Author: ssw15

  • Sunday

    Some stuff…

    The whole flu vaccine shortage is quite a debacle; I like how this NY Times article demonstrates how the debacle crosses into areas of science, politics, human psychology (for instance, it’s amazing how news of the shortage turned into population panic, with the lines of people getting all angsty over not getting their shot; versus reasonable doctors on tv telling people, “You know, if everyone washed their hands, we’d actually have an easier time preventing flu…”), and law. Yep. Just what we need… in the middle of an insane presidential election season (see, complete crossover into everything in life as we know it).

    NYC has its first Asian fire chief, as Sophia Kwok – a Brooklynite via Hong Kong – was promoted to deputy chief of EMS operations last week. Cool.

    NY Times’ Hilary De Vries interviews Korean-American actress Sandra Oh – very interesting stuff on what it means to be Asian, female, and a character actor in Hollywood.

    Yankees v. Bosox. Crazy stuff last night – the game started looking like a football game, with that score (Bosox lost, 17-6); impossible for Bosox to come back from a 3 game deficit – or… well, things remain to be seen, of course. ‘Nuff said there.

  • Wednesday into Thursday

    Ah, short work week means we’re that much closer to the homestretch called the weekend.

    Presidential debate #3 – on domestic issues. Umm. Hmm. Talking about the Iraq war (again) is talking about a domestic issue (?) – well, I guess so, in this day and age. Wasn’t too wild about some of Bob Schieffer’s questions, but figured that it was just another draw between the candidates.

    Seriously, the debates have been like the ultimate reality show (well, without the physical stunts anyway).

    Check out this week’s Doonesbury – (i.e., look for comic strips for the week of October 11) – cartoonist Garry Trudeau, via the Mark Slackmeyer character, is directing readers to websites of editorials or other articles written by disenchanted Republicans/conservatives who disapprove of the current Bush administration (or, are too frightened of Kerry to overcome whatever obvious qualms they may have about the administration).

    Not exactly the funniest Doonesbury this week (Wednesday (10/13/04)’s was funny though – Mark advises a college kid to borrow a laptop to read a Salon.com article on the conservative disenchantment of Bush/fear of Kerry; this is because said kid’s laptop is in the shop for repairs; Mark returns to check on said kid – Mark says, “Well?”; said kid says: “Oh…um, I’m still checking my e-mail.”)

    But reading the articles Trudeau’s been referring have been very interesting (one citation to a John Eisenhower editorial – son of Dwight D. Eisenhower, was a Republican who says he will go independent this election year). Trudeau’s Moral: Getting different perspectives doesn’t hurt anyone; you might learn something (well, he’s not a favorite of the Bushies anyway).

  • Columbus Day II

    The passing of Christopher Reeve, actor who will be remembered for his work as Superman and lobbying for many political and public interest issues.

    South Asian Hindus of Queens celebrating Diwali, the Festival of Lights, a month early – to take advantage of the nice weather.

    Plus, on Slate.com – “Ad Report” presents a review of the latest Burger King ad: wherein Burger King (and I mean literally – a person in robes and wearing a plastic mask with a BK crown) serves a guy a BK breakfast in bed. I think the ad is strangely funny, in a camp sort of way, although I wouldn’t give it the high grade that Slate.com’s Seth Stevenson gave it.

    Enjoying what’s left of the three day weekend.

  • Columbus Day

    Local UPN station had plugged in to the Yankees game on ESPN on Friday night, and delayed broadcasting “Star Trek: Enterprise” ‘s season premiere until Saturday night, so I ended up accidentally taping 45 minutes of the game Friday night. I did end up taping and watching the season premiere; umm, I cannot make an honest assessment until Part 2 of the season premiere airs this coming Friday. Part 1, to say the least, left me thinking, “What?” The Enterprise crew continues to cease to amaze me; digital filming of the episode made for a clear looking cinematic look; and poor time traveler Daniels… his fate is bizarre, as usual.

    Saw “Garden State” on Saturday. Good movie – sad, darkly funny. Decent soundtrack. Moral of the movie – it’s ok to feel and to live and all that. Oh, and actress Natalie Portman can act (as opposed to how George Lucas’ Star Wars reduced her talent to pretty minimal stuff); actor/writer/director Zach Braff (whose day job involves playing that screwy doctor J.D. on NBC’s “Scrubs”) – pretty interesting talent he has – to write and direct and act (and I think even produce?)…

    Yankees v. Bosox – argh. How much more of the running soap opera can we put up with these two teams?

    Happy Columbus Day. Geez, I actually miss Toyota’s Christopher Columbus Action Figure. ’nuff said…

  • TGIF

    Tuesday – The VP debate was odd tv viewing. Cheney was being all mean. Edwards was trying to be persuasive. Neither made much headway, in my opinion – a draw. I suppose trying to make it a roundtable made it look silly (I know that the Cheney group liked it that way, but it’s not good debating style for viewing).

    The Yankees v. Twins game on Wednesday night – a neverending game; plus, I was expecting the Yankees to never say die. Ah well.

    Thursday – I finished the book I read on SaturdayThe Salmon of Doubt – the last book (sort of) by Douglas Adams, author of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Essentially a collection of his essays, drafts, speeches, and unpublished materials (including a half-done – obviously so – novel (or novella, to be more precise)) put together by his editor. Adams died in 2001, too soon and too young – and this book was a nice homage to his intellect, his humor, and his insight. The half-done novel was… weird. There was the sense that Adams really wasn’t sure of what to do with his ideas, and just wrote them out; his editor figured that this might as well be published, even if there was no real ending (seriously, no there wasn’t). Nonetheless, this book was decent subway reading. I will get to reading the Hitchhiker’s Guide soon enough – am looking forward to it…

    More presidential debating this Friday, town hall style. (sure, let’s watch a bunch of intentionally-selected Average Joe Schmoes ask their (already approved) questions to the candidates)…. (umm, pardon me for letting a little cynicism ooze there)…. 😉

  • Sunday

    I can’t resist blogging, can I?

    NY Times’ columnist Thomas L. Friedman is back from sabbatical, with a clear theme in today’s column “Iraq: Politics or Policy?”: “We’re in trouble in Iraq. We have to immediately get the Democratic and Republican politics out of this policy and start honestly reassessing what is the maximum we can still achieve there and what every American is going to have to do to make it happen. If we do not, we’ll end up not only with a fractured Iraq, but with a fractured America, at war with itself and isolated from the world.” He reiterated this on “Face the Nation” on CBS this morning (I was channel-surfing and there he was, telling Bob Schaeffer the problem that the current administration has and how the Kerry camp isn’t all that much better; yep, Friedman’s back all right).

    Seattle Mariners outfielder, Ichiro Suzuki, has broken a record for most hits within a season, and not only does it change the way Americans view Japanese players, Japanese people are apparently hoping Ichiro’s changing the way Americans view Japan as a nation and as a people. I don’t know if it we can makes such a conceptual leap, but at the least, baseball is a big thing to somewhere other than America.

    You know the world has changed when dialing the 212 area code leads you to someone, who via cell phone, is in… Baghdad? Fascinating article by Ian Urbina on “Area Codes, Now Divorced From Their Areas.” Urbina notes:

    In this era of mobile telecommunications, calls now connect people, not places. Cellular phones, changing governmental regulations and new Internet technology have torn area codes from geography, allowing people to have phone numbers with area codes distant from where they live. Though not new, the trend has kicked up a pitched debate among a colorful collection of technological pundits, telephone historians and Web preachers who specialize in the topic.

    “For many people this will come as a deeply confusing development,” said James E. Katz, a sociologist and director of mobile communication studies at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. “You delocalize area codes, and it’s one less North Star and one less compass point that people have to help orient themselves in an increasingly complicated world.”

    It is confusing – your number(s) identify you and follow you; yet these numbers were once identifying where you were, but now you’re really mobile. Um. Ok.

    Have a nice Sunday.

  • Saturday

    Spent today at Alma Mater’s homecoming game against That School in Jersey, the rival that it is. (no link provided at this time – sorry). It’s not like I understand football very much (I can watch NFL or college ball on tv, but that’s because I’d be watching as a casual tv viewer and can tune out easily, and the commentators explain stuff), but I wasn’t surprised that the NJ team beat us – but such a narrow win in overtime (it helps that they’re (a) more patient, (b) have a better kicker, whereas Alma Mater did… ok (we need a better kicker)). It’s still a heartbreaker (they won by only one point), and more so since the school spirit was great and great turnout (likely due to Alma Mater’s big anniversary more than anything else). Oh well. Better luck next homecoming; or, at least, try better in next week’s game, Alma Mater.

    (the subway ride… lord, going back and forth took as long as the games itself. Being in Brooklyn to head up to the tip of Manhattan ain’t all it’s cracked up to be, especially on the weekend schedule; have good reading material handy).

    Slate.com had a good Bushism – straight from the presidential debate: “The enemy understands a free Iraq will be a major defeat in their ideology of hatred. That’s why they’re fighting so vociferously.” When I had heard the president say this line, I concede being confused; “vociferously”? Mr. President, vociferous means “loud.” Sure, bombs are loud, but I think he meant more than that. I think. His debating style more to be desired; he stayed on point (“My opponent is inconsistent…”) but it got repetitive. Kerry kept it short and to the point – while not really simple. At point, I sympathized with Jim Lehrer for being confused over the two’s contrasting views on the issue of foreign policy with North Korea. I watched mostly the PBS coverage, but switched to ABC for the split screen look and the better coloring/lighting on the tv screen (the tv reception at home isn’t terrific). I’ll keep my commentary to that.

    Law.com posted an interesting Associated Press article on Ch. J. Rehnquist, as his birthday is looming but not his retirement. Hmm.

    Enjoy the weekend.

  • Wednesday

    I hope you don’t mind my passing this on, FC – this was forwarded to me by the local Asian American bar association:

    Taste of Chinatown : Oct. 2nd (1-6pm)
    $1.00 Tasting

    Join us for an exciting exploration of culinary delights in our first
    ever Taste of Chinatown, on Saturday, October 2nd, 2004 from 1:00PM to
    6:00 PM. One dollar ($1.00) buys you a taste at each of the thirty
    plus restaurants, bakeries and tea houses. This is a risk free
    opportunity to test out establishments that you’ve never ventured into
    before, and of course visit old favorites for the usual delights.

    Participants of the Taste of Chinatown are located in the heart of
    Chinatown, South of Canal Street. Each establishment will have a
    table outside their store, where you can sample Asian delicacies at
    only $1.00 a plate.

    See the attached document for a detailed list and map of the
    participants or go to:
    http://www.explorechinatown.com/AutumnMoon/TasteofChinatownTour.pdf

    Spend a wonderful day with us exploring Chinatown the best way there
    is; through your taste buds. Should it rain, we’ll reschedule for the
    following Saturday, October 9th.

    For more information please visit www.ExploreChinatown.com/AutumnMoon.

    Please share the news and tell your friends.

    Looked cool. Unfortunately for me, I may have to miss it. We’ll see. (weekend plans include Homecoming – something I usually don’t attend, but might as well this year).

    The Montreal Expos are apparently moving to Washington, D.C. Such a shame. Games at the Olympic Stadium were decent fun, in that Quebecois sort of way. Adieu, les Habitants. Guess you Quebecois prefer only hockey and nature type things like skiing and fishing or what. But, can D.C. better support baseball? It lost two (or three) Major League teams in the last 100 years. Hmm. (and don’t get me started with the Washington Redskins – I knew it wasn’t going to be an easy season, but I thought having the legendary Joe Gibbs back as head coach was going to make things fun for D.C. football fans).

    A special Associated Press story on the unbecoming conduct of a member of the legal profession: “Naked Attorney Gives New Meaning to ‘Legal Exposure’”. Apparently:

    [Stephen Linnen, Esq. of Ohio] was sentenced to a year and a half in jail for ambushing dozens of women while nude and taking pictures of their shocked expressions.

    But [he] won’t lose his law license and will be allowed to leave jail to continue work as a law clerk.
    … He pleaded guilty earlier this month to 53 misdemeanor counts of public indecency, sexual imposition and criminal trespassing.

    Linnen, a former lawyer for the Ohio House Republican caucus, has admitted to photographing women while he was unclothed over nearly two years, gaining the name “the naked photographer.” He apologized in court, but none of his victims was there.

    Judge Tommy Thompson declined to label Linnen a sexual offender, saying he was not a threat to the community and was unlikely to repeat the offense.

    Thompson ordered Linnen to keep seeking psychiatric treatment. Linnen said in court that he meets with a psychologist weekly and goes to daily meetings for people addicted to sex.

    For some reason, I’m noticing a sense of irony to all this, in ways I’m sure others can guess at. (and thanks to Law.com for posting this story – so good to know that Law.com isn’t always so dry…)

    One day before the presidential debate… ’nuff said.

  • One Year Anniversary

    Ah, yeah, that. It’s been a year. Times flies!! (Happy One Yr, FC) In honor of the anniversary and noting my sporadic posting of late, here’s a long-ish post.

    Happy Moon Festival. A friend of mine once said that the moon cakes we Chinese folks eat are the equivalent of the western culture’s ubiquitous holiday fruitcakes. I’m inclined to agree (although, moon cakes are just that much better, in terms of good old fashioned lard goodness).

    Upstate NY district attorney declined to press charges on a restaurant customer who refused to pay the 18% tip because he felt that he had poor service. Basically, the restaurant has to say it’s a surcharge (and therefore required) rather than gratuity (which, by definition, is discretionary) to get the money their staff relies on as income.

    On the one hand, it’s harsh publicity – it takes guts for a restauranteur to want to press criminal charges a cheap customer (plus, once the news gets out that you did that, who would want to go to your restaurant unless you make awesome cheesecake or something worth risking the wrong calculation of the tip and going to jail or paying fines for it?). And, once Cheap Customer is made an example, I suppose it makes people put the money out for tips. Personally, I think we’re better off making it a surcharge (it’ll make it easier to calculate and then neither the restaurantuers nor the customers will shaft the labor force, at least, not by not paying up).

    One should never say that the Asian American voters are a monolithic voting group – this NY Times article by John M. Broder illustrates how one Vietnamese California community differ on the issues:

    Little Saigon straddles the cities of Westminster and Garden Grove, between them the home of 70,000 Vietnamese-Americans. An estimated 200,000 ethnic Vietnamese live in Orange County, the largest concentration outside Vietnam. Little Saigon is their social and commercial hub, a thriving center that sprang up in an area once covered by strawberry fields and derelict warehouses.

    One can drive for a dozen blocks along Bolsa and Westminster Avenues and not see a single storefront sign in English. The shops are full of Vietnamese foods and toys and videos and clothing. Vietnamese music blares from open shops, and the fast-food cafes emit the sweet and spicy aromas of Vietnamese cooking, redolent of lemon grass and simmered pork and nut-dough pastries.

    Conversation tends to focus on commerce and the capitalist paradise these refugees from Communism have found here. But it is not difficult to coax opinions about the presidential campaign from those who have stopped for a cup of French iced coffee or a plate of sticky rice.[….]

    [Mr. Chau] said he approved of the war in Iraq and hoped only that the United States would stay to finish the job of wiping out the insurgents.

    “They’re doing the same thing to the Americans in Iraq that the Communists did in Vietnam,” Mr. Chau said. “They should stay there until it’s better. The United States should have stayed longer in Vietnam.”

    Orange County tends to be safe country for Republicans, although by smaller margins than in the past because of changing demographics. The Vietnamese-American population, like the Cuban exile community in Miami, is fiercely anti-Communist and predominantly, though not unanimously, Republican[…. ]

    Mr. Kerry’s outspoken opposition to the Vietnam War won him few friends here… Others claim Mr. Kerry was duped into believing that the Vietcong were peace-loving rice farmers.

    “I think a lot of people here are affected by what Mr. Kerry did after he returned from the war,” said Toan Do, editor of Nguoi Viet Daily News, the largest Vietnamese-language daily newspaper in the country. “There is a certain resentment about his antiwar activities because the Vietnamese feel they are victims of the Communist invasion, and the Americans didn’t see it that way, especially the protesters.”

    Still, Mr. Do said, most Vietnamese in the United States would rather not relive that era, even as politicians try to keep it alive with the Swift Boat advertisements and the flap over Mr. Bush’s service in the Air National Guard.

    “The Vietnamese are not really interested in this discussion,” Mr. Do said. “They want to look forward and not look back into the past.”

    There are Kerry supporters among Vietnamese-Americans, those who see him as a brave patriot and vastly preferable to Mr. Bush.

    “John Kerry is a hero to me,” said Thuy Reed, 52, who married an American contractor and fled Vietnam in January 1975, three months before the fall of Saigon. She is a writer and founder of New Viet Women, a support group for Vietnamese women in the United States.

    “By acting and behaving the way John Kerry did, it shows a person like me that he has faith in the American way, to come back here and say what he said,” Ms. Reed said. “Where I came from, they would take me away if I did anything like that. So when I heard about Jane Fonda or when John Kerry came home, it showed me what America was.”

    She said she intended to vote for Mr. Kerry, in part because he was among the leaders in Congress who pushed for restoration of diplomatic relations with Vietnam, which came in 1995. She also fears that the United States is embarked on a dangerous course in Iraq and believes Mr. Kerry will change it.

    Politics just isn’t simple, I’d say.

    Mixed feelings about the MoMa’s reopening in Manhattan with a $20 admission fee. Quite an expense. On the one hand, you’d think that this would be a disincentive to go there with MoMa making us dig deeper into our pockets; on the other hand, even the Daily News today pointed out that there are ways around the $20 – MoMa’s still has discount or free nights and maybe it’s worth the $20 anyway (they do need to pay the renovations and they have major masterpieces). Eh; things aren’t getting cheaper in this city either way.

    And, last but not least, “Have you eaten yet?: The Chinese Restaurant in America” – an exhibit of one man’s collection of the Chinese restaurant menus. NY Times has an interesting article on it, and NYC’s Museum of Chinese in the Americas (MoCA) is hosting the exhibit until June 2005. MoCA’s newsletter directed me to the equally fascinating Associated Press article about the exhibt. I guess I can’t look at those ubiquitous menus the same way anymore.

    Enjoy what’s left of the weekend.

  • Midweek tv stuff

    I watched most of “Amazing Race” last night – quite a finish. Quite glad that the Christian Modeling couple didn’t win it (they got on my nerves). Don’t know what exactly the adventure says about their relationship, or that of the other young white couple; the middle age-ish black couple certainly defied age and they had great drive and adaptability. I can see why this is an Emmy-winning reality show. Nicely done.

    I watched pieces of the “Smallville” season premiere – the first appearance of Lois Lane, in the life of Clark Kent. Cool. Looks interesting.

    In that same time slot, I was mostly watching “Lost” on ABC – the new show about a group of plane crash survivors and dealing with what’s with them on this island. This ain’t “Fantasy Island,” and so far seems like an engrossing watch (and I didn’t intend to watch it; it was on and I more-or-less stayed watching, but for commercials). It’s created by the man who made “Alias” and “Felicity,” so I worry about the weirdness that’s more than likely to ensue (and I haven’t even seen Part 2 of “Lost”‘s series premiere yet). Slate.com’s Dana Steven’s has her own take on it.

    I also watched the series premiere of “CSI: New York.” I like Gary Sinise as the lead, Mac Taylor; he has an aura of tragedy about him. And, he honestly looks and acts like a nice guy, as opposed to Slightly-Eccentric-But-Strong Gil Grissom of “CSI” original and “I’m the Ex-NYPD Blue Man” Horatio Crane on “CSI: Miami” (a show I haven’t watched since its own pilot crossover episode on “CSI”). The 9/11 aspects are a little grating, but it depends on how heavy handed the writers want to make it – which remains to be seen. Melina Kanakaredes as the main female lead (Stella) still has her touch of “Providence” about her, but hopefully the character will develop (well, yeah, I know shows like these don’t really focus all that much on character, but I’m a character-focused person when I watch tv; I can’t help that). Could be watchable of the CSI spinoffs.

    During channel-changing moments, I watched some of “Law & Order” – goodbye Jerry Orbach (Det. Lenny Briscoe) and hello Dennis Farina as Det. Joe Fontana. Umm, well, it looked weird. Years of Orbach and so it’s hard to adjust. (and Farina isn’t exactly like a memorable character actor for me; but that’s just me).

    And, then there’s the stuff about Dan Rather. I’m not a big CBS person, and definitely not big on CBS News anyway, and ultimately, the whole CBS-using-dubious-sources storyline mainly reveals to me that the media really tries too hard to get the exclusive and Dan Rather… well, he has his history in eccentricity. So, I’m not suspecting a left-wing conspiracy, not really; just Dan-and-CBS trying to get something thing. (just an opinion, mind you.)

    Hmm… first day of fall indeed.