11 April 2009
03 April 2009
Stuck in an elevator with Murray Gell-Mann
Murray Gell-Mann
The NYT did a profile last weekend on Freeman Dyson, which remind me of the crush I had on that whole crowd of midcentury white men – Dyson, Gell-Mann, Oppenheimer, Hans Bethe, Niels Bohr, of course Einstein and Feynman. Brilliant to a man, they made a sort of secret fraternity, which peaked (in secrecy and importance) with the MAnhattan Prpject but also pre- and post-dated it; if you read a memoir by any one of them, every six months they seem to be keeping each other's company in meetings at Caltech and MIT.
Anyway, I'm not qualified to actually understand their scientific work, but I've always had a fantasy that if I could spend a couple of hours with any one of them, it would be like touching the godhead. And that's about one bout of stuck-elevator time.
Of course, they're all ninety, so if I was really stuck in an elevator for them, I'd spend all of my time fanning them and feeding them salt tablets for their hypertension.
31 March 2009
TV funhouse
Grab a hold of a Holdengräber
I'm in Arlington for three days, on the day job, attending the annual Computers In Libraries convention. This morning's keynote speech was an interview with the NYPL's Paul Holdengräber; while I'm not sure I learned anything about computers, he dropped a few mots bon enough to jot down (all paraphrased from my legal pad; the thing was streamed, and is probably online somewhere if you want to look):
~~~~~~~~~~
I don't think it's a bad thing to feel small, walking up the steps of the NYPL between Patience and Fortitude. I don't think it's a bad thing, in the library, to feel the weight of five, ten, fifteen thousand years' collected knowledge, the weight of 52 million books, which no one in one life could ever read. But then you have to get past it.
~~~~~~~~~~
Paul's mom's maxim about being a good listener: "There's a reason you have two ears and one mouth."
~~~~~~~~~~
Digression is the sunshine of narrative.
~~~~~~~~~~
(Regarding the role of library higher-ups: ) The books are there already, okay? They are there. I have to make people desire them. And that's what I do: generate desire.
~~~~~~~~~~
Bonus thought from an excerpt of Malcom Gladwell at the NYPL, speaking at a thing Holdengräber curated, and expressing something I've often tried to say, but with much more pith: Let's reverse it for a minute. Let's imagine we live in a world with computers, and iPods, but no paper. And I say, I've come up with this great new technology called paper. It's cheap, and it's easy to use, and it's durable if handled correctly, and it works without electricity. And you'd say, wow, that's a great idea!
Realpolitik
Do you remember Lawrence?
Oh, yes.
And he's in dog heaven now?
No, he's in the ground.
12 September 2008
What I've been up to
13 June 2008
Hey, Bo Diddley
ANYWAY, I think it's best summed up by the YouTube tags associated with it:
Tags:
Bo Diddley Amazing Wow best video ever awesome greatest guitar live
29 May 2008
Metatextual efficiency expert
This is one step closer to having a little robot version of me living inside my head, barking orders at myself and threatening to get out the shock collar. Which, to be honest, is where I suspect I'm really heading.
24 May 2008
20 May 2008
Good dog unhappy man
Lawrence the dog died in my arms this morning, which will surprise a lot of close-but-distant friends, because he was smart and strong. As a friend remarked a few weeks ago when I mentioned that the dog was seriously ill, “That seems like the kind of dog that you’d want to be lost in the woods with, if you had to be lost in the woods.”
The pup endured two separate bouts with Lyme disease. The first time, in summer 2007, the treatment almost killed him, but he finally rebounded nicely; when he got it again (again! vet’s blood tests confirm that he was clear in the interim), it went straight to his kidneys. With no working tool to screen out waste, the uric acid backed up into his bloodstream; full of poison, he lost all his appetite, got weaker and skinnier. For a month he’s been on K/D, and I’ve been administering fluids via an IV, and that probably bought us a month.
It was a pleasure going through all the photographs that I’ve posted here, because his weight and health have been so precarious for the last few months, I had sort of forgotten what a strong, smart buoyant presence he was for most of the five-plus years that I had with him. He was so lean that dog run confederates in the city used to speculate that one of his anonymous parents might have been a greyhound. I don’t suspect that that was true, but when I watched him take off after those lacrosse balls, I was impressed – the way you’re impressed by a well-designed industrial machine.
I plan to write more later, and maybe I will, or maybe I’ll spare you. How many times do you need to read Marley & Me? Lawrence was Brian’s fourth-favorite dog, and he was my favorite dog. He has slept in my bed for the last two thousand consecutive nights, and I’m going to miss him tonight.
16 May 2008
errant art
Harper's has their entire (160-year) history online and searchable, and free to subscribers, and maybe something like that is the future of print v. web. Because a subscription to Harper's only costs me about $15 a year, and though I've grown frustrated as, during the Bush presidency, it's grown into less of a thinking polyglot journal and more of an educated liberal/progressive/anarchist/paranoid rag, it remains good enough to buy, and this isn't the first time that I've gone online looking for something I read ten years ago. But what I want to actually say about that is: the end product is scans of the actual magazine pages, which have been scanned and OCRd to be searchable. The pages are big image files, so load somewhat slowly, so when you want to read something, you copy the text out and paste it somewhere else as straight ASCII data. And this works great for the bulk of the article, but where text is used as a graphic element – big, small, italics, what have you, in the interest of laying out the page or, in this case, the author bios – that ASCII data sometimes has a hard time keeping up, and what results are lovely little word poems. I've attached four.
I'll probably copy this into a blog post, since I never update those damn things, so no one ever reads them. The only thing I ever do when I feel like writing something is send email to Robin.




Labels: abortion in print in 1992
30 March 2008
Another ten percent is ketchup

All the people who say this critical darling (above) is just a laundry list of statistics alternating with anecdotes about the author's 97-year-old father: yeah, that's true, but as usual, what matters is how you do it, and Shields is falling with style. It's a marvelous read.
The statistic, though, that got me up out of my chair, walking around the house barking it at everyone (including the confused four-year-old Boy, who didn't deserve that): according to Shields, one-fourth of all the vegetables consumed in the United States are French fries.
Does that leave you as gobsmacked as it does me? Why or why not? Discuss.

Labels: French fries
29 March 2008
Radio nincompoop: Finally, sled pie.

Some things, when you get to heaven, you can measure in terms of Actual Time Spent (washing cars, 164h; attending births, 22h). Other things are so pervasive and enormous, you measure them as Percentage of Life Spent (sleeping, 31%; commuting / work-related travel, 4.5%). For a little while there, "making mix tapes" was threatening to move from my list A into my list B.
In high school, it makes sense to make mixtapes for girlfriends. In college, it's still sweet. When you're 35 years old, and you just can't decide whether the next song should come in on the two or the four, and you're auditioning it this way and then that way, then playing the entire previous song trying to figure it out ... as Dennis Miller once said, "you've probably made a serious vocational error somewhere along the line."
So here you go. For best results, iTunes. And to all those who are too cool for Bruce Springsteen, I offer: When a man is tired of Rosalita, he is tired of life.
Labels: Radio nincompoop
27 March 2008
18 February 2008
Portrait of the Gonzo journalist as a swimming fool: who knew?

All quotes from Gonzo [Wenner / Seymour], which is overall better than you've heard; like most "oral biographies" I've seen (especially Plimpton's Capote thing from a decade or so ago), its primary fault is rhetorical flab.
Who knew that the good doctor was so crazy for chlorinated water?
Richard Goodwin: But at Hickory Hill, i'd wake up and look out the window, and there would be Hunter in the swimming pool. I found out later that Ethel (Kennedy) was a little worried about Hunter's presence around the kids – but mostly he just swam. [p189]
Ralph Steadman: On the night of the fight [Ali-Frazier in Zaire], Hunter had a big bag of marijuana, and he took a bottle of Glenfiddich I had bought him down to the pool with a bucket of ice nd the bag, threw the marijuana into the pool ... and dived in and just hung by the side of the pool, smoking and drinking and loving the whole meaningless nature of it. [p 191]
Patti Stranahan: ...we used to let him swim in our pool every night. He was quiet, and he could do whatever he needed to. [p 275]
Marilyn Manson: ...he really, really wanted to come to my hous eto get in my swimming pool, which I had told him was as hot as a Jacuzzi. [p 407]
16 January 2008
Felicitous adjacence
My entire day around the house is accompanied by iTunes' Party Shuffle function pulling from a list of about 12,000 songs. It just chugs through them, like the big custom jukebox that it is, playing Curtis Mayfield after Charles Mingus after Frank Zappa, never tiring or asking me to turn it off (both of which services the wife provides in spades). And occasionally, just like all those little monkeys crouched tirelessly over their little typewriters, it comes up with a segue that merits a headline.
I was served both of these sequences today.
A:
The Residents: In between dreams
Bill Frisell Quartet: Stand up, sit down
Violent Femmes: Jesus walking on the waterB:
Big Star: Holocaust
Sondre Lerche: It's our job
John Wesley Harding: I can tell (when you're telling lies)
28 December 2007
Give 'em the evil look, son.
Parents have trained baby to "give 'em the evil look" on command.
12 December 2007
High praise: The correct ingredients of bottom

In the event that I ever die, I want you to volunteer to write my eulogy. And what I want you to do is just plagiarize this section of Sly Stone's liner notes from Dance To The Music, plugging my name in for Larry Graham's:
09 December 2007
Triborough Bridgecam

A street sign that reads FDR DR n one side and TRIBORO BR on the other.
Let's be clear, for our nonnative friends, that the FDR drive is a ten-mile-long, six lane highway bracketing the east side of Manhattan, and that the scale of the Triborough Bridge can be discerned from its moniker: it's not even a thing, it's several things, it's a series of bridges that, taken collectively, spans Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx. It must weigh, I don't know, a million tons.
Let's be clear: if you ever got close enough to this sign, on foot, that it could do you any good by telling you where you were, you would be dead.
Erie Hotelcam

What's a little extra apostrophe? It's not cast in iron, out there for all the world to see.
Labels: misusage
Borderscam

A juvenile sense of humor is a terrible thing to waste.
Labels: adbusters
UPS Storecam
Hyphenmania!
Makes you wonder whether a corporate memo mentioned the importance of getting the Thank-Yous out on deadline.
You're-welcome, Citizen-Murphy! Come-again!
Labels: adbusters, hyphenmania, misusage
16 October 2007
A clever formulation that would be the perfect title for a fact sheet about fatal disease except that it's so viciously insensitive, it pains even me
04 October 2007
all this stuff
And I know, it's been a while.
It'll be a while longer, terribly busy.
As are we all, I suppose.
And yet.
There's all this stuff, you see.
(Haiku formatting mine.)
*The typo was accidental at first, but was also perfect, though not, I assure you, true.
31 July 2007
Meanwhile, around the corner, Hungary lurked

The Alexandria Link wasn't on my radar before Dad gave me a copy for my birthday; it was clearly built from a Da Vinci Code Erector set, from the terse, cliffhanger-rich, 700-word paragraphs to the Article + Historic Term + 4-Letter Noun title kit. And I think that's terrific. I think one or two books a year that kick off with their bibliophilic protagonists defenestrating burning buildings is the right amount. (I also enjoyed the current Bruce Willis vehicle, and I ate lunch at McDonald's last Saturday.) Other books that I didn't think were as good at doing whatever this newly hatched genre does, exactly, include this, this and – stinko! - this.
A bunch of folks fussier than I have attacked Brown's book for its less-than-deathless prose; it never much bothers me in a thing like this, because I figure every metaphor is just another obstacle between you and the next exploding car. In fact, in the sixty pages I read last night, I only found one sentence that I'd nominate as a howler. From page 51:
Sweden loomed on the horizon.
So, via American Heritage: did the northern nation appear as a threatening, shadowy form, or did it seem about to occur?
Labels: inane critical rambling
30 June 2007
Is it live, or is it Dogmental?
---- ---- ----
This blog's title was chosen ironically; I knew when I opened up this wing of the manse that I wouldn't have the energy to post at more than one place regularly. I'm putting this notice up as a teaser for you / threat for me that within a
07 March 2007
Zap!
New new newspeak!
Labels: neologisms
Words, words, words
This thought brought to you by Van Halen's "Little Guitars."
(Note: this is not the same as treasuring art because it is bad, viz. "Run for cover lover;" "Hello Lucille are you a lesbian."
Another neologism:
The work you bought out of curiosity because, although you don't consider yourself a completist per se, you've got everything else the guy ever produced, so doesn't it have to be at least interesting?
This thought brought to you by my ownership of GBH and Il sogno.
(Answer to the above rhetorical question: No.)
Labels: neologisms
15 February 2007
Geek wanted
So the next question, for the self-loathing exhibitionist: how do I make this a little streaming feed that you can all leave on while you're at work? Because I'm a little short on Wu-Tang and a little long on Zappa, but the fact remains, your life would be terrifically improved by witnessing the sequence Let's go away
for a while - Beach Boys / Cotton fields - Pogues / It's your thing - cold Grits / Hotel California - Gipsy Kings.
05 February 2007
Baby steps
GLASS HALF EMPTY: I'm still having dreams that feature superheroes.
GLASS HALF FULL: I've moved past the point where I might wonder aloud, in my dream, at the incongruity of a DC hero seeking a Marvel hero.







