Have a look at this eye-popping stuff from the Hubble Telescope. It may take a short while to load, but it’s worth the wait. The combination of the moving images and the music by Australian Web designer Richard Pree evinces a feeling of otherworldliness rivaling anything by Stanley Kubrick. Some people say the images resemble abstract paintings. […]
91 YEARS YOUNG
Leave it to Studs Terkel to put things in perspective. “Colin Powell, we know, is the African-American butler to the new Bertie Wooster,” he tells Salon in an interview about his latest book, “Hope Dies Last: Keeping Faith in Difficult Times.” Here’s the full quotation and the context: You notice I dedicate the book to a […]
THE WEAK STUFF
What’s wrong with this picture? Roy Disney’s resignation from the board of the Walt Disney Company was big news yesterday. Today, Sharon Waxman, in a follow-up in The New York Times, reports: “Roy Disney’s parting words to the company his uncle built were harsh, but few resonated more painfully than the charge that the Walt […]
DER GROPE MEETS
THE UNINDICTED CO-CONSPIRATOR
The time was 1991. The place was the Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, Calif. Der Gropenfuhrer helicoptered in from the set of the first “Terminator” sequel. The Unindicted Co-Conspirator was star struck. It was a meeting of minds. “I’m a Republican because of Richard Nixon,” Der Grope proclaimed. Is he “a Nixon Republican at heart?” Sandy […]
JUST SO WE DON’T FORGET
It yesterday’s news, I know, but worth a reminder: Donald Rumsfeld won < EM>“Foot in Mouth” honors from Britain’s Plain English Campaign for most baffling comment by a public figure, defeating Der Grope for the booby prize. In case you don’t recall, here’s Rumsfeld’s winning remark: “Reports that say something hasn’t happened are always interesting […]
MUGS’ PRIMER
No movies for me over the big L-tryptophanic weekend. I spent it luxuriating in the novels of Eric Ambler, the daddy of all thriller writers. Never a huge fan of genre fiction, I’d read some of the mystery and spy classics by the usual suspects — Hammett, Chandler, le Carré, Forsythe, Leonard and a few others — […]
THE BOLD AND THE BOLDER
Our Maximum Leader’s secret mission to Iraq, described as bold even by some of his critics, had all the trappings of a novelty act. Anyone who believes for a minute that the White House arranged it for the troops is living on another planet. The lights-out landing, Our Maximum Leader in the cockpit of Air […]
IMBABAZI THANKSGIVING
Excellent word comes from ABC News, if it holds. A report about Frederick, the Imbabazi Orphanage artist and photographer, is scheduled for Thanksgiving on “PrimeTime Thursday” (10 p.m. ET, 9 p.m. CT). His hands were amputated during the Rwanda genocide of 1994 and have since been replaced by prosthetics with help from supporters of the […]
NO LIMITS
Jeannette Walls, the gossip columnist for MSNBC.com, complained yesterday in her newsletter that there were “nine camera crews from Japan alone” covering Michael Jackson’s arrest in handcuffs. I wonder if her own editors ever read her newsletter. MSNBC.com’s entertainment section gave the Japanese a run for their money with eight stories in a row: “Jackson […]
LEGAL BEAGLES
I’ve overlooked the Stella Awards for too long. There have been so many bogus stories about them on the Web that I simply dismissed them. The Stella Awards, if you don’t know, are named after 79-year-old Stella Liebeck, who spilled coffee on herself and successfully sued McDonald’s in 1992. She won $200,000 in compensatory damages (later […]
EYE OPENER
Magic for a Monday morning: While you’re finishing your coffee, move your mouse over the screen here and here and here. Now it’s time to go to work. What a shame. EAR OPENER This morning also brings news of Ray Kurzweil‘s latest invention: the cybernetic poet, a software program he regards as an aid to […]
REAL LANGUAGE
“Curse of Youth,” an interesting take on those newspaper tabs for tots, provides a shorthand clue to success: “If you want your newspaper to appeal to young people, you must be willing to print the word ‘fuck.’” Vulgar but true, and here’s the reason: Young people want the world as they see it: without filters. […]
FAKE LANGUAGE
One thing about the upcoming Biennale de Paris seems certain. It’s not going to score points with English speakers. Here’s what the latest biennale bulletin has to say, in so-called English translation, about the theme and context of the 2004 exhibition: The BDP is an event favorising an art dynamic with the goal to reveal […]
READING MATTER
Late on a Friday afternoon is not the best time to bring this up. Everybody’s probably gone or about to be gone for the weekend. But if you’re still around and online you’ve got to read “The Vanishing Case for War” by Thomas Powers in the current issue of The New York Review of Books. […]
WELCOMING THE PRESIDENT
The British sure know how to welcome a guest, especially when it’s Gee Dubya Shrub on a state visit. Let’s not count the fountain water stained red in Trafalgar Square; it’s the scribblers — wise-asses, poets, professors, novelists and the cream of the theater — whose tone set the example. Dear Jorge, Look out! Behind […]
REMEMBERING
It’s a week of extraordinary commemorations. Today’s big news is the unveiling later this morning of finalists in the 9/11 Memorial Design competition. Families of 9/11 victims saw the designs last night in a preview at the Winter Garden across the street from Ground Zero, where a public exhibition of the designs begins today. Check […]
FUN AND GAME
Several newspapers around the country have started bite-sized tabs for readers who are either still learning to read or have no time to digest the news in larger bites. The Dallas Morning News recently bought into the tabs-for-dummies trend with Quick, which targets what it calls “time-starved” young readers. In fact, it’s not the first Quick to […]