney bullying him still has her one-sided rant about it over on her blog. What a tool.
Z.
Today in Nerd Excellence
There is nothing not awesome about a slinky on a treadmill.
Coolest Wedding Ring EVER.
This one guy made his own out of a meteorite.
Best Shot Glass EVAR
Watch it being made. On a lathe. From candy.
Hitchhiking Tips
Be careful when picking up hitchhikers, because they may turn out to be John Waters.
Official Heathen Policy
Dept. of Nerdery Intersections
“Wait, you mean there’s a blog entry somewhere detailing the watches worn on Mad Men? SIGN ME UP!”
Dept. of Obsessive Attention to Detail in Mad Men
It should surprise precisely nobody that Matthew Weiner is very, very careful about the correct current events in Mad Men, even including what play Don and Megan went to see.
(Also cute: the modern Hare Krishna movement — more formally known as the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, or ISKCON — was founded in New York in 1966, just months before the last night’s Christmastime episode.)
Update: It gets deeper. I’m informed via the Well that:
The diner Crane and Kinsey meet in at the end of the episode is identifiably Ratner’s, which happens to be just down the street from an actual ISKCON storefront on 2nd Avenue.
Mohawk was hit by a strike in December of 1966, which lasted until the end of January.
Yet another great reason to have a metro system
A disused “ghost” station on the Paris Metro has been set up as a really lovely ad for the upcoming Ridley Scott film Prometheus.
It’s sort of a companion to the existentialist social networking post
Introducing Objectivist C. (via Maud Newton on Twitter.)
Wind is sexy
What wind does to your face, not so much.
Today in Public Transit News
Yet more reasons to love Miles Davis
From this Guardian piece, pointed out to us by BoingBoing:
In 1987, he was invited to a White House dinner by Ronald Reagan. Few of the guests appeared to know who he was. During dinner, Nancy Reagan turned to him and asked what he’d done with his life to merit an invitation. Straight-faced, Davis replied: “Well, I’ve changed the course of music five or six times. What have you done except fuck the president?”
DOJ to Cops: Shut Up And Quit Hassling Photographers
The DOJ has issued a clear and unequivocal statement that makes clear the fact that citizens videotaping or photographing police are protected by the First Amendment under all but the most extenuating circumstances, and that steps taken by police to bully or harass those photographers are completely unconstitutional.
Nice job.
More at TechDirt and Ars.
HULK ON HULK
This is all over the net now, but if you haven’t read Film Crit Hulk’s long discussion of his latest cinematic adaptation over at the NewYorker, well, get to it. It’s brilliant.
Ze Has Advice For You
“You were born, and your inheritance was pain. Make sure you are connected to the Internet.”
Social media for existentialists.
“Your friends list is empty. It will always be empty.”
(Via @lemay on Twitter.)
Dept. of GAAAH
Io9 points out that a child’s skull is actually pretty terrifying.