Tommy Ramone died: They Might Be Giants' John Flansburgh pays tribute to longest living member of The Ramones.
Not that I ever heard more than a handful of their songs, I guess*, but the oddness of The Ramones and their place is music is well discussed by one of the John's in They Might be Giants on Slate.
*Update: Actually, I think I tell a lie. I'm pretty sure I bought a late album of theirs on vinyl, listened to it once or twice, and that was it. I liked one or two of their songs on Rage, though.
Monday, July 14, 2014
Sunday, July 13, 2014
An operation that may be a bit less popular soon
Vasectomy raises risk of lethal prostate cancer, study shows | Society | theguardian.com
From the report:
From the report:
Harvard scientists analysed the medical records of nearly 50,000 men
and found that those who had the operation were 10% more likely to be
diagnosed with the disease.
The study revealed a stronger link with the most serious forms of prostate cancer,As the article goes on to note, the rate of increased risk amongst men who have had the snip is not exactly dramatic, but it's still pretty bad PR for an operation that I suspect has peaked in popularity. (Just taking a guess on that point.)
with rates of advanced or lethal disease rising by 20% in men who had
the procedure. The danger seemed to be highest among men who had a
vasectomy before the age of 38.
The caffeine of war
How Coffee Fueled the Civil War - NYTimes.com
Here's something a bit out of the blue: a great read about the huge importance of coffee to the soldiers in the American Civil War. For example:
Although these sets were made of plastic, I have never since seen ones that were of similar detail, perhaps short of what you can buy and paint in modeller's shops in those boxes where you only get 6 or so in a tiny set. (I can't remember how many figures we had in ours: I would guess a good 30 to 40 figures on each side, together with equipment. The pieces were not designed for painting - they were able to be used just as they were, and a human figure was perhaps 3 cm high. You sometimes see really ultra low quality soldier sets of similar size in KMart or discount variety stores, but they are absolute rubbish compared to the quality in the sets I'm talking about.)
Anyhow, I remember that the Civil War set included little pieces of camp cooking equipment, which included something that did look like a coffee pot. So, this is the reason why, and it was indeed accurate.
PS: it also brings up one of those fascinating odd points about the US - obviously, coffee has long been important to Americans, but it seems almost universally agreed by Australians and Europeans who visit there that the "standard" version of coffee they now consume is pretty bad compared to what we have after developing a "coffee culture" in the space of only about the last 30 to 40 years. Did their making do with coffee brewed from whatever water was available in a field in the Civil War permanently degrade their taste for it? Just wondering. (And a disclaimer - I am not really a coffee snob, and I did not have a coffee habit
when I was last there over 20 years ago. So maybe it is just coffee snobbery I am hearing - but the complaint does seem so common, I assume there is something to it.)
Here's something a bit out of the blue: a great read about the huge importance of coffee to the soldiers in the American Civil War. For example:
The Union Army encouraged this love, issuing soldiers roughly 36 poundsThis actually explains something. As a child, I had a quite nicely detailed soldier set of the Civil War. It came from my eldest sister, who had married an American. Actually it might have been my brother's set, as there was also a set of American World War 2 soldiers fighting the Japanese, if I recall correctly, and maybe we had one set each. In any event, I ended up playing with both sets, although it is possible that my brother eventually took them with him. He retained a fondness for setting up war scenes with soldiers well into his marriage!
of coffee each year. Men ground the beans themselves (some carbines even
had built-in grinders) and brewed it in little pots called muckets.
They spent much of their downtime discussing the quality of that
morning’s brew. Reading their diaries, one can sense the delight (and
addiction) as troops gushed about a “delicious cup of black,” or fumed
about “wishy-washy coffee.” Escaped slaves who joined Union Army camps
could always find work as cooks if they were good at “settling” the
coffee – getting the grounds to sink to the bottom of the unfiltered
muckets.
Although these sets were made of plastic, I have never since seen ones that were of similar detail, perhaps short of what you can buy and paint in modeller's shops in those boxes where you only get 6 or so in a tiny set. (I can't remember how many figures we had in ours: I would guess a good 30 to 40 figures on each side, together with equipment. The pieces were not designed for painting - they were able to be used just as they were, and a human figure was perhaps 3 cm high. You sometimes see really ultra low quality soldier sets of similar size in KMart or discount variety stores, but they are absolute rubbish compared to the quality in the sets I'm talking about.)
Anyhow, I remember that the Civil War set included little pieces of camp cooking equipment, which included something that did look like a coffee pot. So, this is the reason why, and it was indeed accurate.
PS: it also brings up one of those fascinating odd points about the US - obviously, coffee has long been important to Americans, but it seems almost universally agreed by Australians and Europeans who visit there that the "standard" version of coffee they now consume is pretty bad compared to what we have after developing a "coffee culture" in the space of only about the last 30 to 40 years. Did their making do with coffee brewed from whatever water was available in a field in the Civil War permanently degrade their taste for it? Just wondering. (And a disclaimer - I am not really a coffee snob, and I did not have a coffee habit
when I was last there over 20 years ago. So maybe it is just coffee snobbery I am hearing - but the complaint does seem so common, I assume there is something to it.)
The Old Man and the Sea
Fight climate change by building away from sea: Rupert Murdoch
In a big weekend for disclosures that didn't really surprise anyone, the more important one was that Rupert confirmed his climate change skepticism and suggested the magic solution is (to paraphrase) "I don't know if its happening, but even if it is, don't bother trying to limit it: just don't build big houses on the seashore."
Thanks for the sage advice, Rupe.
In a big weekend for disclosures that didn't really surprise anyone, the more important one was that Rupert confirmed his climate change skepticism and suggested the magic solution is (to paraphrase) "I don't know if its happening, but even if it is, don't bother trying to limit it: just don't build big houses on the seashore."
Thanks for the sage advice, Rupe.
Another test
A test.
Update: I just needed to post a pic from my tablet, and having done this one some time ago, just decided to use it. But I have to say, if ever we did need a pantomime Queen Liz for a Parliamentary kid's show, it would be like he was made for the role, no?
Update: I just needed to post a pic from my tablet, and having done this one some time ago, just decided to use it. But I have to say, if ever we did need a pantomime Queen Liz for a Parliamentary kid's show, it would be like he was made for the role, no?
Saturday, July 12, 2014
"Say anything" Clive
No, Tony Abbott, nothing about the Senate negotiations was 'normal' | World | The Guardian
As Lenore Taylor notes:
As Lenore Taylor notes:
This is, after all, the bloke who said this week, while launching aSurely this wild inconsistency has to sink in soon through the skulls of the unengaged voters who got him in?
publication on the renewable energy target:, “When it comes to fighting
climate sceptics you have to persevere.”
But before the election, asked on the ABC whether he agreed that
global warming would have a big impact on Australia, he said: “No, I
don't believe that's so. There's been global warming for a long time. I
mean, all of Ireland was covered by ice at one time. There were no human
inhabitants in Ireland. That's how the world has been going over
millions and billions of years and Ross Garnaut knows that's true, so I
think that's part of the natural cycle.”
Sack him
Operation Sovereign Borders chief unable to answer asylum questions | World | The Guardian
The role Angus Campbell is playing in this government's refusal to supply basic information as to its conduct is a disgrace:
The role Angus Campbell is playing in this government's refusal to supply basic information as to its conduct is a disgrace:
Asked where the 153 asylum seekers were, Campbell said: “In regard to
that issue and the venture that you speak of, that is a matter under
consideration by the high court so it would be inappropriate for me to
comment further.”...
Campbell was later questioned about the capabilities of vessels
involved in asylum-seeker operations. Asked by the Greens senator Sarah
Hanson-Young what the capacity of the Ocean Protector was, he said:
“Again I don’t have the answer to that at hand and if you wish me to
take it on notice I will refer that to the Australian Customs and Border
Protection Service.”
Hanson-Young then asked: “And how many people would the Triton hold?”
Campbell: “I’ll have to refer that to the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service.”
Get a room, you two
Rupert Murdoch: It’s one of my lifetime achievements | 50th Birthday | News | | The Australian
Good Lord, hasn't it been embarrassing watching Paul Kelly write page after page for what seems like the last 6 months about the grandeur of the 50th birthday of Rupert Murdoch's newspaper which has sunk to the level of objectivity shared by Green Left Weekly?
I trust Kelly, always a tedious analyst who loves to take 1000 words to say what could be said in 200, is at least getting paid well for such PR guff and embarrassing promotion of a boss who increasing looks like Mr Burns. Actually, Mr Burns can open his eyes wider that Rupert appears now capable of doing.
Good Lord, hasn't it been embarrassing watching Paul Kelly write page after page for what seems like the last 6 months about the grandeur of the 50th birthday of Rupert Murdoch's newspaper which has sunk to the level of objectivity shared by Green Left Weekly?
I trust Kelly, always a tedious analyst who loves to take 1000 words to say what could be said in 200, is at least getting paid well for such PR guff and embarrassing promotion of a boss who increasing looks like Mr Burns. Actually, Mr Burns can open his eyes wider that Rupert appears now capable of doing.
Friday, July 11, 2014
Kant is hard work
Kant confusion | TLS
This review of another book about Kant's moral philosophy starts out well, pointing out the problems people see with the categorical imperative, but as it gets more and more into the detail of Kant's terminology, the more one remembers what hard work it can be to follow his arguments.
Still, it's worth a read.
And it reminds me - one of my fantasy film scripts or novels was going to be about Kant not being a fussy virgin who never left his home town, but an early James Bond doing secret spy work across 18th Europe during university holidays. I mean, just look at those bedroom eyes:

This could be the hardest pitch ever to a Hollywood studio - but you have to admit it is original. (I hope.)
This review of another book about Kant's moral philosophy starts out well, pointing out the problems people see with the categorical imperative, but as it gets more and more into the detail of Kant's terminology, the more one remembers what hard work it can be to follow his arguments.
Still, it's worth a read.
And it reminds me - one of my fantasy film scripts or novels was going to be about Kant not being a fussy virgin who never left his home town, but an early James Bond doing secret spy work across 18th Europe during university holidays. I mean, just look at those bedroom eyes:
This could be the hardest pitch ever to a Hollywood studio - but you have to admit it is original. (I hope.)
He (and they) really likes the film
Boyhood review – one of the great films of the decade | Peter Bradshaw | Film | The Guardian
Like the fabled Jesuit, Richard Linklater has taken the boy and given us the man. In so doing, he's created a film that I love more than I can say. And there is hardly a better, orIt has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes too, which is rare. I will see it.
nobler thing a film can do than inspire love.
Relationship problems, Adam?
If anyone has read Adam Creighton's blog entry in The Australian today, and understands his point, could you kindly drop by and explain it to me?
My quick take is that it's an impenetrable mish mash of a discussion about no fault divorce and economic consequences of divorce and how women now do things differently and that may not be good and maybe we'd all be better off (how exactly is not explained) if there was fault based divorce that still didn't actually require fault.
My quick take is that it's an impenetrable mish mash of a discussion about no fault divorce and economic consequences of divorce and how women now do things differently and that may not be good and maybe we'd all be better off (how exactly is not explained) if there was fault based divorce that still didn't actually require fault.
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Highly Radioactive Man
The Tragic Tale Of Atomic Man: Life As A Radioactive Human | Gizmodo Australia
I don't recall reading the story of Harold McClusky before. It seems remarkable he survived so long...
I don't recall reading the story of Harold McClusky before. It seems remarkable he survived so long...
A Bolt apology
Andrew Bolt the latest to apologise over Tony Abbott's wall punch | Richard Ackland | Comment is free | theguardian.com
It's a pity he only had to make it on radio. Didn't he suggest the Ramjan incident didn't happen in his blog? I would have expected so, but can't be bothered looking.
It's a pity he only had to make it on radio. Didn't he suggest the Ramjan incident didn't happen in his blog? I would have expected so, but can't be bothered looking.
Comedian needs another job
I never thought Jimeoin was particularly funny: inoffensive though.
But from the parts of SBS's "Full Brazilian" show I have seen: man oh man, does this comedian need to find another line of work, or what? Or are other, completely burnt out, unfunny writers responsible for the dire lack of successful humour that he tries to deliver on the show?
It's been awful.
I feel a bit mean saying it, in a way, because his dumb persona is successful to the extent that one imagines he is unemployable for any more challenging task. And he is still inoffensive.
Lucky no one much reads this blog, then.
But from the parts of SBS's "Full Brazilian" show I have seen: man oh man, does this comedian need to find another line of work, or what? Or are other, completely burnt out, unfunny writers responsible for the dire lack of successful humour that he tries to deliver on the show?
It's been awful.
I feel a bit mean saying it, in a way, because his dumb persona is successful to the extent that one imagines he is unemployable for any more challenging task. And he is still inoffensive.
Lucky no one much reads this blog, then.
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