Category: Brooklyn

  • Charles Dickens

    NYC’s local PBS (Channel 13) is currently showing “Dickens” and I’m more or less watching it, thinking I ought to know something more about Dickens and having been inspired after reading Virginia Heffernan’s review in today’s NY Times. Basically, it’s a documentary spliced with dramatic recreations (or “historic reconstructions”); actors portraying Dickens and his family and friends look into the camera as if they are actually being interviewed by the documentarian. Meanwhile, there are clips of PBS/BBC movies of Dickens’ books and narration by novelist/biographer, Peter Ackroyd. It seems well acted, but Dickens comes across as really whiny so far (“My mother made me work in the factory when I was 12! I was robbed of my childhood and I could never forgive her!”; “I dumped my wife; no, I will not talk about my mistress(es)”). The overarching theme feels like “Innocence lost” again and again. Could this Dickens portrayal be a tad less Freudian, please? (hates his mom, loves his dad…) And, not to mention how Dickens had every potential of being a snob: dresses like a gentleman as an adult; resents working in the factory; resents that his sister got to attend the Royal Academy for piano lessons while he was in the factory; did he ever realize he had to work because his family needed the money? It’s easy to see how Dickens created the character of Pip in “Great Expectations” – he used his own self as a model. Pip was convincingly portrayed as a young man who resented his working class circumstances because Dickens was that very same kind of person. Peter Ackroyd intones about how Dickens suffered “humiliations of his youth”; I get the feeling that had therapy been invented back then, perhaps Dickens wouldn’t have gone to his writing to get through his emotional turmoils!

    Dickens was a snob (possibly), but championed outcasts. In his public speaking circuits, he was amusing but was internally dark. He apparently hated London for being the source of his sorrows, but all his books recreate 19th century London amazingly (did he really hate London, or was he doing all he could as a reformer because he saw the city had potential to be better than a place collecting the worse of society?). Dickens’ wife loved the man; how much did he love his wife, rather than just using her (marrying her because he needed a marriage)? Did he ever empathize with her pains (she bore all those kids for him; he was needy; she was needy; it was not a great marriage)… Dickens was human and the documentary is very good about making that very apparent.

    I still don’t enjoy these kinds of documentaries that much; it’s weird to watch an actor speak as Dickens in such a revealing manner – it doesn’t feel like they’re speaking in a 19th century style, even if all the characters’ British accents are plummy and nice. A celebrity like Dickens revealing all his frustrations sounds too much like a 20th/21st century creation. And, I miss the talking heads; where are all the scholars who talk about their areas of expertise? I’m left wondering why I have to listen to only Peter Ackroyd (I’m not so well-read to have gotten around to reading Ackroyd’s works either). Oh, well, each person has his/her own taste about documentaries.

    Sidenote – Virginia Heffernan used to be Slate.com’s tv critic; I enjoy her writing, because it always gives me the feeling that she’s someone who really enjoys television and writes well. I like to see that critics like their subject area, even if they’re critiquing something less-than-glowingly. The NY Times has an asset in Heffernan.

  • Pocket Change

    While in the process of cleaning up my apartment, I collected coins that fell out of pockets and onto the floor. Commerce Bank has a neat coin counting machine called the “Penny Arcade”. You dump the coins into the machine, the machine counts the coins and gives you a receipt, and you just go to the teller to collect fresh green bills. The really neat thing is that unlike CoinStar, which does the same thing at supermarkets, Commerce Bank does not take any commission for the service. There is also a guessing game — you get a free prize if you guess within $1.99 of the counted amount. I guessed $35, but it turned out to be $51.47 — what a find!

  • Survivor Strategy

    RE SSW’s comments in http://www.triscribe.com/wp/index.php?m=200312#post-69:

    I thought that the boy scout leader’s strategy in keeping Sandra backfired. I suppose that if you had to spend your last night on the island with someone, it would be better for one’s sanity to not have Jon scheming and psyching you out all night. However, there was no way that anyone on the jury would have voted for Jon. When the questioning by Jon (I think) forced the scoutleader to renounce her uniform, that lost it for the jury, IMHO.

  • Movie season climax

    Not a real big movie goer and having missed a number of big ones this year (like T3 and Matrix3), I’m definitely not missing Lord of the Rings. I saw The Last Samurai only because a couple of my friends wanted to go. I’m really glad I did, despite me not being a big fan of Tom Cruise.

    I saw The Last Samurai twice. The second time, it was more powerful emotionally to me. I was able to appreciate the actor’s and character portrayals more and realized that was a big reason for its effect. Probably won’t get a lot of awards but definitely for me a big winner. The movie spoke to me and I wasn’t sure if it was due to my “Asian-ness” or because of the universal (maybe, maybe not) virtues of service and honor. My swedish friend saw it twice and was also completely taken in by the movie and the virtues the movie tried to depict through the movies characters.

    Don’t know enough about Chinese history to say whether or not there have been any similar classes in China. Service, honor are also very Confucian type of virtues. Going to do some preliminary research into this but probably won’t turn up much. I think this movie is a Top 5 movie of all time for me.

    =YC

  • TV and then some

    Watching enough tv this weekend:

    The news’ broadcasting of Lt. Gen. Sanchez’s press conference of the capture Saddam Hussein in Iraq kept repeating Sanchez’s use of the phrase “spider hole” to describe the location in which Hussein was hiding. Today, Slate.com’s “Explainer” explains what the heck is a “spider hole.” Interesting explanation.

    Slate.com also has a nice article on CBS’ “Two and a Half Men,” a.k.a. that show that Charlie Sheen and John Cryer are on, with the time slot after “Everybody loves Raymond.” I thought the article was on target. I have actually caught myself watching an episode of “Two and a Half Men,” and expected it to be below average; after all, I still saw Charlie Sheen as the one who lowered the standards on “Spin City.” However, imagine my surprise when I actually found myself laughing at some of the jokes and watching for the full half hour (granted, I may have been waiting for the 10:oo news). Hmm. Charlie Sheen isn’t so bad when playing a character with whom he seems to identify (there were moments when his character was reminiscent of the Sheen of the gossip pages). But, the series’ writing still seemed weak and one is left wondering if it could be just a little more original. (I haven’t watched it in a long while, so the spoiler in the article about Cryer’s on-screen wife was surprising – but not by much, since Friends on NBC has already done a similar storyline). But, tv shows that are considered “average” can manage to stay on the air; lucky for them, I guess. I still miss “Boomtown” and its challenging elements.

    Last night’s “Survivor” was, as usual, riveting. I haven’t really followed it very much this season, but felt very much caught up by watching the last episode. Host Jeff Probst was as sharp as ever, and the “cast” was quite a bunch of crazies. The cast reunion in the third hour wasn’t too revealing, but I thought it was especially unsurprising that Mr. Savage was the contestant who was an attorney in real life, considering the way he analyzed everyone’s strategies in response to Probst’ questioning; could he possibly be less… analytical? Ah, well; a good tv night.

  • 6000 Years of Chinese sexual history

    Move over Kama Sutra. http://msnbc.msn.com/Default.aspx?id=3717283&p1=0

    Interesting reading on the major portals. I find that MSNBC from the MSN homepage and Slate always makes for hilarious to amazing reading. Coupled with a healthy dose of NYTimes and Washington Post and Businessweek, you’re pretty much covered all around. No time for CNN, substitute MSNBC for CNN just for convenience sake. I also prefer the Newsweek articles over the TIME articles. TIME used to be so good 20 yrs ago but now it’s pretty pathetic. Newsweek is so much better I think.

    I miss all the snow out there… makes for a really good holiday spirit.

    Ho-ho-ho!
    =YC

  • Happy Holidays

    My first blog post and am glad it is on FC’s uber-cool site.

    So happy holidays to all … have a happy and healthy one.

    If this works ok, I might start serious blather.

    Respect mah authoritai!!! 😉
    =YC

  • Winter Wonderland

    Umm, okay, I need to come up with better titles for my posts, particularly today. But, I wanted something to cover some rather disparate topics – The White House and ice skating.

    On tv this afternoon on ABC, it’s some International Challenge from Detroit, after last week’s ice skating competition in Paris. So far, the American men haven’t done so great (Timothy Goebbel fell a lot; Michael Weiss was rather lackluster). The women are up now and there are more falling (hmm). Dick Button is still a great commentary man and Peggy Fleming’s not so light on the critiquing either. Together, they make Terry Gannon a better play-by-play man – last week, he had Peter Carruthers as his partner, and yet Gannon did a lot of the criticizing himself (it seems he took a lot of lessons from Dick).

    Last night’s Channel 11 (WPIX) news closed with a highlight of the White House’s website feature – a short movie on the Christmas adventure of Barney Bush, the Bushes’ little black Scottish terrier. Not that I’d really apologize, but I am a sucker of presidential pets. I still haven’t gotten over the weirdest photo from the 2000 campaign from Time magazine, where George W. Bush is spending quality time with his cat and yet the picture made it look like the cat was kind of trying to mawl Bush’s arm. Anyway, Barney’s the cutest dog and I had to check out the little movie. What Xmas fun!

    Plot: Barney’s assigned to help decorate the White House for Christmas and Chief of Staff Andrew Card is demanding no antics until Christmas, when the job is done. Trying to humor the children, I suppose; I think we all know that the decorations aren’t attributed to the dog, no matter how smart the dog is. Pros: Barney is cute. Andrew Card is a better actor, being very convincing at the guy in charge of operations (which he is). General Counsel Alberto Gonzalez (and still referred as “Judge Gonzalez” because he was a judge in Texas) tries to hang a wreath with his… ceremonial gavel. (what? No one could have given him a hammer? Even he knows better than that!). Advisor Karl Rove also there – umm, I’ll reserve judgment on his appearance, but it was amusing. The best appearance was Ari Fleischer, former presidential press secretary. Fleischer’s playing cards with Barney and Card comes in and says, “Barney, go do your job. And, Ari Fleischer – what are you doing here? You don’t even work here anymore!” LOL. Ari Fleischer’s certainly looking less stressed out now that he’s not working at the White House; his Yankees baseball cap was a deft touch. Has the Texas bunch of the White House been giving him a ribbing that the Yankees’ Andy Pettitte has gone back home to Texas?

    Fitting the winter/holiday theme – ABC’s rebroadcasting Charlie Brown Christmas tonight. Come on, get in touch with your childhood and watch it.

  • Out of the mouths of certain politicians

    Today’s New York Times Quotation of the Day got a reaction out of me:

    “I’m like a fish out of water. They’ve never run across anything like me. I mean, a guy like me running for the presidency? I’ve never run for anything.”
    – GEN. WESLEY K. CLARK, on campaigning, so far.

    Hmm. So, how are we supposed to interpret a guy admitting that he never ran for anything before? There are good and bad things about it. For instance, he has no experience in public office; that’s bad – how can he deal with things? But, by not having prior experience in public office, maybe he has fresh eyes and views toward old problems – that’s good. And, the “guy like me” is also an interesting line. A general/Rhodes scholar/West Point valedictorian isn’t devoid of a good resume; in the 19th century, he’d be a shoe-in for presidency (putting aside that there was no such thing as Rhodes scholar in the 19th century). Indeed, in modern era of the last 50 years, we had Eisenhower; so sure, if Joe Schmoe or MAD magazine’s Alfred E. Neuman said, “a guy like me running for the presidency?”, then I’d agree and say, “Yeah, you’re kidding, right?” But, the turn of the 21st century’s environment is where we would give pause and say to a general, “Yeah, you’re kidding, right?” Just my thought to reflect on the nuance of language and society; no conclusions can be made at this time.

    Slate.com had an interesting assessment of Teresa Heinz (aka Teresa Heinz Kerry), wife of the other Democratic candidate John Kerry. Like Clark, Heinz is known for saying off-the-cuff remarks. As a modern woman, what she does and says also becomes nuanced by the turn of the 21st century’s environment. The media would go into a feeding frenzy about what controversial thing she says or gossip how she’s one politician’s widow/another politician’s 2nd wife and an heiress. But, Heinz isn’t a rookie at political campaigning and appears to be able to do public outreach, since she can speak the languages of various communities. Heinz’s outspokenness can be an negative (there’s the stereotype of the scary politician’s wife, re: Lady Macbeth), but can be an asset – why not go out there and show what one individual can do and say, quite honestly? (this is the post-feminist age, isn’t it?).

    Such a confusing and an interesting time that we live in.

  • And in the news today…

    I may never fully understand the problems of campaign finance reform, but the NY Times had the quote of the day:

    “We are under no illusion. Money, like water, will always find an outlet. What problems will arise, and how Congress will respond, are concerns for another day.”
    – JUSTICES JOHN PAUL STEVENS and SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR, upholding new campaign finance rules.

    Hmm. Money like water… Such a needed resource, and yet we can never get enough of it… I like the analogy. Then again, how willing am I to plow through a many-page-Supreme Court decision to find more of the analogies that the nine justices are so good at making?

    Law.com directed me to this article about how California bar exam takers should take heart; failing the nation’s toughest bar exam isn’t so bad because lots of people fail it and it’s the toughest bar exam. Then, California gets to pat itself on the back for filtering out incompetents from practicing and yet, what’s so good about being the toughest when it means telling lots of people to either find another state to practice law or else be very realistic before applying to take that state’s bar exam or enter non-certified California law school. It once again highlights how the process can be such a mind game. Plus, there is something very disturbing about the points the article made – for instance, does it really make anyone feel better about not being able to practice law in California because it has the toughest bar exam? What does it say about the profession of law; that California is that progressive or that insightful and that protective of the consumers/clients?

    Just a rant; it may not mean very much and I should really find other things in the news to peruse…