Blog

  • Post July4th Week

    Very hot in the city. Iced coffee time. Me bouncing due to more caffeine. OOps.

    NY Times reports a petition going on to get an express train on the F-subway line in Brooklyn – sign petition here www.petitiononline.com/bkln4fnv/petition-sign.html. I’ll get on the soapbox that MTA also ought to make a better W train, which is not a very useful line to that great an extent.

    NY Times’ Linda Greenhouse on “On the Wrong Side of 5 to 4, Liberals Talk About Tactics.” She notes:

    Exactly what that vision should encompass is now the question. It is easy enough to find consensus on a checklist that would include a robust reading of the guarantees of the Bill of Rights, including the notion that some rights are fundamental; a constitutional interpretation not tethered to a search for the framers’ original intent; invigorating the right to privacy to include personal privacy in the electronic age; restoring the shield of habeas corpus; and recapturing the government’s ability to intervene for the benefit of African-Americans and other minority groups without being constrained by the formal and ahistorical neutrality that liberals saw as the conceptual flaw in the chief justice’s opinion a little over a week ago invalidating two voluntary school integration plans.

    The challenge for those inspired by such an agenda goes beyond the question of where the votes would come from on the current court. The notion that profound social change can be accomplished through judicial action has taken a huge beating, and even liberals, watching the political currents of recent decades, have come to doubt the ability of courts to change the world. The tension is acute between the vision of the Constitution as an engine of social progress, on the one hand, and the fear that harnessing it through judicial action to serve that role is, on the other hand, simply counterproductive. [….]

    With a tide so long in the running, it is no wonder that some leading liberal scholars are looking to the far horizon. “The idea that one can regroup and come back at the court is not realistic for the foreseeable future,” Prof. Laurence H. Tribe of Harvard Law School said the other day.

    Two years ago, Professor Tribe suspended work on the third edition of his monumental treatise on constitutional law, declaring that the moment had passed for propounding a “Grand Unified Theory.” His current ambition, he says now, is to “teach to the future,” in ways that will challenge the current climate and “make a difference 20, 30 or 40 years from now.”

    Now there’s a plan.

    I found this NY Times’ article about librarians as pretty cool – this might very well be the “it” profession, in terms of their ability and duty of gathering and accessing info for the public and just plain old knowing lots of stuff. Then again, I may be kind of biased, since when I was a kid, I kind of wanted to be a librarian, since they got to be among books all day long and tell people to shut up.

    Harry Potter Returns in the Order of the Phoenix movie. OOh…

  • July 4, 2007

    Went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art today to see the New Greek-Roman Galleries. Dizzyingly Awesome! You can be there all day to stare at the stuff.

    July 4th news item: Kobayashi loses to Joey Chestnut, a civil engineering student from CA. They ate 60+ dogs. Watching them on the big screen tv — well, made me nauseous. I like a hot dog as much as anyone else, but competitive eating is just gross.

    A NY Times article on those yummy kettle cooked potato chips – well, I do so love a chip! In the accompanying slide show, they had the Kettle Brand Chips as number one (well, weren’t they the ones who started the whole kettle cooked trend?), with the Cape Code chip and Lay’s Kettle Cooked Original (umm, yeah, I’ve been eating those too much lately… – can’t be a good sign, is it?).

    NY Times has San Francisco chef Daniel Patterson talking about making butter.

    Writer Neal Pollack on being a dad trying to get a hot dog for the kid – Costco was the answer, apparently, but he had to figure that out from his own dad’s advice.

    Dark chocolate can be good for you! You just can’t overeat it, though.

    A Slate article on the previous Transformers movie (cartoon, not live action), and the 1980s phenomenon that was The Transformers for those of us of a certain generation.

    The passing of opera singer/arts supporter Beverly Sills.

  • June into July

    Those Mars rovers just keep going and going… awesome!

    I reserve opinion on the Transformers movie, which actually got a positive review already in Reuters. All I can say for now is that I’d be really, really terrified if they wind up making a live action movie of G.I. Joe and My Little Pony and other 1980’s childhood nostalgia.

    Watched the series premiere of “Burn Notice” on USA, wherein Secret Agent Michael Westin (played by Jeffrey Donovan, who played a spooky angsty role on NBC’s “The Pretender” and was last starring on USA series as Crazy Cop/FBI Agent Dave Creegan in the American version of British cop series “Touching Evil”). Kind of agreed with NY Times’ Alessandra Stanley’s review – the premiere has its moments, but feels kind of light-weight tv. Or maybe I’ve been watching too much dark espionage/thriller stuff myself such that I’m desensitized…? Oh well. I’ll try watching a bit more to say more or not.

    Finished reading Brooklyn Noir, Volume 2. Solidly good read – Brooklyn in its eerie glory. Thumbs down on one of the stories (wherein this prostitute dies in a stream-of-thought style – grim and too stylized for me); otherwise, perfect subway reading.

    Soo, you have to get permission to take photos in the City. The regulation intends to pretty much not cover tourists and casual photographers (i.e., families taking pictures with the irritating kids), but the fact that such intent is not written into the reg kind of still makes the reg overbroad (on paper, anyway). Why don’t they just write in the exception? Is it that hard? No wonder I’m not a legislator or a policy person.

    The 10th Anniversary of the handover of Hong Kong to China.

    NY Times’ Linda Greenhouse summarizing the US Supreme Court’s 2006-2007 term
    . Oh, well. I’m still trying to follow up on the commentaries on the Seattle and Louisville school districts cases, and debating whether I really want to read the decision (way too many pages, my lazy side feels; my political side feels too concerned though to avoid trying to do more reading).

    The passing of movie critic Joel Siegel.

  • The Encounter

    OK, here it is – the video that we made last weekend for the 72 Hour Film Shootout – we only had 72 hours from start to finish to do everything, from writing the script, shooting the scenes, editing the film, and geting it onto miniDV tapes to submit it for judging (the funny thing is that getting the edits onto miniDV was actually the hardest part of the whole thing). Hope you like it.

  • Summer in the City

    Sunday: saw “Ocean’s Thirteen.” Nothing spectacular – the plot’s kind of “huh?” – Danny Ocean (George Clooney) and Friends are back in Las Vegas to pull off a scheme to make up for Al Pacino’s character’s screwing their fellow cohort, Reuben (played rather amusingly by Elliot Gould). The movie’s still pretty slick to watch (I kind of liked “Ocean’s 12” and certainly enjoyed “Ocean’s 11” – haven’t seen the original “Ocean’s 11” with Frank Sinatra, but oh well). The guys are good-looking as ever – drool-worthy Mr. Clooney and Brad Pitt; Matt Damon and the rest funny to watch. At the very least, there’s something fun watching the guys having fun with each other. The womenfolk (well, Julia Roberts anyway) aren’t in the movie this time, with only Ellen Barkin taking up the Woman in the movie – she was ok, but it was more about watching the Guys, of course. I’d give the movie a B grade – a good watch.

    An icky NYC summer day this Tuesday.

    I suppose we could feel bad for Kobayashi, the Hot Dog Eating contestant whose jaw injury is preventing him from this year’s Nathan’s July 4th contest.

    This is a story that’s getting around: “Giants penguins may have roamed Peru.” The headline alone is kind of amusing – prehistoric Giant Penguins on the Earth. The imagery – big beaks waddling around, or swimming really really fast. Like, what? Saber-tooth tigers ate them? Or maybe they ate saber-tooth tigers and woolly-mammoths?

    MTA makes the (unsurprising) study that concludes that the A, 1,2,3,4,5 are fully crowded to capacity and no more subways and frequent rides can be put on the lines (insert sarcastic “yeah, we all love congested subway tunnels”), whereas the J, M, Z are barely used and are 99% on time. Um, what kind of genuises figured that out? Geez, now the next step is to figure out how to ease the crowded lines and make better use of the unused lines.

    The Genius of P.G. Wodehouse,” a Newsweek web exclusive. Well, I’m certainly partial to the silliness of Bertie Wooster and the whole Jeeves to the rescue – at least actors Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry made Bertie and Jeeves fun. Wodehouse’s writing – it’s clever, but I kind of would have liked more heart.

    The Case of the DC ALJ Who Sued the Dry Cleaners is dismissed. Thank goodness. Now can we please restore some dignity to the profession, please?

    This story on how doctors who refuse to give treatment because it conflicts with their religion — well, it’s kind of disturbing to me. I won’t go into the legal implications (I’m hardly an expert), but the article depressed me. There’s more than just a hint of double standard to this – so, you might have a doctor who would refuse to prescribe birth control to a rape victim (!) or conduct an abortion because of religious reasons; but no problem (or have no similar moral qualms) on prescribing Viagra to a man (whose only real use for Viagra is well – you know…)? The disproportionate effect on women and their health just doesn’t feel right to me.

  • Shootout at the Waterfront

    This past weekend I finally was able to check off another of those “No Opportunity Wasted” items, and joined in with a group of P’s friends to compete in the Asian American 72 Hour Film Shootout. I’ve always thought about doing it, but never got it together. This year, the critical mass finally came together.

    The required theme for this year’s competition was “Elizabeth Ong is missing…”. We ended up with a 3 minute cannonball run thriller that had us dashing through the streets of Long Island City and driving through the back roads around the FDR Drive. I was technical director, which involved being the go-to guy when we ran into a problem, and making sure nobody hurt themselves.  We all gained practical experience in movie making. The best part of it was that we all made new hard and fast friends — that was the best takeaway from this experience. There’s 63 other teams out there, so let’s see how far we can go at the AAIFF film festival.

  • Checking in

    Been awhile, just so busy with stuff at work, I’d forgotten to check back here. Time has just went a big “whooooooooooooosssshhhhh” :o! Anyways, what prompted me to blab was I caught some old AsianAvenue.com spam mail and found “AngryAsianMan.com” tie-in with AA. I’m like WTF?! Unbelievable, I guess things just don’t ever change, but people in their old age move on and get on with the more important things in life.

    Will be an interesting summer…. lots of work stuff coming down the pike. I’ve got my seat belt buckle on.

    Keep cool folks!

  • Start of Summer

    Morgan Freeman’s essay in Newsweek – makes you appreciate life – he observes how taking up golf, even at the age of 70, gets him exercise and fresh air; taking up flying means fulfilling a life-long dream; and acting in a comedy, hard work as it is, reminds him not to take life too seriously. Morgan Freeman’s the man, really.

    On the APA front of things: a NY Times profile of a NY actor Kim Chan, a memorable character actor (well, if you watch as much tv as I have, you’ll remember him as That Old Chinese Guy that pops up on various shows – the accompanying video NY Times showed a clip where he was on “Kung Fu: The Legend Continues” – David Carradine’s syndicated series sequel, which – for me, anyway – was ridiculous but guilty tv viewing during the 1990’s – a scene wherein Mr. Chan’s character advises Mr. Carradine’s character – I say “guilty” because I still feel weird about Carradine’s role but concede that there were witty lines and angst on the series).

    NY Times’ Ginia Bellafante has an interesting article on the play “Platanos and Collard Greens,” a drama on Black-Latino interaction through the lens of interracial romance. Bellafante explains the origins of the show. I especially found the article fascinating because (a) I had seen the play advertised in the subways and thought it sounded interesting, so the article really fleshed it out; and (b) well, it’s amusing that David Lamb, the show’s creator, went to law school (what is it with lawyers and the arts?) and got something out of a little networking:

    “Platanos & Collard Greens” concerns itself with the tension between the African-American and Latino communities in New York and the overwhelming majority of men and women who go to see it, some over and over, are nonwhites.

    In its ethos and sentiment, the play rests somewhere between a civics lesson and Howard Finster’s folk art. Mr. Lamb doesn’t traffic in the imperatives of angry reproach. “Platanos & Collard Greens” is a simplistic morality tale rendered in cheerful tones, a look at the refraction of racial prejudice from one minority group to another, and a primer in how best to curtail pernicious stereotype.

    The story, some of which is told in belabored hip-hop rhymes, revolves around a group of ambitious students at Hunter College, an election for student body president and a chaste love affair between a young African-American man and Dominican woman whose mother disapproves of the relationship. Mr. Lamb removes the potentially complicating factor of class so that the mother’s criticism of her daughter’s boyfriend is rooted purely in the color of his skin. Hard working, the boy comes from a well-educated family. The mother, in denial of her own African roots, is the sort of woman who admonishes her daughter to stay out of the sun so as not to look like “those Haitians.”

    The particulars of the storyline have made the play quite popular on college campuses, where Mr. Lamb is typically asked to stage it at the invitation of student minority groups. In the past few years, “Platanos & Collard Greens” has been produced at more than 100 colleges and universities across the country, including Princeton, Cornell and Wesleyan.

    A graduate of Hunter College himself, Mr. Lamb grew up in a housing project in Queens before going on to graduate work at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton and later to New York University, where he studied law. It was at N.Y.U. that he began writing hip-hop fiction, self-publishing a novel “Do Platanos Go Wit’ Collard Greens?” in 1995 after he finished studying for the bar. Soon after the book was completed, Mr. Lamb was asked to talk to students at a public high school in the city where conflict had developed between African-American and Puerto Rican students on one side and newly arrived Dominican immigrants on the other. Eventually, the book became part of the curriculum of a handful of alternative schools in New York; Mr. Lamb was a popular speaker.

    The teenagers he encountered, Mr. Lamb and his wife Jamillah, explained, introducing “Platanos” to its audience at the 400-seat Gould Hall Sunday afternoon, began expressing a wish to see the characters in the novel come to life. With no theatrical experience at all, Mr. Lamb — then working as a lawyer for a low-income housing fund — and Jamillah, a banker, invested $20,000 of their own to stage the play at the Producers Club four years ago.

    “Platanos & Collard Greens” wears its allegiance to political solidarity obligatorily, like a host who inquires after the health of his dinner guests when all he wants to do is pour the wine and ladle the dirt. Mr. Lamb surely believes on some level that ending factionalism in the inner city could help to put to rest the afflictions that degrade it. But it is the idea of racial harmony as a lifestyle choice — a lot easier than the alternative, and considerably more fun — that compels him instead.

    His inspiration for the story, he said recently, came not from any personal experience with the kind of relationship he depicts. It came instead from his internship during college for Representative José E. Serrano, the Bronx Democrat, then a state assemblyman. When the two men met, Mr. Serrano remembered the name Lamb as belonging to someone he fondly recalled from middle school. Mr. Serrano, as it happened, had known Mr. Lamb’s uncle. And from that point on, Mr. Lamb said, he recognized congeniality as the best preparation for riding the currents through which life might carry you.

    Some law-related stuff of interested:

    Linda Greenhouse on how the Ch.J. Roberts era seems to be about slowly overturning precedence. What it may mean — well, we live interesting times, don’t we?

    Edward Lazarus’ Findlaw article on J. Ginsburg’s – umm – interesting year on the US Supreme Court in the Ch.J. Roberts era.


    Prof. Anthony Sebok about the screwy cases
    of the ALJ in D.C. who’s suing the dry cleaners and Judge Bork suing the Yale Club for his personal injury. He articulates very well why those two cases are just so irritating:

    We can now see what makes these two cases so frustrating: The legal issues they raise are relatively simple–a dry cleaner should return pants brought to them by a client; a private club should offer a reasonably safe means to access a lectern to members of the public. Yet what makes the cases themselves hard is that the circumstantial evidence suggests that the plaintiffs may well be misrepresenting important pieces of information–pieces of information that, if conceded them from the outset, would have made each lawsuit so simple that it would either never have been brought, or would have been settled quickly for a modest amount.

    The problem is that there is no way to decide ex ante whether any of the parties to these lawsuits are telling the truth. That’s why we have trials. Yet many people, myself included, feel very frustrated when confronted with suits like Pearson’s and Bork’s because we suspect that the plaintiffs are knowingly taking advantage of the American litigation system’s clumsy insistence on trying factual claims, rather than allowing “common sense” to dispose of cases like these. (Common sense would likely give Pearson the cost of the pinstriped suit, give Bork a fairly modest sum for his injury, and leave it at that.)

    Why do litigants exaggerate or misrepresent the truth in pleadings? The obvious answer is that, until a statement is made under oath, there is little or no penalty for doing so. Statements made in the course of litigation are privileged – that is, they cannot be the basis of a defamation claim; the only legal consequence that can arise would be a difficult-to-prove charge of perjury. This is, as every lawyer knows, “the real world” of litigation. Hyperbole and trumped-up claims are tactical maneuvers that set out the furthest reaches of a litigant’s negotiating position when it comes to settlement, and everyone, in theory, is supposed to know that.

    The problem, however, is that the real world of litigation has produced a situation where it can take a lot of time and money to cut through all the bluster that makes up so much of a plaintiff’s initial allegations. The Chungs had to spend thousands of dollars whittling Pearson’s case down to its real core. Now, they will have spend thousands more attempting to prove that Pearson is a liar In turn, the Yale Club will have to spend thousands challenging Bork’s claim that he should be able to collect $1 million in punitive and compensatory damages, before his lawsuit is finally reduced to the minor slip and fall case that seems to lie at its core.

    The fact that plaintiffs and defendants can use lies and exaggerations tactically in litigation may seem commonplace to lawyers, but I think the public is right to be irate when they see these tactics being used, in particular, by judges who choose to become litigants. The public is upset, I think, because they expect judges to be part of the solution to the problem of dishonest litigants, not part of the problem. They expect – reasonably so – that judges should set a high standard, not lower themselves to the level of the typical litigant.

    The civil justice system can only work if litigants monitor themselves, refraining from exploiting the system’s slow and clumsy mechanisms for ferreting out claims that are not true. By refusing to keep their claims and damage demands to a minimum that reflects the true core of their cases, Judges Pearson and Bork help erode public confidence in the civil justice system and weaken the very institution they swore to uphold.

    Last, but not least out of my zany mind, I was poking around YouTube, which led to finding a Muppet Wiki. Can’t vouch for the articles, but love the pictures… Okay, I need to really get a life.

  • Post Weekend

    Saturday: Cebu, in Bay Ridge, for brunch. Pretty nice.

    A review of a book on J. Clarence Thomas, by Washington Post reporters. Sounds fascinating.

    Speaking of Supreme Court justices, apparently, J. Breyer didn’t do too hot on a quiz show on NPR. Oh, well – I saw the questions (apparently, he had to answer three questions about rock history to help a law student win a prize), and I couldn’t possibly answer them either (I know very little about David Bowie et al). At least the law student ended up getting a signed copy of the Constitution from Breyer as a consolation. And, it’s NPR, so it’s kind of for a good cause.

    The Zagats in the NY Times this Sunday, on “Eating Beyond Sichuan” – their hopes of Americans’ opportunity to eat authentic Chinese food. Umm, I wonder – do they mean the Americans outside of the NY metropolitan area?

    Oh, YouTube. Oh, this is funny – a tribute to Bob Ross, that perennial painter of PBS (may he still be painting little trees in a happy afterlife; peace be with you, Bob Ross, wherever you are!).

  • Cut to Black

    Just tagging on to SSW’s Sopranos talk. Lots to squeeze, especially since I haven’t been really watching it until season 7 (I didn’t have access to HBO until I started dating P). For those that need a catch-up, here are some appropriate YouTube clips:

    Sopranos Seven Season Synopsis in Seven Minutes (someone had way too much time on their hands)

    Every death scene in chronological order (brutal)

    Aaaay – Ohhhh – funny

    Tour the real places in Jersey with Vito

    The last four minutes

    Some good commentary

    My opinion: I was going for the existential “Tony – that’s what it is like to be wacked” explanation until I saw the last video commentary – it changed my mind. There were claims of four potential assassins at the diner – the 2 black guys walking in (which were claimed to have been in season 1), a trucker (claimed to be from season 3), and some Italian guy at the bar that was ID’s as the NY boss’s nephew. Others debunked these theories – identifying that they were all knocked off or didn’t exist. The last video gave a perfectly good explanation. Recreating Dostoevsky’s “Crime and Punishment” paranoia of having to look over your shoulder every moment – the way David Chase was able to make the entire audience feel – is sheer brilliance in execution (sorry, couldn’t resist the pun).