Category: Brooklyn

  • TGIF!

    Interesting article on Barack Obama on Slate. The coverage on his (maybe) presidential intentions – well, I’m a fan of his, but I’m on the fence of whether he’s to pursue the presidency in 2008 or not, but the article makes the pro argument fairly well (while still taking into account realities). Got the new Obama book, so looking to read it soon – from what I can tell, not quite the poignancy of the first book, but it (more importantly) still has his voice.

    Game 5 of the World Series… sorry, Detroit.  St. Louis Cardinals are Champions.  Darn.

    I’m really getting into YouTube – watching these various clips or videos.  Prof. Tim Wu explains on Slate that YouTube’s pretty legal.  Not completely, but pretty much so.
    The amusing Direct TV ad with William Shatner as Captain Kirk inserted in a clip from (apparently Star Trek VI, not clear) which movie – praising that Starfleet installed the crystal clear picture… Actually, Shatner looks really odd due to either age or the walking in front of a blue screen to make the ad. But, what I really loved – the theme song (the one from the movies/Next Generation) – the majesty of the tune just makes the Trekkie in me swell with pride and hum along. Ah, 40 years of Trek indeed! Almost made me want to get DirecTV – almost!

  • Good partners

    Saturday judged three rounds of moot court. If you’re really into it, judging can be as draining as being up there as a moot court competitor. I didn’t judge the team from our school but they managed to advance to the nationals. The two members of the team work well together, complementing each other.

    On the Amazing Race, the chivalrous Korean Cho Bros are putting the best foot forward for Asian American racers with their good karma, singlehandedly helping 3 teams while catapulting from last place to fifth. The only question – what is up with their t-shirts? The Kuwait episode has to be one of the best editions of the race – hard puzzles in foreign languages, lots of driving around – think about this one for Emmy number five.

  • Monday

    That was a nice “How I Met Your Mother” episode on CBS tonight – Lily realizes that her dream job was what she had in the first place: her old job as kindergarten teacher; Ted achieves his dream to become the Youngest Architect in Charge of a Skyscraper Project (Probably), after standing up to his jerk boss; and Marshall gets a B+ in his constitutional law class – after Barney slept with Marshall’s professor (played by Jane Seymour, the ex-Medicine Woman) and achieved — well, you can guess what Barney achieved.

    Bill Gates, Sr., on public service law.  Heck, I didn’t even know that Gates, Sr., was a lawyer.  Cool.

    The passing of Jane Wyatt, best known to the mass audience at the mother in “Father Knows Best” – but best known to us Trekkies as Spock’s mom, the human Amanda Grayson who married the Vulcan Ambassador Sarek (and somehow put up with her husband and her son’s logical feuds).  Check out the link from Star Trek’s official website – there’s the clip where Jane Wyatt as Amanda slaps Spock for refusing to help the sick Sarek – the two actors at their best in character defining moments (the whole Spock internal conflict of his dual heritage; his mother’s commitment and love to the love of her life, even if it means overcoming serious motherly love).

  • Sunday

    Study says that chefs don’t count calories when you eat out – of course not!  That’s not their job.  As much as I don’t care for the big portions, the idea is that they give the big portions to convince you that you’re getting your money’s worth of food.  Plus, they want you to feel full.  The key, I guess, is that people shouldn’t eat out regularly; if you make your own food, you control your calories.  Or, if you eat out, know what you’re getting.

    Starbucks’ overtaking culture, as the arbiter of what movies, music, and books we read.
    And, in the world of comic strips and the Internet: boy, are people really mourning the passing of Aldo of Mary Worth?  Aldo was Mary Worth’s semi-stalker, to the point that Mary’s friends gave him an intervention (instead of, say, calling the cops), which frustrated Aldo’s intentions of dating Mary such that he went back to the bottle and then fatally drove drunk off a cliff (accidentally driving off; not like he intended to committ suicide – Aldo’s stupid, but not that stupid, apparently).  Wow.  Could it be that Mary and the soap opera comic strips are making a comeback?  Or is it that Mary’s comic strip is the one where we get some strange characters for our (un)intended amusement?  (Aldo, Smitty Smedlap – a serious grouch who had his own odd crush on Mary, plus “Woody” – who became psychotic after finishing his dissertation and failing to flirt with Mary’s neighbor Dawn).

    October reading:

    John Le Carre’s first novel: Call for the Dead.  Great read – the weight of the emotional baggage of the characters – George Smiley, Elsa Fennan, and the weird office politics of British Intelligence (which felt a lot like anyone else’s insane workplace), and the feeling of being in another time – the Cold War at its height.

  • Patently Taxing Advice

    OK, now this takes the cake. Somebody’s got a patent for a method of creating a tax shelter. There is a whole list of patents of this type on the US Patent website. Unless it has something to do with recycling a stack of CCH books to make a lean-to, I don’t see how it ought to be patentable – it is purely an idea, not an invention, and it will be just horrible for attorneys having to wonder if there is some sort of patent associated with their advice. What’s next, Barry Sheck will get a patent for a method of freeing death row inmates using DNA? Andrew Oh has been checking up on the case in his blog.

  • Mets

    And, so it goes: so long to the 2006 season; see you in spring training next year, Mets. Didn’t think you’d make it this far (I never thought it way back in spring training of this year), but my God, you were NL East Champs and got into the playoffs. Sorry you couldn’t get to the World Series. Heartbreaking loss (Mets had bases loaded; man!). But, proud that you made it as far as you did. Better luck next year.

  • Rainy Tuesday

    Boy, college protest season started early – but, found Slate’s Explainer explaining the protests at Gallaudet U to be fascinating. Not entirely up on the issues yet (still reading up), but kind of interesting that, no matter how differently abled they may be, college kids are still the same – the vigors of youth going to action on the issues they find important. Rather inspiring, to say the least.

    A Slate article on San Francisco’s architecture. That’s certainly what I had liked about it when we were there – the buildings had character and color. Whether it’s “poor architecture” isn’t for me to say (I’m no expert) – but I had liked seeing the stuff – very different, to say the least (seeing private homes done in pastel – well, it’s different).

    Barack Obama’s new book “The Audacity of Hope” is out; NY Times’ Michiko Kakutani gave it a pretty good review – with at least complimenting that he kept the voice he had from his previous book (pre-US Senatorial days – probably that much more an authentic voice) “Dreams From My Father” (which I read and highly recommend). Senator Obama’s the cover story on this week’s Time and an excerpt of the book is inside – which does seem to keep that voice. Whether he’s ready for 2008 – as President? Vice President? – well, there’s still time for that.

    Wow – a back story on P.L. Travers, the woman behind Mary Poppins.

    And a back story on Dr. Shing-Tung Yau, the mathematician of the Calabi-Yau space in string theory.

    And, just a few weeks ago, I was watching Nova Now on PBS, where Dr. Tyson hosted and there was the story on the search for the newest elements on the Periodic Table – and the NY Times reports that maybe the search has succeeded – for about a few fractions of a second. An emphasis on the maybe!

    Let’s Go Mets! Got to hang in there!

  • Monday

    Why blogging about jury duty may be a bad idea

    This Slate article worries me – could tv really be bad for us after all? Apparently, exposing your babies to tv is bad; but too much may be even worse?

    Pancake recipe – without resorting to a mix?! Cool!

    And, just when we all have gotten back from our travels, the NY Times on Affordable SF hotels. Geez Louise!

    And, last but not least: are the Mets incredibly lucky or what?    Rain in St. Louis gives Tom Glavine another day to rest.  Let’s Go Mets!

  • Nobel Peace Prize

    I love this story on the Nobel Peace Prize – the idea of a professor of economics doing more than being in the Ivory Tower – but finding a basic way of using basic capitalism to help those who need it most:

    The 2006 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded today to the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh and its founder, Muhammad Yunus, for pioneering microcredit — using loans of tiny amounts to transform destitute women into entrepreneurs.

    The Norwegian Nobel Committee praised Dr. Yunus and Grameen for their “efforts to create economic and social development from below.”

    Though it is not the first time the committee has chosen to honor economic development as a contribution to world peace, rather than the more usual diplomacy, rights advocacy or philanthropy, it is the first time the prize has been awarded to a profit-making business.

    The selection seemed to embody two connected ideas that are gaining ground among development experts: that attacking poverty is essential to peace, and that private enterprise is essential to attacking poverty.

    Dr. Yunus founded the bank in his native Bangladesh to lend small amounts of cash — often as little as $20 — to local people, almost always women, who could use it to found or sustain a small business by, say, buying a cow to sell milk or a simple sewing machine to make clothing.

    Traditional banks considered such people too risky to lend to, and the amounts they needed too small to bother with. Dr. Yunus’s simple but revolutionary idea was that the poor could be as creditworthy as the rich, if the rules of lending were tailored to their circumstances and were founded on principles of trust rather than financial capacity. He found that they could achieve lasting improvements to their living standards with a little bit of capital.

    Since its creation in 1983, Grameen has made a total of $5.72 billion in such small loans, and has turned a profit in all but three years, including $15 million in 2005.

    “Across cultures and civilizations, Yunus and Grameen Bank have shown that even the poorest of the poor can work to bring about their own development,” the Nobel citation said.[….]

    James D. Wolfensohn, the former president of the World Bank president, said by telephone Friday that the award testified to “the power of entrepreneurialism.”

    “What it has to do with peace,” he added, “is that it gives dignity to families and hope to families. And it’s the lack of hope that is the greatest cause of bloodshed and intolerance.”

    Dr. Yunus reacted joyously to the news of the prize, The Associated Press reported. “I am so, so happy,” he said in a telephone interview from Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, shortly after the prize was announced. “It’s really great news for the whole nation.”

    The son of a prosperous goldsmith, Dr. Yunus has said that his mother’s generosity to the poor instilled in him from a young age a sense of duty to the poor. [….]

    Dr. Yunus, then a professor of rural economics at Chittagong University, gave the woman and several of her neighbors loans totalling $27 from his own pocket. To his surprise, the borrowers paid him back in full and on time. So he started traveling from village to village, offering more tiny loans and cutting out the middlemen. Dr. Yunus was determined to prove that lending to the poor was not an “impossible proposition,” as he put it.

    When he later formalized the loan-making arrangement as the Grameen Bank in 1983, the bank adopted its signature innovation: making borrowers take out loans in groups of five, with each borrower guaranteeing the others’ debts. Thus, in place of the hold banks have on wealthier borrowers who do not pay their debts — foreclosure and a low credit rating — Grameen depends on an incentive at least as powerful for poor villagers, the threat of being shamed before neighbors and relatives.

    The bank’s 6.6 million borrowers so far have paid back 98.5 percent of their loans.

    “We have no guarantee, no references, no legal instrument, and still it works — it defies all the conventional wisdom,” Dr. Yunus told Fortune magazine in a recent interview.

    By contrast, acccording to Mustafizur Rahman, the research director at the nonpartisan Center for Policy Dialogue in Dhaka, traditional banks in Bangladesh, which lend mainly to businesses and affluent families with collateral, have recovery rates of just 45 to 50 percent, and most of them survive only because they are owned by the government and receive large subsidies.

    The Grameen Bank has also transformed attitudes toward women in Bangladesh, a heavily Muslim country, Mr. Rahman said.

    The Nobel citation described microcredit as a “liberating force in societies where women in particular have to struggle against repressive social and economic conditions.”From the start, profit-making was central to Dr. Yunus’s philosophy.

    “Grameen believes that charity is not an answer to poverty,” he wrote in an introduction to microcredit posted on the organization’s Web site in August. “It only helps poverty to continue. It creates dependency and takes away individual’s initiative to break through the wall of poverty. Unleashing of energy and creativity in each human being is the answer to poverty.” [….]

    As for Dr. Yunus, the prestige of the Nobel and the $1.4 million prize money, divided equally between him personally and his bank, may propel him closer to a distant goal: “One day,” he has often said, “our grandchildren will go to museums to see what poverty was like.”

    It’s so inspiring; the idea that people having hope may lead to peace – well, isn’t that what Nobel, the man who invented explosives and felt bad about that, meant to bring to us with his award?

  • Crash

    This is a catch-up post for the past week, because I was so sick coming back from my trip. Yesterday was P and I’s anniversary, so we went to the local favorite sushi restaurant where we were welcomed warmly (it was a dark and stormy night, there were not a lot of people there, and they could use an Asian couple in the window table to draw customers).

    My dad’s old office was on 73rd and York, so I spent a lot of summers growing up in the area where the plane crash occured Wednesday afternoon. There are ususally a lot of people walking around, especially connected with all of the hospitals in the area. It was a very sad way to go.

    Last Thursday through Sunday I was in Las Vegas for my friend’s bachelor party. All I have to say is what happened in Vegas is staying in Vegas. What happened afterwards? I drove with 3 hours of sleep and 3 days of clubbing and I was really suffering. After dropping one of the people at the airport, I drove 300 miles back to Orange County to meet up with Pei. Stopped once at Alien Jerkey in Baker, CA – the best thing going was a very clean bathroom and easy access to Gatorade. Barfed just before picking up gas. Made it back to Orange County at noon and spent the rest of the day sleeping, then awoke to a bowl of homemade pho. P and I made it to the plane finally and came back at 6. Overslept a lot this week. Probably will need this weekend as well to catch up from jet lag.