Monthly Archives: August 2008

In Memoriam: Jeff Mackay

Jeff Mackay as Corky in Tales of the Gold Monkey

In revisiting many of the television series I loved as a kid, I’ve realized that TV production in the 1960s, ’70s, and ’80 must’ve been a very small world. Watch enough of these old shows, and you’ll see the same familiar faces over and over again. For example, part of the fun of watching The Andy Griffith Show, for me anyway, is seeing all the guest stars who also appeared on Star Trek. I don’t notice this phenomenon quite as much these days, probably, I would imagine, because the barrier between TV and movies is so much more permeable than it used to be, which means there’s a much larger talent pool to draw from, and also perhaps because the last vestiges of the old studio system — in which actors were signed to exclusive contracts and used in everything the studio made — are long gone. But back in the day, it seemed like I was constantly snapping my fingers (yes, I would actually snap my fingers!) and saying, “hey, that’s the guy from — !”

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Dancing 2008

My friend Erin posted a link to this clip earlier today, with the comment that it makes her happy every time she sees it, and “It’s just nice to know, with all the divisiveness and conflict in the world today, that there are still some things that are universal.”

I’ll be damned if watching it didn’t make me feel happy, too. See if you don’t agree:

It comes from the website of a guy named Matt, who apparently wanders the world and dances. Not a bad way to spend your life, actually. And not a bad way to start a long holiday weekend after a really long week… have a good one, kids.

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Leia Goes Wild

Enough of the political unpleasantness for now… let us consider something far more soothing to the mind… like this delightful piece of ‘net crap:

Leia goes wild!

Oh, if only this video really existed… I’d know what I’d be doing this weekend for sure!

(Incidentally, there’s an entire thread of similar stuff over at Fark. The idea was to photoshop Star Wars characters into other movies. Most are pretty lame, but a few generate a chuckle; this one is downright creepy…)

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The Barackopolis? Grow Up, People…

I really shouldn’t press my luck by writing two political posts in the same day, but I’ve been hearing a lot of nonsense about the set that’s been constructed in Mile High Stadium for Barack’s acceptance speech this evening. Seems our friends on the conservative side of the spectrum think there’s something funny about Roman-Greco-style columns. They’re making jokes about “The Temple of Obama” and “The Barackopolis.” One of John McCain’s people has reportedly issued an illustrated style guide to instruct people on how to properly wrap a toga.

Puh-lease. Most every government building in this country — including the White House, which is, of course, the goal Barack is trying to achieve — has a Neo-Classical facade. Our very system of government derives from the Greeks, something everybody should’ve learned back in middle school. I’m willing to bet that most people, whether consciously or not, simply associate columns with government and politics. There’s nothing elitist or foolish about them.

But then, I’m a liberal and as such I’m not supposed to have any idea how common Americans think, right? This grandiose display is supposed to be an illustration of Barack’s arrogance and his “cult of celebrity,” right? And the Republicans would never, ever do this sort of thing, right?

Give me a frakkin’ break. This is grade-school-level taunting of the most foolish kind, and it’s tedious bullshit like this that drains all the meaning and intelligence from our political process.

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History in the Making

My advice to you, kids, is to take a look around today as you go about whatever your business may be. Take note of the details: the weather, the quality of the light, the snatches of conversation you overhear on the streets and in the shops, the general mood of the people you encounter. Because sometime in the future, a child may ask you what it was like the day one of the major political parties first nominated a black man for the office of the President of the United States.

It doesn’t matter whether you like Barack Obama personally. It doesn’t matter if you think he’s the savior of a fading nation or all flash and no substance. It doesn’t matter how you feel about the Iraq War or whether you’re a Democrat or Republican. It doesn’t even matter, in this context, whether Barack wins the general election in November. Because the mere nomination of this man is a thing of wonder. It’s a sign that the America we were told about by those Schoolhouse Rock cartoons when we were children — the country where all people are created equal, and where anyone can go as far as their aspirations and grit will take them — is not entirely a pipe dream. It’s easy to become cynical about that vision of America as we grow up and begin to understand that there are a lot of decks stacked against us, and as life batters us around and we gradually realize just how many of our countrymen — maybe even ourselves — have feet of clay.

But today, 45 years to the day after a brave man told us about a dream that must surely have seemed impossible — or at least highly improbable — to many of those who heard his words, we’ve done something that would have made him very proud. We’ve nominated a black man to the highest office in the land. It’s something that should’ve happened long ago, but no matter. Because the breakthrough has finally been made.

You may think I’m being melodramatic or making too big a deal of this. And maybe I am, as I’m prone to do. But I’m just thrilled to be witness to this moment. So often the big events that occur during our lifetimes, the things that are destined to go into the school books, are bad: the fall of Saigon, Watergate, the assassination of John Lennon, the destruction of the space shuttles Challenger and Columbia, the Oklahoma City bombing, 9/11. Death and destruction, followed by insecurity, soul-searching, and pain. But here’s something that is good, a moving-forward moment.

I’m not one of those who think Obama is a superhero. There are aspects of his campaign and his persona that I find frustrating, and I know that a nomination is a long way from an election, and that whoever takes the Oval Office in January is going to have a hell of a job in front of them. Nevertheless, I feel great pride in and hope for my country today.

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Does It Matter If We Remember Books?

Something that’s been bothering me lately is the difficulty I have remembering books these days. If you throw out the title of something I know I’ve read, I can usually summon an impression of whether I liked or disliked it, and maybe some quality that contributed to said impression (e.g., it was pretentious, it was fun, etc.), but the specifics of plot, character, style, the writer’s voice… these details have more often than not evaporated from my brain without a trace.

It didn’t used to be this way. I used to have excellent recall, and I don’t know if the change is a consequence of getting older, or of having so many more concerns competing for my attention now that I’m a grown-up, or even because of some mundane thing like not getting enough sleep or something. Whatever the cause, I don’t like it. I mean, I really don’t like it. Recently, I tried keeping a book journal to try and help my retention. I failed utterly, giving in to procrastination and ultimately abandoning the thing after only three or so completed books. My efforts at reviewing books here on the blog haven’t been any better.

And so I’ve been struggling to accept the reality that, even though I’m more or less constantly reading, not much of that effort is sticking. It’s hard not to feel like some kind of failure, or to worry that I’m getting old and losing something that used to be effortless, or to wonder if I was just fooling myself for all those years that I thought I was such a literary person.

Apparently, I’m not the only one:

In fact, an afterglow is about all that is left to me of many – maybe most – of the books I have read, and, as age advances, less and less of what I read is retained in any solider form. The one thing I liked about Nicholson Baker’s U And I was his frank admission that, of the Updike he had read, he remembered very little indeed – and wasn’t going to look again to refresh his memory (well, that’s how I remember it anyway, and I’m certainly not going to check Baker again).

 

Does it matter how much we remember of books? Does it matter even if no memory at all is available to our conscious mind? I know I must have read large numbers of books that I don’t even remember reading – occasionally I find myself reading one, and realise I’m actually rereading… What I like to think is that the better ones (of the books I do at least remember reading) have left some beneficial trace at a level somewhere just below the conscious, retrievable memory – an afterglow, an aura, a faint fragrance… Or maybe I’m deluding myself?

Do books leave a residue somewhere in the unconscious mind? I hope they do. It’s nice to imagine so, anyway…
(Via Sullivan.)

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Liking Stephen King Novels Is Just Liking Stephen King Novels

Over the past few years, I’ve been gradually coming to terms with the fact that my tastes in media are resolutely middle-brow, at best (said epiphany being thanks in no small part to George Lucas and how often I’ve had to defend my continuing enjoyment of the Star Wars universe even after the Special Editions, the prequels, and now, of course, The Clone Wars). I now grok that I am not nearly as literary or snobby as I used to believe myself to be. I’m quite comfortable with the fact that I like pulp adventure novels more than “literature-with-a-capital-L,” and that ’80s pop-rock music moves me while jazz in all its hoity-toity incarnations leaves me cold. I can admire the paintings our culture deems “great,” but I’d rather hang a vintage pin-up or movie one-sheet on my wall. I prefer the feathered-hair-and-daggett version of Battlestar Galactica to the critically acclaimed but angsty remake. You get the idea.

Even so, I’ve often felt the need to describe the things I really love as “guilty pleasures.” To make myself look like less of a dork, I suppose. SamuraiFrog argues that I shouldn’t do that anymore:

I’ve never liked the phrase “guilty pleasure.” Why should you feel guilty about getting pleasure out of something? Look, I’m not, repeat, not saying this is true of everyone who uses the phrase, but I’m talking about the origin of the phrase “guilty pleasure.” It just comes from this snobbish, elitist place that I don’t like. The idea that you have to feel guilty if you like Keanu Reeves movies or Stephen King novels or something. Something that you’re afraid will reflect badly on you. Because, as I’ve said before, some people seem to think life is only about proving that you’re a little smarter than the next person.

 

“Guilty pleasure” is an apology. I’m sorry I like something universally considered stupid. I don’t want you to believe that I can only read at a sixth grade level and that’s why I like Stephen King. It’s a way of revealing that you care what other people think about your tastes.

Molesting children and buying blood diamonds are guilty pleasures. Liking Stephen King novels is just liking Stephen King novels.

You have to admit, the man has a point…

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Public Service Announcement

Be warned. The Girlfriend and I spotted Halloween decorations at Costco yesterday. Let me repeat that: Halloween decorations. In August. A full week before Labor Day. And not just any old rubber-bat or paper-skeleton-style Halloween decorations, but light-up inflatable lawn displays like those obnoxious things that have been so popular at Christmas time for the last couple of years. And they have an audio component, too, stereotypically spooky sounds like screams, blowing wind, creaking doors, and, of course, John Carpenter’s Halloween theme. Oy.

All Hallow’s Eve is my favorite holiday, but I don’t want to think about it this early, not before Labor Day, and ideally not before October 1st. I also don’t want to think about Christmas in September or Valentine’s Day in January. I have a theory that part of the reason why it seems like time moves so quickly these days and everybody’s so stressed and feeling like they just can’t catch up is because of crap like this. The retail industry seems to be increasingly out of sync with the actual seasons of the year, and thanks to their shopping “seasons,” we consumers are, too. You can’t buy a swimsuit in July because the back-to-school stuff is already on the shelves, and you can’t get a new coat during the deep-freeze days toward the end of January because the spring lines are coming out, and we’re expected to be worrying about Halloween before the pumpkins mature and Christmas while there’s still leaves on the trees. Basically, the sales pitches insist that we always be looking ahead instead of enjoying the now, and the time between the advance sales and the calendar seasons seems to grow wider and wider every year. It makes me crazy…

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Thirty-Eight Number Ones

Ah, Saturday morning. Blessed Saturday morning. You know how I know I’ve been spending too much time at the office lately? Because cutting my lawn — an obligatory chore I usually perform only grudgingly — was actually kind of pleasant this week.

You know what else is kind of pleasant? Making lists and doing memes. Yeah, I know I was bitching yesterday about how I’ve only been able to do memes and photos lately instead of writing real blog entries — whatever those may be — but you know what? I like doing memes, and I’m in a better mood today.

Once again, this is a meme I borrowed from SamuraiFrog, who seems to be finding all the best meme-age lately. In this one, you go to a particular website and enter your birthday to find out what the Number One song was that day, according to Billboard, for every year you’ve been alive. Commentary is apparently not required, but you know me…
One brief proviso: I haven’t paid much attention to popular music in years, not since Cobain and all those other throat-singing, flannel-clad mopes from Seattle turned rock into a dirge and hip-hop claimed ascendency on the pop charts. Which means I don’t recognize many of these titles until we get back quite a few years. Yeah, I know, I’m an old fart. For the record, I’m listening to Janis Joplin as I type this, so take from that what you will.

Anyhow:

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Good to Know

Just in case this situation ever comes up…

How long could you survive in the vacuum of space?
Created by OnePlusYou – Free Dating Sites

Of course, the accompanying text makes it sound like a most unpleasant minute and 41 seconds:

Congrats! You could survive for 1 minute 41 seconds !

 

In the first 30 seconds any fluid on the surface of your body would begin to boil due to lack of ambient pressure, this includes the saliva on your tongue and the moisture in your eyes. Your eardrums would most likely burst due to the pressure in your body trying to equalize with the vacuum outside. Unlike what some science fiction films have suggested, your body would not explode.

 

After the first 15 seconds you would lose consciousness. If you held your breath you could potentially stay alive longer but you risk pulmonary trauma. If you didn’t hold your breath you’d pass out sooner, but your lungs might have a better chance of avoiding permanent damage.

 

The pressure in your veins would rise until your heart no longer had the capacity to pump blood, at which point you’d die.

Hm. Better to just splatter into strawberry jam like the guys in Outland, I think. Messy and deeply traumatizing to my fellow astronauts, but quick…

Thanks to Phil Plait, the Bad Astronomer for pointing me to this particular time-waster.

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