Category: Brooklyn

  • Redesign Fatigue

    Two changes to two major websites, one temporary and one permanent:

    1. Slashdot as an April Fool’s joke turned their frontpage pink and changed their motto to “OMG!!! PONIES!!!”, starting a bloggersphere catchphrase craze not heard of since “All your base are belong to us!“. Funny while it lasted.
    2. The New York Times changed their website into something kind of, sort of like the printed version, with multiple colums of stuff to peruse. It is going to take come getting used to. It’s hard for me to scroll around – I rather like the setup in their “Today’s Paper” version instead, where everything is in one column.

    Looking forward to the annual asian alumni dinner at school on Wednesday. It’s going to be at the new conference center, so that should be great.

  • A Follow Up

    The Scalia story continues, with Dahlia Lithwick’s most amusing commentary, providing the case history and the holdings therein (haha – very much in the style lawyers are much too familiar with).  (although, note that I made no substantial comment on J. Scalia’s hand gesture; I continue to withhold comment; merely linking to the Lithwick article).

    Oh, and one shining moment – congrats to Florida’s Men basketball team for winning the NCAA tournament, beating UCLA.  Bummer that UCLA couldn’t have made it a closer game, but things happen, I guess.

  • April Flu’s

    The cold that I picked up on Thursday is finally abating, just in time for the weather to warm up. Just about everything is budding, which just made my recovery that much longer. Saturday, I practically spent the entire day in bed – probably more than 15 hours of sleep. Amazingly, P hasn’t caught anything from me, probably because of the antibiotics she’s taking while recovering from her oral surgery.

    The angry flood girl from upstairs finally got herself kicked out this weekend. Apparently she also wasn’t paying her share of the rent with the other woman in the apartment. Most of the afternoon was spent with her stomping up and down the stairs with her bags. Good riddance! Hopefully the flood waters will finally stop.

  • Ill-ing

    I usually get seriously sick once a year in the springtime. It starts out as hay fever that goes into a sore throat and then a full-blown cold. Right now my sinuses are in a slow burn keeping me awake, so I’m using the greatest hits of eastern (Gan He Cha) and western medicine (Tylenol Sinus), plus P’s Homemade Chicken Soup and the Neilmed Sinus Rinse, all of which are taking care of my symptoms. Probably will need one more day of suffering.

  • Extremes

    I’ve taken a small blogging hiatus over the past fortnight, but a ton of extreme things have kept things exciting.

    • My doctor says that I’ve got an incredibly high triglyceride level (550 when it should be less than 150) so I got to lose 10 pounds and cut out bacon and eggs by June or I’m going to be on Lipitor.
    • P and I have a new long distance travel adventure planned. It will be in May, and we’ll let you know about it when it happens
    • I see SSW at the alma mater’s charity auction – neither of us win any bids.
    • AS makes a reappearance in New York with his bouncing baby boy
    • Two members of the staff have deaths in the family, so I’m doing coverage for them
    • My mom decides to go back to school, which is conveniently located across the street from my apartment. P & I get to see her every day hanging out at my dinner/mj table.
    • 4 hour Indian engagement party with my friend, his fiance, three priests and an Archbishop (I don’t ask, I just eat)
    • My boss quits, and general mayhem ensues. Looks like I’m going to be left running the show
    • I see a new batch of fledgling attorneys (several of my friends among them) being sworn in
    • P has dental surgery, not too much pain although she talks funny
  • Wednesday into Thursday

    Can’t wait for the weekend already…

    Brooklyn Restaurant Week! So cool.

    Tuesday’s “House” – okay, so House somehow figures out that this lady is poisoning her husband. But, we don’t know WHY. I guess I’m a sucker for the old fashioned kind of mystery – not so much on the how to kill, but why they bother trying to kill at all. But, I have to admit, the lady came off as a bit of a psycho in the way she told naive Dr. Cameron that there’s such a thing as a perfect marriage (considering that Cameron’s the one who married a guy who died of cancer, leaving her to be a young widow when there’s even a question as to why she even married a dying guy and she has a history of being attracted to ill men, well, perhaps Cameron’s not all there anyway).

    Meanwhile, the off-screen Mrs. Wilson’s finally kicking Dr. Wilson out of the house (he claims it’s not because he’s an adulturer) has put Wilson in House’s house. And, as much as having Wilson around irritates him, House obviously likes having his best friend around (Wilson hires his former housekeeper to clean House’s house; Wilson actually cooks food, so House can now eat food other than the alcoholic and peanut butter kind). It’s like the Odd Couple. Although, I do wonder – so long as Wilson’s around, does that mean House curtailed his own partaking of prostitutes? (which he apparently only did to dull the (self-inflicted) pain of losing the love of his life (again)). Or are Wilson and House the kind of buddies who would go on the prowl together? Ugh…

    Personally, I’m curious to see if they’d ever bring Mrs. Wilson on-screen. I know this is House’s show (it’s called “House”), but I’d like to see what on earth made Wilson want to have a third wife anyway. We only get inklings as to what makes House’s best friend tick (he has the role of being the Upstanding Good Guy Oncologist Who Likes Women a Bit Much (probably no better than Cameron’s liking male patients; Wilson strikes me as a guy who likes female patients), but really, there’s a dark side too, or else why does House want to be friends with him?). Plus, we’ve had some Cameron and Foreman episodes, and a couple of Chase episodes, and even some Cuddy moments (she is the head of their hospital, so not easily ignored), so Wilson ought to have an episode.
    Wednesday night’s Charlie Rose had a guest host (done rather rarely) – I believe it was the president of Memorial Sloan Kettering interviewing Nobel laureate Eric Kandel (who was fascinating, even if I felt a little weird about his referencing to my Alma Mater University). Turned out that there was a reason Charlie Rose wasn’t on – he had heart surgery. Bummer. Get well, Charlie Rose – but pardon me if I end up watching while you’re away, just to see who’ll be the guest host (who may just as intruiging as the guest itself)…

  • Monday into Tuesday

    AP report that Justice Scalia made a hand gesture.  Just not the hand gesture some news reporters thought it was.  A bit of wit, perhaps.

    Caught the second half of “Everwood” last night – the return of “Everwood” felt as if the show never left.  Speaking as someone who pretty much missed most of the season’s first half, it felt nice to be back in the world of Everwood – wherein Amy and Ephraim are re-thinking their relationship (again) because apparently sex actually can cause problems and changes a relationship that was never entirely stable to begin with (no, really, Amy and Ephram – that didn’t occur to either of you when this tv season began?); wherein Ephram doesn’t hate his dad (for now anyway) and may be back at playing the piano; wherein it appears to be Ephram’s sister Delia, who gets her pre-adolescent turn to hate their dad (Dr. Andy Brown just can’t get a break with his resentful kids); and wherein the other town doctor, Dr. Harold Abbott, is debating whether he really wants to adopt another child since the kids, Amy and Bright, have moved on to college.  Amy starts to volunteer at the college’s planned parenthood/sex ed type thing, and gets into a tense discussion with her brother’s girlfriend about sex v. abstinence.  Amy doesn’t realize that her dad, the leading conservative of Everwood (to balance the much-too-liberal Dr. Andy), had performed abortions in the past (and may still do), harkening back to a well-done Everwood episode way back in season 1.  Um hmm. Ain’t that a kick in the head?
    The WB may be leaving the air, but the new CW better renew “Everwood.”  And, “Gilmore Girls” (at least let it linger to a believable end, so give it another year).  Probably save “Smallville” (which really hit quite a stride once it finally took on the Superman mythos) and “Supernatural” (of which I still can’t quite watch a full episode, simply because I resent that it’s the show that replaced “Jack and Bobby,” which was a show that really deserved another shot, even if the ratings numbers weren’t successful).  And take UPN’s “Veronica Mars” and “Everybody Hates Chris.”  CW would be quite a little network.  Stand up for quality, please!

    CBS also re-ran the cute “How I Met Your Mother” episode, wherein protagonist Ted meets Victoria at a wedding, but almost misses out on keeping her around in his life, because the two foolishly made a pact to just enjoy the once-in-a-lifetime thing.  For a first year sitcom, it’s not a perfect sitcom, but it has a heart and angst that I like.

  • Weekend

    Thursday night was Alma Mater Law School’s Public Interest Auction, the fun social event of the year of the Alma Mater school stuff. Junk food galore, and amusing auction items. And, of course, the people who dare to bid, sticking their paddles high up until they reach a magic number (“Sold, to the gentleman in the back…” – as if he really intended to buy the helicopter ride or the dinner with the dean for that much amount of money)…

    Friday/Saturday – I attended a rather interesting symposium on constitutional law at the Law School by Lincoln Center. Affordable CLE credits. Way much stuff flying over my head, but I was able to follow enough to enjoy it. It felt a lot like an anthropological expedition, wherein I observe the interactions of constitutional law professors. The profs were clearly in their element, knowing each other a very long time, and commenting on each other’s work and worrying (or critiquing) the course of progressive/liberal/left politics / interpretation of law. And, they all kept referring to each other by their first names – “Randy” “Sandy” “Jim” and Moe and Curly and so on (“But, I disagree with Rick about his view on [insert some big terms of constitutional law here]” ; “Oh, and thanks, Jim, for setting up the program…” and oh, I love how these events have the best cookies and tons of coffee and tea – do universities always have that in their culture of event arranging?). And, the profs – they clearly love their work and you can feel it and almost envy it (well, I do, anyway). Rather amusing, I must say, once I caught on with the discussion.

    One ponders: what happens with the Constitution in the post 9/11 world? J. Scalia – the man who inspires a few snickers; and that John Yoo, the attorney behind the White House’s torture memos – another source inspiring snickers. But, I got rather tired, due to the long week I’ve been having.

    And, I don’t doubt that what the profs discussed and researched is important stuff, but I wonder – are professors sometimes too trapped in their ivory tower? If you only talked about the important stuff amongst yourselves (I’m sure they don’t, but…) — well, I just felt that the public ought to be in the know, but then again, the public probably doesn’t care about the gritty details of constitutional law (even though some members of the public go into their whole red v. blue state nonsense without really understanding why there’s a red v. blue nonsense; the law profs sadly do know) and our society’s not going to reach a resolution on problems and controversies anytime soon with an apathetic public.

    But, I may be a geek for saying this, I find this stuff very interesting. I didn’t really like my con law prof back in law school, but the whole Supreme Court stuff and how federal government works (or doesn’t work) have always intruigued me.  Anyway, the whole symposium gave a lot of food for thought.
    Afterward, I visited the NY Public Library’s Performing Arts branch – interesting exhibits on vaudeville and Irving Berlin and music in Harlem.

    Later, I went to Borders. I avoided buying stuff, but flipped through the latest Dr. Alex Delaware mystery book. I’m so behind the series, having more or less dropped it ever since the author, Jonathan Kellerman, put Dr. Delaware through yet another tribulation in the Delaware love life (something about blowing the doc’s house up and the live-in girlfriend/wife getting really sick and tired of the dangerous adventures getting way out of hand – I sympathized). It looked as if Delaware’s back in his element of yet more screwed up love (his own and that of others – the murder victims and villains) and weird cases.

    Seriously, though, I have been rather skeptical of Delaware’s break with the love of his life (it didn’t help that there were times that both Delaware and Robin had their less-than-rounded-out character moments – all these years, and Delaware’s still a bit on the shallow side – the first book was when he seemed most like a person; his humanity’s central warmth has been rather missing since then – but, after you get beaten up by the bad guys enough times, can you blame him?; moreover, Milo, the gay LAPD cop/Alex’s best friend, is more of a person than Alex half the time). From what I can tell, half the fandom hated Robin for being whiney and the other half liked her, even if she got a tad annoying (ok, I’m in that camp – at least Robin made some sense to me – what woman wants her man in stupid danger, as Alex has been repeatedly? Heck, Milo’s domestic partner (a medical doctor, lucky Milo) probably hates it that Milo gets in danger – but he’s a cop, not a psychologist who digs into trouble, like Alex). And, then again, the plots got rather crazy, even for a psychological thriller series (again, when even Delaware’s little pet fish and the poor dog get endangered, you just wonder if it’s a bit much).

    Anyway, I flipped through the pages of “Rage” and felt indifferent. If you want to read a good psychological thriller/mystery series by Kellerman, I’d say it’s best to read the first bunch of Delaware books; the later ones feel iffy to me. So, it may be still awhile yet before I pick up a Delaware book for proper reading.  I’m behind on other reading as it is.

    UCLA and LSU as half of the Final Four. Who picked them? And, boy was that UCLA v. Memphis game so low scoring. Well, I still have UConn and Villanova…

  • Spring Equinox and then some

    The Empire State Building was yellow the night of 3/20/06, in honor of the first day of Spring. Funny how the temperature sure didn’t feel like spring.

    A law-related article (and perhaps in time for Women’s History Month?): the NY Times looks into why so few women are high up in the big law firms. I thought the most interesting line in the article was the view that there’s more than discrimination going on, but perhaps a problem of biases – cultural change is something harder to combat, and so are the issues of retention in the legal profession.

    The passing of a NYC institution: Eyewitness News’ Bill Beutel. The NY Times had a fascinating obituary, noting among other things:

    After graduating from Dartmouth, Mr. Beutel went to the University of Michigan Law School but left after a year to pursue journalism. He got a radio job in Cleveland and then came to CBS radio in New York.

    In 1962, he joined ABC as a reporter for the national news broadcast and as an anchor on the local New York news program “The Big News.” Up to then his name had been pronounced “BOY-tel,” but at the beginning of his first live broadcast on WABC-TV, the narrator pronounced it, “Byoo-TEL.” The new pronunciation stuck.

    Channel 7 also had nice tributes (well, Bill Beutel was their leader). I just think it’s just sad that Beutel, who was an ABC London bureau chief around the time of Peter Jennings’ own rise on ABC, is now also gone. ABC losing its national lead, as well as its local lead (ok, Beutel retired or scaled back some time ago, but still, for a long time, he was a fixture at 6pm, to lead to Peter Jennings).

    Even more sad – it’s only with the passing of a Channel 7 veteran that brings out the other former Channel 7 guys back on the air – Doug Johnson and John Johnson to speak about their colleague. Channel 4, although the rival network, had a nice tribute too. Kind of weird to realize, but Channel 4’s Chuck Scarborough really has picked up the baton here – the longtime guy who still carries this voice of authority (unlike, say, Ernie Anastos and his I-get-to-work-on-every-channel thing). Also weird – seeing longtime Channel 7 reporters go to different channels gives you this feeling of them bringing their Channel 7-ness with them wherever they go: Channel 4 had David Ushery talk about Bill Beutel; Channel 2 had Roz Abrams talk about having been a few offices away from Beutel for years.

    You could feel Channel 7’s loss; you could get the sense of respect from Channel 4 (when even Chuck had nice things to say) – but it feels weird to not get a more substantial take from CBS? Well, they haven’t had a lead anchor of the Chuck Scarborough or Bill Beutel stature in awhile – not that kind of longevity or ability. Channel 5 had John Roland, but even he moved on. A passing of an era, indeed.

  • Isn’t it supposed to be spring already?

    The day of vernal equinox is coming, yet it still feels darn cold. And, my own cold lingers. Blech.

    The NCAA brackets are what they are. I picked too many Big East teams, and lo and behold, a bunch of Big East teams fell on Day 1 (I should’ve known better than to have picked Seton Hall and Syracuse, but was surprised about Marquette, but probably should’ve seen that Alabama was probably prime to be a good upset there). I also made the mistake of picking Indiana as one of my Final Four (more because I was hoping it’d be my upset pick to go all the way). The rest of my Final Four – Duke, UConn, and Villanova – are still in – so here’s hoping that my brackets won’t get entirely ripped up yet.

    An article on the Baby Universe – curious stuff scientists are finding out about what happened just after Big Bang. Slate’s William Saletan links to other articles about the research – and poses that the answer to all our questions about the beginning of the universe lies in… religion. Can’t say that I disagree with him.

    And, is there such a thing as a lawyer’s witness coaching going too far as to become witness tampering? Apparently, yes, says Slate Explainer.