Monthly Archives: September 2008

Links 9.6.08

A Fela Kuti musical… Hmmmmm, not sure about this one…

This video makes me very angry. Be sure to watch to the end. (via DJA)

Clive Barker on PG-13 horror:
“It’s one of the most disgusting developments in the last few years. The whole notion of a PG-13 horror movie to me is a contradiction in terms. It’s like having a XXX Disney picture. It doesn’t work.”

According to a new study I have high self-esteem, I’m creative, I’m introverted, not gentle, I have low self-esteem, I’m not at ease, not hard-working, not creative, etc. (thanks, C)

Is anyone else disgusted with CNN.com’s new “Living” section? It’s like they’ve created their own little US Weekly section of their website. C’mon guys, you’re diluting your brand. And this is one of the most awkward, poorly-written pieces of fluff I’ve read in a while.

The most popular very-wrong reason to have sex, revenge sex never ends well.

Hooking up with his best friend because you’re angry at your boyfriend will get you nowhere. If you do manage to break up their friendship, then you’re stuck with an untrustworthy dude (if he did it to him, he’ll do it to you).

Even worse, there’s always the (strong) possibility that he went right back and told his buddy and the two of them are now comparing notes over high-fives and hot wings.

Try reading some of that out loud. Trust me, you’ll feel like a douche-bag, try it.

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The Daily Show rocks.

Watch this and then post it yourself or send it to as many people as you can.

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RNC – The Palin Speech, etc.

Palin’s performance last night was impressive and surprising. She knows how to deliver a speech, even though she didn’t write the speech, and it wasn’t even written for her. Yes, it was mean-spirited, bitterly partisan, and misleading, but that’s just par for the course for the Republicans. I think she has a future in politics, whether we like it or not.

Here it is:

(embed may not show up in all RSS readers)

Something else struck me about the speech. Allow me a digression, if you please. Ok, so the other night I was at the bar with some friends after a little recording. There was a TV in my line-of-sight showing baseball so I was casually watching it. I am completely indifferent to sports, so when I find myself watching them my mind often wanders. It seems that the two most Americana sports are baseball and football. When you think back to the “Golden Age” of American conservative values, the ’50s, images of salted peanuts at baseball games and fight-songs at football games are readily conjured. The one thing both of these games have in common is incessant interruptions, something basketball, with its more urban/metropolitan appeal, is relatively free of. These sports tend to cater to our shortened attention spans, our preference for intense action in short bursts.

I’ve noticed a trend evolving with every successive state of the union that Bush has given. The length of time between applause shortens and the speech is increasingly divided into small chunks, some even a sentence long. This is mainly because Bush is a terrible public speaker, so the tactful Republican congress did what they could to make it easier on him. But this trend has solidified into a full-fledged practice. Republicans were determined for Palin to come off a success last night, so the Bush treatment was applied, consciously or not.

Perhaps ironically, I would argue that this trend, and the aforementioned tradition in sports, speaks to the American spirit against passivity. I would guess that most viewers of these sports would prefer to watch in the company of others, because the constant interruptions give them a chance to chat about the game with their friends, or refill the salsa in their nacho hat or whatever; it gives them moments of interactivity and individuality, no matter how superficial. The fractured Bush-style speech gives the audience periodic moments of emotional release, no matter how banal and tragic it may seem to someone on the outside. A common cynical and condescending view is that these people are just “sheeple” baaa-ing their approval to their masters. But is the herd mentality of conventioneers chanting “Drill Baby Drill!” really so much more reprehensible than the herd mentality of the Rage Against the Machine audience chanting “Fuck you I won’t do what you tell me!“? Sure, one makes me feel ill and one makes me feel inspired, but I have to wonder how much of my own reaction is simply bias.

That said, Palin’s speech was pure pop sensationalism. It was fluff. The deepest it ever got was the increasingly prevalent inspiration-on-a-stick formula of “The X of Y, rather than the Y of X”. This is something I’ve been hearing more and more of this season. Here’s Palin’s:

In politics, there are some candidates who use change to promote their careers.

And then there are those, like John McCain, who use their careers to promote change.

Bill Clinton had one the other day that, I’ll admit, I kinda fawned over:

People the world over have always been more impressed by the power of our example than by the example of our power.

I heard that formula like 3 or 4 different times last night and it killed every time. Jesus, we’re suckers aren’t we?

Here’s some of the text from her speech, so you can see a visual representation of the soundbitiness (new word I just invented) I was talking about. If you didn’t watch/hear the speech, imagine a five to fifteen second pause between each line break, as the audience shrieked their affection.

But with the support of the citizens of Alaska, we shook things up.

And in short order we put the government of our state back on the side of the people.

I came to office promising major ethics reform, to end the culture of self-dealing. And today, that ethics reform is the law.

While I was at it, I got rid of a few things in the governor’s office that I didn’t believe our citizens should have to pay for.

That luxury jet was over the top. I put it on eBay.

I also drive myself to work.

And I thought we could muddle through without the governor’s personal chef – although I’ve got to admit that sometimes my kids sure miss her. I came to office promising to control spending – by request if possible and by veto if necessary.

Senator McCain also promises to use the power of veto in defense of the public interest – and as a chief executive, I can assure you it works.

Our state budget is under control.

We have a surplus.

And I have protected the taxpayers by vetoing wasteful spending: nearly half a billion dollars in vetoes.

I suspended the state fuel tax, and championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by Congress.

I told the Congress “thanks, but no thanks,” for that Bridge to Nowhere.

Yeah, except you were for it.

Anyway to sum up, as creepy as it was during the Obama speech when the camera would turn to his starry-eyed supporters listening in rapturous silence; it was hella more creepy to watch the RNC audiences spaz out and jump to their feet at the completion of every sentence as if Palin’s talk of budget surpluses were her announcing that they all had keys to new cars under their fucking seats.

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Watching the RNC

Michael Steele is leading the floor on a chant of “Drill Baby Drill! Drill Baby Drill!” Oy… This cheery rejoicing of an energy source that is doomed to run out essentially typifies the surreal mindset of most in the Republican Party.

In fact I would say that the theme of this convention is Cognitive Dissonance:

They are embracing the big-government neo-conservative policies of the last 8 years while screaming for government ‘out of our lives’.

They are describing McCain’s torture in gruesome detail while refusing to admit that the same tactics when employed by our own government is torture at all.

Romney is decrying “Big Brother” liberalism, without a reference to the surveillance program started by the Bush administration.

I could keep going but I’ll just say this: this is a party that is dying in its current form, but they are going down fighting. I know Obama is looking to work with these people, but good luck man. If anyone could do it it’s Obama I guess, but I’m looking forward to seeing how on earth he attempts to do this.

PS. Romney is fucking crazy. You’ll be seeing some clips from his speech on the news I bet.

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A Lesson for Americans

Wow, I just gained a lot of respect for soccer hooligans. Not that they were especially noble or anything, but when do you ever see people in this country stand up for their abused peers? I would have loved to see the people witnessing this employing the same response.

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The right to fire those who don’t do their job

In this LA Times piece Crispin Sartwell makes a valid point about the logic behind the right of health care workers to refuse to perform services that violate their moral or religious beliefs.

[Thoreau] argued that although I am under no obligation to try to fix all injustices, I am under something like an absolute obligation to not push forward things that I regard as unjust, to not participate in things I regard as wrong or gratuitously hurtful. Some doctors and nurses regard abortion in precisely this way, taught so by their religion or by their experiences. I don’t happen to agree with them, but the objection is clear and principled, and it ought to be respected.

The idea that, in assuming some function — some career, for instance — I resign my conscience to the institution or to the state is perhaps the single most pernicious notion in human history. It is at the heart of the wars and genocides of this century and the last. It is the first — the only — defense in any crimes-against-humanity trial: I was just doing my job; I was just obeying orders.

I agree with the right of the individual to refuse to perform these services. But the thing is, I also agree with the right of their employers to fire their asses. If you’re a high school biology teacher who happens to be a Creationist and you refuse to teach evolution, go nuts, but you are putting your job on the line and you know it. I mean, if there’s a slippery-slope issue it’s this one. Allowing federal protections to these employees opens the door to all kinds of other possible nightmares. Personally, I think that anti-depressants are way over-prescribed. That is my personal belief. I’m sure there are many others, likely many pharmacists, who have similar beliefs. Would these pharmacists now have the right to deny Paxil to patients? I can think of a dozen other scenarios as well.

Of course, my logic leaves open the door that a sympathetic business could allow or even encourage their employees to do this. I can easily see smaller businesses in conservative states doing this. But I’m also against using federal laws to force pharmacists to prescribe medication that are against their personal beliefs. I may completely disagree with them, but I also feel it is the right of a business owner to sell only those products he wishes to sell. It may suck to live in your small town in South Dakota, but so be it.

By the way, I’m pretty sure this same debate was essentially already covered in Clerks:

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Morning Links 9.2.08

Off to catch a matinee of Wall-E with Jack (second time for both of us!). Here are some links of stuff I’ve been wanting to post:

Takashi Miike’s latest, Sukiyaki Western Django is playing this week at the Landmark Sunshine Theater. It’s an adaptation of Leone’s Fistful of Dollars, which itself is an adaptation of Kurosawa’s Yojimbo. Looks awesome, if you can sit through Japanese actors speaking English essentially phonetically.

Henry Darger, everyone’s favorite outsider artist, has an exhibit at the American Folk Art Museum this month. The exhibit will feature excerpts from Darger’s 15,000 page graphic novel, The Story of the Vivian Girls, in what is Known as the Realms of the Unreal, of the Glandeco-Angelinnian War Storm, Caused by the Child Slave Rebellion. Runs through the 21st of September.

Fuck Comcast. I downloaded 10 movies last night in protest.

I’ve been getting my geek on with Yahoo Pipes recently. Here’s a Lifehacker feed I made with all of the Windows-only posts filtered out. Power to the people baby.

The Alien Quadrilogy for 26 bucks!

I really don’t get how the ‘trouble-making’ protesters are always labeled “anarchists”. Also, for the record, as annoying as some of these protesters can be, I will always side with a trendy pierced-up asshole in a face scarf over a paramilitary storm trooper-looking asshole spraying teargas and mace into peoples’ faces. Here’s some horribly biased coverage.

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Maximizing My Personal Bandwidth

It’s 12:30am. I’m sitting on my couch, eating Dinty Moore, watching Will and Grace on TV, and illegally downloading experimental Japanese films. I can’t tell if this means my life sucks or my life is great.

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Amy Goodman Arrested at the RNC

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