Category: Brooklyn

  • November 11

    Thank you to the veterans. What we really need is to help improve social services for veterans and their families; but take a moment to think about what they have done for us all.

    Also: on the day of World War I’s armistice, with next year the 100th anniversary of the start of WW I, take a moment to think about a world without war.

    Also, not to say that we don’t acknowledge veterans, but it takes all of us to help each other; so I thought that this was an interesting article by vet Alex Horton on The Atlantic, including how he considered the perspective of World War II veterans (who transformed culture even if it took 60 years to have a memorial for their war; sometimes it’s not about the public acknowledgement – you can have history for that – but it’s about what you do):

    I once talked to a World War II veteran about the experience of attending college after coming home, and asked if it was jarring to sit next to those who never served. I wondered if veterans huddled together under the umbrella of mutual understanding and thought less of civilians who never shouldered a rifle. His answer was surprising. They were proud of their time in uniform, he said, but for many, the war interrupted their lives, and education was a return to normalcy. Instead of a victory lap, they were more interested in getting back on track.

    Perhaps the fact that many Iraq and Afghanistan veterans I’ve talked to take precisely the opposite view is due, in part, to current civilian attitudes. I call it the pedestal problem.

    Horton further notes:

    That’s the problem with viewing something on a pedestal: you can only see one side at a time, and rarely at depth. It produces extremes—the valiant hero or the downtrodden, unstable veteran.

    Thank you for your service. But we’re looking for someone else.

    The view from the pedestal has warped the perspective many veterans hold when they leave the service. We call ourselves warriors and worship the Spartan ethos, but don’t always appreciate that our society is detached from our conflicts the way Sparta never was. [….]

    The place to begin is to understand ourselves [as veterans] — and what we need to begin defining success after we leave the service. In addition, our society should be less concerned with freebie giveaways and boilerplate op-eds on Veterans Day, and more concerned about how to provide opportunities for our veterans to flourish after their service.” (emphasis added)

    Worth a read.

    In the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines, here are ways to help.

    A lot of food for thought on this day.

    (cross-posted at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com)

  • Not in Kansas City November 2013

    triscribe’s FC and a crew of the Asian American Bar Association of New York (AABANY) are at the NAPABA convention in Kansas City, land of the bbq. (pardon the abbreviations; we’re lawyers).  FC noted on his Facebook – as did AABANY on the AABANY blog: Judge Denny Chin and AABANY’s historical trial re-enactments – including the newest one, “22 Lewd Chinese Women,” done at the NAPABA convention in Kansas City – got covered by NPR! (so law and bbq are perfect together). (also: I’m sorry to miss the fun, you guys). FC is quite prominent in the photo there.

    Meanwhile, I’m plowing ahead with this year’s National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) project.  I didn’t plan ahead nearly as much as in previous years (work, work, work, trying not to think about work, work).  This year, the aim is just to write fiction and to feel good about fiction, since I haven’t done very much fiction writing for awhile and my legal (work) writing (such as it is) is tiring me out.  Writing in a genre that I usually don’t write – fantasy – has been a challenge.  So far, I have a psychic and some fortune-telling, a prophecy that the world will end, a search for the “Elixir of Elysium” and an FBI special agent who’s sort of wondering why is he in this. Oh, and now there’s about to be a murder (since I seem to need a reminder that I’ve written murder mysteries and those can be more fun, in some ways).  Hmmm.

    I’m somewhat blogging about my NaNo project over at my tumblr.

    In Brooklyn, we’ve apparently been very excited to see “Elementary” filming in the area.  I liked that the show returned Sherlock’s brother, Mycroft.  Also: they did the latest episode on Silver Blaze! This is all making me want to reread the classic Holmes stories.

    Still hoping that “Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD,” via the people of Joss Whedon, will keep going (ABC gave it a full season, so…).  I think the latest episode was an improvement. I wanted to hug Agent Phil Coulson, the man who came back from the dead from “The Avengers” (yes, yes, big spoiler, but since so many of us saw “The Avengers” movie, get over it).  I like Phil, and actor Clark Gregg has really pushed the angle with Phil’s toughness and professionalism and… yep, humanity, and not wanting to face the real trauma (like, oh, death and maybe not being afraid about that).

    The hard part is building the relationships and getting to the humanity – the stuff that superhero stories don’t nearly get to cover enough (unless you count the countless times of “Let’s keep torturing Batman!”).  Since Agents of SHIELD is about the people who are basically the support staff to the superheroes (with their own adventures besides just cleaning up after The Avengers), they should try to cover more, not just be X-File-like or Alias-like or Fringe-ish.  Come on, Agents of SHIELD, keep at it!  You can do it!

    (bear in mind, Whedon’s tv shows have a slow go.  “Buffy” moved quickly to establish the friendship of Buffy, Willow, and Xander, but high school and monsters kind of make that kind of thing happen).

    To be airing on PBS: Hugh Jackman in “Oklahoma!” (link to the story coverage over on Entertainment Weekly’s website).  I could have sworn that PBS had shown this years ago, but they’re showing it again as part of a fall arts festival this month (last night was “Company” with Neil Patrick Harris, Stephen Colbert, etc.). “Great Performances” is the umbrella show airing the musicals.

    I wish PBS would take more stuff out of ye olde archives – they’ve got tons of good stuff (oh, and it’s almost pledge time, so…)

    Oh, and in sports: Boston Red Sox won the World Series, which we in New York City might just have to say “congrats.”  The New York City Marathon 2013 was great – things are so much better without a hurricane.  And the NY Giants have won two games so far.  Yay.  Columbia football has so far not yet won a game. Ugh.

    On to the next thing…

  • One Year Later: Superstorm Sandy and Stuff

    Time flies.  Here are some of our posts from the results of Superstorm Sandy:

    The eve of Sandy (with more presidential campaign and Star Trek anniversary coverage than anything else – and a little sports and a reminder of how Gangnam Style captured our imagination.

    Some of FC’s photos of the local gas station, the lines for supplies, and the return of the subway.

    The days after

    WNYC has special series on Life After Sandy.

    Oh, and according to Time Out NY, MTA is going to be nice to mass transit riders on the anniversary of Sandy; free rides for riders on the A and R? Cool!

    I’m not sure of the full effects, because in so many ways, we’re still feeling it (R and G subway tunnels’ repairs are ongoing, as far as NYC goes, and I shake my head about South Street Seaport, since change is change, when the storm just made the change go faster; and the effects on public housing is horrid, because these were buildings that didn’t get nearly enough help before Sandy in the first place).  Infrastructure investments and many other implications are not stuff we’re facing, but then again, are expectations too high, too low, too whatever?

     

  • What, How Did October Go By So Fast?

    We’re nearing the one year anniversary of Hurricane Sandy.  I can’t believe we’re getting toward the end of October already, because I’m not ready for my writing venture for this November’s National Novel Writing Month…

    …And, I have to catch up on getting some posts up here on triscribe or over at my tumblr site.

    The thing I love about fall tv is checking out the new shows – trying to be hopeful to find the next new thing (umm, I’m going to hope that Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD will get better. And that Agent Coulson is NOT an android or a clone of his previous self from The Avengers movie, and I wish, for sentimental reasons, that Michael J. Fox’s new show was funny for me) or seeing how crappy a show is and figuring what would be the first show to go down (that turned out to be ABC’s Lucky 7).

    Meanwhile, FOX pushed back the series premiere of Almost Human, the J.J. Abrams’ exploration of a human cop-robot cop partnership, with Karl Urban (the Dr. McCoy of Abrams-verse Star Trek) and Michael Ealy. I’m intrigued to see what J.J. Abrams and Friends will do this time, and Karl Urban doing American tv!  But, really, cops and robot cops have been done before on tv. I remembered NBC’s summer experiment, Mann and Machine.  I was too young at the time to realize that something entertaining could be so cancelled, but it was a real series – at least, it’s on imdb; Yancy Butler as the robot who wanted to be human and David Andrews as the cynical cop (who has gone on to be a credible character actor in shows or movies that require an authority figure like a cop or military person; pretty good for an ex-lawyer!)  – with a touch of the battle of the sexes and odd chemistry – since the robot just happened to have a sexy female form… well, I have no idea if Urban and Ealy will go in that kind of direction, but if FOX can give me a solid friendship chemistry, a la Holmes-Watson or a House-Wilson, I could be pretty content.

    Speaking of Holmes and Watson, I like watching Elementary. Last season’s season finale was really good and brought on the feeling of “I want more!”  So far this season tries to hit that level of “Gimme more!”  The season premiere took us to London, and has Holmes trying to patch things up with Lestrade (yep, a nut job addicted to fame, and still not nearly a good detective; and probably not as good as Gregson, which probably was the case in the books/stories) and Holmes gets a new point of restraint with Mycroft (yay, Holmes’ brother showed up!).

    Holmes and Watson are friends, although trust issues might still crop up.  I’d like them to stay friends because there’s just not nearly enough solid friends shows (not when every show seems to insist on having the foundational romantic relationship; and the Holmes-Watson relationship has historically been fraught with interpretation that should just be left to the readers/viewers anyway!).  Jonny Lee Miller as Holmes is definitely more human than Benedict Cumberbatch’s Holmes – and I like that.  It makes the levels of ridiculous easier to swallow.  Lucy Liu as a smart Watson is also fun.

    The recent episode of Holmes’ telling Watson about his first interest in a murder, back when he was a teenager, was a curiously interesting episode, especially once I realized that the actress who played Holmes’ crush/pen pal from his adolescence, Laura Benanti, had also played the first love of Miller’s character, Eli Stone, of the old ABC series, Eli Stone (where Miller was the crazy lawyer; umm, the show was entertaining, I swear!).  Benanti and Miller still have a nice chemistry (which I never quite understood how Eli Stone didn’t push more, but that’s another discussion entirely).

    I do think that Captain Gregson and Detective Bell need to have beefed up roles.  An ensemble is more fun tv.  Bell’s sarcasm has had some good moments and could be deepened.  And, why on earth would you waste actor Aidan Quinn by not giving Gregson more lines/action?

    Meanwhile, CBS has been filming Elementary in downtown Brooklyn/Brooklyn Heights. I have not yet spotted either Liu or Miller.

    The passing of Marcia Wallace (see here for commentary over at Entertainment Weekly), a character actor who popped up in a lot of sitcoms over the years (including Full House) and whose voice is memorable as Mrs. Krabappel from The Simpsons.  As Mrs. Krabappel, she brought a lot of humor, bitter humor, sarcasm, and grace to the character.

    My two cents on Mrs. Krabappel: Mrs. Krabappel was exhausted as Bart Simpson’s teacher, as life made things a joke (her husband left her, kids don’t care, and Springfield Elementary…).  The episode where Mrs. Krabappel and Mr. Skinner had their romance (and the whole community so didn’t get it, and Bart was a pawn) was one of those funny and poignant episodes that shows don’t do enough.  Krabappel and Skinner were just two lonely people, so why couldn’t they get it together?  Well, besides the complications arising from, say, Skinner’s mom… and I kept cracking up over Krusty the Klown’s reaction to the town’s uproar to the relationship (as Mrs. Lovejoy – the reverend’s wife – had said something along the lines of outrage over the idea that the teacher and the principal were or could be having “s-e-x in front of the c-h-i-l-d-r-e-n”; and Krusty – who either couldn’t spell or was semi-illiterate – said: “What?  The Sex Cauldron?  I thought that place closed?”)…

    Anyway, the point is, Mrs. Krabappel was a great character and I don’t see another actress taking it on.  I understand that the producers of The Simpsons will have to retire her now – it makes sense.  So, farewell to Marcia Wallace; so long to Mrs. K., wherever you are!

    I liked how this tumblr had put it, showing a set of images from the episode where Bart had foolishly set Mrs. K. up with “Woodrow,” who had the face of hockey legend Gordie Howe (at least I think those images came from that episode; it might be from the episode when everyone thought that the meteor was going to wipe out the town, which was also bittersweet).  Mrs. K to her kids, with a sad faced Bart: “Well, it’s going to be hard to say goodbye to all of you. /  We’ve had a lot of fun together. / Where does the time go?”before fading to black to the show’s credit of Marcia Wallace.

    I’d like to think that Mrs. K. finally found happiness somewhere.

    Thinking about the retirement of Mrs. K reminds me of this article over at Slate from September: the proposition that the powers behind the Simpsons seriously consider letting the Simpsons age already. Frankly, for me, the more poignant and funny moments from the earlier seasons were the flash-forwards to the future – like the episode where Lisa got married, or the glimpse of Chief Justice Bart Simpson of the US Supreme Court finally getting to watch the Itchy and Scratchy movie, or the other alternate universe where US President Lisa Simpson has to ask her deadbeat brother Bart talk the allies into letting the US off the hook (or buy more time) on debts.  If the Simpsons were to age, it might even motivate me to watch the show again.

    See, it didn’t seem so funny anymore when Apu’s octopulets were suddenly older toddlers than Maggie Simpson.  And, I can only watch so much “Homer is a bad dad and then realizes he loves his family after all” or “Marge tries to find a new hobby” stories and how many ways can the show go to focus another character? (did Bumble Bee Man have an episode yet?).  Can the Simpsons go on forever doing the same thing, over and over, and being the same while time moves on for the rest of us?  Bart was once a kid in the late 1980’s/1990s – the episodes recalling Homer and Marge’s past as youngsters of the 1970’s were sweet stuff. Rebooting the Simpsons as if Homer and Marge were youngsters of the 1980’s… that doesn’t work for me. (I think FOX had an episode that time-shifted when Homer and Marge were young; it really felt wrong).

    Aging the Simpsons would at least explain why Bart is no longer being taught by Mrs. K and we can all move forward and move on already. The character development (yes, even for a cartoon) would be fascinating to watch.  So, come on, FOX and the Simpsons’ producers – let’s do it. Think of Marcia Wallace, Phil Hartman, and all those who passed and how we can never forget their characters – and think of finding a resolution.

    (or if you really want a cartoon where no one ages or learns a lesson – well, you could bring back Futurama. Again.)

    And, FOX – or your sister entity, FX Speaking of cable tv – AMC: thanks for that final run of Breaking Bad. Powerful, well-written, and just nicely done.  The series finale was good stuff.  It didn’t hit the levels of brutal-what-the-eff level of the other episodes of the final eight, but I think it hit the right note.  And, I’m speaking as someone who didn’t get to jump on the Breaking Bad bandwagon during the rest of the series.

    New York metro area sports at every level is not spectacular. NY Jets isn’t nearly as bad as expected, but suffered a crappy loss today.  NY Giants is 2-6 as of today; being 0-6 was horrid.  NY Mets and Yankees didn’t make it to the playoffs.  Yankees gave Mariano Rivera a nice farewell, as the great reliever retired, but how will the Yankees fare in the future? Meanwhile, the NY Rangers as a team isn’t very good either.  Let’s see how the NBA teams will be.  (my alma mater hit new levels of bad college football by losing yesterday to Dartmouth, with the score of 0-56; you can understand how I probably should not follow college football).

    Well, the World Series between Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Cardinals has been weird and wacky. May the best team win…

    Postscript: according to A.V. Club, Mrs. Krabappel actually re-married to Ned Flanders, of all people.  Seriously, I fell so behind on The Simpsons.  In my mind, for all the bitterness and banter between Mrs. K and Principal Skinner, they would always have the little spark between them.

  • Taking a Pause to Remember and Reflect

    As we have done previously:

    Try to remember the kind of September

    When life was slow and oh, so mellow.

    Try to remember the kind of September

    When grass was green and grain was yellow.

    -“Try to Remember,” from The Fantasticks.

    Another photo I had taken a couple of years ago (maybe last year or two ago?).

     

    (I took the photo above at the Brooklyn Promenade, a couple of years ago.  That framed picture is still there, do check it out if you’re in the neighborhood. — ssw15).

     

     

    (cross-posted at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com)

  • Winding Down August 2013

    8/28/13 was the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington.

    Congressman John Lewis, the last living speaker from the March on Washington – and now 50 years later, still inspiring us all:

    More stuff from PBS NewsHour’s playlist on the commemoration, on the NewsHour’s YouTube Channel.  There’s also NPR’s coverage – terrific stuff.

    There is also President Obama’s speech; definitely worth a listen.

    Some fascinating thoughts by Emil Guillermo on Asian Americans’ relevance in remembering the March on Washington, over at AALDEF’s website.

    Keep hope alive; the dream still lives on.  Maybe…

  • Happy Happy

    I’m off by a couple of hours/a day, but…

    Best wishes to FC and P on one month since the arrival of Baby A!

    For your pleasure, consider this photo below that I had taken while off the Highline and near Chelsea Market, from a couple of years ago.  I’m not sure if Oscar is still there, but he looks strangely cheerful in this photo.

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    And, I think Sesame Street is appropriate for kids of all ages… And then there is this:

     

     

     

     

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    I had taken that photo of the sign on the City Store, when they were selling like hotcakes awhile back (and properly licensed for such) (I think the time stamp on the photo is right; I never quite get it correct on my digital camera). Cookie Monster Cop is cute.  And funny that Big Bird is the cabbie, when Oscar was the one with a cab (and, according to his performer, Caroll Spinney, Oscar’s voice was inspired by a NYC cabbie who drove Spinney to the very day he first does Oscar).  And Oscar used to be carried around by Bruno, a sanitation guy.  Hmmm….

    Welcome to the world, Baby A!

  • Happy Independence Day 2013!

    Happy 4th of July! Take a moment to remember what the American version of democracy and representative gov’t means, and those who serve since 1776. And then figure out if you’re really going to overeat, or watch what tv marathon is on (Walking Dead marathon? Star Trek: TNG marathon over at BBC America? Oh, yeah, fireworks).

    From an e-mail of the Brooklyn Historical Society: July 4, 1827 is also Emancipation Day for NYS, as the day that slavery was finally abolished in NYS. Lots of cool things happened on 7/4.

    The complicated history and implications of Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America,” over at Slate (excerpt of God Bless America: The Surprising History of an Iconic Song by Sheryl Kaskowitz).

    This year, the US Supreme Court really packed it in at the end of the 2012-2013 term, with decisions that I still have to read already.  But, I got a kick out of the Breakfast Table at Slate, where Emily Bazelon facilitates the posted discussion with the crackling minds of Walter Dellinger and the Posners, Judge Richard Posner – such a great read as ever – and Eric Posner (son of Judge Posner and no slouch on his own as a legal mind as a Prof. of U of Chicago Law).  Starting with the first entry to the last – this was a good start of the coverage of the US Supreme Court.

    Not that I had timed this at all, but I finished reading this week The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin by Gordon S. Wood.  An exploration of Franklin’s evolution (arguably revolution) from British patriot to American revolutionary, Wood’s smooth writing made this a terrific read.  I enjoyed it.

    Currently reading: E.E. Cummings poetry, from this nifty little Selected Poems edition edited by Cummings biographer Richard S. Kennedy.

    Well, every year, TCM on cable shows 1776 the Musical. (for whatever reason, they scheduled it at 1:30am – when it’s 7/5… sigh).   At any rate, it’s a great musical, really awesome, and felt pretty accurate, putting aside the whole movie-version-of-Broadway-show element. John Adams just pisses everybody off and we keep trying to fight a good fight. In the middle of an icky summer too. Yep. (N.B. – John Adams here was played by the awesome William Daniels, well before he did St. Elsewhere, Knight Rider, and Boy Meets World on tv)

  • May Day

    It’s May 1st!  And, it has been a cool spring. The flowers look nice though.

    May 1 isn’t just May Day, it’s also Law Day (umm, something to do with Eisenhower and the ABA’s way to tackle the Cold War and how the USA wasn’t like other places, if I remember correctly? Never quite sure!). Rule of law, if we can just remember that, not about crazy people shtick.

    So, feel free to check out the Presidential Proclamation for Law Day 2013.

    And the ABA Law Day website, with all kinds of fascinating materials.  Some bar associations even make it a Law Week, or designate a different day. NYCLA, for example, or NYSBA (check out the press release statement from NYSBA President Seymour James). Brooklyn also has an event, fitting this year’s theme of “Realizing the Dream: Equality for All” (pdf).

    Meanwhile, it’s also the start of APA Heritage Month. And there’s a Presidential Proclamation for that too and stuff from the White House Initiative on AAPI’s (Asian American and Pacific Islanders) (h/t: Angry Asian Man blog).

    Combining both Law Day and APA Heritage Month is this nifty item in the NY Law Journal by Mike Huang, current President of our very own AABANY.  (h/t: NAPABA’s Facebook page and AABANY’s Facebook page).

    So many events out there!  Keep hope alive! (or so goes the spirit of spring anyway).

  • US Supreme Court in Spring!

    I recently finished reading The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court by Jeffrey Toobin.  In the grand tradition of Bob Woodward’s The Brethren, Toobin’s book is quite read, even though it took me awhile to finish it (I’ve been reading other things in between, and my commuting has made reading not so easy).  Toobin’s just a great writer, with a smooth writing style, and the feeling of being on the inside – and not to mention his making the law parts graspable – were definite pluses.

    The book starts off with covering the odd oath blooper of the 1st Obama inauguration, tracing the parallels of the paths of President Obama and Chief Justice Roberts, and then leading to through the selections and confirmations of Justice Sotomayor and Justice Kagan, and an overview of the case of the Affordable Care Act (the Obama health care case – the big surprise of last year). The twists and turns – and the revelation that the justices are quite human in their emotions and their politics – were quite something to read about, all things considered.

    And, the issues covered are horrifically timely in light of the current issues before the federal government this spring: gun control, gay rights, and judicial independence.  Toobin fired up on originalism – as Justices Scalia and Thomas view it – and how it impacts stare decisis and  how partisanship can be a problem (or not, depending on how one has viewed the evolution of things of the past 40 years).  I kept nodding and shaking my head a lot during my reading of the book.

    That Toobin closed the book on the big problem of the last several years – the obstruction toward federal judicial nominations – was really ridiculously timely, since I reached the end of the book on the same day as the NY Times had its editorial criticizing the sad state of the US Senate’s inability to vote up or down on judicial nominees and the President’s lack of hurrying up on naming nominees and better advocacy for them, causing a logjam in justice and impacting the Third Branch.

    (Just to be on the soap box: the whole situation is almost like a snake eating its own tail; I’m not even sure who to blame anymore there, since the rise of hyper partisanship is making such a mess. One can’t just blame this on the Democrats’ starting the Borking or what happened to the Justice Thomas confirmation, or even what happened during the George W. Bush era; it’s getting to supremely bad levels, when the current president was picking nominees who weren’t actually partisan lightening rods and they were still being held up on confirmation.  At some point, one can’t keep crying foul over the past and just get to work on the present and future – and don’t get fixated over a right wing agenda of a future.  I can only hope that nomination of Srikanth “Sri” Srinivasan to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit – a potential first Asian Indian American to serve as a federal appellate court judge and a potential first Asian Pacific American to serve on the D.C. Circuit – won’t become messy. Off the soap box).

    Anyway, I highly recommend this latest Toobin book if you’re a Supreme Court buff or a follower of American legal history or American politics. It’s definitely worth reading.

    Oh, and on a final note, I also highly recommend listening to the Terry Gross interview of Jeffrey Toobin on this book, on NPR’s “Fresh Air” – great stuff.

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