Blog

  • Sunday

    Catching up: this week was the Alma Mater Law School Reunion – umm, yeah, interesting. Chelsea Piers’ The Lighthouse; took a bit of public transportation; would’ve been nice if it hadn’t rained; but the food was pretty much okay; dessert spectacular. I’ll let FC and P put in their own say about it; suffice it to say that we agreed that the little crabcakes and dessert wontons were quite good.

    NBC’s “Heroes” season finale tomorrow night. Get ready!

    Watched the end of the “Grey’s Anatomy” season finale – give actress Sandra Oh an Emmy; I was amazed by the ambiguity of her character Christina – she loves Burke, no doubt, but does she want to get married; is she just a surgeon; is she really “free” as she proclaimed in tears that were hardly of joy? And, Meredith Grey – Lord, the woman is messed up, and meanwhile is the show setting us up for another Grey? I gritted my teeth and realized why I’ve been losing interest in the show and have scaled back on watching it – it’s no fault of either of the actresses playing Christina or Meredith, but the plots drive me nuts.

    ABC presented a review of “Lost” which helped me appreciate the craziness that is “Lost.” I may very well end up watching the season finale next week.

    PBS showed the documentary “The Slanted Screen,” on the portrayal of Asian/APA males on the screen. I was watching most of it the other night – interesting takes and I thought it was overall a pretty good documentary with clips of, say, one of George Takei’s roles (I keep forgetting he did stuff other than Star Trek) but I kind of agree with an analysis over why the documentary had to be limited to Asian/APA men? Not to say that the men’s portrayal has been very good on tv/movies, but neither has Asian/APA women. Portrayal of Asian/APA people in general leaves much to be desired.

    But, we can be hopeful, when shows like “Lost,” “Heroes,” and “Grey’s Anatomy” have more diverse casts – and actually use these talented actors of color – and more Asians/APA’s in the directing/writing/producing side of things (I heard Nair’s “The Namesake” was doing well; I really have to read the book and watch the movie already). Then again – “Lost” and “Heroes” are using Asian/APA’s actors to play Asians, and not really as APA’s (check out this Newsday article on the topic of Asians/APA’s on tv) – and I’d like to see just a few more APA’s on tv (speaking as an APA). Well, we’ll see.

    TV industry rolling out their fall 2007 schedules this past week. Goodbye to the NBC tv show “Raines” – which was pretty good with Jeff Goldblum and a diverse and interesting cast; too bad you didn’t get the ratings numbers and no good time slot.

    NBC jumps deeper in the trend to have British actors play Americans (Damian Lewis, the insane Soames Forsythe of British tv’s “The Forsythe Saga”? Well, he has played American before, so I guess I can’t criticize).

    CBS renews “How I Met Your Mother” – hooray! NBC renews “Scrubs”! Whoa.

    All the networks are seemingly going for more quirky shows. I don’t mind quirky, but sometimes I’d like a little originality. Come on, a vampire private detective? WB already did that – it was called “Angel,” and unless they’re going a different route on this (I guess doing something without Angel’s emotional baggage). Moreover, NBC’s “Chuck” also sounds an awful lot like old UPN’s “Jake 2.0.” Other ideas include: musical tv? (even after just about 15 years, have we not learned from “Cop Rock,” even if this new show has Hugh Jackman and is derived from a British project?); an immortal cop? A bionic woman?

    (Okay, NBC, let’s see what you can do with the return of Jaime (not Jamie?) Summers; I actually watched those reunion movies back in the 1980’s and 1990’s where Bionic Woman and Six Million Dollar Man saved the world and finally got together, and I enjoyed them – call me sick; there’s always potential for this kind of idea – but if you’re going to make Ms. Summers like Sydney Bristow, Buffy or Veronica Mars… well, you’re going to have to really work at it to impress me).

    I can’t help but be intruiged by FOX’s using Kelsey Grammar and Patricia Heaton to do another take on a sitcom taking place at a tv network news setting. It’s seems just a bit different for a sitcom – and returning two familiar faces who do bear resemblances to local anchornews people. Hmm.

    APA’s in the news: Sunday Times: profiling David Chang, rising foodie star.

    Time magazine profiling Khaled Hosseini, the writer of “The Kite Runner,” whose new book “A Thousand Splendid Suns” is getting rave reviews.

    Daily News’ coverage of City Councilman Eric Goia’s experiment of living on one week’s worth of food stamps was interesting. Goia’s closes it with suggestions on the food stamp issue, including giving recipients ability to buy healthy food. He noted being hungry, yet managing to gain pounds off of the less healthy cheap carbs he bought – which goes toward showing the sad reality of how poor populations develop heart and weight problems.

    Mets. v. Yankees subway series – game three tonight. Go Mets!

  • Greatest American Hero

    This was my alma mater’s reunion weekend, and at my college’s luncheon we honored the “dean of travel experts”, Arthur Frommer, from the class of 1950. This coincided with the 50th anniversary of his guidebook “Europe on $5 a Day”. (To get in that law angle, after going to Yale Law School, he was a litigation associate with Paul Weiss before he left to pursue a career in travel.)

    Why is he a hero? While in the U.S. Army in Germany, he figured out how not to be the Ugly American – be respectful of the people and places visited, go off of the well-worn track to obtain authentic experiences, and of course, have your money go farther and smarter. In my experience taking trips overseas starting in college, I’ve tried to take these principles to heart. Fifty years later, he still has a lot to teach us.

  • Mother’s Day Weekend

    Happy Mother’s Day to all Mothers Everywhere.

    Hmm. Spider Solitaire (usually found on Windows XP) – an addicting game to say the least – really have to pull away from it. Really. I’ll say that much.

    Just a little catching up: last Sunday’s APA Heritage Festival at Union Sq. was very nice – pretty much bumped into everyone!

    The custody battle for a beloved dog.

    A look at the art of Edward Hopper.

    Last month, I noted the story of the governor who tried to live off of food stamps for a week. Saturday’s Daily News reports that, this week, City Councilman Eric Goia (D., Queens) is trying out the experiment. He’s apparently coming down to the determination that there are people in hunger in this city. No, really? Well, we’ll see if this trendy experiment will bring up new ideas and ways to battle poverty and hunger in this city/state/country.

    Interestingly, NY Times has an op ed on the subject of hunger and food stamps this Mother’s Day.

  • British Evasion Invasion

    The Queen visits Virginia; all sorts of shock and awe ensues. What makes her third visit to the U.S. significant is the changes and interchanges between America and Britain. Not crushing domination on either part, but a gradual blending as the Mother Country’s stewing multicultural melting pot still longs for the idyllic country town featured in Hot Fuzz (seen with SSW last weekend). On the other hand, Brit humor makes a comeback via the comedy of Dave Eggers (McSweeney’s) and John Hodgman (Mr. PC in the Mac commercials). The straight-laced and stiff-upper-lipped throwbacks to 21st Century Victorian mores make a distinctly American version; what makes it not dry is the sense of discovery, wonder and ultimately charity.

    Eggers started a non-profit group called 826 that seeks to teach young people the wonder of creative and expository writing. The New York branch, 826 NYC, is based in Brooklyn, hidden behind their front store, the Brooklyn Superhero Supply Co. (and yes this is a real storefront – I’m not making this up). Sales from their crime-fighting store help fund tutoring for Brooklyn elementary and high school students. Check them out at 372 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn.

    For the complete British experience, visit the Park Slope ChipShop across the street at 383 Fifth Avenue for their fish and chips, and fried just about everything (including Twinkies and various candy bars). Fried mac and cheese balls are awesome, and fried pizza is just something you have to try.

  • Post May Day

    Presidential candidates’ personal preferences.

    A rather amusing article reviewing the release of the DVD of Season 1 of “Hawaii 5-0.”

    NY Times’ Mark Bittman on getting the best steak frites in Paris. Mmm. Fries.

    Plus, Bittman with a risotto recipe, along with the accompanying video. The butter and oil that chef Mario Batali put into his risotto – goodness. But, looks tasty and otherwise, Bittman and Batali made it look easy. Almost makes me want to cook. Umm, yeah, right…

    A profile on Allyson Hannigan, the ex-Willow of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” fame, and currently Lily on “How I Met Your Mother” on CBS, a pretty darn good comedy. And, I agree – Lily and Marshall are probably the only couple in the TV multiverses who are in a healthy relationship – heck, they’re surviving Marshall’s time as a Columbia Law student. All they have to do is get through Marshall’s bar review experience, and they’re golden.

    Serious note: Law Day – celebrating rule of law, not about celebrating lawyers, the NY Times editorial on May 1 notes. I’ll applaud that.

    But, meanwhile, I found it highly disturbing that the Daily News spent Sunday and Monday on a Special Exclusive on the city’s alleged worst lawyers – people who resigned or were disciplined because they seriously screwed up. That’s nice to know, but not quite sure what else Daily News was trying to do – as if people didn’t already have little faith in the system as it is – as if we don’t learn what not to do.

    Interesting article on the current trends on Civil Rights history, Southern history, and American conservatism – as a new generation of historians consider examining the Civil Rights era from the lenses of the White moderates. Patricia Cohen writes:

    Conservative appeals to limit the government’s reach and emphasize individual freedoms resonated not only in the South, but in the North as well, said Joseph Crespino, 35, whose book, “In Search of Another Country: Mississippi and the Conservative Counterrevolution” (Princeton University Press), was just published.

    The racial and religious conservatism of whites, for instance, “converged in unexpected ways in the fight over federal tax policy toward Southern private schools,” Mr. Crespino writes. He said that while many Southern whites set up “segregation academies” for the sole purpose of avoiding school integration, others were genuinely interested in sending their children to church schools for religious reasons. “By the late ’70s, this issue of defending church schools against harassment by the federal government and the I.R.S.,” Mr. Crespino explained in an interview, led to the “mobilization of evangelical and fundamentalist Christians.”

    Mr. Crespino, who grew up in rural Mississippi, said his research was partly inspired by his experience. Many of the African-Americans he met in the deeply segregated precincts of Chicago while he was an undergraduate at Northwestern University had come from his home state and were struggling with the same issues they had had down South. “Rather than treating white Mississipians as these racist pariahs in larger postwar liberal America, I wanted to treat them as part of a broader popular reaction against modern liberalism,” he said. “I wanted to show how central the resistance to civil rights policies were in shaping modern conservative policies.” [….]

    Like Mr. Crespino, Matthew D. Lassiter was motivated to research his own Southern roots. He found a gap between the history he had learned in school and his experience growing up in its wake in Sandy Springs, a white, middle-class suburb of Atlanta. “I was trying to find my own people, my parents and grandparents,” said Mr. Lassiter, 36, who wrote “The Silent Majority: Suburban Politics in the Sunbelt South” (Princeton) published last year. “There were a few white Southerners who were liberals, a larger number throwing the rocks with the rioters and the vast group in the middle were left out of the story.”

    As a graduate student at the University of Virginia, he taught undergraduates and assigned the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter From Birmingham Jail,” in which he wrote, “I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride towards freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to ‘order’ than justice.”

    Reading this just tempted me to go get the books; really reminded me of what I studied back in college and discussing the course of post-World War II America with the TA’s. … ok, pardon, geeking out as the former history major that I am. 😉

    But, it is interesting to wonder – what is the moderates’ position in society? Are moderates more a threat than they realize, by virtue of what they hold as priorities? Or are they too busy concerned about stability and status quo (maybe even too scared shitless) to dare pursue a course of justice and a better world?

    Hmm. Kind of makes me question why I consider myself a a left-of-center moderate. Kind of.

    Leading to an interesting question, which NBC’s “Heroes” made me wonder: “If You Could Save Millions of Lives, Wouldn’t You?” Would you dare to save the world? … Well, Monday’s episode was just plain awesome. And, reminds me once again why time traveling episodes drive me a little nuts (the possibilities of paradoxes astound me). Actors Masi Oka (as Future Hiro and Present Hiro – thumbs up!) and James Kyson Lee (as Hiro’s sidekick Ando) play well as Asians/APA’s on tv. Oh, and finally (even if it was in the future) the character Dr. Mohinder Suresh takes a heroic action ( I won’t say more, in case others haven’t watched yet)… once we head back to the present, well, surely the hard part’s coming…

    More cool space stuff: pictures from Jupiter.

    On the local side of things:

    The planned arts library in Brooklyn is hitting a snag; not easy when the Brooklyn Public Library is experiencing another change in leadership. Guess I can only hope for the best for BPL, since libraries in the city need better hours and facilities as a basic matter.

    And, last but not least: Frank Bruni reviews Max Brenner. I did like the Union Sq. one myself, but he’s right – it can be a bit much.

  • The Week That Was

    Last Wednesday, managed to catch the Design Made in Africa exhibit at the World Financial Center, co-sponsored by the Museum for African Art. Fantastic looking and very utilitarian pieces of furniture and other object des arts – modern Africa heading towards the 21st Century – at the Courtyard Gallery in the World Financial Center from April 12 to June 24.

    Gov. Ted Kulongoski (D., Ore.) is trying out an experiment: can he live off of food stamps for a week? Apparently, he’s trying to raise awareness as to how not very good the food stamp program is to feed people in need. Part of it is indeed a question of when was the last time the governor actually did his own food shopping, but I’d still applaud him for trying – imagine if we made all the politicians perform this experiment. Perhaps it’d force them to really think about ways to really help people.

    Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick on the oral arguments at the US Supreme Court on the whole question of campaign reform. The article was quite funny, in a sad way (sad, well, in terms of political thinking, and depending on where one is on the political spectrum…).

    9/11/01 remnants for archivists’ subject material.

    FC, P, and I saw “Hot Fuzz” on Saturday. In the movie, Sgt. Nicholas Angel, a cranberry juice drinker, is sent to the boondocks because he’s too good a cop for his superiors in London to accept (because, well, he makes them look bad). However, Angel finds out that there’s more to the boondocks than he would have thought. Much more.

    Slate’s movie critic Dana Stevens says, “Hot Fuzz is like an Agatha Christie novel directed by Michael Bay and adapted for the screen by P.G. Wodehouse.” Well, I’d agree on the Michael Bay part; less so on the Agatha Christie (unless you’re thinking of Christie’s creation of Miss Marple and Miss Marple’s town of St. Mary Meade, where – you guessed it! – the town’s murder rate is kind of ridiculous and Miss Marple’s probably a closet psychopath); and really less so on P.G. Wodehouse (well, unless you’re citing Wodehouse as the source of wacky British humo(u)r; I’d say Monty Python would’ve been a better reference). Honestly, I’d expect good old Inspector Morse walking into “Hot Fuzz.” The whole beer thing would’ve been perfect for him; but not, say, the gun thing. No, that’d still be in the realm of Michael Bay.

    All in all, thumbs up to the movie.

    FC, P, and I later had afternoon tea at Sweet Melissa Patisserie, across from the movie theater. We managed not to give in to the sweets – but they looked soo good.

    Daily News publishes Mario Cuomo’s thoughts on the recent Democratic debate – with his idea that there ought to be a permanent debating system to let the candidates talk about actual ideas. I thought there were some good thoughts. Personally, I kind of feel for the candidates who aren’t likely to make headway – Joe Biden actually does have real ideas on Iraq (not that I’ve read up on them enough, but he certainly knows what he’s talking about) and Bill Richardson has quite a resume – he’s now a governor and was a UN Ambassador and is Latino (although, his tenure as US Dept. of Energy Secretary included the debacle toward Wen Ho Lee – something APA’s aren’t going to quite forget – at least I haven’t). The candidates are many; the competition will be rough.

    “Heroes” – a bit caught up. The episode of 4/30/07 will be interesting…

  • First Half of the Week

    Felt like summer already today.

    Must watch “Heroes”… am sadly behind… don’t watch spoilers… must resist…

    First I saw the AP article on Yahoo, and I, of course, scoffed at it: the idea of a “potentially habitable planet”? And, notice the numerosity of “maybe’s” and “this theory may change upon further research,” as the scientists hedge it – just in case they may be wrong. Then, the NY Times also has coverage on this story? Oh well.

    The passing of Boris Yeltsin.

    This was quite the shock, when I got on the web and saw the breaking news – the sudden passing of journalist David Halberstam, in a car accident.

  • Uncertainty

    Sorry I’ve been OL the last few days. Hay fever got the worst of me this weekend. I stayed home from work on Monday. Here’s lots of catchup:
    Happy Bday to AS and MJ!

    In random order, Taste of Chinatown was on Saturday. Peking Duck House gets their act together, and we were able to snag a 5-pack of those delectable Peking Duck rolls. Checked out H2 Cards – an East-West wedding invitation card store. Found my friend’s wedding invite in the catalog. Not a bad price either.

    Last weekend’s Atlantic City trip was nice. We had a group of three carshare down from the city. We passed what we thought was the accident site of NJ Gov. Corzine – the troopers were still searching for the guy in a red pickup truck, which turned out to be a casino worker. Keynote speaker NYC Council Member John Liu pointed out that Sharpton used Liu’s playbook in the Hot 97 tsunami song protest , but Sharpton was much more effective sooner in putting on the pressure on Don Imus. (Liu got to put the plan in effect again this week with another incident with CBS radio.)

    Where to begin with the VT massacre? It will take years to over-analyze how this happened, from every angle (Asian/foreigner thing? no – 2 asian and 5 foreign victims; video games? no- Cho didn’t really play video games; gun control? mental health? school security? instant messaging? magnitude – do you count it as 32 or 33 victims? worse mass shooting (at a school? ever in the U.S. since the Civil War? – but this level of carnage happens in Iraq every day.)

    This is today’s information version of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: either you muddle aimlessly through the fog of war, but can divine a guiding theory that explains all, or you have access to all knowledge, but there is so much detail that it is impossible to discern or learn.

    The best that we can do is remember, and try to keep our connections to those that we love.

    We drove back from Atlantic City last Sunday in the middle of the nor’easter. We were in the car together, watching this other guy trying to drive a three-wheeled motorcycle encased in a plastic poncho through the wall of water. A little faith goes a long way.

  • The sun has come out…

    What lovely weather – finally spring outside, not reserved to the tulips in my office at work.

    Time Magazine’s Lisa Takeuchi Cullen posts on her blog the Asian-American journalist’s dilemma in covering the Virginia Tech story. It made a lot of sense to me – you don’t want to make race/ethnicity the issue, but then again, you want to present a full picture. And the dilemma doesn’t make it easier when you feel personal about it – you may feel relieved if the shooter isn’t from your own ethnic group (since, after all “Asian” covers a lot), but in the end, the shooter is still from your group (“Asian” to the outsider is just “Asian” – as if the outsider cares whether one is Korean, Chinese, or what – we are all going to be seen as the “foreigner,” the marginalized, etc.).

    Charlie Rose interviewed a panel on Thursday night that included Columbia Law Prof. Patricia Williams, Time’s Managing Editor Richard Stengel, and others, covering the Virginia Tech story, the Supreme Court’s decision on (so-called partial-birth) abortion, US AG Alberto Gonzalez, and the presidential election in France. I thought Time’s announcement on putting the Virginia Tech kids on the cover to be a good idea and Stengel’s argument on Rose’s show was persuasive: put the emphasis on the loss – the pride of potential – not on the murderer (who has his own issues, to be certain). I’d also say let’s not forget what we as a society may have to figure out. NY Times had a similar approach – and it resembles the Profiles in Grief that they had done after 9/11/01.

    The pictures of the Virginia Tech struck at me for being a portrait of the diversity and spirit of American universities today – from the professor who was a Holocaust survivor and survivor of Communism and protected his students, to the RA who was a band guy and a soon-to-be engineer, to the hardworking Asian-American freshman and so on. It reminded me of how it was when I was in college, and how we can all empathize over what had happened at Virginia Tech – goodness, it could have been anyone. Crime on campus is not what we want to imagine, when we look to academia as our safe haven.

    Slate’s Explainer explains why the media hasn’t quite figured out whether to put out the Virginia Tech shooter’s first name first or last name first (Asian style); apparently, ABC went with the American style in a quicker manner, after consulting with its own Korean/Korean-American staff. I think ABC made the better decision – it’s not like the guy was a foreign student – he was a green card guy – which means first name first, last name last (at least for the purposes of being in this country). Perhaps I’m being narrow-minded in that line of thinking – but it did kind of bothered me that the media seemed act like it was trying to be “sensitive” about the nationality thing – as if they were thrown off by Cho’s non-English name. If his name was “John” Cho, would they have gone with Cho John? I’d doubt it, but I guess his lack of an English name put him in even more isolation, which is sad to think about.

    Come to think of it – Friday’s Slate has a lot of interesting articles. One fascinating feature – a slide show essay by David Segal on the history of racist advertising mascots, in light of the new portrayal of Uncle Ben (of Uncle Ben’s rice) on the company website as Ben, CEO, of the rice company (thanks to Slate and Segal for the link). Almost laughable, if it isn’t kind of sad. Segal observes that this is apparently also consistent with, say, the evolution of Aunt Jemima, who no longer wears a kerchief – but wears pearl earrings because, well, she too is the fictitious CEO of the company (okay, maybe not quite, but check out the website, where they –profile the history – that in 1989, they ditched the kerchief and in 1992, “During a frozen package redesign Quaker tilted Aunt Jemima’s head into a more upright position,” and notes that, today, “The Aunt Jemima products continue to stand for warmth, nourishment and trust – qualities you’ll find in loving moms from diverse backgrounds who care for and want the very best for their families.” Diversity wins, hands down, thank goodness; but, hey, Jemima still wants you to eat well).

    Hell, Madison Avenue even did it to Betty Crocker (we just don’t have the same racial connotations with Betty Crocker – no, just sexist ones) – transforming her from housewife to CEO… who still bakes brownies. (thanks to Wikipedia for the link to the website on the evolution of Betty Crocker; can’t seem to track down the latest image of her as a multi-ethnic woman; the official website of Betty Crocker seems to have a treasure trove of recipes and stuff – I won’t criticize, as I don’t cook/bake/etc., and I grew up on that stuff, so really, I can’t criticize!).

    Met’s re-opening of the Greek-Roman galleries – having removed the old cafeteria, we can now see the Romans in their better glory – well, the NY Times’ Michael Kimmelman previews it – and it looks great, at least from the Times’ website feature anyway. So looking forward to going up there soon and seeing it!

  • Will the Sun come out, tomorrow…

    Note on the weather – despite the nor’easter being well over, the gray skies have yet to clear up around here; ugh. At least I’ve a bunch of tulips blooming in my office to give some color, otherwise it’d be really dark and dreary.

    “Raines” episode of April 13, 2007 – pretty good, I have to say. The judge who takes drugs finds that life really, really sucks. Linda Park as Officer Lance has to deal with being the APA chick stereotype, when she shoots a perp. And Goldblum as Raines – hmm – the man has issues, to say the least.

    I would hope that NBC renew the series – it has such potential and a bit of heart to it (honestly, we need more hopeful stuff on tv – don’t get me started about how “24” had made me plain tired of stress and horror) – but I won’t expect very much.

    Then again, ABC renewed “Grey’s Anatomy” after its first season of only eight episodes, so you never know. Depends on whether NBC is as much desperation now as ABC was then.

    Speaking of tv – having cable means having SNY and watching way much more NY Mets than I have in quite some time. The SNY announcing team is pretty good – Ron Darling is turning out to be a good commentator – and nice to see an APA out there (he’s a Hawaiian hapa, a Yalie, and it’s all cool); Gary Cohen’s a great play-by-play (Alma Mater alumni magazine even did a cover article on him; goes to show you how far you can go without running for president…); and Keith Hernandez… well, he and Lee Mazzilli (who analyzes from the studio) – I think the two give off way much of the 1986 Mets machismo, but whatever. Having good baseball is simply a major plus.

    Tai chi helps your immunity from… shingles?

    NY Times reports that Fordham Law’s former Dean Feerick has been selected to the state’s ethics commission.

    Someone’s going to have to explain to me one of these days if legal academia and the business of law really do cooperate with each other or not.

    The passing of Kitty Carlisle Hart. I had recently read about her – how she was once romanced by George Gershwin, and what it was like in that bygone era of the arts. Kind of strange to think that this longtime veteran of the arts has passed away.

    Last, and hardly least: the tragedy at Virginia Tech — well, not necessarily going to lay out all my thoughts on it, although I’ll ramble off some of the thoughts. The story is still unfolding, and it doesn’t sound like it’ll get better.

    My main wonder is whether the media is overdoing it – and it certainly feels like it, now that I have cable and can witness directly how nuts CNN, FOX News (boo!), MSNBC, etc., go at it. Slate has this interesting article about the media coverage. Plus, NY Times publishes an article on the South Korean reaction of shame and regret on the shooter being Korean – which surprised me to some extent; taking a broader view, I wonder more about how does this affect Asians/Asian-Americans? Does it affect APA’s; should it affect APA’s at all? What does this say about American culture in general, or the state of an individual and the creative mind gone terribly wrong? What about universities – their responsibility, if at all, or what could they have done and how far; what about how we as APA’s or Americans overall address mental illness, or guns or what – or maybe this is indeed a horrific example of random violence that you just can’t foresee.

    But, perhaps the Internet age doesn’t make it any better. On the one hand, you can hope that we can try to communicate and understand each other better. On the other hand, maybe we’re just inundating ourselves with stuff and not arriving at a resolution.

    You can examine the Virginia Tech tragedy from so many angles that it kind of makes the head spin. Lots of questions; what are answers – well, I guess life is where we try to figure things out as best we can.