Category: Links

  • A Review of Reading/Literary Highlights of 2012

    Happy New Year!  It’s 2013!

    As a follow up of the Reading/Literary Highlights of 2011, here are some analyses of my personal reading of 2012.

    I have Agatha Christie’s Seven Dials Mystery, a Christmas/birthday gift, actually, to be finished this week, but as I didn’t get to finish it in 2012, it shall have to be the first book of 2013.

    As usual, thank you, Brooklyn Public Library and New York Public Library for allowing me to borrow ebooks and regular books from you! (I made my year-end donations in time; hope you all did the same for your public library systems).

    So, as of 12/31/12, I read a total of 66 books.  This is less than the numbers since I’ve started keeping track of the books I’ve read since 2009 (excepting 2009 itself, since I started the list late in that year and couldn’t reconstruct what I was reading earlier).  I was hoping to read up to 75 books in 2012, but it just didn’t happen.

    In no particular order, regarding my personal reading/literary highlights:

    1. Breakdown: approximately 1/3 of the books read were in ebook format (18 or so); I have not given up the dead tree.  I’ll post the list shortly, but the further breakdowns might very well impact my 2013 reading (assuming that I do go forward with being more discerning about the 2013 reading with real intention, rather than continue with my haphazard selections): overwhelmingly fiction; 4 politics/law; 11 comics/graphic novels; 1 play; 21 mystery/thrillers, 2 writing/craft of writing; 2 poetry; 2 travel; 3 memoirs; 3 literary criticism; 13 romance novels; 2 philosophy; 2 literary fiction (i.e., not genre fiction).

    2. My change in jobs cut down my commute and that changed my reading habits.  I’ve been reading a lot more dead tree issues of magazines, including Sports Illustrated (I have it in the house; what else am I going to do?), which had some really well-written and illuminating articles, I shall say, to keep me informed even though I am a very casual sports fan.

    3. Odd pattern – it’s looking like November is when I write so much (because of NaNoWriMo), but not really read.  Or when I read, I don’t really write.  Odd!

    4. A graveyard of incomplete reading (skimmed or unfinished) such as a collection of Anton Chekov short stories, a bunch of romance novels, and a collection of Wallace Stevens poetry.

    5. Still reading a bunch of Batman compilations.

    6. No Star Trek reading at all, probably the first time in years, and certainly the first since I starting keeping my lists of books read.  This might need to be remedied in 2013.

    7. Rediscovered Colin Dexter and again enjoying reading Inspector Morse.

    8. Tackling political reads in a political year (Anne Kornblut, Gwen Ifill, and Jim Lehrer – putting aside whether he did great or not at the debate this past fall).

    9. That binge on romance novels this summer made me realize more than ever that the romance publishing industry (or Harlequin the company at least) ought to consider better editing, or at least made me appreciate little distractions from boring otherwise commutes (see the link below for my summer romance reading post).

    10. Spending more money and time at independent bookstores – like Strand, Mysterious Bookshop, or even Greenlight.  I especially had a kick out of the Strand events of seeing Billy Collins and Robert Pinsky, or seeing Ed Lin at Mysterious Bookshop (I have Ed Lin’s One Red Bastard; he signed it!; and I was going to read it in 2012, but obviously that didn’t happen; it shall be a 2013 read, I promise!).

    11. Goodbye to the independent bookstore Partners & Crime.  Ugh!  So sad.  (see here and here for past posts on the subject).

    12. I am getting more curious about reading more shorter fiction, but was not really actively pursuing that.  Alan Bennett’s The Uncommon Reader: A Novella made more curious about the novella – and not to mention the value of reading.  Meanwhile, Junot Diaz (for Drown) and Elmore Leonard (for Fire in the Hole and Other Stories) had me appreciating the strength of voice in short stories and Agatha Christie’s short story collection made me appreciate plot.

    13. Brooklyn Book Festival!  (see link on my post about it below).

    14. Zadie Smith’s crackingly strong mind.

    15. Reading Kenji Yoshino reminded me of the ties between law and Shakespeare.  Did I read more Shakespeare in 2012?  No, but maybe I’ll do it in 2013.

    16. Reading some fun philosophy books (certain when it’s done with some humor or with some Batman perspective) reminded me on how I didn’t hate reading philosophy back in college.

    17. Finally tackled authors I’ve long thought to read and never quite did it before: Elmore Leonard and Sara Paretsky.

    18. Reading Pico Iyer and Eloisa James with their memoirs of life abroad and back again – to seize life in action and in words.

    19. More Lawrence Block and Rex Stout – clearly, mystery/thriller remains a genre that I enjoy.

    20. Justice Stephen Breyer’s Active Liberty: Interpreting Our Democratic Constitution probably was the most serious thing on my list (putting aside the politics books and that lyrical depths of Pico Iyer’s book), so maybe I ought to read more weightier stuff in 2013?

    See here for the previous compilation of retrospective reading/literary posts. (or you could click for the reading or lit tags on my tumblr).  Other links to other 2012 posts on my reading/literary ventures since that compilation in spring 2012:

    Thoughts on reading Zadie Smith and Kenji Yoshino.

    Recent spring reading.

    A review of my summer 2012 reading.

    A specific post on my summer 2012 romance reading.

    My thoughts on the Brooklyn Book Festival 2012.

    Reading Eloisa James’ Paris in Love.

    Reading Lawrence Block’s A Drop of the Hard Stuff, ending it on Christmas 2012.

    The 2012 list will be up next.  Thank you for joining the ride and let’s see how 2013 will be!

    (cross-posted at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com)

  • The Winding Down of 2012 or Some TV Highlights

    My personal TV Highlights of 2012, which isn’t really a best/worst list (or maybe it should be) and it doesn’t help that I’ve really cut back on tv viewing and don’t have Showtime and HBO (so, no Damian Lewis and Homeland or Boardwalk Empire).  And I’m not on the Breaking Bad bandwagon.  In no particular order:

    1. Sherlock/Elementary – I decided to combine the Holmesian stuff in one category.  I got a kick out of seeing Irene Adler on Sherlock and credit Elementary for bringing Jonny Lee Miller back on American tv.  Benedict Cumberbatch and Miller bring out different aspects of Sherlock, and while I like how Cumberbatch plays up the clever and anti-social Sherlock, Miller does a nice job on a tragic Sherlock, who won’t admit that he’s tragic.  Elementary‘s not perfect and not as crisp as Sherlock (having a longer season on American broadcast network does drag things out), but a good watch.

    2. Community – the season finale was just terrific (note that this is a show that I have raved on the blog previously).  If that had been a series finale, I could accept it and move on, but NBC’s giving me a sense of empty hope of when Community would be back.  Hopefully, we’ll get a triumphant final season soon (I say “final” since I don’t expect a renewal; NBC could surprise me, but who knows?).

    3. The summer Olympics 2012.  As I posted here about the Olympics, NBC continues to be an irritation about its coverage, since it has to make a great highlights show already, rather than a bloated half-ass one, but good stuff is still good.

    4. Presidential Debates 2012 – the crazy reality show that really affected reality.

    5. Fringe – what a weird year of the series, especially as we’re in the last season.  We’ll see how this ends.

    6. Suits – Is it a perfect show?  No, but I get a kick out of the characters and the dialogue, as improbable as the plots are.  This priceless line of dialogue this summer really had me guffawing, something along the lines where Harvey Specter (the basically nutty senior partner of the law firm) says: “There can only be one” at the funeral of the founding partner’s wife, and Jessica Pearson (managing partner) replies to him: “You’re quoting ‘The Highlander’ [at a funeral]?!”  That Jessica of all people even knew what Harvey was quoting was ridiculous to grasp.

    7. PBS’ Masterpiece – I’m still not on the Downton Abbey bandwagon (gasp!).  But, I’m still on board with Lewis (whatever the outcome of the show with its odd plots, Inspector Lewis, Sergeant Hathaway, and Dr. Hobson are such great characters),  and was kind of happy with the return of Morse (even if it was a young Morse).

    8. Justified – US Marshall Raylan Givens might shoot an awful lot, but he still gets around to asking lots of questions.

    9. Young Justice – yes, it’s a cartoon, but it’s an animated DC Comics that moved a lot more than I expected. Red Arrow’s sad trajectory (doing the drug storyline without the drugs!) and even Dick Grayson as Nightwing and a return of Tim Drake as Robin – seriously, not what I’d think DC Comics would finally pull off on the (small) screen.  So cool that Entertainment Weekly’s Ken Tucker touched on Young Justice on his blog (at least somewhere on the mainstream covered it).  Definitely a different way to look at whole Young Justice/Teen Titans as one combination (without using the name “Teen Titans” or even “Titans”).

    10. Hurricane Sandy tv coverage – well, I didn’t lose electricity, so I probably overdosed on the coverage, especially to figure out whether I could travel or go to work or what.  NY1 did a great job.

    Honorable Mentions:

    The Walking Dead (I finally got around to watching it this 3rd season, and seeing how nutty it is, at least insofar as how they notched the violence and decreased the melodrama of the relationship of Deputy Rick Grimes and his family);

    Archer (ridiculous as ever);

    Nova Science Now (David Pogue as host isn’t quite Neil deGrasse Tyson, but still science on PBS continues well and alive);

    America Revealed (as noted previously on the blog, it was great for having Yul Kwon and, besides, it covered comprehensively and in a fascinating way a topic that Americans don’t think about: infrastructure of systems);

    The Legend of Korra (the continuing saga of the Avatar series – just amazing for a cartoon!);

    Doctor Who (linking to the BBC America site; I’m so behind, it’s not funny, but I caught some episodes and clips).

    I have also gotten behind on Parks and Recreation, but what a show.

    Oh, and Comedy Central’s just killing it with Key and Peele, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,  and The Colbert Report (that Maurice Sendak interview that Stephen Colbert had was just priceless, and so poignant after Sendak passed away this year).

    I’m probably forgetting other notable stuff of 2012, but I never promise to be comprehensive!

    The professional tv critics have their lists out there:

    David Bianculli has the rundown reflecting on the state of tv in 2012 on NPR’s Fresh Air and his list up on his website, TV Worth Watching.

    Entertainment Weekly’s Ken Tucker in a video on his Top 10 (check your dead tree issue, too) and the rest of the 10 making his Top 20.

    Time’s James Poniewozik with his Best TV, and Best Episodes lists and other lists, along with his Worst of 2012.

    There are probably many other persons’ lists I’m missing; feel free to look for your own favorites and share accordingly.

  • Christmas Eve 2012

    Merry Christmas!  It’s that time wherein the folks at NORAD (that Cold War remnant) is on the lookout for Kris Kringle.

    Santa Claus traveling via wormholes makes a heck of a lot more sense, though… (Science of Santa, via NPR).

    If you’re reading this, you must have realized by now that the alleged Mayan Apocalypse, 12/21/12, did not happen (feel free to check out this interesting PBS NewsHour item on the subject), but hopefully it meant that people had an opportunity to think about the Mayans (and other doomsayers who really doomsaid and didn’t prognosticate correctly (like this item that I shared from FC on Facebook  – where the Economist discusses such doomsayers as… the prophet hen of Leeds, who thought the world was going to end in… 1806. Wonder what happened to her…).

    David Stuart is the foremost expert on the Mayans (at least that Nova or Nat’l Geographic episode years ago made it seem that way), so he ought to know and did know what the Mayans might have meant; so, feel free to check out what he said on NPR about what he’d do to celebrate the new baktun: “‘I’ll be here in Austin that night,’ he said, ‘and probably raise a glass of wine to the end of the baktun, and the beginning of a new one.’”

    What a nice way to think of the new cycle, whether it’s a multi-thousand year cycle like a baktun or a new year, and after all, remember that the Mayans were/are incredible people, until a lot of other bad other things happened. You know, have a teachable moment.

    From the ABA Journal:

    Just what we all need: a zombie law casebook. Hopefully answering such questions as “Are you legally responsible for destruction you cause because you have no brains/need brains/fighting those who want your brains?”; what about consequences arising from zombie apocalypse? Etc. Funny thing: I’m pretty sure most of “The Walking Dead” aren’t in the law (not talking about Rick or the Governor either, and yes, I have been watching “The Walking Dead” earlier this season).

    ABA Journal on a lawyer with a llama sanctuary.  Seriously, where do they find these stories?  And the headline: “Shama Llama Ding Dong: Attorney Establishes Llama Sanctuary” –  I don’t know whether that’s cute or sad, or a ridiculous of both.

    Meanwhile, we still have no hockey because of the NHL lockout, with no end in sight.  NY Rangers fans, as this nifty little post notes, should boo the hell out at NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, because the Rangers aren’t in pursuit of the Stanley Cup at this time of year and Bettman has no resolution to the lockout.

    NY Giants are so pathetic, as one wonders whether they should even make the playoffs, as this post asks.  The inconsistency is truly sad, and the recent consistent badness – sigh…  But, at least they’re not the Jets, with copious amounts of quarterback controversy.

    I never quite like a year’s in review in advance, since the year’s not over yet and then we’d miss such notable recent passings:

    The passing of Dave Brubeck, jazz pianist.

    The passing of US Senator  Daniel Inouye  (D. – Hawaii), 1st Japanese-American elected to both House & Senate, & World War II hero, an inspiration for all Americans and an Asian Pacific American pioneer.

    (h/t: Angry Asian Man’s Facebook page – I had no idea that Sen. Inouye was into punk rock or at least got involved because his kid was in that field of the music industry. Talk about supportive dad.)

    The passing of Judge Robert Bork.  Over at Slate, interesting commentary from Judge Richard Posner, in light of the passing of Robert Bork. (I don’t like how the Bork process got us where we are now with all kinds of Senate confirmations, but politics is a dirty business, and I’m surprised that Bork didn’t realize it at the time of his nomination, or so it seemed to me).

    The passing of actor Jack Klugman, formerly Oscar of TV’s “The Odd Couple” and the former Quincy of the tv show “Quincy,  M.E.”  (NY Times obit here).

    It has been more than a week after the terrible shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT (see here for the PBS NewsHour coverage – I have found the PBS NewsHour’s work to be the most responsible, after gnashing my teeth over the endless media speculation that came without substantiation during an ongoing investigation over this heart breaking situation), and I’m still getting my head wrapped around the issue of gun control versus the NRA’s non-approach to the issue (see here for the PBS NewsHour coverage on the NRA’s weirdness of last week).

    I have especially found these articles interesting on the subject, which I shared on Facebook:

    Slate’s Emily Bazelon writes persuasively on what will make us candid about the subject; she closes the article that we need social transformation/cultural shift – it’ll take a lot, but will it happen? I’m doubtful of that (I’ll try to keep hopeful about it), but I did like these paragraphs of Bazelon’s:

    We are saturated with 300 million guns but we are not truly a country of guns, because that would means we collectively understood and respected them. [….] In the United States, we’re divided, and we have no universal basic knowledge of weapons. We make it incredibly easy to buy the kind of weapons that shoot and shoot again instantly, but we don’t search people at the doors of schools or malls or movie theaters, and we don’t post armed guards in these places. We have the guns without the safety checks. We call that freedom. We invoke the current Supreme Court’s understanding of the Second Amendment right to bear arms. [….] The cost of this definition of freedom is too high: That’s the point advocates for gun control make, over and over again.

    Slate’s William Saletan is quite right, as he writes:

    I wish we could pass a magic law that would stop madmen from killing our children. We can’t. There will always be angry lunatics. There will always be knives and shotguns and gasoline. I don’t think banning guns will make the problem go away. We don’t need another all-or-nothing war between pro-gun and anti-gun ideologues. What we need is a frank, precise, constructive conversation about the problem of high-speed weapons. You don’t need rapid-fire weapons to hunt or defend your home. [….] And while it’s true that passing a law against them won’t eliminate them, that’s not an argument against legislation. It’s an argument for going beyond legislation. The community of gun sellers and enthusiasts must act collectively to track and control the technology of mass murder.

    The Atlantic’s Ta-Nehisi Coates raises a good question: how eager are Americans being armed on their own person? And, then how far do we go? Hmmm.

    I wonder if we can find something reasonable – can we have sensible gun control, civil dialogue, and better mental health care (not to presume that mental health problems are the cause of mass shootings, but I would posit all factors get to be put on the table, simply to make for a better society); but then again, the Reasonable Person only existed in law school as this abstraction, so who am I kidding?

    When we have a year of the consequences of Hurricane/Superstorm Sandy and the tragedy at Sandy Hook (and gun violence is this epidemic that never stopped during the past several years, in all honesty), I’m really hoping that 2013 will be better.  When I’m hearing that Hurricane Sandy victims are giving to help the victims at Sandy Hook – and the idea of paying it forward – it’s kind of heartbreaking, but maybe there is hope amid all the madness.   Let’s hope that we would have a better year next year; I’m always reminded how much hope springs eternal.

    I’m also hoping for one more post before 2013. No guarantees of a “best of” list or a year in review, but we’ll see.

  • The Days After

    No, I’ve never seen the movie “The Day After Tomorrow” – somehow, the idea of NYC wrecked in a new Ice Age (and this movie probably came out some time after the bad snowstorm of 2003) didn’t appeal to me and I wasn’t in the mood for the emoting of Dennis Quaid and Jake Gyllenhaal.

    And, according to imdb, there was a 1983 tv movie with the title  “The Day After” (something about a nuclear fallout and starring a bunch of big names and familiar character actors like Jason Robards, John Lithgow, Steven Gutenberg, JoBeth Williams, and John Collum); I have no memory of that one.  And, based on the summary on the imdb page, it sounds really depressing. We’re no where near that close to world dissolution.

    Count your blessings!  Breathe!

    But, the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy incurred a bunch of mixed feelings. The headline of this NY Times’ article by James Barron and Ken Belson, “Hardship Strains Emotions in New York,” works for me because there has been so much going on.  I think it was from the NY Times somewhere, maybe a Thomas Friedman column (don’t hold me to it!), where it was said that the nation was in post-traumatic stress since 9/11/01, and I often feel that’s the case in New York City; the stress of the hurricane’s aftermath only emphasizes that to me.

    Dazed, since one never imagines that this much damage would happen to the tri-state area; persistence, since one can’t just give up; maybe even inspiration, since so many have risen to action.  We’re pulling through; we’re getting there.  (almost a personal motto of mine as it is).

    There has been a lot of impatience – I wonder if the Internet and social media, and cell phones, only increased the feelings and expectations of instant gratification? Or that we’ve become so dependent on electricity? (easy for me to say, when my neighborhood in Brooklyn was minimally effected).  Then again, a lot the craziness could have been avoided with a lot more planning and better communication of what happened and what expectations to have and why things will be.

    There’s the sense of question for what works in the context – what respects the community? (such as it is, since in a dense urban context, sometimes “community” is hard to find).  For example: do we hold the marathon or not?  Unlike 9/11/01, we did not have have a six-week odd to deal with stuff; we had only days. I consider the marathon to be a great NYC thing, and I look at Meb Keflezighi as an American inspiration for being an American elite marathoner (not too many of those for quite awhile), but there was just not enough time for the NYC Marathon.  We could have civil conversation, but the controversy itself became a distraction from moving forward and helping each other out.

    How do we balance interests and feelings and needs and wants?

    Everybody feels forgotten, and Manhattan looked like two cities, with the half/third of the island in darkness (even described as a “dead zone”) and the north end looking no worse for wear.  You got to feel empathy for Staten Island, Gerritsen Beach in Brooklyn, and the Rockaways and Breezy Point in Queens, and there was so much going on.

    But, there are reasons for everything: gas shortages are because the port was closed; the port needs electricity; there are places with no electricity; etc.

    Gas? Well, we’re getting there…

    Electricity? In Manhattan – almost there!  So looking forward to near normal MTA service; MTA is doing quite a job! (amazing that I’m even saying that).

    Semblance of normality is near.  In the meantime, see how you can help.  There are a lot of possibilities. Brokelyn has a good list, wnyc has been a great resource (see here for wnyc’s list of ways to help; also, their tumblr page is terrific), and the libraries are open (NYPL, BPL, and Queens).  NYS Bar Association announced a storm relief effort.

    Oh, and FC is so right on the mark on Facebook: NY1 has been on it and has done a great job.

    I’m not forgetting NJ.  I’ll be out there again soon, I’ve no doubt.

    Don’t forget Eastern Standard Time; we fall back an hour tonight.

    Don’t forget to vote next Tuesday. The Civil War didn’t stop Election Day; our legal rights should still be exercised. Hell, you can still vote by paper, if necessary (not that I’m suggesting that it has to be, but that depends on your district’s situation). Check your district/board of Election/county clerk’s office.

    So, hang in there, friends!

  • Hurricane Sandy 2012

    Guess this fits the Halloween thing: Hurricane Sandy’s just about here, still early yet, and it’s creepy.  Stay safe!

    Congratulations to the San Francisco Giants for winning the World Series 2012!  (big yay for ex-Mets Marco Scutaro and Angel Pagan).

    Since I’m catching up my triscribe posts, let’s just say that seeing the new Barclays Center takes some getting used to.  Traffic patterns still look strange and could be smoother (from my non-driver perspective). Brooklyn Nets? Hmm.  I’m of the generation that rooted for the Knicks.

    And, then this news about the Islanders coming to Brooklyn in 2014 or 2015?  While it’s nice that the Islanders want to get in on the fun at Barclay Center and Brooklyn is the far end of the “island,” and they remain in NYS, (a) there’s still no hockey season in 2012, so do something about that, NHL, and (b) I’m still planning to root for the NY Rangers (if this season ever starts already).

    Let’s go, NY Giants! What a season so far! (and with the real refs back for some time now).

    Let’s not be bored: some more Gangnam Style!  Here’s a link to Gangnam Style with Robots!

    A Gangnam Style mashup with that other song of 2012, Call Me Maybe (h/t: Generasian’s tumblr, at http://generasian.tumblr.com/day/2012/09/21)

    To distract myself from one of the presidential debates this month, I watched this Gangnam Style parody of… Vanilla Ice and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.  It almost amazed me.  Vanilla Ice? Really?

    Here’s a laugh: the side-by-side Obama and Romney parodies of “Gangnam Style.” http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/10/03/mitt-romney-vs-barack-obama-whose-gangnam-style-parody-video-is-better/

    I’ve really scaled back with my tv viewing, and still think that the nuttiest reality tv is the presidential/vice presidential debates.  While the results of Election 2012 remains to be seen, I suppose I should appreciate that the debates gave some food for thought.  For instance:

    All the Big Bird jokes reminded people about PBS, the jokes about the military reminded people (somewhat?) about the budget questions relating to the military, and let’s not forget the women (to paraphrase Abigail Adams, when she wrote to her husband John when he went to assist with the writing of the US Constitution).

    The parodies of Joe Biden v. Paul Ryan in their one VP debate were too easy to target.

    The endless sports analogies during the debates.

    Realizing that the best way to talk about foreign policy is to… not talk about foreign policy.

    The quibbles and the talking heads, the drinking games and bingo games – and the hypocrisy… (well, perhaps I shouldn’t make my politics too obvious).

    Oh, and let’s not forget about the economy, and war, and how the world will go to hell in a handbasket.  We seemed to have forgotten about climate change, but I guess we can only expect so much from the presidential candidates.

    What’s among the really shocking: that the federal subsidy to PBS is the equivalence of SIX HOURS of what the Pentagon spends. I think this is about perspective, Mr. Romney.  I think – to Mr. Romney and Mr. Obama – we need to grasp a lot about perspective. Just saying…

    Random historical thing to note, from Slate: Nathaniel Hawthorne was a Whig Party hack, who helped his friend, US President Franklin Pierce. Really? Fun fact: Barbara Bush, and thus former President George W. Bush, is distantly related to Franklin Pierce.  Presidential stuff can be fun! (even when, in reality, it’s not).

    And in the category of “Well, who knew?” Turns out that White House Honey Ale is a pretty good beer, according to Brooklyn Brewery’s brewmaster Garrett Oliver and the NY Times liquor critic Eric Asimov.

    Other fun facts: Sesame Street fun facts! (from the Atlantic).  I knew about Oscar being once orange, but I had no idea that Giancarlo Esposito used to be a recurring character on Sesame Street as Big Bird’s camp counselor back in the early 1980’s.

    Check out Cookie Monster and Grover in their movie parodies, over at Entertainment Weekly!

    2012 appears to be a year of anniversaries: ex., 25th anniversary of “The Princess Bride” (check out the great interview on NPR’s All Things Considered with Mandy Patinkin, of the famous line: “Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die.” – Mandy Patinkin, “The Princess Bride.”)

    In time for the 25th anniversary of Star Trek: The Next Generation, back in September, my sister and I caught the Star Trek Mixtape at the Paley Center, in time for the 25th anniversary of Next Generation. They aired the “Inner Light” episode at the end, a total Patrick Stewart classic (the “I should have been nominated for an Emmy for this particular effort” – quite a thing to watch after the end of the Next Generation run and realizing what a character Picard was/is).

    The episode also reminded me of this great video on YouTube, for the 40th ann’y of Trek, which used the song from that episode and clips to make you love Trek all over again (previously posted somewhere here on triscribe; see below the embedded item). Also, check out a list of what consists of TNG’s legacy (h/t: Time.com).  Enjoy!

    Which reminds me… I will start feeling sad with tv series leaving us soon (Fringe is in its last season and it’s been an upheaval of dystopic sadness; and when will “Community” be back, so we can say goodbye; NBC is unfair!)… Back to the hurricane…

  • Marching On In September 2012

    Because the summer hit won’t completely go away, and because the conductor of this orchestral/choral version of “Call Me Maybe,” is an APA, of course I’ll share this (saw this on Facebook via a friend). As the linked article by Edwin P. Sallan notes,

    What should make this version of particular interest to us is the fact that its conductor, 22-year-old Arianne Abela is actually a Filipina, a niece of noted stage actor Bart Guingona. Arianne’s parents migrated to the US before she was born and she also has a 14-year-old sister named Krista who actually edited the video.

    In a 2008 article published by the Daily Hampshire Gazette, Arianne was born with physical disabilities brought about by a rare condition called amniotic banding syndrome, which caused her left leg to be amputated. Some of her fingers on both hands are either missing or fused together and there are toes missing on her right foot.

    Thankfully, those physical defects didn’t stop her from pursuing a career in music successfully as she went on to graduate at the Yale School of Music and Yale Institute of Sacred Music.

    Very cool!

    FC shared this interesting item over on Facebook: Rachel L. Swarns writes in the NY Times about how second or third generation Americans try to hold on to their heritage via food.  It’s a fascinating and bittersweet article – we want to remember what our grandparents or parents made, but assimilation is hard to fight and maybe we can’t quite get the food to taste the same or it gets Americanized (or we might have even grown up with Americanized versions of the food because of lack of ingredients or whatnot).

  • Taking a Pause; Remember and Reflect

    As we did last year.

    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.

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

  • August 2012: Farewell to the London Olympics 2012

    Well, it has been too long.  Dust off triscribe a little and do a little blogging…

    An Olympic wrap up (oh, come on, why not; it just ended this past Sunday night and surely we’re all still in Olympic withdrawal?).

    Of course I got all excited for the the quadrennial (yep, I looked it up) craziness that is the Olympics. I kind of liked the mascots from Beijing and I really liked the mascots from Vancouver. Didn’t get into the London mascots – they do lack that furry cuteness thing that sells boatloads of products (see here for this Slate post on Olympic mascots). Guess the British Olympic Committee didn’t want to do the usual Lion and Unicorn thing?

    On the other hand, the photo of Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt prancing with the mascots, after he won the gold – that was kind of funny and priceless.

    The Opening Ceremony was definitely something weird and different. Director Danny Boyle bringing in the (fake) Queen to jump out of a helicopter with a parachute (along side Daniel Craig’s James Bond) – well – really?  Stunt doubles?  The Queen?  Oh well.  And, sure, I get that you want to celebrate Bond the British icon, but how silly to be timed before the next movie.

    I did kind of liked the whole celebration of evolution of pastoral Britain to Industrial Revolution, with actor Kenneth Branagh  and odd performance arts stuff.

    I was a little pissed with the NBC broadcast (they apparently cut a moment of silence and their context of explanations wasn’t very good).

    And, I thought that it was weird that Danny Boyle chose to celebrate the British National Health Care system and British children’s literature (the latter was something I understood; the former – not really).  Like everybody else, I didn’t know what to make of the jumping in the bed kids (who are taken care of by the national health people and then somehow dream of … Voldemort. Nice of J.K. Rowling to make her appearance though).

    The formal parade of nations was mostly fun, with the usual loads of useless trivia from Matt Lauer, Meredith Vieira, and Bob Costas; but I felt exhausted by watching those poor lines of volunteers drumming and dancing to any beat.  That the audio system kept blasting loads of British pop was a relief surely – Amy Winehouse, BeeGees, U2, Eric Clapton, etc., to keep those drummers’ energy going.  I really gave the Brits credit for having a pretty awesome soundtrack.

    Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean? Really? But, not Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry?  And, the 1st presentation of many of the endless broadcast of the music from “Chariots of Fire.”

    In the end, you couldn’t beat Sir Paul McCartney, who led the biggest sing along of “Hey Jude” at the end of the Opening Ceremony.  Although, really, Danny Boyle, all of that Opening Ceremony stuff made me want to watch “Trainspotting” again, versus the “Slumdog Millionaire” – the campy “We love the United Kingdom” and optimism and hope – it got to be a bit much and made me yearn for the crazy Scotland of “Trainspotting.”

    On the other hand, Boyle did an impressive job of showing off the diversity of modern British demographics, with all the different people dancing and making the Opening Ceremony possible.

    The Olympics itself was great stuff.  Criticizing NBC’s broadcast became something of a sport in and of itself.  I could pile on, but I’ll choose not to waste more of the Internet on that.

    (oh, ok, some rambling here: hated the dubious amount of limited live stuff at the beginning of the Olympics; the schizophrenic “Here’s gymnastics/cycling/back to volleyball” rotation at night, even though I understand you’d rather not have us sit through five hours of a regular session of gymnastics by itself – but I hated how I had no context and no understanding of how, say, the British men won a bronze in gymnastics; and mindless storytelling and controversy generation – which was a shame, because when the story of an athlete was actually told, it got to be told well – and not just the American athletes’ stories).

    If the primetime NBC coverage is going to be a highlights show, because everything already happened (you know, because of time zone differences), then please be a great highlights show, not a half-ass one.  I pretty much agreed with NPR’s Linda Holmes on her post on the coverage.

    NY Times sports bloggers posted this great item of the US Swim team doing their own routine of Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe.”

     

    I’m probably not going to be the first or last to say this, but the US Swim team is made up of some ridiculously attractive people. Hmm.

    Sure, there was Michael Phelps and his drive for Olympics glory.  But, because this is triscribe, I especially got to give a hand to Lia Neal and Nathan Adrian for their Olympics swimming efforts.  Lia Neal is the 2nd African-American swimmer to make the team, but also half-Chinese (see here on the profile of her by NY Times’ William Rhoden – h/t: FC via Facebook); Neal probably is way more fluent in Chinese than most of us on triscribe, I’d hazard guessing.  Nathan Adrian is also half-Chinese. Hapas!

    Oh, and other great Olympics stories: David Boudia, winning the gold after a terrible earlier round of diving; Ashton Eaton in the decathalon; Mo Farah in the long  distance running; Oscar Pistorius of South Africa and his amazing legs; and of course Gabby Douglas for winning all-around gold in women’s gymnastics – the first African-American woman to do this, with a Chinese-American coach (an American story indeed!).

    It also never ceases to amaze me that the Olympics makes me pay attention to sports that I otherwise wouldn’t care about.  I caught snippets of the synchronized swimming; thought those water polo men were buff; and while I still don’t understand trampoline, BMX biking (which was kind of entertaining) or that other cycling stuff (looking at you, team pursuit), I couldn’t pull away from the tv either.

    A moment when I felt old watching the Olympics: I was watching the diving and saw USA’s Troy Dumais (finally won a bronze in 2012) and Canada’s Alexandre Despatie (Montreal’s own). I was all “Hey, haven’t they been at it for a real long time now?”; then I checked online and it turned out that they’ve both been in Olympics since 2000. Wow. Good for them. (see here for a poignant story on Despatie from the Montreal Gazette).

    Heartwarming essay by NY Times Frank Bruni on “The Soul of the Olympics” – how, even for a brief time, the Olympics gives us hope.

    British rock/pop/fashion was totally celebrated during the Closing Ceremony.  I didn’t have much to say on the fashion, but I mostly liked the music.  It turned out that watching it live streaming online was far more comprehensive, since (of course) NBC messed up with the editing (you might not care for some of the bands, but I’d just like a full show, with no stupid editing. Or a half hour cutaway to a pilot of a sitcom I won’t watch).  And, how did this become the Olympics of Ryan Seacrest? (oh well; here’s to the present/future of American tv).

    If it wasn’t obvious there: I really wasn’t happy that NBC did what it did to the Vancouver Olympics: split up the Closing Ceremony with the new sitcom. Geez, NBC. This might not motivate people to watch the new show by fall.  (see here for a summary review from NPR)

    But still: Spice Girls! Liam Gallagher singing “Wonderwall” with his Not-Oasis band! The Who! Tons of great 1980’s and 1990’s stuff! (and George Michael, and a tribute to Queen and John Lennon). Oh, and Eric Idle, but not the rest of Monty Python.

    Now, we wait for Rio 2016. (or at least Sochi 2014).

  • Happy Memorial Day 2012

    Take a moment to think about those who served and are currently serving.

    Some APA Heritage Month items, as the month winds down:

     

    Recently, coverage on two APA lawyers:

    Yul Kwon, on “Tell Me More” with Michele Martin,about being an APA Game Changer, i.e., that he was the first APA to win “Survivor” – and without totally backstabbing everyone – thereby being a pretty positive APA image on tv and undermining lawyer stereotypes to whatever extent; and once named to People magazine’s list of “Sexiest Men Alive.” (he certainly got to be one of the sexier ones on PBS with the America Revealed series).

    Additionally, Stuart Ishimaru, an out-going EEOC Commissioner, was on “Tell Me More,” to discuss his new appointment to the the Office of Women and Minority Inclusion in the US’ Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, to monitor diversity in the banking industry.

     

    FC shared this on Facebook, and I’m forwarding it along on triscribe: coverage on NY1 on APA’s – specifically the aging and growing Chinese population in Brooklyn.

    Additional NY1 items include:

    a story on how APA’s in government from Flushing came about because of a city council member’s insensitivity,

    the development of the Pakistani population in Brooklyn, the expansion of Chinese demographics in Staten Island, and

    Cambodians in the Bronx.

     

    FC and I had also checked out “Revisiting Vincent,” a performance/talkback/reception on the Vincent Chin case, co-produced by our favorite Asian American Bar Association of NY (AABANY), the Asian American Arts Alliance and the Museum of Chinese in America (MoCA). The performance was just great, thought provoking stuff by professional actors, adapting the AABANY project led by Judge Denny Chin and Dean Frank Wu (the two of whom also did a great Q&A at the end).  AABANY posted a photo and the AABANY intro by Executive Director Yang Chen at the event.

    Photos from Asian American photographer/icon  Corky Lee were presented and even available in a silent auction.

    The AABANY blog also shared that Jeff Yang at Wall Street Journal’s blog did a shout-out of the “Revisiting Vincent” event.

    All great stuff.  Keep it  going.

  • Happy APA Heritage Month 2012!

    Of course, around here at triscribe, everyday is APA Heritage. My alma mater already observed APA Month last month, since this time of year is finals.  Go study, kids.  But, the rest of us can have fun.

    And, sure, it’s now officially APA Heritage Month (as President Obama has declared – see here, for this post over at Angry Asian Man blog, sharing the Obama proclamation and fascinating content from various federal resources (the Library of Congress, Smithsonian, National Archives, etc.).

    From our friends and colleagues at the Asian American Bar Association of New York (AABANY): a terrific list of events this month.

    This Saturday, April 14, 2012: the CAPA 33rd Annual Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Festival, over in Brooklyn in DUMBO (Water St. and Anchorage Place), 11am to 5pm.

    Oh, and do check out “America Revealed,” on PBS, wherein Yul Kwon did a great job as a host in covering the various systems in America – our transportation, our energy, our food system, and our manufacturing.  Not that this is an APA thing or a lawyer thing, but Yul Kwon – he’s the man…!