Author: ssw15

  • A NaNoWriMo 2011 recap

    National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) has come and gone.  As a follow up to a previous post on NaNoWriMo as I have been going through it: a recap!

    Yeah, I did it – I hit the 50k, ending the month at 55,364 words (well, according to the NaNoWriMo validator; I had bizarre footnotes that didn’t get picked up in the cut and paste from MS Word to the NaNoWriMo validator).

    Is the story actually “finished”?  I managed to give it a title, “Living in the Gray,” and it seems to be about how the COO of this technologically-inclined corporation learns of corporate espionage going on against his corporation (but there’s no proof!), that he doesn’t really know what’s going in with bad accounting in his corporation, that the CEO is getting friendly with various international criminals, including an elderly war criminal but there’s no proof there either of why he’s doing that, and that the Little Orphan Annie like character isn’t happy that the COO isn’t going to take down crazy CEO (and besides being a drunk and being repeatedly referred to as a megalomaniac, is the CEO really “crazy”?).  At the “end,” the COO makes a decision to challenge the CEO, but the COO is staring into the sunrise, ambiguously…

    Oh, and a wormhole showed up in the mid-chapters.  I really still don’t know why, other than my desperate desire for “action” and writing vigorously at a write-in with the other NYC Wrimo’s.  And, I literally ended on “to be continued?”  My previous Nano’s did not have the question mark, if only because I had ideas to eventually return and expand, and desire to revise.  This one – not so sure.  This wasn’t a Nano that I’m feeling terribly fond of at the moment.

    Will this ever see the light of day?  Probably not.  But, I am feeling a little inspired to get back to revising one of my past Nano’s as a 2012 project, and at least I got back to writing fiction again, even when I so didn’t feel like it or even when I didn’t feel into this story and the characters.  The process got me to realize that I kept going, even if I didn’t really want to – probably a life lesson in there, somewhere.

    Plus, NYC NaNoWriMo is a good bunch of crazy writing people.  We kept at it!  We did it – 50k or not, we wrote our asses off.  We do it because we can.

    Last night, we had our Thank God It’s Over (TGIO) party in downtown Manhattan.  Our Municipal Liaison fshk announced how we got into a Village Voice article (fshk and alexisdaria and others got quoted) – so cool!  NYC NaNoWriMo rocks!

    Writing fiction (and reading fiction) – to be continued…

    (cross-posted at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com).

  • Happy Thanksgiving 2011!

    Some links. Don’t overeat, if you can. Be grateful for what we have. Keep hope for what we don’t have. Be well.

    Visual history of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade over at Time.com.

    Mark Bittman at the NY Times had some cool links for Thanksgiving Eve (although we can still chew them today).

    Time Out New York on the stats behind the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade.

    Past Triscribe Thanksgiving posts, for your viewing/reading pleasure:

    A little Coldplay

    A couple of other videos (including a Muppet one! and a clip of the Simpsons’ Thanksgiving) and links from Thanksgiving 2009 (and more).

    Thanksgiving 2008 had the nice quote: “If the only prayer you said in your whole life was, ‘thank you,’ that would suffice.” – Meister Eckhart.

    FC on good eating and shopping in Thanksgiving 2007.

    Thanksgiving 2007: I linked to the NY Times’ Thanksgiving links and YC sent good wishes from Taipei.

    Thanksgiving 2006: More food and thoughts from FC.

    Thanksgiving 2005: a post from FC and a law-related Thanksgiving post from me, and a Thanksgiving Sunday post from me, along with a Beijing post from YC. Oh, and while this one had Nightline on Tuesdays with Morrie and a Thanksgiving intro to Ted Koppel-less Nightline, FC also makes it a “Lost” Thanksgiving.

    Thanksgiving 2004: warm thoughts from me. If you check posts around that post, you get great stuff from us at triscribe.

    Thanksgiving 2003: then as now, the post-parade dog show gets referenced (yes, it’s on the tv RIGHT NOW).

    (cross-posted at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com)

  • Civics Education

    An interesting profile in the Washington Post on the activism of retired US Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.  I agree with her that civics education in America needs help.  An educated populace is a populace far more able to vote.

    Civics education could have helped Rick Perry, as Jon Stewart amusingly presents the “oops” moment during the Republican debate, when the candidate couldn’t remember an agency he wants to eliminate. While errors are going to happen (Perry is only human and we all have those moments of forgetting) and that doesn’t stop one from becoming president, it doesn’t look good for Perry.

    The history of “oops,” thanks to the Explainer at Slate.

  • 11/11/11

    On this Veterans’ Day: A salute and thank you to past, present, and future Armed Services members. Take a moment to think about them and how we can all do better for/with them.

    Oh, and take a look at the video that FC posted from last year’s Veterans’ Day.

    JP Morgan Chase underwrote the Veterans’ Day parade in Manhattan today. They have a bunch of programs for vets, some new (per their announcements link) including a jobs program.

    Some stuff I found so far on Tumblr: from New York Public Library and via the Atlantic: “In Flanders Field.”

    (cross-posted on sswslitinmotion.tumblr.comsee here)

  • News and Stuff

    Something to amuse us:

    From the 11/4/11 edition of “Mother Goose and Grimm” by Mike Peters:

    Mother Goose: “See, Grimm, that’s a cardinal, but not all cardinals are red. Some cardinals are yellow, and some are grey.” (she’s reading a book on birds, during the bird watching)

    Grimm, the dog (really bored): “Which is the most popular cardinal?”

    Mother Goose (deadpan): “Stan Musial.”

    Grimm: look of surprise.

    Old joke, probably, but I thought that it was funny.

    In the current storyline, for the week of 11/7/11, Grimm’s friend, a not-that-bright dog, Ralph, is dating G.M., the corporation, because he heard that corporations are people. Ralph’s dating life isn’t very good to begin with, and his dating corporations simply continues this. Poor Ralph.

    In other news from the world of comics/comic strips:

    The passing of Bil Keane of “Family Circus.” Jeff Keane’s been slowly taking over the comic awhile ago, so it’ll probably still continue. (“Billy” became an animator, in his real life identity as Glen Keane, who worked on many a modern Disney project; it’s all on “Jeffy” now).

    Some links: from Time.com; MSNBC (via Associated Press). Nice thoughts from Gael Fashingbauer Cooper at MSNBC.com, Stephan Pastis of “Pearls Before Swine,” and even from The Comics Curmudgeon, who has amusingly teased, and will continue to tease, “Family Circus,” something we can all keep going back to in the comics section.

  • Happy NaNoWriMo!

    I had some of my NaNoWriMo 2011 analyzed. Apparently:

    I write like
    Cory Doctorow

    I Write Like by Mémoires, journal software. Analyze your writing!

    Well, I never read Cory Doctorow, so…?

    Then, I had two paragraphs of one of my triscribe blog posts analyzed and I got this:

    I write like
    James Joyce

    I Write Like by Mémoires, journal software. Analyze your writing!

    I also never read James Joyce. But, this is entirely amusing.

  • 1st November Weekend

    Can’t believe that it’s November.

    I also can’t believe that baseball season is over (St. Louis Cardinals beat the Texas Rangers in the World Series, for those not in the know; fun fact: Cardinals’ now-retired manager Tony LaRussa is a lawyer – JD and apparently passed the Florida bar exam back in the day).

    Football in the throes of things: Sunday’s the big Patriots v. Giants game; go Giants!

    Behind on “Community” episodes. “Fringe” is a little frustrating – with the latest iteration of the Fringe team, rather than the main one that I had grown accustomed to the previous three seasons; but I’m still open to seeing what’ll happen and watching the story unfold. Oh, and the moral of the latest episode, without giving away the plot too much, if at all: evil shapeshifters are pretty evil.


    Angry Asian Man has a Q&A with John Cho and Kal Penn
    . I have no idea if I’m really going to see the latest Harold and Kumar movie (I missed the 2nd one as it is), but I liked that John Cho and Kal Penn were really thoughtful in this Q&A on the progress of APA’s on the big and little screens. There are still ways to go, but hey, smart/stupid/average APA’s are now getting more of a chance, not just the Dragon or Model Minority or Victim stereotypes.

    According to Angry Asian Man, Aasif Mandvi could be on a CBS comedy. I still can’t believe he was the latest Taco Bell spokesman. Or that guy in the “Avatar: The Last Airbender” movie. But, Aasif Mandvi with a sitcom could be a cool idea.

    Saw “The Ides of March.” It was pretty good. Dark. But still: Ryan Gosling. Mmm…

    The weekend before Halloween 2011 had snow, yes, but still: Xmas commercials are simply way too early. (yes, I count those Layaway commercials in that category too). Ridiculous.

    The passing of 60 Minutes’ Andy Rooney. I’m linking to the Ken Tucker’s commentary about Rooney over at Entertainment Weekly; good read.

  • October continues…

    Can’t believe it’s October.  Time flies…

    Google doodle: celebrating Art Clokey‘s 90th birthday with a little Gumby (and his pals, Pokey, Prickle, and Goo, plus those Blockheads… – plus, Gumby and Pokey now have an online home).

    Oh, and a little YouTube search pulled up the Gumby theme song (remastered!):

    Last but not least: from the LA Times – the US Senate passed a resolution apologizing for discriminatory laws targeting Chinese immigrants (including the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882). Congresswoman Judy Chu of California is sponsoring the House version.

  • Notable Items

    The passing of Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple.

    I don’t have an iPhone or other Apple products, but Steve Jobs – he was an original (Pixar! technological revolution! not perfect guy, but he changed society!).

    Via the Slatest over at Slate: “From his 2005 commencement speech at Stanford: ‘Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked; there is no reason not to follow your heart.’”  I have to say: that was a great speech.

    Time’s obit by Harry McCracken was interesting to me for how it covered the man and the company he made.  Plus, a nifty feature about those Apple commercials; the one on innovators (“Think Different”) would surely include Jobs himself:

    Also, Time’s James Poniewozik posts on how moved he, an Apple user, felt about the news of Jobs’ passing; great writing and analysis, as Poniewozik notes, in review of his iPad/iPhone/Mac/Pixar films with kids: “Which is why I’ll spend much of tomorrow, too, inside Steve Jobs’ idea: that a computer should be an elegant, simple frame, and we should fill it with the things that matter to us.”

    Just a thought: instead of buying flowers and leaving it at an Apple store, donate that money to cancer research. I think even Jobs would like that.

    Also: the passing of Arthur C. Nielsen, Jr. – the man who transformed an industry, in the development of the Nielsen ratings – the stuff that makes our television shows rise or fall.  As Poniewozik notes on his Time.com blog, “Tuned In,” Nielsen helped make tv a business.

    Also: the passing of Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, civil rights pioneer; I link to the NPR obit, which had an interesting subtitle of “History Meets Hope” regarding one of Rev. Shuttlesworth’s last public appearances at a celebration of President Obama’s inauguration.  I thought the obit about him in the NY Times by Jon Nordheimer was fascinating:

    When he tried to enroll his children in an all-white school in 1957, Klansmen attacked him with bicycle chains and brass knuckles. When a doctor treating his head wounds marveled that he had not suffered a concussion, Mr. Shuttlesworth famously replied, “Doctor, the Lord knew I lived in a hard town, so he gave me a hard head.” [….]

    In 2009, in a wheelchair, he was front and center among other dignitaries in an audience of about 6,000 at the city’s Boutwell Auditorium to watch a live broadcast as the nation’s first black president, Barack Obama, was sworn in.

    He had encountered Mr. Obama, then a senator from Illinois, two years earlier, along with former President Bill Clinton, during a commemoration in Selma of the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights marches. As a crowd crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, where demonstrators were beaten and tear-gassed on “Bloody Sunday,” March 7, 1965, Mr. Obama pushed Mr. Shuttlesworth’s wheelchair.

    When I’m getting really cynical about the state of civil rights these days, it’s good to remember that the previous generation fought a real battle to get us to a certain point and the battles continue.

    History Meets Hope, indeed, in an age where I wonder where the hope went.  Let’s not forget the innovators and the fighters; let’s be like them.