Author: ssw15

  • Thursday

    I ought to get a life – I’m actually watching “Dancing with the Stars” as we speak. Well, Tia Carrere is on. She ain’t so bad; she pushes herself to do the dancing, when she’s a brand new mom and dealing with (you know) life stuff. (More importantly, Asian-Pacific American representation!). However, be advised – I still don’t know how they call this “with the Stars” when they’re drawing people out of the C or D list of celebrities (no offense meant to the Stars on the show). But, the real weakness of this pretty entertaining show is this: the music they use for the show is NOT ballroom dancing music! Using old pop music isn’t appropriate; it’s even worse when you make the decent pop music sound bland.

    Slate’s William Saletan posts a referral and fleshing out on the story of the Arizona judge who held that fetuses don’t count in figuring out whether one’s car is compliant with carpool rules. I especially thought it was amusing how AP article notes:

    Municipal Judge Dennis Freeman rejected [Candace] Dickinson’s argument [that her fetus counted, since Arizona law counted a fetus as a victim in violent crimes against pregnant women] Tuesday, applying a “common sense” definition in which an individual is someone who occupies a “separate and distinct” space in a vehicle.

    “The law is meant to fill empty space in a vehicle,” the judge said.

    Sgt. Dave Norton stopped Dickinson’s car Nov. 8. When asked how many people were in the car, Dickinson said two, pointing to “her obvious pregnancy,” the officer said.

    Norton said Dickinson’s theory “would require officers to carry guns, radios and pregnancy testers, and I don’t think we want to go there.”

    Well, there are a lot of subjects we don’t want to go to, but some people have no sense about it. Like, do we have to wait until there’s an “obvious” pregnancy? Imagine the fat lady who isn’t pregnant – she’d be mighty pissed at being perceived pregnant (or maybe just relieved at avoiding a ticket?).

  • Wednesday

    “House” last night – whoa. Stuck in snowy Baltimore and no way to get home to Princeton, NJ. Umm, sorry, Dr. House, but couldn’t you just hop in a car and drive up the I-95? Or was there too much snow for that? (only on tv would the Eastern seaboard have so much snow two winters in a row (see, last season, “House” also portrayed a pretty snowy winter)). The junior doctors proved not that able without their crazy leader. Dr. Wilson appears to be really cheating on his wife (geez, do you want a fourth divorce, Wilson?). Oh well. And, it remains to be seen when and how House’s own love life gets resolved (or maybe never resolved; who knows?). At least the ratings look quite good for the first House episode of 2006.

    J.K. Rowling explains what made her to write Harry Potter as an orphan.

    And, according to the NY Times, the British have only begun to realize that drinking alcohol excessively might not always be a good thing.

    And, the NY Times has quite a series on the diabetes epidemic in the city. Here’s the story on Asians and diabetes.

    Jan. 23-27, 2006, and Jan. 30-Feb. 3, 2006 – NYC’s Restaurant Week. Check out the list of participating restaurants.

  • And More News…

    The Judge Alito hearings have been interesting, I daresay. He may not be as slick as Ch. Justice Roberts, but he has various responses (or non-substantive responses, but they’re far more interesting than his opening statement). Dahlia Lithwick in Slate continues to be quite amusing, I daresay, regarding the Alito hearings. (from what I watched on tonight’s “Newshour” on PBS, she isn’t entirely wrong, either).

    Reliever Bruce Sutter got into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

    Scary story: woman died smothered by her own clutter. Uh, reminders of how I have yet to fulfill my New Year’s resolution of cutting my clutter!

    Time magazine has some good stuff in this week’s issue: a profile on Judge Alito; going to Pluto (which may or may not be a “planet”); and a profile on Asian-Americans (like, about time, Time!).

    Phantom of the Opera really is the longest running Broadway show? Wow – I never thought anything would overcome Cats.

  • News

    So, in the news…

    The North Star has a companion star.

    Apparently, even though black holes are incredibly powerful, a one-way trip into a black hole still takes 200,000 years. Boy, does that make me feel relieved to know it’s not that easy to get sucked into a black hole. (well, my understanding is that you may still not pull away from it, but at least oblivion’s pretty far away).

    Over-the-counter cough syrups aren’t terribly effective. Except for Robitussin, apparently. Well, good for the makers of Robitussin, I guess. (I’ll have to say from experience that it does seem to work).

    The study of the extinct poor dodo.

    I caught a bit of the PBS Newshour’s coverage of the Judge Alito hearing. Judge Alito’s speech was a bit curious. (I just thought Slate had a funny read). Based on what I could tell of his speech on tv, he had a nice childhood, a respect for traditions and law and so on. Regarding his personal past, he seemed to have loved the intellectual part of his undergraduate years, but not the socio-political craziness of the times, or at least that of the bright but not so-values-oriented nature of his classmates. Umm, okay. Washington Post has an interesting coverage of Judge Alito’s early years.

    And, I wished “Nightline” had more coverage of the Alito hearings. Instead, it did its usual three story coverage (along with the Alito hearings, there was an update on Ariel Sharon’s condition) and closed with Terry Moran (who I think could make a pretty good host, if they didn’t have to saddle him with McFadden and Bashir) and a human interest story on a pet detective.

    NY Times’ Alessandra Stanley seems to think that the new anchors of ABC World News Tonight aren’t too shabby. She seems to feel that it’s good for Liz Vargas to gain authority (what we’d all like to see in an anchor), and that making one anchor (currently Bob Woodruff) the roving anchor makes for less chemistry:

    Ms. Vargas, who had been alternating with Mr. Woodruff since their appointment was announced in December, looked poised and crisply comfortable in the role, though she anchored the news standing in front of a transparent desk that made her look a little like Snow White, freshly risen from her glass coffin.

    If Mr. Woodruff minded looking like a second fiddle in his first week on the job, he didn’t show it. He didn’t even wince when Ms. Vargas referred to him as “my co-anchor,” which, while accurate, sounded slightly highhanded – a little like a local television reporter who refers on the air to “my cameraman.”

    Change on any network newscast can be unsettling and over-scrutinized. But so far, ABC’s bold decision doesn’t seem very earthshaking. Anchors have lost what the CBS chairman Leslie Moonves once referred to as voice-of-God status. Both Mr. Woodruff and Ms. Vargas are fine in the job: good-looking, highly polished and competent. It’s hard to see how they will broaden the demographics of “World News Tonight”; neither can be considered a youth magnet. But they are not likely to offend the program’s older viewers.

    It’s probably safe now to pull down what Clark Gable referred to in “It Happened One Night” as the Wall of Jericho and let the co-anchors work in the same room together. Sparks are unlikely to fly.

    I also have to agree: the studio furniture that ABC has for their on-air staff looks a little too ultra-modern and weird.

  • Sunday

    A belated note: the passing of Lou Rawls. I was amused by the NY Times’ obituary noting that Lou Rawls did the songs on the “Garfield” cartoons (probably my main introduction to Lou Rawls, besides his work on the United Negro College Fund tv specials). Ironically, Channel 4 (WNBC) aired the syndicated “An Evening of Stars” this afternoon (a taped program), with the caption on the bottom that it was taped before the passing of Rawls. A salute to Rawls.

    Today, the NY Giants lost to the Carolina Panthers. Oh well, the end to quite a season.

    In the NY Times: an interesting story on the snow in Japan’s “snow country.”

    NY Times has an article on cooking eggs: Daniel Patterson writes that his environmental lawyer fiancee wouldn’t let him used Teflon pans, so he resorted to other ways to cook eggs. The recipes look interesting. (not that I cook, but I liked his writing anyway).

    The upcoming hearings for Judge Alito. A primer from the NY Times. We live in interesting times.

  • Saturday!

    Slept in late (for me anyway).

    Updates to my little website. New art, one new piece of short fiction. Although, the website’s still a work in progress, so pardon any interruptions…

    Fascinating story on cat evolution from the NY Times.

  • Stuff

    Chinese Language Catching on in US classrooms” – hmm. So, kindergarteners can learn Mandarin Chinese and I still can’t figure out Cantonese? Oh, well. Nice to see America trying to embrace multi-lingualism, as usual.

    Dining articles almost makes me hungry —

    Looking for a good macaroni and cheese recipe? NY Times has a nice article and some recipes.

    An article on a drink that’s not sake.

    Mark Bittman is encouraging readers to go back to butter.

    Tips on plaintains in Newsday.

    Daily News’ David Bianculli felt that Vargas and Woodruff on ABC’s World News Tonight were pretty good. I caught the new on-line World News Now webcast on ABC News on-line – it looks and feels like World News Tonight – familiarity can be a good thing. (like, keeping the theme song more or less intact, unlike Nightline’s strange break from its respectable past). So, maybe Vargas and Woodruff can do a decent job.

    Speaking of Nightline, Ted Koppel, his executive producer, and a number of Nightline staff got signed on to Discovery channel, to do the stuff Ted wants to do. Well, good luck to Ted. And, gee, will I really have to give in to getting cable someday???

  • Happy New Year!!

    It’s 2006!

    Great year in review, FC!

    New Year’s Day – I saw “Memoirs of a Geisha.” I never read the book (or only read parts of it; I haven’t been able to make the full read for whatever reason), so I wasn’t watching the movie to make any comparison. But is it a great movie? Well, I can’t say. Visually fascinating, but the pacing of the plot was a serious slow go: the beginning half could have had more momentum.

    Ziyi Zhang (or Zhang Ziyi in China) was okay, but maybe I feel this disappointment because I was uncomfortable with her character, who isn’t the spitfire her past characters have been, rather than due to Zhang’s acting ability. (Like in “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” – boy was she something there). Zhang’s English was okay for the movie, and most of the movie was about her and the art of the geisha – but there’s the feeling that had this movie been in Japanese and done with subtitles, it would have been more authentic and fascinating (well, it’s a Hollywood movie, so how much authenticity was I expecting?). Michelle Yeoh was very good, and Ken Watanabe – wow, he could just as well not speak any language and he just packed in emotion and expression so well.

    Some interesting stories on-line:

    The little rovers that could are still on Mars, chugging along on their mission (to go where no one has gone before… 😉 )…

    The assistant US Attorney, who blogged about federal courts (his own jurisdiction) without permission, has left the US Attorney’s office. For my own safety, ummm, yeah, I’ll reserve comment.

    Liz Vargas and former corporate attorney Bob Woodruff are about to officially takeover as co-anchors of ABC World News Tonight. Apparently, ABC will make them into roving anchors. Oh, geez, like that’ll be the way to earn viewers in the early 21st century – it’s not about the roving around, it’s about the quality of the reporting, stupid! I, a former ABC News viewer, have all but succumb to NBC News (MSNBC.com’s airing of Nightly News after its airing and Brian Williams’ blogging have been interesting stuff) and PBS Newshour (you can’t beat the in-depth coverage of Jim Lehrer and the gang). I’m not pleased by “Nightline” (although I think Terry Moran has his moments, Cynthia McFadden and Martin Bashir leave so much to be desired – they’re just not Nightline people; they’ve a 20/20 or tabloidy touch to them).

    And, I ought to give NBC credit – I had thought the long transition of Tom Brokaw to Brian Williams was silly, but I now realize that it just made things more seamless and less-distressing. ABC should buckle up for a bumpy ride; not that Vargas and Woodruff can’t be anchors – but it will take time to get used to them and gimmicks won’t make it any good. Or maybe I’m prematurely being a doomsayer. But, I only criticize because I think they can do better.

    Fascinating food articles in the NY Times this Sunday:

    Food and Memory in Kyoto; and the NY Times’ food critic Frank Bruni samples the diversity of cuisine in Capetown, South Africa.

    The new year: the expectation of better things to come. I think I’m just renewing last year’s resolutions for this year. But, no matter what, may we all fulfill our resolutions!

  • Eve of New Year’s Eve

    Looking forward to FC’s year-end entry!

    Bizarre Reuters article on Yahoo
    , with a curious first line: “Would you pay $175 for a pound of coffee beans which had passed through the backside of a furry mammal in Indonesia?” Apparently, the civet’s digestive system does something to the coffee beans:

    “People like coffee. And when they want to treat themselves, they order the Kopi Luwak,” said Isaac Jones, director of sales for Tastes of The World, an online supplier of gourmet coffee, tea and cocoa.

    Despite being carnivorous, civets eat ripe coffee cherries for treats. The coffee beans, which are found inside of the cherries, remain intact after passing through the animal.

    Civet droppings are found on the forest floor near coffee plantations. Once carefully cleaned and roasted, the beans are sold to specialty buyers. [….]

    He expects to sell around 200 pounds of the coffee this year, with orders coming from North America and Europe. So far, most of the orders have been from California.

    Indonesia produces only about 500 kilograms, or roughly 1,100 pounds, of the coffee each year, making it extremely expensive and difficult to find.

    “It’s the most expensive coffee that we know about in the world,” said Jones.

    Umm, sorry – that just sounds weird… (well, I’m not exactly a gourmand, so who am I to say? It better be damn good coffee though).

    NY Times’ Sewell Chan profiles the NYS mediator, Richard A. Curreri – the man who helped make the transit strike end possible:

    IN grade-school baseball and stickball games, while other children stood out for their fleetness of foot, strength of arm and speed of bat, Richard A. Curreri was already becoming known for his skills as a mediator.

    “I tended to be the kid they went to to make a decision in normal disputes,” he recalled. “Whether somebody was safe, whether somebody was out – they’d ask me. I don’t know why. For whatever reason, that was my role. Probably I was a better umpire than baseball player.”

    Mr. Curreri’s skill at seeing both sides of an argument has served him well at the New York State Public Employment Relations Board, where he is the director of conciliation and played a critical role last week in developing a framework that ended New York City’s first transit strike in a quarter-century.

    Mr. Curreri, 53, a mild-mannered public servant with a wry sense of humor, has helped settle scores of labor disputes over the years, including strikes by teachers in Yonkers in 1999 and in Buffalo in 2000. Nothing in his 29 years at the state labor board, however, had approached the fury and intensity of the transit negotiations. [….]

    Born in Brooklyn, Mr. Curreri grew up in Valley Stream, on Long Island, and graduated in 1973 from Cornell University, where he studied government. He did not develop an interest in labor relations until his time at Albany Law School.

    ONE of his professors there was John E. Sands, who had been a top New York City labor-relations official under Mayor John V. Lindsay. Mr. Sands saw a spark of talent in Mr. Curreri and encouraged him to enter the field.

    “He was born to arbitrate and mediate,” Mr. Sands said. “He has a sense of the process – the pragmatics of mediation as an extension of collective bargaining. He just has a natural feel for it. Plus, he can read parties’ real intentions, behind the rhetoric.”

    After getting his law degree in 1976, Mr. Curreri joined the Public Employment Relations Board, a small agency created under the Taylor Law of 1967, which forbids public employees to strike.

    Mr. Curreri started as an assistant counsel, defending decisions by the board, which makes rulings in complaints about improper labor practices. He also became a protégé of Harold R. Newman, a former union organizer who was chairman of the board from 1977 to 1990 and who died last month at 84. In 1990, Mr. Curreri became director of conciliation, taking a job Mr. Newman held when he helped settle the last New York City teachers’ strike, in 1975.

    Pauline Rogers Kinsella, the board’s chairwoman from 1991 to 1998, has a theory for Mr. Curreri’s success. “He has the ability to listen carefully, which is a critical quality in a mediator,” she said. “He does not inject himself into, or make personal, the mediation process.” [….]

    It may seem easy to identify what it takes to be a good mediator, but it’s probably harder to carry it out. So Mr. Curreri’s definitely an inspiration here for taking on the mess that the MTA and the union put out. And, maybe alternative dispute resolution should be a tool used more often!

    Hilarious, as NY Times’ Adam Liptak reports: Boston U’s Prof. Jay Wexler came up with a law journal article where he analyzed the Supreme Court transcripts and determined who’s the justice who garners the most laughs: Scalia (no surprise – the man’s a wit, as we can tell from his written opinions). The professor concedes that his analysis is hardly accurate, but it’s fun to consider. The other justices are hardly slouches, even if the transcripts don’t quite reflect that, and maybe Ch. J. Roberts may be on the rise as the new ringleader of wit and verbal jousting:

    [….] Jay D. Wexler, a law professor at Boston University, was quick to exploit the new data to analyze the relative funniness of the justices. His study, which covers the nine-month term that began that October, has just been published in a law journal called The Green Bag.

    Justice Scalia was the funniest justice, at 77 “laughing episodes.” On average, he was good for slightly more than one laugh – 1.027, to be precise – per argument.

    Justice Stephen G. Breyer was next, at 45 laughs. Justice Ginsburg produced but four laughs. Justice Clarence Thomas, who rarely speaks during arguments, gave rise to no laughter at all.

    Of course, what passes for humor at the Supreme Court would probably not kill at the local comedy club. Consider, for instance, the golden opportunity on Halloween this year when a light bulb in the courtroom’s ceiling exploded during an argument.

    It takes two justices, it turns out, to screw up a light bulb joke.

    “It’s a trick they play on new chief justices all the time,” Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who joined the court that month, said of the explosion.

    “[Laughter.]”

    “Happy Halloween,” Justice Scalia retorted.

    “[Laughter.]”

    And then, the kicker. “We’re even more in the dark now than before,” Chief Justice Roberts said.

    “[Laughter.]”

    On the other hand, in a January argument in a statute-of-limitations case, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy made an amusing observation about the absurdity of modern life.

    “Recently I lost my luggage,” Justice Kennedy said. “I had to go to the lost and found at the airline, and the lady said has my plane landed yet.”

    “[Laughter.]”

    Professor Wexler concedes that his methodology is imperfect. The court reporters who insert the notations may, for instance, be unreliable or biased.

    The simple notation “[laughter]” does not, moreover, distinguish between “a series of small chuckles” and “a joke that brought the house down.” Nor, Professor Wexler said, does it separate “the genuine laughter brought about by truly funny or clever humor and the anxious kind of laughter that arises when one feels nervous or uncomfortable or just plain scared for the nation’s future.” [….]

    Justice Scalia’s numbers may similarly overstate his wit, if only because the courtroom expects quips from him and may laugh at the least provocation. Also, he tried hard.

    “He plays to the crowd,” said Pamela S. Karlan, a Stanford law professor and Supreme Court advocate who has garnered her own share of laughter notations in the transcripts.

    Sometimes, the laughter that apparently filled the courtroom is hard to comprehend. Chief Justice Roberts, for instance, got a laugh for this observation at an October argument on assisted suicide: “The relationship between the states and the federal government has changed a little since Gibbons v. Ogden,” a landmark decision in 1824 about national regulation of the economy.

    Lawyers get laughs sometimes, too, but it is a dangerous business. In the guidebook the court provides to lawyers preparing to argue before it, there is this stern warning: “Attempts at humor usually fall flat.”

    Thomas C. Goldstein, a Washington lawyer who appears before the court frequently, said humor “is a land mine.”

    “You have to follow the justices’ lead,” Mr. Goldstein said. “You have to be a straight man.”

    Lawyers confuse one justice with another surprisingly often, and those mix-ups are, of course, an opportunity for humor.

    Last November, Sri Srinivasan, a government lawyer, apologized to Justice David H. Souter for referring to him as Justice Scalia.

    “Thank you,” Justice Souter said, with characteristic self-deprecation, “but apologize to him.”

    “[Laughter.]”

    The New York Times, building on Professor Wexler’s pioneering work, analyzed the available transcripts for the term that began this October. The mood under Chief Justice Roberts has brightened, the analysis found, with the average number of justice-generated laughs per argument rising to 2.9 from 2.6 the previous term.

    In the current term, the Times analysis found, there has also been movement in the funniness-of-individual-justices department. Justice Breyer has taken the lead, at 28 laughs, edging out Justice Scalia, with 25. They also tied in the largest-number-of-jokes-in-a-single-argument category, each squeezing five into a single hour.

    Chief Justice Roberts made a strong early showing, coming in third, with 13.

    “It looks like he’ll be competitive,” Professor Wexler said in an interview.

    Justice Clarence Thomas continues to bring up the rear, with what is shaping up to be another jokeless term for him. [….]

    So, there will be much to look forward to in the new year. Winter Olympics. A new Supreme Court Justice. NYS Gubernatorial and attorney general elections. And so on. Happy New Year everybody (in case I don’t post again before 2006). Peace and good will and all that good stuff. And, hmm, let’s see how those resolutions will hold or not… 😉

  • Tuesday After Christmas

    The passing of Michael Vale, the actor who was Dunkin’ Donuts’ “Fred the Baker” – the man who made the line “Time to make the donuts” to remind us that Dunkin’ Donuts toiled long and hard for us.

    Goodbye to Monday Night Football, at least in its broadcast network format, as we have known it. New England Patriots v. NY Jets, 31 to 21. Jets ending it, the way they began MNF 35 years ago – and with the same score too. Yeesh.

    US Attorney/Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald is National Law Journal’s Lawyer of the Year.

    In Washington State, a lawyer is found guilty for having tried to murder his opposing counsel, Kevin Jung.

    Law.com posted a fascinating article on Justice O’Connor – who’s in the unusual position of being around to watch her historical position be evaluated before she leaves the Court.

    Oh, and here’s a link to the Fareed Zakaria interview on NY1.com — awhile ago, but a good one.

    Remember those old NJ tourism commercials, where you had Governor Tom Keane waxing poetic about how “NJ and You: Perfect Together”? Well, NJ is trying to change its tourism motto, in light of its latest self-esteem problems. Uh yeah, that’ll make you feel better:

    “New Jersey: We’ve Got Three Really, Really Big Roads” apparently failed to capture the joys of driving to Atlantic City. “New Jersey: What’s That Smell?” seemed downright mean. And would “New Jersey: You Got a Problem With That?” really attract tourists?

    Acting Gov. Richard J. Codey officially rejected all of these slogans – and many more – before unveiling five finalists in the state’s tagline contest last week. He said he believed the five were as majestic, charming and light-hearted as New Jersey itself.

    Two of those slogans seemed to tilt toward romance – “New Jersey: Love at First Sight” and “New Jersey: The Real Deal.” Mr. Codey said he wanted the finalists to reflect the state’s “big heart” and “passion for life.”

    “If nothing else,” he added, “it should get us a second date.”

    And yet, if the final five slogans are a Rorschach test, New Jersey, despite its nickname “The Garden State,” does not seem to have fully overcome its awkward struggle with low self-esteem. Residents said that the three other finalists – “New Jersey: Come See for Yourself,” “New Jersey: Expect the Unexpected” and “New Jersey: The Best Kept Secret” – open the state to a wide range of stinky or driving or “Sopranos” jokes, which are already far too common among visitors and bad comedians. [….]

    Several people also toyed with what visitors might discover if they came to see New Jersey for themselves and were to “expect the unexpected.” Some said they would most likely run up against the state’s high insurance rates and property taxes. Others predicted heated encounters with drivers who beep their horns at the first sign of a green light, and perhaps, in the cities, violent crime.

    “When a person says ‘unexpected’ in my neighborhood, everyone says, ‘Uh-oh, what’s that mean?” said Julius Simmons, 31, who was hawking DVD’s on Market Street here. Since outsiders already have a negative image of New Jersey, he said, some of the slogans “might give people the wrong idea.”

    Even the two sentimental taglines, evoking the cherished “I Love New York,” seemed ripe for humor. Darrell Armstrong, 28, who was on Broad Street here with a smile and friendly banter as he sold hats, gloves and stuffed bears, took one look at the list of finalists and laughed.

    ” ‘Love at first sight,’ ” he said. “Yeah right, until you find out how expensive it is to live here. It’s definitely not a deal.”

    Like many people in New Jersey, Mr. Armstrong said he doubted that any of the slogans would bring many more tourists to New Jersey. That would be just fine with Mark DeMarco, 49, a shopper at the Mall at Mill Creek in Secaucus. “We have enough people here as it is,” he said. “You ever try to put a towel down on the beach at Atlantic City?”

    Other residents, however, observed that the slogans’ supposed flaws were somehow appropriate because they allow for interpretation. New Jersey, they said, is characterized less by an individual city, like Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, or a specific tourist destination, like Cape Cod. What sets the state apart is its range of places to visit – from beaches to orchards – and its attitude.

    This is a place where people rarely put on airs, where they shout from car windows, gobble pizza while wearing a tuxedo, sing and joke about getting out even as they fondly recall why they have stayed home. [….]

    Taking a nap on the public furniture of NYC. Yeah, right. But, if they make the benches looks as comfy as they do in this photo in the article – well…

    Let’s make the last week of 2005 a good one…