Month: July 2004

  • Sunny Saturday

    Spent part of last night and this morning on an update to my so-called website, which is still neither flashy nor sophisticated.

    Since PBS’ Nova (in NYC anyway) is showing “Elegant Universe” again this week and next, I thought it was timely that Slate.com had this interesting assessment of the physicist Brian Greene. The writer Amanda Schaffer articulates what I thought was valid criticism of how Greene does his whole let’s-pretty-up-science thing (his intentions – to make science palatable for non-scientists – are good; but it’s understable that Greene’s critics want evidence to back up the theories).

    I like reading for pleasure; I like that in NYC, you can step into a subway car and see everyone reading something (Bible; newspaper; every possible form of literature, good or bad). But, do people outside NYC do that? According to this NY Times’ op-ed, “The Closing of the American Book,” less Americans are reading for pleasure and the argument is that this affects American culture or hurts America as a culture with an open mind, and American brains will get lethargic. Hmm…

    This NY Times travel article about the new Trans-Russia highway is interesting. Imagine driving the longest highway in the world, and then (a) realize that it’s not entirely paved yet; (b) there are no hotels or restaurants or other amenities (the author notes: “And don’t expect to find gas stations, restaurants and roadside motels in Siberia. Drivers pack food and gasoline, and keep their tire irons handy for unwanted night visitors.” talk about roughing it.); and ( c ) it takes 25 days to go cross country (when taking the Trans-Siberian railroad will get you a week).

    So it goes.

  • Fun with Instant Messaging

    For the record, I dislike instant messaging. Maybe I’m old school about this, but I don’t like the idea that someone can randomly interrupt what I’m doing while I’m in the middle of typing or doing something intricate on the screen with the mouse. Yes, even if it’s my girlfriend. That’s in addition to random bling noises happening, or even worse, something worse popping up on my screen.

    That being said, I tried sending a TV show to P–. I have a TV tuner card installed into my home computer. It’s possible to set the TV tuner to act as the video input for the web cam feature of Yahoo messenger. The hardest part was trying to change the channel — it insisted on setting the channel to public access every time it was activated. I had to start up the TV program to get to the channel switcher, then go back to Yahoo and fiddle with the screen size until the soundtrack kicked in. P– was able to watch Emeril with me.

    That with using the included Snapstream (aka “BeyondTV”) software, tv viewing anywhere over the Internet is a reality. The video quality is not so hot – upstream on DSL is not much better than using a modem — but it works.

  • Finally Friday…

    “Why does Saturn have rings? – And how come Earth has none?” – Slate.com Explainer explains…

    The passing of Jeff Smith, a.k.a. The Frugal Gourmet.

    According to the NY Times, apparently, there is more green stuff (of the tree-like variety, rather than the toxic) in downtown Manhattan; more parks are good for you, you know. (of course, my understanding is that Bowling Green also has wireless internet connection, but it’s not like I’ve been able to try that there).

    Finished Harry Potter and the Sorceror’s Stone last night. Scholastic, the publisher, annoyingly made obvious edits to slightly Americanize what is supposed to be British, so far as I can tell… well, yeah, I read/watch too many British stuff such that I’d notice the changes, but still, I ask why tamper with that? It’s not like American kids can’t figure out the context of the British terminology or wouldn’t still enjoy the work. And, I cannot accept that J.K. Rowling really originally had her British characters calling their mothers “Mom” or soccer “soccer.” Otherwise, nice read. Went fast (of course, I’ve already saw the first movie, so maybe that’s why it went fast as a read). Let’s if I can get through all five books in the series by the end of the summer (not bloody likely, as there mucho other books to read, but we’ll see).

    Enjoy the weekend.

  • Headgear, a Walk in the Park, and Upward Mobility

    Seen on the (same) subway: Hasid with superslick fedora; young woman wearing a Calvin Klein burka. It was black with the CK logo in a subtle midnight black. I had no idea.

    Planning meeting today for the picnic. The concept of buying food for 200 is intimidating. Not because it’s 200 people – I’ve done that before. Doing it without a car is a problem.

    Finally I can say it. My promotion at work finally came through, so I’m quite happy. I’m managing four people now, so that will be a bit of a challenge; we’ll take it one day at a time.

  • Is it Friday yet?

    It doesn’t feel like a shortened work week, and I’m apparently not the only one who noticed that feeling at work.

    Do we really need another Police Academy movie? Apparently, it’s coming anyway, in a theater near you…

    The cast of “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy” are making the rounds this week on the tv talk shows to promote their movie. I particularly enjoyed seeing Will Ferrell on Charlie Rose last night; when Ferrell reminisced about the local anchormen of his childhood of the 1970’s , the thought struck me: have local anchormen really changed all that much since then? Are they just great targets or what? See, in NYC, the local news stations are becoming really diverse; there are (reality check time) still vastly more female Asian-American television reporters/anchors than male Asian Americans (at last check, two, I believe), and I’m rather curious that each station has a female African-American anchorperson (usually carefully balanced by a white male anchor). There’s also sometimes even the reverse; i.e., the white female anchor with the male African-American anchor. So, Balance is a Big Deal (pardon my sounding quaint, but I like that the news channels are trying to be diverse). Some time ago, when Channel 4 had the instance of an all male set (meteorologist, two anchors, and the sports guy (usually guy, no matter the race)), it got in the newspapers as something not seen in some 20 years.

    Yet, despite the passing of local favorite male anchors (by way of mortality or retirement), you have the following:

    –> Channel 2 (WCBS) promoting Ernie Anastos (although, Channel 2 is also heavily promoting the new hire of Roz Abrams, the long popular female African-American anchor who’s of a certain age – so, at least congratulate Channel 2 for not going entirely young on its anchors, despite letting go of the old favorite sports anchor Warner Wolf);

    –> Channel 7 (WABC) promoting Bill Ritter (“Say hi to Bill when you see him hard at work!” – what a lame commercial, frankly – so not 21st century; and for the curious, he’s the white male paired at the desk with Liz Cho, who is bi-racial);

    –> Channel 4 (WNBC), with the celebrated veteran Chuck Scarborough (white male anchor paired with Sue Simmons, an African-American female veteran – the two have been together on the same channel and timeslot for less than two decades).

    Anyway, if you listen hard, the sonorous, deep baritone voices of the men (to best convey trust and confidence and all that) aren’t that much different than what Will Ferrell is satirizing. Of course, there may be one or two anchormen who find ways to express their (more than likely; hopefully?) interesting personalities (Jim Watkins on Channel 11 has the requisite Sonorous Deep Baritone, but his sarcasm has its moments). On the other hand, while it’s amusing to make fun of the local anchors, they’re nice to look forward to watching. I mean, it’s no coincidence that last year, when the Daily News made a poll, NY’ers said that they loved Chuck and Sue the best (it doesn’t hurt that those two have been on so long that it’s like watching an old married couple and they’re amusing for their quirkiness (usually Sue) or otherwise (Chuck and that way serious voice of his)). (Pardon me; I’m still a sucker for the local news personalities and making good-natured yet sarcastic fun at them, so the clips of “Anchorman” are just so hilarious to me – rival anchormen having fights with each other straight out of “West Side Story”? Hehehe).

    Ooh – the first day of the John-and-John show (a.k.a., the Kerry-Edwards campaign). Loved how this Slate.com entry on the first day makes it easy to satirize the Democratic candidates. I’m still trying to accept how this will work, of course, but at least things are really cooking now in the political landscape. Time magazine’s portrayal of the young Kerry life was deep and sad and interesting. Nice read.

    Ok, so Friday is tomorrow. All right already…

  • What are they thinking?

    Amazing Race 5 started today — the first leg was from Santa Monica to Punta del Este, Uruguay– and they are sure not giving a good impression of Americans overseas. Why do they think that saying “muy rapidimente — we’re in a race” is going to get them anywhere faster?

    What makes it worse is that a number of teams make some really bogus mistakes, such as missing the clue box clearly stated across the street from the hotel. That forces the top two teams to turn back from the finish line to retrieve the missing clue.

    I’m rooting for the Father/daughter team — He’s a Vietnam chopper pilot, she’s a U. Florida law student. If that guy can get 25 stitches and still not be eliminated, that guy’s tough as nails.

    On a different note, the New York Asian American international film festival is next week. Tremendous selection this year, and my org is sponsoring a film session. Their website sucks for trying to figure out what conflicts with something else, especially since there are two venues.

    I’m thinking about getting a new cell phone in August. My phone wasn’t working over the weekend because a screw in the antenna was loose and I had no way of fixing it until I got to work. I’m considering the Nokia 6820 because it has a decent keyboard and it’s tri band, so it will work in other countries.

    For those in the NY area, save Saturday, August 15 for the 7th annual Asian American Alumni Picnic at Forest Park, Woodside, Queens.

  • Day off was not long enough

    Anyway, so it has been back to work. Let’s see what’s in the newspaper…

    Ever noticed the Asian musicians in the subway platform who play “The Godfather” theme? Ever guessed at their back stories? “Asian Music, Accompanied by the A Train” in the NY Times profiles a few; fascinating article about a group of immigrants who were accustomed to the grand halls and now trying to make a living underground amidst a time when the reverence for traditional music isn’t nearly what it used to be.

    According to Michael Luo of thee NY Times in “Got the Time? At Grand Central, It Has Never Been That Simple,” Grand Central terminal has way too many clocks – and they’re not very consistent. But, soon, they will be. Maybe. At least, Metropolitan Transit Authority’s game plan.

    And, so it’s a Kerry-Edwards campaign ticket. William Saletan of Slate.com makes a nice analysis for why Senator John Edwards is such a “wise” choice. Good read.

    Looking forward to the shortened work week…

  • More Hsinchu

    On the second day of the Hsinchu trip, we went to Leo Foo village. It’s a small Taiwanese version of Disney. We were getting the tail-end of typhoon Mindulle so there was heavy winds and rains. Ended up taking the bus back to Taipei.

    That night we went out to have Taiwan steamboat, half spicy (ma-la) and half regular with herbs. Walked around the Zhongxiao Dunhua and Fuxing area. Picked up a papaya drink from Taiwan Milk King, a chain that sells specialty fruit drinks. Taiwan the land that gave us Bubble Tea has a lot of different kinds of drink products.

    I also picked up a cold but have recovered.

    =YC

  • July 4 Observed

    Some observations. Pardon the lengthiness.

    Let’s Go Mets! Wow, a sweep of the Yankees this weekend. Crazy stuff – neither would quit. Go Mets…

    Catching up on the NY Times reading:

    Linda Greenhouse of the NY Times does a year-end round-up of the Supreme Court. She observes what I saw Dahlia Lithwick and Walter Dellinger in Slate.com observes: is it really a matter of the pragmatic justices vs. the doctrinal justices? Hmm. And, I’m not sure what to make of her observation that Chief Justice Rehnquist is no longer the center of influence (or less of an influence). Oh, then there’s Prof. Cass Sunstein’s view that by saying less, the Supreme Court is sort of doing more (“In controversial cases, some judges are minimalists. They say no more than necessary. When they are asked to resolve the largest issues of the day, they try to do so as narrowly as possible,” says Sunstein). Interesting.

    Interesting article in the NY Times, “Asian-American Trendsetting on a Shoestring,” about two Los Angeles guys, Martin Wong and Eric Nakamura, and their ‘zine “Giant Robot.” NY Times’ writer Randy Kennedy notes:

    Mr. Nakamura’s self-image in publishing, and even as a Japanese-American, has always been that of an outsider. His Japanese is not good. Mr. Wong, whose grandparents were born in China, speaks no Mandarin or Cantonese. They met while writing about punk bands for various zines, and when they started their own — named after a 1960’s Japanese television series about a boy who controls a giant robot with his wristwatch — they were seeking to please nobody but themselves.

    They wrote about Hong Kong movies and celebrities like Chow Yun-Fat, John Woo and Jet Li years before they became popular in the United States, but they once declined an offer to interview Jackie Chan because he had become too mainstream. And they often angered Asian-American promoters who saw them as allies.

    “Usually it was these really terrible P.R. companies saying, ‘If you really cared about Asians, you’d write about this Asian actress,’” Mr. Wong explained. “But we’re just not interested in mediocre Asian actors in mainstream movies.”

    Mr. Nakamura described the magazine as “the punk-rock kids in the corner who didn’t get invited to the parties,” but more often it has seemed that the magazine is the one not inviting people to its party.

    With their reflexive self-deprecation and finely tuned cultural antennas, both men are aware of the danger that the underground culture they write about is becoming more mainstream, in part because of their efforts. And they are wary of their own success: of being seen, God forbid, as somehow grown-up and too serious.

    The audience may not necessarily be Asian or Asian-American; ultimately, it’s all about what’s cool or what’s not or whatever:

    With a decade under their belts, he and Mr. Nakamura say they have not come across any formula for putting out a good magazine. Mr. Nakamura once explained their editorial process to an interviewer this way: They agree on what’s bad (he used a more colorful description) and leave that out, and they agree on what’s good and leave that in.

    “That’s still pretty much it,” Mr. Wong said, adding that besides health insurance and a salary, he feels fortunate to have a job that serves as the perfect cover for his obsessions.

    “It turns me from being a fan boy into being a journalist,” he said. “If it weren’t for this, I’d be a stalker. Or a creep. Or something.”

    Okay. Good to know that there are outlets out there to help people from doing strange things and toward something productive. Sort of.

    Brooklyn in the house: this NY Times notices that on the Fulton Mall (mall in the dictionary sense, that is, a space where one walks (not the post-WWII sense of an indoor place to buy stuff), there are amazing pieces of historical architecture – just look up and see the ornate cornices, atop of the beauty salons, delis, and so forth:

    [L]ooming above, preservationists say, are the reminders of the area’s 19th- and 20th-century grandeur, brick and stone relics of a thriving shopping and theatrical district serving Brooklyn and Long Island.

    “You have to look up, particularly here, it’s so dramatic,” Robert B. Tierney, chairman of the Landmarks Preservation Commission, said on a recent afternoon, pointing toward the Flemish-inspired gables, decorated in vibrant, multihued glazed terra cotta, atop a building on Livingston Street with a hair salon below.

    Glad I’m not the only one who has noticed the beauty in the urban setting. Now, let me go back to enjoying the day off…

  • Could have been a contender

    What is good enough? Should we even be thinking about good enough? This Independence Day many have to think that, such as the Takeru Kobayashi’s world record breaking 53.5 hot dogs at the Nathan’s hot dog eating contest (and Sonya Thomas’ woman’s (and American) record of 36). Or Spiderman 2 or Farenheit 9/11’s box office records. Are we driven by regret, as suggested by ABC’s 20/20 piece on Marlon Brando’s acting career?

    We should be thinking, “Could be a contender” rather than “Could have been a contender”.

    The Amazing Race 5 starts again on Tuesday! 75,000 miles by 11 teams. I can’t wait! Happy 4th everyone.