Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Match Point


Go! Woody Allen does not appear in his latest film but his imprint does. With each new film, it's fascinating to see him rework his tried-and-true formula (boy meets girl/boy meets other girl/boy marries girl/boy has affair with other girl/etc.). That's not to say Match Point is formulaic. Frankly, there's enough going on to keep things humming for two hours. The cast is great and the script is engrossing. There's even a directorial stroke of genius I won't give away that involves parallel shots which is both clever and appropriate, driving home the luck vs. work theme explored.

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Oprah, puh-leeze


I am agnostic about Oprah. At least this diva uses her superpowers for good instead of evil so I'll give her that.

However, I've only watched her show twice (the 4 Seinfeld actors about a year ago and yesterday, the 4 Brokeback Mountain actors). I guess my expectations were too high but both times I grimaced at the squandered opportunity to get some substance from the rare alignment of these stars being in one place at one time. Is even one grain of insight too much to expect? Instead, we got Oprah either stating the obvious, pursuing irrelevant tangents or whipping her obsequious audience into a sycophantic "Up With People" vibe.

Garcon, may I please have some sherbet to cleanse my palette?

Friday, January 27, 2006

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire


Missing James Frey and his publisher get bitchslapped by Oprah makes me want to read the Smoking Gun account. I'm no Oprah fan but she done good turning 180 degrees on that slime. It's all about truthiness in the long run, ain't it?

Leaping to a totally different realm, I am reminded of Marcus Borg, a very worthy biblical scholar I admire. One of his recurring themes is "fact" versus "truth" as in:

Given the richness of meaning that a historical-metaphorical reading of Genesis reveals, the creation stories strike me as profoundly true. Critical thinking leads to an understanding of why the details of Genesis are as they are and also makes clear that their truth is not to be understood in literal, factual terms. Rather, their truth is expressed in the nonconceptual language of myth and metaphor, and no particular reading can exhaust their meanings. But I can hear the truth of their central claims.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

To be or not to be

George Will asks the appropriate question "what is conservative about conservatives' complaints about the court's decision?" concerning the recent Oregon case regarding assisted-suicide.

Since the 2000 election, it's obvious that even judicial conservatives will usurp federalism to advance their own judicial activist tendencies, despite the mythology of liberal activist judges. For example, to 1. defend ideology(Oregon) or 2. elect their candidate (Bush v. Gore). Cynical translation: even Supreme Court justices can be hypocrites when it suits them. That's what makes Alito's appointment so scary.

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World

Pass. You won't find it sitting through this movie either.

Monday, January 23, 2006

Godsitting

Daniel Dennett rocks in this brief Q&A.
I can't wait to read his new book.

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Dogsitting















Annie.
Smart, cute and obedient.
A good house guest.
Most important, she completely ignores the parrot.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Break Blow Burn


I finally finished Break, Blow, Burn after almost a year of picking away at it. It's that kind of book though: 43 poems followed by a few pages of explication by the inimitable Camille Paglia. I'm a fan and I love it when she's on TV (not enough).

Since I know little about poetry I can trust her judgment that these are 43 of the world's best poems. She starts with Shakespeare and ends with Joni Mitchell so that's good enough for me.

Due to my ignorance, and the fact I prefer my poetry embedded in the pop songs of folks like Bob Dylan, Neil Young and yes, Joni, I've always thought poetry on the page was either boring, pretentious or inscrutable. Therefore, this is the perfect book for a beginner. In fact, Paglia appeals here to "serious readers outside academe who were craving an introduction to literary and cultural history and its enduring artistic principles [by writing these] concise commentaries on poetry that illuminate the text but also give pleasure in themselves as pieces of writing."

This book succeeds. Here's a sample of her writing from the essay on "Kubla Khan" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The same could be said of Camille Paglia insofar as she creates her own artful writing while analyzing the art of others:

"Talented artists have the uncanny power to materialize their thoughts and fantasies, temporarily invading our minds and becalming our bodies. But great artists radically transform us, permanently repopulating our consciousness with their own obsessions."


Monday, January 16, 2006

"the fierce urgency of now"

Every MLK day I read this speech. It only takes a few minutes and its economy belies volumes of imagery and meaning. Even out of the context of 1963 and detached from the performance in front of the Lincoln Memorial, it remains inspirational.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Song of the Day



"...Can you still have any famous last words
If you're somebody nobody knows,..."
"Strawberry Wine" by Ryan Adams from 29 [Listen to track 2 in full]

Thursday, January 12, 2006

No, I told you it's a dark green Samsonite...

Yesterday:
MINA, Saudi Arabia - Muslim pilgrims tripped over luggage while hurrying to ritually stone the devil Thursday, causing a crush that trampled at least 345 people to death in the latest stampede to mar Islam's annual hajj. Saudi authorities have sought for years to ease the flow of increasingly mammoth crowds, but the tragedy underlined the difficulty in managing one of the biggest religious events in the world, which this time drew more than 2.5 million pilgrims.

100 Years from now:
Child: Tell me one more time, how did great-grandfather die?
Parent: He tripped over luggage while hurrying to ritually stone the devil.

Frying Pan, meet Fire

News about Iraq.
Opinion about Iran.

This fascinating report from Iraq tells of encouraging splits between Iraqi insurgents and Al-Queda with concomitant stories of bitter feuds and revenge violence. Hopefully, the US can exploit this but it remains to be seen. Call me naive, but if these people had water, electricity and jobs it seems like they would have less time to make mayhem.

The Iran picture is like a big chess game where pieces are hidden, no one knows the next move and Iran's Holocaust-denying leader is "cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs".

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Gangs of Four

No one told me blogging would involve homework but all is forgiven since this is from Michael. In blogspeak, I think he "tagged" me with a "meme", so here goes:

Four Jobs You've Had
1. Clothing store stock clerk (memory: HQ mandated perpetual rotation of Kenny Loggins' 8-track of Celebrate Me Home which led to temporary insanity circa 1977)
2. Baskin-Robbins (memory: abandoning my shift due to a debilitating hangover after I pledged KA the evening before at "Jungle Juice with Pure Grain" night)
3. Small printing press operator (memory: mind-numbing hours of repetitive tasks)
4. Computer industry purchasing & sales--23 years (Lloyd Braun's got nothing on me!)

Four Movies You Could Watch Over and Over
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey
2. Blade Runner
3. Annie Hall
4. Harold and Maude










Four Places You've Lived
1. Kentucky (Lexington & Louisville, ok, that's really two)
2. New Orleans (2 months out of college, I guess that counts)

Four TV Shows You Love to Watch
1. Seinfeld
2. The Office
3. Arrested Development
4. Scrubs

Four Places You've Been on Vacation
1. Bahamas (Windjammer cruise)
2. Grand Cayman/Ocho Rios/Cozumel (Carnival cruise)
3. Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
4. Cape Cod--Provincetown

Four Blogs You Read Daily
1. Daily Dish (Andrew Sullivan)
2. Boblog (Bob Mould)
3. Towleroad (Andy Towle)
4. Huffington Post (Arianna plus many others)


Four of Your Favorite Foods
1. Kit Kat bars - regular
2. Kit Kat bars - the mocha version (limited edition)
3. Kit Kat bars - the large Big Kat version
4. Kit Kat bars - bite size for the movies






Four Albums You Can't Live Without, Lately
1. Ryan Adams - Cold Roses
2. Joni Mitchell - Songs of a Prairie Girl (collection)
3. Bruce Springsteen - Devils and Dust
4. Sonic Youth - Washing Machine











Four Vehicles You've Owned
1. Mustang
2. Corolla
3. RX-7
4. Camry

Monday, January 09, 2006

6 x 5 4 Alito

The NYT has a fascinating set of 30 questions suggested by op-ed contributors. My favorite:

The right of judicial review - the right of courts to declare duly enacted laws unconstitutional - is not explicitly granted in the Constitution, but was proclaimed (some would say fabricated) by John Marshall in Marbury v. Madison. One objection to judicial review has been that it is undemocratic because the decisions of democratically elected officials are overturned by jurists who have been appointed for life and who are, therefore, unaccountable to the judgments and desires of their fellow citizens. Do you think that judicial review can be defended and justified in the face of this objection? Is the practice of judicial review a violation of the separation of powers? Are judicial review and judicial restraint reconcilable or are they antithetical?

Six legal minds contribute five questions they would ask Supreme Court nominee Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr.
Finality and Fallibility by Leonard A. Leo
Your Beliefs, Your Decisions by Cheryl D. Mills
Secrets Hidden in the Text by Kenji Yoshino
Is America at War? by John Yoo
Back to Bush v. Gore by Scott Turow
A Constitution of Contradictions by Stanley Fish

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

2005

Album of 2005: Z by My Morning Jacket

Movie of 2005: Brokeback Mountain

Song of 2005: Knot Comes Loose by My Morning Jacket

Concert of 2005: Lucinda Williams, Brown Theater, Louisville, KY, 9/29



Ice Cream of 2005: Dulce de Leche Caramel
by Haagen Dazs (even the 1/2 fat version is transplendent)




Artist of 2005: Ryan Adams (He's prolific and ambitious; it works.)

Obit of 2005: Robert Funk, religious scholar, ultimate anti-fundamentalist, founder of the Jesus Seminar. I had the honor of meeting him briefly a couple of times. Book recommendation: Honest to Jesus

Book of 2005: A Short History of Nearly Everything

DVD of 2005: Wonderfalls (See below.)

TV of 2005: The Office

Biggest TV disappointment of 2005: Desperate Housewives (How much worse can this show get? It's godawful. Yet, I keep watching.)

Birthdays of 2005:
1. 100th birthday of our dear Fran
2. 100th birthday of Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity

"Give him heart"


One of the highlights of the holidays was watching all 13 episodes of Wonderfalls. Unfortunately, those are the only episodes available since the innovative show was canceled a couple of years ago after just four episodes aired. Now on DVD, it's actually heartwarming to know something this creative, well-written, funny and poignant made it to network television in the first place. I rank it up there with all-time TV greats like Seinfeld and Sex and the City. It has heart.

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Miscellaneous


Larry David won't see Brokeback Mountain. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

Olivia Judson is "proud to be part of the riot of nature."

Bill Maher is "on the page with this technology thing."

Steve Martin skewers Bill O'Lielly.