Saudi Arabia rules out war with Iran | GulfNews.com
Sorry, I shouldn't make light of it, but the Middle East is such a basketcase. Or does North Korea deserve the top title for that?
Saturday, January 09, 2016
Well handled by Obama
'American Sniper' widow confronts Barack Obama over gun control | US news | The Guardian
Seems very odd indeed that she should be taking the line "let's look on the bright side" when her fellow pro gun ownership lobby is always focusing on the need to arm themselves for self protection.
Seems a bit like the hydra-headed aspect of climate change denialism: any line of argument will be used with complete disregard for consistency.
Seems very odd indeed that she should be taking the line "let's look on the bright side" when her fellow pro gun ownership lobby is always focusing on the need to arm themselves for self protection.
Seems a bit like the hydra-headed aspect of climate change denialism: any line of argument will be used with complete disregard for consistency.
Encouraging information
I see that Bryan Appleyard liked Bridge of Spies quite a lot, and he did an appreciative interview with Spielberg and Hanks in which this information is found:
Spielberg is now 68, but as his mother is 95 and still running her Milky Way kosher restaurant in Los Angeles, and his dad is 99, we can take it he has a few decades of film-making left.Excellent.
Friday, January 08, 2016
Star hopping
Alien life could thrive in ancient star clusters : Nature News & Comment
Until now, scientists have largely discounted the idea of finding
extraterrestrial civilizations in globular clusters, which each contain
thousands to millions of stars. Out of the thousands of known extrasolar planets,
only one has been found in such a cluster, and many astronomers think
that the gravitational interactions among tightly packed stars would
have long ago hurled any accompanying planets into deep space.
But the proximity of all those stars may actually be an advantage for
supporting life, says Rosanne Di Stefano, a theoretical astrophysicist
at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Lots of closely packed stars could also mean lots of
planetary systems within easy travelling distance. “If there is an
advanced society in an environment like that, it could set up outposts
relatively easily, because we’re dealing with distances that are so much
shorter,” she says.
With such networking, civilizations in a globular cluster might endure
for billions of years, and thus be around for humans to communicate with
today or in the future.
Teargate
Blog: Obama's fake tears?
The stupid thing is, after reading this latest evidence of, what? some sort of deranging brain damage afflicting the Right of American politics?, I actually re-watched the video to see if some of the "analysis" had the details right. They don't. (Surprise, hey?)
The stupid thing is, after reading this latest evidence of, what? some sort of deranging brain damage afflicting the Right of American politics?, I actually re-watched the video to see if some of the "analysis" had the details right. They don't. (Surprise, hey?)
Market breaks, and the coming crisis (allegedly)
Interesting bit of history here on the market of built in stock market trading breaks.
I see that Soros is going on about a potential financial crisis again, even though it would seem that it would not be based on anything too closely resembling what happened in 2008. I get the feeling Soros is crying "crisis" too often now. How old is he? 85?
I'm sorry, but this is pretty much the age at which my rule of thumb about being able to safely ignore the warnings of older men kicks in. Look at Rupert Murdoch's (84) peculiar recent tweet:
Mind you, this rule can be subject to modifications: if libertarian, subtract at least 45 years, for example.
I see that Soros is going on about a potential financial crisis again, even though it would seem that it would not be based on anything too closely resembling what happened in 2008. I get the feeling Soros is crying "crisis" too often now. How old is he? 85?
I'm sorry, but this is pretty much the age at which my rule of thumb about being able to safely ignore the warnings of older men kicks in. Look at Rupert Murdoch's (84) peculiar recent tweet:
Mind you, this rule can be subject to modifications: if libertarian, subtract at least 45 years, for example.
Good point
Why the opioid epidemic is making a libertarian rethink drug legalization - Vox
Haven't I made the same point last year? Yes; yes I have.
See, sometimes even a libertarian moves closer to my (always reasonable) opinion!
Haven't I made the same point last year? Yes; yes I have.
See, sometimes even a libertarian moves closer to my (always reasonable) opinion!
Rand doesn't do "chat" well
Gee. Rand Paul has appeared on Colbert, and doesn't he come across (for the most part) as uncomfortable and awkward in that format? I don't know that any of his attempts at humour work, although (as usual) Colbert has some good moments.
However, Rand's point about the lack of knowledge and gravitas on the part of Trump on minor matters such as, you know, potentially being in charge of the world's second largest thermonuclear stockpile, is well made.
And it's also interesting to note that it appears Paul thinks it is trivialising him if interviewers always want to talk to him about marijuana. He appears genuinely annoyed that the topic has been broached, apparently breaking a pre-appearance deal.
I also learn that I am not the only person who think his hair is odd.
Watch the whole thing:
However, Rand's point about the lack of knowledge and gravitas on the part of Trump on minor matters such as, you know, potentially being in charge of the world's second largest thermonuclear stockpile, is well made.
And it's also interesting to note that it appears Paul thinks it is trivialising him if interviewers always want to talk to him about marijuana. He appears genuinely annoyed that the topic has been broached, apparently breaking a pre-appearance deal.
I also learn that I am not the only person who think his hair is odd.
Watch the whole thing:
Thursday, January 07, 2016
At last, the critics are catching up with me
While still getting not so bad aggregate scores on the likes of Metacritic, I have read enough mainstream critics' poor reviews of Tarantino's Hateful Eight to consider that they are (finally) really starting to turn against him and his oeuvre. For example, Anthony Lane ends on this note:
Above all, we get confirmation of the director’s preëminent perversity: patient and elaborate in his racking up of tension, he knows only one way to resolve it, and that is through carnage, displayed in unmerciful detail.To be fair, the more blood is spilled, the more some people lap it up; the audience at my screening howled with glee as Daisy’s face was showered with the contents of someone else’s head. Chacun à son goût. By the end of “The Hateful Eight,” its status as a tale of mystery and its deference to classic Westerns have all but disappeared, worn down by the grind of its sadistic vision. That is the Tarantino deal: by blowing out folks’ brains, he wants to blow our minds.David Edelstein:
You wonder what he has up his sleeve in The Hateful Eight, but gorgeous as that sleeve might be, what’s up it is crap. The movie is a lot of gore over a lot of nothing.Dana Stevens in Slate:
What is Quentin Tarantino’s game these days? Who is he making movies for? Is it only my fun-hating prudishness that makes me regard this historical-revenge-fantasy bender he’s been on since Inglourious Basterds as ineffably evil?
Just in case you needed reminding..
here's Sabine Hossenfelder (sounding very serious and, well, very German) explaining the correct answer to whether light is a particle or a wave:
Readers might also be interested in her speculating on how a lightsaber might work. Or should that be "lightsabre"?
Readers might also be interested in her speculating on how a lightsaber might work. Or should that be "lightsabre"?
Colbert too smart for the times
Stephen Colbert is fantastically talented at comedy acting: energetic, sharp as a tack, probably the only chat show host in the history of television who also happens to be serious enough about religion to teach Sunday School at his Catholic Church, and he has a crack team of writers behind him.
He's also moderately liberal, which means a large slab of the American public (the part that thinks Obama really is a Muslim, and that Trump is the best thing to happen to politics) cannot stand him.
So it doesn't really surprise me that after a strong start, his chat show is now running third in the ratings.
But get this: the lightweight, dumb comedy of Jimmy Fallon is number one. I don't find Fallon offensive, but I fail to see that he has any great talent; and I just don't think his writers come up with great lines. He is, at least, slightly hip with da kids in a way the daggy Jay Leno never was. (I mean, who could believe that he routinely out-rated David Letterman, even when DL was at his peak.)
Yes, it's not just Colbert: late night America doesn't tend to like its chat show hosts to be too smart. But especially at this extremely peculiar time of distressing, spreading stupidity amongst much of the American public, Colbert was always going to have a hard time being the ratings leader.
So that's all by way of preamble to a couple of recent clips from his show that I found amusing:
He's also moderately liberal, which means a large slab of the American public (the part that thinks Obama really is a Muslim, and that Trump is the best thing to happen to politics) cannot stand him.
So it doesn't really surprise me that after a strong start, his chat show is now running third in the ratings.
But get this: the lightweight, dumb comedy of Jimmy Fallon is number one. I don't find Fallon offensive, but I fail to see that he has any great talent; and I just don't think his writers come up with great lines. He is, at least, slightly hip with da kids in a way the daggy Jay Leno never was. (I mean, who could believe that he routinely out-rated David Letterman, even when DL was at his peak.)
Yes, it's not just Colbert: late night America doesn't tend to like its chat show hosts to be too smart. But especially at this extremely peculiar time of distressing, spreading stupidity amongst much of the American public, Colbert was always going to have a hard time being the ratings leader.
So that's all by way of preamble to a couple of recent clips from his show that I found amusing:
Wednesday, January 06, 2016
Peter Martin on how the net didn't quite change things as expected
Why the blockbuster is far from dead
I liked this column from Peter Martin.
On the subject to the net and movies, as I have written before, I also find it curious that the change to digital projection, and therefore digital distribution, of movies has not seemed to have had the cost cutting benefits to movie making that would have seemed to be a natural consequence. (Or maybe it has, but just other movie making costs have increased anyway to "compensate".)
I liked this column from Peter Martin.
On the subject to the net and movies, as I have written before, I also find it curious that the change to digital projection, and therefore digital distribution, of movies has not seemed to have had the cost cutting benefits to movie making that would have seemed to be a natural consequence. (Or maybe it has, but just other movie making costs have increased anyway to "compensate".)
By way of comparison
1. David Leyonhjelm, in 2016, when it is a matter of female journalists being made to feel uncomfortable at work:
2. David Leyonhjelm, in 2014, when the issue was how he felt about John Howard's gun laws:
2. David Leyonhjelm, in 2014, when the issue was how he felt about John Howard's gun laws:
"All the people at [Sale that day] were the same as me," Leyonhjelm tells me, his light-blue eyes blazing. "Everyone of those people in that audience hated [Howard's] guts. Every one of them would have agreed he deserved to be shot. But not one of them would have shot him. Not one." He found it offensive, he adds, that Howard "genuinely thought he couldn't tell the difference between people who use guns for criminal purposes, and people like me".
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