Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Happy New Year

moon and milky way over beach

If you celebrate the turning of the year today, then Happy New Year! May it find you happy and well, make you so if you aren't now, and keep you thus until it ends.


Saale Nao Mubbarak
Gelukkig Nieuw Jaar
Antum salimoun (اجمل التهاني بمناسبة الميلا و حلول السنة الجديدة)
Shuvo Nabo Barsho
Nedeleg laouen ha bloavezh mat
Schastliva Nova Godyna! (Щастлива Нова Година)
Z novym godam i Kalyadmi! ( З Новым годам i Калядамi)
Gung hay fat choy! Sun nien fai lok!
Chu Shen Tan
Blwyddyn Newydd Dda
Scastny Novy Rok
Godt Nytår
Gelukkig Nieuwjarr!
Head uut aastat!
Aide shoma mobarak (كرسمس مبارک سال نو مبارک)
Onnellista Uutta Vuotta
Bonne Année
Bliadhna Mhath Ur don a h-uile duine
Prosit Neujahr
Kenourios Chronos
Hauoli Makahiki Hou
L'Shannah Tovah (חג מולד שמח ושנה טובה)
Krisamas aur nav varṣ saṃgalamay ho (क्रिसमस और नव वर्ष मंगलमय हो)
Selamat Tahun Baru
Sanah Jadidah
Bliain nua fe mhaise dhuit
Felice anno nuovo
Akemashite Omedetou Gozaimasu
Xin nian hao
Godt Nyttår
Manigong Bagong Taon
Szczesliwego Nowego Roku
Feliz Ano Novo
Karisama te navāṃ sāl khuśiyāṃvālā hove (ਕਰਿਸਮ ਤੇ ਨਵਾੰ ਸਾਲ ਖੁਸ਼ਿਯਾੰਵਾਲਾ ਹੋਵੇ)
An nou ferict - La Multi Ani
S Novim Godom (с новым годом)
Sretna nova godina (Сређна Нова Година)
Nayou Saal Mubbarak Hoje
Subha Aluth Awrudhak Vewa
Próspero año nuevo!
Gott nytt år!
Manigong bagong taon
Eniya Puthandu Nalvazhthukkal
Sawadee Pee Mai (เมอรี่คริสต์มาส และสวัสดีปีใหม่)
Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
Shchastlyvoho Novoho Roku (Щастлівого Нового Року)
Naya Saal Mubbarak Ho (نايا سال مبارک هو)
Chúc Năm Mới Tốt Lành

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At 2:23 PM, January 01, 2014 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

...e Feliz Ano Novo para ti!

 

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"TCM Remembers"

Here is the annual TCM Remembers tribute to those involved with the film industry who died in the past year.

They always do such a good job.

And there's always someone whose passing I missed.

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Peculiar use of quotes make guard sound ... well, peculiar


In the print edition, the hed reads: Richardson makes 'them pay'

I don't know about you, but that quote usage is odd enough to make me wonder what he really said. I mean, all they quote is "them pay"? What was it? Something creepily specific or threatening? Something like "I intend to make my enemies pay. I intend to make each and every single one of them pay"?

Well no. In the story he's quoted as saying "Teams weren't really guarding me the last couple of years. And they haven't really been guarding me too much this year. I'm just trying to make them pay for it, to where it makes it easier for everybody else." Ah, now. I see. They couldn't figure out what to do with the missing S.

In the splash page for the GoVolsXtra, the hed is: Richardson makes them pay. No attribution of any of it to him.


Meanwhile, in the full the on-line story, the hed is: Josh Richardson was out to 'make them pay' in Tennessee's 87-52 win over Virginia.


I suppose  the second solution was far too long for the print edition. And the first one might make you wonder what the reporter thought Virginia was paying for. Their win last year? Probably. And that wasn't what the story was about at all.

You know, in Russian, with its manifold cases, they aren't the slightest bit afraid to take a quoted phrase and make it fit the syntax of the new sentence. If it was nominative, but is being used in a construction that needs the accusative or dative, they just make it accusative or dative. Maybe we need to give ourselves permission to add or remove that -S as needed.

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New Year's Eve Sparrow

This cute little guy was in the Japanese maple outside my father's kitchen window.

sparrow

sparrow

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Monday, December 30, 2013

Signs of the Season

Yes, it's the Christmas wake of vultures down the street from my father's house. The last few years there haven't been more than maybe a dozen, but this year, look out. They're back in force.

water tower and cellphone tower

water tower

under the water tower

on the main catwalk of the water tower

on the cellphone tower

one moody guy out in a tree

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Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Week in Entertainment

Film: Frozen, which was quite beautiful to look at, and had some very good songs, but suffered from the Disney trio of dopey comic relief, contrived matchmaking scene, and (to a lesser degree) silly animal sidekick. I did like that the act of true love was not romantic.

DVD: Mr Magoo's Christmas Carol, still very enjoyable. Dark Alibi, a Sidney Toler Charlie Chan film that's a bit embarrassing in places (Warner Oland was the best Chan, partly because of Oland's skill and dedication and partly because Keye Luke's character was more serious than Benson Fong's (speaking of dopey comic relief...)

TV: Several other Christmas Carols, including Patrick Stewart's and Alistair Sim's. The Time of the Doctor, this year's Christmas special, which (like most of the specials) was okay. I'm happy with the explanation of how he's going to go on, love the explanation for the crack in time, almost cried a little at seeing Amy (sort of seeing her), and hope the next season builds well on the premise of finding Gallifrey.

Read: A ton of Christmas mystery short stores from various collections.

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At 4:34 AM, December 30, 2013 Anonymous Adrian Morgan had this to say...

Time of the Doctor wasn't as bad as some, but the resolution was a cheat. So, all Clara has to do is shout a few platitudes through the crack, and the time lords are all "OK, since you asked nicely, we'll stop what we're doing and help instead". Bleh.

I really do feel strongly that having an all-powerful producer in charge of season arcs is bad for the show. I don't think there's been a season arc I liked, and they contaminate individual stories like an infection.

 
At 8:11 AM, December 31, 2013 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

I agree more with you than not. I did rather like Bad Wolf, but that was more a theme than an arc. And I think the whole "Impossible Girl" arc ended in a massive letdown.

I like to think the Time Lords said to each other, "Well, there you go, that's the proof it's really him. Who else would cart around someone who talks like that?"

 

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Christmas singer

This little guy and his mate have been around the Japanese maple all week. This shot is through the window.
Song Sparrow

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Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Winter Solstice, Camelot Station

holly

This is one of my favorite poems of all time.
Enjoy it and the day...

Winter Solstice, Camelot Station

John M. Ford


Camelot is served
By a sixteen-track stub terminal done in High Gothick Style,
The tracks covered by a single great barrel-vaulted glass roof framed upon iron,
At once looking back to the Romans and ahead to the Brunels.
Beneath its rotunda, just to the left of the ticket windows,
Is a mosaic floor depicting the Round Table
(Where all knights, regardless of their station of origin
Or class of accommodation, are equal),
And around it murals of knightly deeds in action
(Slaying dragons, righting wrongs, rescuing maidens tied to the tracks).
It is the only terminal, other than Gare d'Avalon in Paris,
To be hung with original tapestries,
And its lavatories rival those at the Great Gate of Kiev Central.
During a peak season such as this, some eighty trains a day pass through,
Five times the frequency at the old Londinium Terminus,
Ten times the number the Druid towermen knew.
(The Official Court Christmas Card this year displays
A crisp black-and-white Charles Clegg photograph from the King's own collection.
Showing a woad-blued hogger at the throttle of "Old XCVII,"
The Fast Mail overnight to Eboracum. Those were the days.)
The first of a line of wagons have arrived,
Spilling footmen and pages in Court livery,
And old thick Kay, stepping down from his Range Rover,
Tricked out in a bush coat from Swaine, Adeney, Brigg,
Leaning on his shooting stick as he marshalls his company,
Instructing the youngest how to behave in the station,
To help mature women that they may encounter,
Report pickpockets, gather up litter,
And of course no true Knight of the Table Round (even in training)
Would do a station porter out of Christmas tips.
He checks his list of arrival times, then his watch
(A moon-phase Breguet, gift from Merlin):
The seneschal is a practical man, who knows trains do run late,
And a stolid one, who sees no reason to be glad about it.
He dispatches pages to posts at the tracks,
Doling out pennies for platform tickets,
Then walks past the station buffet with a dyspeptic snort,
Goes into the bar, checks the time again, orders a pint.
The patrons half turn--it's the fella from Camelot, innit?
And Kay chuckles soft to himself, and the Court buys a round.
He's barely halfway when a page tumbles in,
Seems the knights are arriving, on time after all,
So he tips the glass back (people stare as he guzzles),
Then plonks it down hard with five quid for the barman,
And strides for the doorway (half Falstaff, half Hotspur)
To summon his liveried army of lads.

* * *

Bors arrives behind steam, riding the cab of a heavy Mikado.
He shakes the driver's hand, swings down from the footplate,
And is like a locomotive himself, his breath clouding white,
Dark oil sheen on his black iron mail,
Sword on his hip swinging like siderods at speed.
He stamps back to the baggage car, slams mailed fist on steel door
With a clang like jousters colliding.
The handler opens up and goes to rouse another knight.
Old Pellinore has been dozing with his back against a crate,
A cubical, chain-bound thing with FRAGILE tags and air holes,
BEAST says the label, QUESTING, 1 the bill of lading.
The porters look doubtful but ease the thing down.
It grumbles. It shifts. Someone shouts, and they drop it.
It cracks like an egg. There is nothing within.
Elayne embraces Bors on the platform, a pelican on a rock,
Silently they watch as Pelly shifts the splinters,
Supposing aloud that Gutman and Cairo have swindled him.

A high-drivered engine in Northern Lines green
Draws in with a string of side-corridor coaches,
All honey-toned wood with stained glass on their windows.
Gareth steps down from a compartment, then Gaheris and Aggravaine,
All warmly tucked up in Orkney sweaters;
Gawaine comes after in Shetland tweed.
Their Gladstones and steamers are neatly arranged,
With never a worry--their Mum does the packing.
A redcap brings forth a curious bundle, a rude shape in red paper--
The boys did that one themselves, you see, and how does one wrap a unicorn's head?
They bustle down the platform, past a chap all in green.
He hasn't the look of a trainman, but only Gawaine turns to look at his eyes,
And sees written there Sir, I shall speak with you later.

Over on the first track, surrounded by reporters,
All glossy dark iron and brass-bound mystery,
The Direct-Orient Express, ferried in from Calais and Points East.
Palomides appears. Smelling of patchouli and Russian leather,
Dripping Soubranie ash on his astrakhan collar,
Worry darkening his dark face, though his damascene armor shows no tarnish,
He pushes past the press like a broad-hulled icebreaker.
Flashbulbs pop. Heads turn. There's a woman in Chanel black,
A glint of diamonds, liquid movements, liquid eyes.
The newshawks converge, but suddenly there appears
A sharp young man in a crisp blue suit
From the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits,
That elegant, comfortable, decorous, close-mouthed firm;
He's good at his job, and they get not so much as a snapshot.
Tomorrow's editions will ask who she was, and whom with...

Now here's a silver train, stainless steel, Vista-Domed,
White-lighted grails on the engine (running no extra sections)
The Logres Limited, extra fare, extra fine,
(Stops on signal at Carbonek to receive passengers only).
She glides to a Timkin-borne halt (even her grease is clean),
Galahad already on the steps, flashing that winning smile,
Breeze mussing his golden hair, but not his Armani tailoring,
Just the sort of man you'd want finding your chalice.
He signs an autograph, he strikes a pose.
Someone says, loudly, "Gal! Who serves the Grail?"
He looks--no one he knows--and there's a silence,
A space in which he shifts like sun on water;
Look quick and you may see a different knight,
A knight who knows that meanings can be lies,
That things are done not knowing why they're done,
That bearings fail, and stainless steel corrodes.
A whistle blows. Snow shifts on the glass shed roof. That knight is gone.
This one remaining tosses his briefcase to one of Kay's pages,
And, golden, silken, careless, exits left.

Behind the carsheds, on the business-car track, alongside the private varnish
Of dukes and smallholders, Persian potentates and Cathay princes
(James J. Hill is here, invited to bid on a tunnel through the Pennines),
Waits a sleek car in royal blue, ex-B&O, its trucks and fittings chromed,
A black-gloved hand gripping its silver platform rail;
Mordred and his car are both upholstered in blue velvet and black leather.
He prefers to fly, but the weather was against it.
His DC-9, with its video system and Quotron and waterbed, sits grounded at Gatwick.
The premature lines in his face are a map of a hostile country,
The redness in his eyes a reminder that hollyberries are poison.
He goes inside to put on a look acceptable for Christmas Court;
As he slams the door it rattles like strafing jets.

Outside the Station proper, in the snow,
On a through track that's used for milk and mail,
A wheezing saddle-tanker stops for breath;
A way-freight mixed, eight freight cars and caboose,
Two great ugly men on the back platform, talking with a third on the ballast.
One, the conductor, parcels out the last of the coffee;
They drink. A joke about grails. They laugh.
When it's gone, the trainman pretends to kick the big hobo off,
But the farewell hug spoils the act.
Now two men stand on the dirty snow,
The conductor waves a lantern and the train grinds on.
The ugly men start walking, the new arrival behind,
Singing "Wenceslas" off-key till the other says stop.
There are two horses waiting for them. Rather plain horses,
Considering. The men mount up.
By the roundhouse they pause,
And look at the locos, the water, the sand, and the coal,
They look for a long time at the turntable,
Until the one who is King says "It all seemed so simple, once,"
And the best knight in the world says "It is. We make it hard."
They ride on, toward Camelot by the service road.

The sun is winter-low. Kay's caravan is rolling.
He may not run a railroad, but he runs a tight ship;
By the time they unload in the Camelot courtyard,
The wassail will be hot and the goose will be crackling,
Banners snapping from their towers, fir logs on the fire, drawbridge down,
And all that sackbut and psaltery stuff.
Blanchefleur is taking the children caroling tonight,
Percivale will lose to Merlin at chess,
The young knights will dally and the damsels dally back,
The old knights will play poker at a smaller Table Round.
And at the great glass station, motion goes on,
The extras, the milk trains, the varnish, the limiteds,
The Pindar of Wakefield, the Lady of the Lake,
The Broceliande Local, the Fast Flying Briton,
The nerves of the kingdom, the lines of exchange,
Running to a schedule as the world ought,
Ticking like a hot-fired hand-stoked heart,
The metal expression of the breaking of boundaries,
The boilers that turn raw fire into power,
The driving rods that put the power to use,
The turning wheels that make all places equal,
The knowledge that the train may stop but the line goes on;
The train may stop
But the line goes on.

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Glad Tidings

Here is Annie Lennox for your Christmas listening:

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Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Happy Holidays

Merry Christmas, Good Yule, Happy Solstice, Midwinter Joy, Happy Kwanzaa, Happy Festivus ... however you celebrate the returning light in this midwinter season, may it fill you with joy.

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Sunday, December 22, 2013

The Week in Entertainment

Film: Saving Mr Banks, which was an utter delight from beginning to end.

TV: An episode of Almost Human that had two DRN robots in it, which at least explains how everyone recognizes Dorian so quickly.  Psych the Musical which succeeded in telling one of their goofy stories while sticking songs into my head (I've heard it both ways: the right way and then your way). Bravi! And the Patrick Stewart Christmas Carol.

Read: The Great Merlini,  a collection of short stories about a magician-detective, and Punch With Care, an Asey Mayo mystery.

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Saturday, December 21, 2013

Religious right upheld

pastor performs marriage for same-sex couple in UtahThis photo is of Ruth and Kim Hackleford -Peer getting married in Salt Lake City on Friday. Please note who is performing the ceremony: the Reverend Curtis Price.

All you ever hear about is Christians claiming it's against their religion to allow same-sex marriage.

This particular pastor apparently doesn't feel that way. And he's not alone.

Why aren't their religious rights important?

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Way to go, Utah

first gay couple married in Utah, with their daughter
Sure, you just made this post wrong. But I don't care.

18 states have marriage equality!

(And it may be that Justice Scalia was right (though he was issuing a dire warning when he said it) that the demise of DOMA has opened the gates. I mean, Utah?)

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At 3:37 PM, December 21, 2013 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Bird by bird... (or state by state, if one must be literal).

Will you be participating in the annual Dec. 25 bird count this year?

 

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Happy Solstice and Good Yule!

Today is the Feast of Sol Invictus, the unconquered sun. Yes, there's plenty of winter ahead of us, cold and snow and darkness, but with every day the light is longer. Rejoice! 

Happy Winter Solstice to my Northern Hemisphere readers...
Winter Solstice Canada
And happy Summer Solstice to my Southerners...
Summer Solstice Austrailia

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Friday, December 20, 2013

This is (maybe) why Pope Francis is doing what he's doing

In Sammamish, Washington, a man got married, and lost his job. The man is gay, and his job was vice-principle of a Catholic school. The Archdiocese dumped him the minute they found out. Bear in mind that Washington has legalized same-sex marriage. Mr Zmuda broke no laws; moreover, he is, according to his principle, "a wonderful educator" and she'd "hire him back in a minute" if she were allowed.

But she's not. So she fired him.

What happened next is probably not what they dreamed of: the kids walked out.

The kids will walk out of the Church if it doesn't stop demonizing. I'm not telling them they have to change their rules (though I'll note they have in the past). I'm not even telling them they have to hire sinners, though they surely know that they certainly do. I'm just saying that the kids flat out don't see what Mr Z did as meriting the Church's reaction. And the crazed culture wars (teh gay and abortion in particular) are turning them off not just the Church, but God. Pope Francis seems to realize that. Perhaps the Church needs to decide if they want to keep the kids, or keep the hate. I don't think they can keep both.

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At 8:28 PM, December 25, 2013 Anonymous Adrian Morgan had this to say...

I have to laugh at "I'm not even telling them they have to hire sinners" ... rather hard to avoid, given that all Christian churches teach emphatically that everyone is a sinner.

 

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Thursday, December 19, 2013

17!

With today's state supreme court decision in New Mexico, there are now 17 states that allow same-sex marriage, and 10 with civil unions. There can be no appeal to this ruling, since it's specific to the state's constitution, and it comes from New Mexico's highest court.

This has been an astonishing year for marriage equality. In 2012 there were 8 plus DC. In 2013 another 9.  But the "easy" wins are over. There are 33 states that explicitly limit marriage (yes, some of those have civil unions). This year's gains won't be repeated next year. But the tide is turning.

But in the last two years more states have become equality states than in the two decades before that.

In my lifetime I expect the whole country to have changed.

And I wouldn't have said that five years ago.

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Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Here's why...

So I was thinking about Kathie's comment about how Sean Saves the World needs better writing. And what I found myself thinking was how bad the writing on The Michael J Fox Show is.

An example, from this week's episode. Setup: Mike loves Sting. Annie doesn't really even know who Sting is. Nonetheless she magically is able to get Sting to come to their apartment on Christmas Eve to do a private concert.

Yes.

Well, anyway, Mike of course cannot get home from the studio as contrived coworker illness and surprise snowstorm keep him on the air. Meanwhile, Sting and Annie make awkward conversation, considering that she has never even heard one of his songs. (How does this work? Your beloved adores Sting but you never heard one of his songs? Yay, earphones, I guess...)

So, she asks him if he would like some tea, and apologizes as she does for it's being a cliché and maybe an offensive stereotype. He says he's not offended and would love some tea - "after all, I'm an Englishman in New York."

Now, the obvious answer to that -  assuming you really didn't know that was a song lyric - would be something like, Oh, sure, you probably hear it all the time, or Oh, gosh, everybody probably asks you that.

But what Annie says is: "And ... I'm ... a New Yorker in an apartment."

What? That is the most bizarre answer I can think of. Tin ear.

ps: Annie and Sting go to the studio before midnight. Sting sings. Ian and Eve learn The True Meaning of Christmas™. And Mike's error with gifts is redeemed by his daughter and Annie is ecstatic. What, you thought something original might happen?

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At 11:26 AM, December 18, 2013 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

That was the first (and probably the last) episode of the "Michael J. Fox Show" I've ever seen, and I agree the writing was lame. Such a shame, too, because as anyone who's watched "The Good Wife" in the past few years knows, Fox is at the top of his acting game when he gets well-written material; plus, Sting is an engaging personality whose talents were largely squandered on that episode of the MJFS. Like with Sean, such great potential was lost due to mediocre (or worse) writing.

(If you saw Beth Behrs do the hilariously bowdlerized version of "Dance 10, Looks 3" on the Marvin Hamlisch tribute on PBS a year or so ago, you'll know that she too deserves so much funnier material than "Two Broke Girls" offers, as do castmates Jennifer Coolidge and Garrett Morris).

 

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Monday, December 16, 2013

Well, that's okay then

So - since you can't go anywhere without a television being on - I saw in the cafeteria at work here some anchor at CNN chattering on about mass shootings in the US since 2006.

The basic message? Sure, there have been 30 this year, but not to worry. There hasn't been a rise in the past six years - 30 is the average number. So it's all fine. No need to actually, you know, do anything..

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At 3:34 PM, December 16, 2013 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Just be glad they don't play Fox News -- which is what was on the last time I was stuck in a waiting room somewhere.

 
At 5:52 PM, December 16, 2013 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

I know. It's horrifying how ubiquitous it is.

 

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Sunday, December 15, 2013

The Week in Entertainment

Live: A brilliant and very funny Falstaff at the Met, with Ambrogio Maestri absolutely owning the title role. And then a terrifically good Waiting for Godot, with Ian McKellen as Estragon and Patrick Stewart as Vladimir.

TV:Almost Human - okay, I admit they made me tear up at the end with Maya, even though I knew it was going to happen. Nice acting by Megan Ferguson. Sleepy Hollow - this gets crazier. Plus, what kind of "Sunday School" teaches about golems? The Mentalist - seriously. Did they pay any attention at all to Jane? Breaking the deal may have seemed clever to Abbot, but it was bound to put Jane against him. Abbot may have 'almost forgotten' what a 'sense of trust' feels like, but I'm not sure Jane ever knew... The Neighbors had a funny Christmas episode ("I have a mug that says I am the World's Greatest Father -" "He does; he bought it himself." "And they couldn't sold it to me if it weren't true. That would be illegal." "Oh, Larry, I have a mug that says I'm Mrs. Clooney."). Funny Modern Family ("Girls! No fighting! I don't have a favorite." "Why the hell not??") and Sean Saves the World. Michael J Fox Show - again, very predictable. It's pleasant, but I'm not surprised it got canceled; nowadays the networks have no patience for letting even really funny shows build an audience (Ted! Ted, I miss you), let alone merely pleasant ones. On the other hand, it had Sting! The Crazy Ones was also predictable in the A-plot (not so much in the B), but the whole cast is so good (not just the big name) that they elevate predictability to funny. Grimm did two eps in a row - the first one sort of blah, but the second excellent. And Agents of SHIELD had a helluva midseason break.

Read: Finished Gone Whalin', which had a very satisfactory ending but iffy epilog. The Cape Cod Mystery - I'm not sure why I put off reading any of these Asey Mayo books for so long because I really enjoyed this one. The Sandman Overture part 1 - an intriguing opening.+

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At 12:32 AM, December 16, 2013 Anonymous Anonymous had this to say...

I'm particularly glad to hear that you liked Godot—I'll be passing through New York this week specifically in order to see it.

 
At 3:33 PM, December 16, 2013 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Saw "Sean Saves the World" for the first time recently and wish they had better writing -- because super-talents like Sean, Megan and Linda deserve far better material. Heck, I'd cast the three together in a Broadway musical (something by Sondheim, perhaps?).

 

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Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Surprisingly tricky wordplay

So, the category was "words in Asian countries", where an English word is spelled out inside the name of a country. The first two were quite easy - PAN in Japan, PAL in Nepal - but once the letter sequence wasn't pronounced the same way, the category became surprisingly difficult. I got HAIL in Thailand, but GLADE in Bangladesh wouldn't come in time - and I'm pretty sure HUT in Bhutan wouldn't have, either, even if I could have remembered that Thimpu is in that country, which I didn't (I was thinking Tibet...).

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At 12:27 PM, December 13, 2013 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Speaking of knowledge-based quiz shows, did you see this item in Mac McGarry's obit in this AM's "Post"? Unlike a certain other host, Mac apparently had the humility to know what he didn't know.

"Mr. McGarry prepared vigorously for the show by researching pronunciations. He once spent an hour on the phone with the Russian Embassy until he could say a Russian word properly."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/mac-mcgarry-its-academic-host-dies-at-87/2013/12/12/5f6f1ebe-2eee-11e0-a371-d2bf1122591b_story.html

 

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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Let me count the ways

meme about honoring dead troops and nobody will ever repost it and blah blah blahSo, this thing was on a Facebook friend's page today.

It's like a lot of them: mindlessly "patriotic," hectoring, and inaccurate.

First, "yesterday"? This was August 6, 2011. It was not yesterday. What kind of "respect" is it that causes people with loved ones still in country to fear for their lives? That stirs up fear of another major attack? How hard is it to write a meme with the right gorram date on it?

Second, "the real reason for flags at half staff"? What does that mean? That flags cannot be at half staff for any reason other than American soldiers dying in combat? Because that's ridiculous. And given the most recent "flags at half staff", it can't help but make me wonder (not about my particular friend, but the source she got it from). Like that sheriff in South Carolina, who by the way was pretty quickly set straight, we don't get to decide why flags are flown at half staff, and dead foreign statesmen have been a valid reason for decades now. Regardless of the color of the statesman, or the president.

Third, "only seen this posted one time"? Then how did you get it?

Fourth, comparing troops' deaths to celebrities' deaths is pointless. The last time this made major rounds was after Whitney Houston died. Like it or not, more people in this country knew who she was than knew those 31 soldiers. And more people know the Fast and Furious franchise.

Fifth, "respect"? Posting something on Facebook is about the lowest value you can give to "respect". Do you lobby your congressmen to get the VA fully funded? To stop us going into wars of choice without the manpower or equipment to fight them? Yes, maybe Afghanistan wasn't a war of choice, but Iraq was, and the invasion of Iraq is the biggest reason the war in Afghanistan is still going on, damnit. And why it took so long to accomplish its biggest stated goal. Are you ready to have your taxes raised to support the troops' needs here and abroad, while they serve and afterwards? Do you vote that support? Do you in fact do anything but post hectoring Facebook memes and put a sticker on your car?

Sixth, "fallen heroes". I quoted Mike Dunford once:
Referring to everyone in uniform as a "hero" is a nice, easy way for the bulk of the American public to assuage whatever pangs their consciences might experience when they consider their own lack of sacrifice during the current war. If everyone who serves is special, heroic, above and beyond the norm, you don't have to feel as bad for not participating yourself. You've left it to the heroes to bear that burden.
I'm not sure that's true of everybody who throws the word around, but it is of many. But this certainly is true: Not everyone in the military is a hero (I wasn't), and saying that they are only devalues the word.

Seventh, Afghan soldiers died that day, too. In that same attack. Afghans on our side. I know most of these memes are pure tribalism (just like that "real reason" thing), but can't we be better than that? Can't we at least try?

And last, that hectoring tone. That "I bet no one cares enough to repost this". It's one thing to say "I reposted out of respect" and another to explicitly say that only someone who reposts "cares enough". The truly repellent thing about all these memes is that accusation, the straight-out labeling of anyone who doesn't join this ritual as callous, troop-hating, un-American...

The odds that I would repost a meme like this are very small anyway. But when you tell me that I have to to pass some purity test ... no.

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At 1:21 PM, December 10, 2013 Blogger Unknown had this to say...

"Every word in it is a lie, including 'and' and 'the,'" as Mary McCarthy almost said.

 

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Sunday, December 08, 2013

The Week in Entertainment (part 2)

Live: Irving Berlin's White Christmas on stage at the Hippodrome. What an excellent show! They didn't have all the numbers from the movie (no "Choreography" or "Mandy") but there's no shortage of Irving Berlin songs to fill up any holes! A show-stopping tap dance to "I Love A Piano" opened the second act - wonderful dancing. This is a great show.

TV: A couple of episodes of Grimm - I cannot tell you how much I love that the captain is working with them. A fairly funny Middle and Modern Family and an extremely funny The Crazy Ones.

Read: It Happened in Wisconsin - (oops, didn't edit this properly!) a very good if oddball book about a barnstorming baseball team of socialists during the Great Depression, and how their politics affected their lives and loves. Poignant and moving. Gone Whalin', a very funny book about a college slacker who suddenly starts spending every other day on a whaling ship in 1867... One Hundred, Ten, and One, a great collection of science-fiction and fantasy micro-fiction and drabbles (and one slightly longer but still ultra-short).

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At 10:08 AM, December 09, 2013 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Whales in the Great Lakes? Farms in Berkeley??? Moo!!!

 
At 10:27 AM, December 09, 2013 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

Oops. My bad on the editing of the post. The whales are in New England. I think. The location of the college actually isn't given. It could be pretty much anywhere.

 

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Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Interesting

In today's print edition of the Washington Times is this oddly slanted headline:

Pentagon gives more room for deadly errors in drone strikes Warriors are told collateral damage 'must not be excessive'

What really grabbed me was that "Warriors". Really? Drone pilots are "warriors" now? But I also wanted to get the link. And look what happened on line? The headline and subheader got changed:
Obama war chiefs widen drone kill box
Lethality of collateral damage ‘must not be excessive’
A glance at the URL tells us that didn't happen as a result of two audiences or anything. Instead, someone decided to change it after it was posted.(p.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/dec/3/pentagon-gives-more-room-for-deadly-error-in-drone/). Someone must have had some second thoughts...

Perhaps, just perhaps that first headline didn't blame Obama enough, while implying that "deadly errors" actually occur?

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Tuesday, December 03, 2013

The Week in Entertainment

Well, dammit. This was meant to be scheduled not posted. And there are comments. Sooooo, part one Tuesday, and part two at the regular time....

DVD: More of The Murdoch Mysteries, which (obviously) I enjoy.

TV: The Mentalist. Okay.... They're skipping two years, so we don't actually get to see Jane enjoying life. Instead, we're going to jump right into him and Abbott fighting it out over whether he's going to become FBI chattel. Also, despite recording 76 minutes, thanks to The Good Wife's running late, thanks, I suspect, to football, my DVR still didn't manage to get the last three minutes, so I didn't know Cho was in the FBI till I found the episode on line.

Read: The Iron Clew, an amusing mystery by Phoebe Atwood Taylor. May have to find more of them. And I should perhaps mention I'm reading Doctor Zhivago and watching the 11-part Russian miniseries "inspired by (по мотивам)" the novel for a class comparing the two. I'd read the book before, but back in college for the English and about twenty years ago for the Russian, though I do adore Pasternak's lyrical style.

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At 7:39 AM, December 04, 2013 Anonymous Adrian Morgan had this to say...

Here in Australia, season six of the mentalist screened just recently, so we are one year behind you.

The final four episodes of season five were never screened. It isn't the first time broadcasts have stopped abruptly in the middle of a season.

 
At 9:23 AM, December 04, 2013 Blogger Barry Leiba had this to say...

I don't watch "The Mentalist", but I do watch (and record) "The Good Wife". I have the TiVo set to record an extra hour (two hours total), and have not missed anything yet. But this week came close, with only 10 minutes to spare.

It's too bad that TiVo can't get the actual timing, in real time.

It's also too bad that TiVo doesn't give any way to trim the junk off the recording... so, if I don't watch it right away, the file takes up double the space on the DVR that it ought to.

 

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How low? Pretty damned

Just when you think they can't get any more despicable, the Washington Times decides to blame (Obama and) food stamps for "fatter kids". Oh, and free school meals, too.

Yep. "School meals have long subverted children's health."

And, of course, there's the predictable outrage that some percentage (20% is the highest cited) of kids actually ate two breakfasts - and calls for the whole program to be shut down.

There is, of course, not one single tiny recommendation for how to feed hungry poor kids. Just calls not to.

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Monday, December 02, 2013

This and that

A few thoughts brought on by the Washington Times front page and opinion section today...

I love it that "watching football" has become a cherished holiday tradition that shopping is threatening.

Since when is someone from the Family Research Council qualified to speak on a medical issue (removing the automatic ban on blood donation for gay men)?

And then ... this headline, filed under "At least if we have anything to say about it!": Health care site 'fixed', but label of failure sticks.

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Sunday, December 01, 2013

The Week in Entertainment

Live: Two operas at the Met -Der Rosenkavalier and Rigoletto. Excellent casts in both - Hvorostovsky singing Rigoletto, with the excellent Matthew Polenzani as the Duke and Stefan Kocán as a brilliant Sparafucile; and then Martina Serafin as the Marschallin and a lovely mezzo, Anne Coote, as Octavian.  I've seen Coote several times now,  Cherubino in The Marriage of Figaro and the dectective in Two Boys. She's very gifted and versatile.

DVD: Chennai Express, which I really, really enjoyed. It's funny. Starring Shahrukh Khan and Deepika Padukone, it features a Tamil-speaking heroine and Hindi-speaking hero - and though the subtitles never tell you which language is being spoken, you catch on quickly. Jack the Giant Killer - I must say, I'd pay good money to watch the adventures of Elmont. Some episodes from season 6 of The Murdoch Mysteries. It's always interesting to see things from the Canadian point of view - like the Americans being the adversaries.

TV: The Mentalist - okay, Jane loses all his points for not realizing instantly that the woman was yet another Red John groupie. Otherwise, a satisfying enough - if long overdue - resolution. A lot still to come, obviously, and now we can see how Jane survives - and what the fallout for the team is. Almost Human - wow, that shot of John waking up, showing us his amputation stump... with a spike at least six inches long sticking out of it. Yikes. That looks like it could quite dangerous to anyone sharing his bed, or his linens, or himself if he's restless. I mean, if it doesn't get damaged being exposed like that (instead of stuck down into the leg), it must be pretty tough... and sharp and unyielding.
Kennec in bed
And he gets up at 7, but doesn't pick his partner up till after 10? (Plus, thanks so much for taking the time to show us the security guy all adorably love-struck before gunning him down, writers; it's just the kind of detail that will bring me back to your show - likeable characters immediately slaughtered, while you riff off established tropes (Die Hard, anyone?).) Sleepy Hollow - absolutely bonkers. Fun, though. Agents of SHIELD - "You stay in the car. This is a delicate situation, so I'll be taking Ward and May." "It's a delicate situation, so you're taking Warm and Fuzzy?" She does have a point.

Read: Terry Pratchett's latest, Raising Steam, definitely one of the best of the books. The rest of the Doctor Who 50th anniversary short story collection, a decidedly mixed bag. Railsea but the brilliant and never-twice-the-same China Miéville. Billed as a YA riff on Moby-Dick, it is much more than either.

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