Blog

  • Stuff Of Inspiration — and Stuff Not Quite of Inspiration

    Saturday: watched “Kung Fu Panda.” Sweetly funny, cute and exciting fight scenes. Not offensive as I was afraid it’d be (maybe because using furry animals helps avoid cultural stereotypes to some degree), and teaches some interesting little morals for the kids in the audience.

    Ken Tucker, Entertainment Weekly’s at-large critic – and longtime tv critic – put in his two-cents in remembering Tim Russert.

    WPIX, a.k.a. CW11, is celebrating its 60th Anniversary! So, it’s airing all a marathon of the old tv shows they’ve aired – “My Favorite Martian,” “I Dream of Jeannie,” “The Odd Couple,” “Get Smart” (in time for the movie, really!), and a retrospective of the history. My big Channel 11 memory: Channel 11 was where I was introduced to Star Trek (Star Trek: The Next Generation, and then watching oodles of original Star Trek reruns, and then Star Trek: DS9). I remembered that “Voltron” was also on Channel 11. NYC’s Movie Channel at one point (during the Oscars time, they’d drag out all the Oscar winning movies from the vault), and for awhile, kept airing “Dirty Dancing” as an annual thing (or it sure felt like that). The afternoon, after school cartoons during the 1980’s and 1990’s (not to mention the weird cartoons on Sundays). The “Friends” rerurns, “Everyone Loves Raymond” reruns (before Channel 9 bought “Raymond”). It’s a NYC fixture – local all the way, kind of like how “Daily News” is the hometown paper that’s left standing (perhaps it’s no surprise that Channel 11’s in the Daily News building). Quite the local channel – I think Marvin Scott’s the one who’s been longest now on Channel 11? Happy Anniversary!

    Around here on triscribe, Asian Pacific American Heritage is… every day, ’cause we’re Asian Pacific Americans (and it’s only fair to recognize all Americans)… so it’s only good to see a report that tackles the “model minority” myth.

    US Federal Magistrate Judge Kiyo Matsumoto, once confirmed, may become the first Asian Pacific American District Court Judge of the Eastern District of New York. How exciting!

    On a not-so inspirational-level story: Chief Judge Alex Kozinski of Federal Appeals’ 9th Circuit is in a bit of a pickle, having some not-good-stuff on his personal website, thus referring the matter to judicial ethics review. The NY Daily News goes even further, putting up photos about Ch. Judge Kozinski’s time on “The Dating Game” back in the 1960’s (what? he did that before he became the judge who wrote all the gripping opinions we became familiar back in law school, particularly in the area of Intellectual Property? Good Grief!). Hmm.

    An interesting read on diversity behind and in front of the tv screen, in this week’s Entertainment Weekly.

    The New Brooklyn — they think they want to bring Manhattan to Brooklyn? Geez Louise, what’s with people!

    Enjoy Father’s Day.

  • If It’s Sunday…

    No, it’s not yet Sunday, but what a shock – the sad passing of Tim Russert. NBC/MSNBC pulling out a massive tribute. Our Sunday mornings will never be the same – “Meet the Press” without Russert? The rest of the presidential campaign without this man and the white board?

    It seemed quite fitting that Tom Brokaw, the longtime leader/face of NBC News, got to present the story:

    And, I do agree with Tom: NBC won’t be the same – but, even more so – neither will broadcast news, which is increasingly marginalized and broken into different forums on the Internet or cable. In a way, I feel as I did when Peter Jennings passed – when I realized nothing would be quite the same with how we watch or learn from the news. At least we all knew Tim Russert. Tim (whom I felt I could look on as a first-name basis as I would the Dan/Tom/Peter era) was the face of politics on news television, and a man who made us think about our fathers and our sons. How sad that he passes before Father’s Day. His “Go, Bills” at the end of “Meet the Press” during football season, to remind viewers of his love of the Buffalo Bills; his love of Buffalo; and his great gotcha moments when he would point a Senator to the screen to see his own words – a litigator’s move to learn and appreciate; a New Yorker who became the consummate Washingtonian insider, without forgetting that he was a man who connected with other human beings.

  • Science Tuesday

    Still thinking about the World Science Festival. Sounded like it was a rousing success; NY Times’ Dennis Overbye gave a good report:

    That was the World Science Festival in New York City this past weekend: 46 shows, debates, demonstrations and parties spread over five days and 22 sites between Harlem and Greenwich Village, organized by Dr. Greene, the Columbia physicist and author, and his wife, Ms. Day, a former ABC-TV producer. Jugglers and philosophers, magicians and biologists, musicians and dancers — a feast one couldn’t hope to sample fairly.

    Of course, I cannot fault Dr. Greene and Ms. Day for doing such a good job that I wanted to see much more than space and time permitted. In fact, you cannot help loving them. They are the first couple of New York science. And by their boldness and energy, they seem to have created a new cultural institution.

    […] Every event sold out — confirmation, as Dr. Greene said, of “the public’s desire to connect with science.”

    It hardly came off without a hitch. Tales were rampant in the weeks leading up to the festival of disorganization, programs planned, canceled and resurrected. The ticket lines were confusing. But the organizers got a lot of things right. The panel discussions, many of them guided by pros like Charlie Rose and Alan Alda, were for the most part actual discussions, or, better, arguments, and not a series of lectures.

    There were flashy graphics everywhere.

    I knew it was all working when my 6-year-old daughter, Mira, grabbed my notebook at a magic and “brain tricks” show and started taking notes.

    What follows is a hop, skip and jump through that notebook, vivid impressions that leap out of a blur of 13 very different events. [….]

    I didn’t know quite what to expect at the Moth, an organization devoted to live storytelling, where scientists and others bravely volunteered to tell tales of experiments gone wrong. But there was James Gates, an imposing string theorist from the University of Maryland with a silvered Afro who folded his entire life as a black man and a physicist into a 10-minute tale of almost falling to his death on a mountain in Iceland. Falling off a mountain, he recalled thinking with some dismay, would be a stereotypical death for a physicist, just as being shot by the police would be for a young black, something that almost happened to him on a stroll one night through Pasadena, Calif.

    “Make your own trail,” came the voice over the Icelandic mountainside when he called for help. Dr. Gates said he still doesn’t know whose voice it was.

    I should have seen more; I managed to catch “Q.E.D.,” the play where Alan Alda plays physicist Richard Feynman. You get to understand the scientist – the man – and the thinking he did. Great stuff!

    Plus, a great op-ed piece from Brian Greene about how “our educational system fails to teach science in a way that allows students to integrate it into their lives.” He opens his article about a letter he received from a soldier in Iraq who was enthusiastic about a Greene book. Greene further writes:

    The reason science really matters runs deeper still. Science is a way of life. Science is a perspective. Science is the process that takes us from confusion to understanding in a manner that’s precise, predictive and reliable — a transformation, for those lucky enough to experience it, that is empowering and emotional. To be able to think through and grasp explanations — for everything from why the sky is blue to how life formed on earth — not because they are declared dogma but rather because they reveal patterns confirmed by experiment and observation, is one of the most precious of human experiences.

    As a practicing scientist, I know this from my own work and study. But I also know that you don’t have to be a scientist for science to be transformative. I’ve seen children’s eyes light up as I’ve told them about black holes and the Big Bang. I’ve spoken with high school dropouts who’ve stumbled on popular science books about the human genome project, and then returned to school with newfound purpose. And in that letter from Iraq, the soldier told me how learning about relativity and quantum physics in the dusty and dangerous environs of greater Baghdad kept him going because it revealed a deeper reality of which we’re all a part.

    It’s striking that science is still widely viewed as merely a subject one studies in the classroom or an isolated body of largely esoteric knowledge that sometimes shows up in the “real” world in the form of technological or medical advances. In reality, science is a language of hope and inspiration, providing discoveries that fire the imagination and instill a sense of connection to our lives and our world.

    If science isn’t your strong suit — and for many it’s not — this side of science is something you may have rarely if ever experienced. I’ve spoken with so many people over the years whose encounters with science in school left them thinking of it as cold, distant and intimidating. They happily use the innovations that science makes possible, but feel that the science itself is just not relevant to their lives. What a shame.

    Like a life without music, art or literature, a life without science is bereft of something that gives experience a rich and otherwise inaccessible dimension. [….]

    But science is so much more than its technical details. And with careful attention to presentation, cutting-edge insights and discoveries can be clearly and faithfully communicated to students independent of those details; in fact, those insights and discoveries are precisely the ones that can drive a young student to want to learn the details. We rob science education of life when we focus solely on results and seek to train students to solve problems and recite facts without a commensurate emphasis on transporting them out beyond the stars.

    Science is the greatest of all adventure stories, one that’s been unfolding for thousands of years as we have sought to understand ourselves and our surroundings. Science needs to be taught to the young and communicated to the mature in a manner that captures this drama. We must embark on a cultural shift that places science in its rightful place alongside music, art and literature as an indispensable part of what makes life worth living.

    It’s the birthright of every child, it’s a necessity for every adult, to look out on the world, as the soldier in Iraq did, and see that the wonder of the cosmos transcends everything that divides us.

    The science of sarcasm – in last week’s Science Times.

    Oh, God: physicists who are Congressmen!

    Speaking of scientific thinking, consider some experimenting in life: The NY Times recently did this article about the Buddhist couple who were never more than 15 feet apart (while remaining celibate, because they were still Buddhist clergy people, somehow); so Slate’s Deputy Editor David Plotz (whose book on the history of this particular sperm bank was quite hysterical and fascinating journalism) and his journalist wife Hanna Rosin tried out their own experiment. Funny and illuminating stuff – plus a Slate video on experience of the RosinPlotzes (Plotz’s own term).

    In a non-science related note: Plotz is going to be the new editor of Slate, succeeding Jacob Weisberg, who succeeded the founder of Slate, Michael Kinsley (who still contributes).

    The technical nature of moving a 200 year old house: NY Times has this awesome graphic feature that recreates how the moving of Alexander Hamilton’s house is being down; quite a feat, just to move it one block!

    Oh goody – the astronauts in the space station has a working toilet again. Plus a lab called “Hope.” But, I’m sure the fact that the immediate concern has been resolved relieved (uh, oops – pun!) the astronauts based in the space station…

  • A June Heat Wave

    Ah, it’s hot, and I’m too sluggish to care about much.

    Saturday – friend and I went to Brooklyn Botanic Garden and later saw the Murakami exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum. Loved the roses, hated the heat, and still bemused by the otaku / anime subcultures – and certainly a little uncomfortable about the erotic nature of some of Murakami’s pieces. Oh well.

    The changes in NYC (putting aside the heat thing) –

    I had seen the new “Train in Thought” prose in a subway some time ago, but I’m already missing “Poetry in Motion” – so sad that it’s no longer around. NY Times’ Jim Dwyer has an article that gives the transition of the poetry in the subway some perspective.

    Some politics:

    Fascinating profile on Barack Obama – particularly found these lines of Michael Powell’s article most interesting:

    “[Obama] has the gift of making people see themselves in him and offers an enigmatic smile when asked about his multiracial appeal.

    “‘I am like a Rorschach test,’ he said in an interview with The New York Times. ‘Even if people find me disappointing ultimately, they might gain something.’”

    NY Times’ Bob Herbert raises a great point – we still have a long way to go, whether we may ever have a black president or a woman president, but we ought to savor this time, because this is really something. It’ll be a quite the dream if we may ever reach a point that having either scenario isn’t too extraordinary at all (just running for presidency is a feat regardless of race or gender, I’d daresay).

    I think this is the key quote in Dahlia Lithwick’s article, regarding the generational differences between feminists:

    Yes, my generation grew up in the plush comfort of academic equality and equal access to jobs. It’s true that far fewer of us have bumped our foreheads on a rigid glass ceiling. But we’re not blind to sexism and we don’t tolerate it any more than our moms did. We’ve worked very hard to broaden our definition of feminism to include women of different classes and races and we are proud that the men we date and marry have met us halfway on the little things. We don’t think our choices are frivolous. We think they are complicated.

    As Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter notes, the calculus in trying to see who could be Obama’s VP is ridiculously complicated (or not that complicated – just really hard to choose). Alter’s Newsweek colleague Howard Fineman writes how it’s no less easier for McCain to select a VP.

    Ooh – found this lovely time-lapse video of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s cherry blossoms:

    Last but not least: the passing of Jim McKay, who will forever be remembered for the lines: “the thrill of victory… the agony of defeat.” Modern broadcast sports owes much to McKay.

  • The Wide World of Sports

    Anyone who watched any TV on a Saturday afternoon in the 60s, 70s, or 80s remembers the “The Thrill of Victory – and the Agony of Defeat” of Jim McKay’s ABC Wide (Wild?) World of Sports. Nothing was too small or esoteric, or large and dramatic to fit the 12 inch color TV in my parents’ bedroom, converted into an inside stadium for viewing the world. As it was the only room with the air conditioner, we would all pile in on the bed with “picnic” dinner – takeout from Chinatown, or maybe oven roasted chicken and baked mac and cheese, or even the breaded zucchini topped with cheddar cheese (don’t ask me where my dad picked that one up). The sun would be shining in through the western windows, shaded by the lush catalpa tree outside. That was our shared experience, out of keeping cool, fed, and in tune with that bowling championship, curling competition, go cart race, or triple crown trial.

    Jim McKay was able to see the world, do what he loved, and combine professionalism and humanity. What a wonderful life! If we could be brave enough to do that….

  • Weekend!

    Going to be a scorcher of a weekend. Hmmm!

    The latest issue of “Entertainment Weekly” profiles Dwayne [the ex-WWE wrestler formerly known as] “The Rock” Johnson, who’s slowly but surely working on his acting career, with his being on the upcoming new “Get Smart” movie. I’ve guffawed loudly at the trailers for “Get Smart” – hopefully it’ll be a good movie!

    “Entertainment Weekly” news: TV Guide’s Michael Ausiello will be joining EW! (which is also noted in the paper EW, but I can’t seem to find a story on their own website). And, EW’s Alynda Wheat will step down from doing the “What to Watch,” the snarky section on commenting notable tv programming for a beat in LA for EW – say it ain’t so! She had been dead-on for quite a bunch of remarks over the years. Example: in her last one, in the 6/6 issue of last week or so, she headlined the return of Star Trek: The Next Generation on tv – now on Sci Fi channel – with the words “La Forge Ahead!” (okay, so only I’d think that’s funny, me and LeVar “Geordi LaForge of TNG” Burton, maybe), plus, she noted on return of “The Mole” with: “Where’s our Anderson Cooper?!” (so true; I stopped watching when ABC had Ahmad Rashad as the host; only Anderson had the right sarcasm and gravitas for The Mole).

    Sometimes I can be a bit frustrated by EW. It’s fun, but not nearly as in-depth as I’d like (or what it once was at one point). Oh EW. Why can’t you be more like your corporate sibling, Time? Time.com has been quite amazing with the new blogging (or, at least I’m pretty into reading “Swampland,” Lisa Takeuchi Cullen’s “Work in Progress,” and James Poniewozik’s “Tuned In“), but EW.com has to catch up (their TV Watch section isn’t nearly as easy to manage as the TVGuide.com‘s tv show blogs section).

    More to blog on later; so I’d think anyway. If the heat and humidity doesn’t rob me of a brain…

  • A June Midweek: History and Stuff

    TV critic Diane Werts plugs about Turner Classic Movie Channel’s “Race and Hollywood: Asian Images in Film.” I’m going to have to try to check some of this out (I mean, I actually do have cable now; you’d think I’d use it more than checking a bit of CNN and SciFi and Food Network stuff).

    June’s starting out to be pretty interesting: we’re living in history, as Barack Obama is the Democratic nominee. No matter what happens, this says a lot that a white woman and a black (or biracial) man can get this far and maybe even farther in this country and the campaign to lead it.

  • June Begins

    Got behind on blogging; life and other things (namely Facebook and the ease of putting things up there) got in the way. A long post for catching up on stuff.

    Monday Memorial Day: watched Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of Crystal Skull. Hmm. If you’re an Indy fan, you’ll have to watch it. Good movie, yes; great? Not quite. I think the Indiana Jones and the Crusades movie was better. But, Indy came off mature and sweet, as he lives in the 1950’s America and the Cold War. It’d be easy to imagine how he got through World War II; hard to believe he never got around to getting back with Marion or other friends during the interim? But, the adventures continue, evidentally.

    Interesting posting from the NY Times’ City Room blog, on the status of private libraries. I’ve walked past by the General Society Library of Mechanics and Tradesmen on 44th Street, and kept wondering how did it come about; this City Room post at least explains how such libraries existed and what may be their path toward the future.

    Interesting NY Times article: “Mystery Writers, She Once Wrote,” by Gregory Beyer — how mystery writers who portray NYC try to keep it real, even if there’s not as much murder in the city as there used to be.

    A profile on the man behind Wii, Mario, Donkey Kong…

    Theatrical lawyer turned producer: on John Breglio, who helped bring “A Chorus Line” back to Broadway. Hmm… I have to admire a lawyer who found a way to turn his interests as a part of what he does.

    So, what does it mean to be “elitist“? NY Times’ Elizabeth Bumiller on the historical contradiction of how American politicians try to be both the best of the best while still trying to be “just like everybody else.”

    Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter, a cancer survivor himself, notes that if the senators really are serious about helping Ted Kennedy fight the good fight against cancer, it’s about doing serious legislative work. Some good points in his latest column.


    Can meditation really help? Or is it just a red herring/placebo?
    Hmm. I just don’t think it can hurt all that much.

    A look at the secret (or just nice little spots) gardens of NYC. I like the Battery Park gardens myself – so nice and making you forget that you’re in the city…

    Chef John of the Food Wishes blog presented a video where NY Times’ Mark “The Minimalist” Bittman argues over how we should be aware of the impact that the food production system has on our diet and take action. You don’t have to stop eating meat; just eat less and demand better from the “industry.” Hmm. Food for thought, indeed.

    That the NY Public Library’s Donnell Library is (temporarily) closing is sad; it really is one of the nicer branches of the NY Public Library system. Sewell Chan’s City Room blog posting — the original version, to some extent, of his co-written article about the Donnell Library closing – with additional reporting about the various closings and renovations throughout the NY Public Library system. I thought that the Brooklyn Public Library system could frustrate me, but sometimes I wonder what NYPL is trying to do with the public at large…

    Wow – as a big Alexander Hamilton fan (well, my dorm room in college had a good view of ye olde Hamilton Hall and the Hamilton statue in the quad, so kind of unavoidable) – this is quite an exciting development. The idea of moving his house to the nearby city park is to kind of recreate how the Hamiltons lived back in 1802, when the neighborhood was more rural.

    A fascinating article in Washington Post, by Blaine Harden on Jerome White, Jr., who’s developing a singing career in Japan singing enka, a sort of Japanese folk song genre on lost love – with his own kind of hip hop twist. He’s of mostly African-American heritage – but became inspired by this genre due to his Japanese maternal grandmother. Fascinating to read about someone who connected with his Asian heritage and handling this mix of cultures.

    NY Times’ Ginia Bellafante on the thinking and contemplating of “Lost.”

    And, speaking of “Lost,” I finally watched the season finale over the weekend. Quite a watch. The island moved – to where, or when? Other set up for next season: Jack joining forces with Ben to go back to the island? What the heck has Locke done? Hmmm… James Poniewozik of Time makes his observations, as does Jeff Jensen of Entertainment Weekly, and David Bianculli was pretty cheerful about it (or at least eager for the season premiere, which won’t be out until January 2009 – that long a wait?).

    So ends May – a season of tv and APA Heritage month events. Will June be interesting? Stay tuned…

  • Memorial Day Saturday

    Take a moment to think about the men and women who died serving this country.

    Saturday: a mild cold has me with a sore throat and barely much of a voice; but went out to see “Iron Man” at the Prospect Park Pavilion. Fun movie! Robert Downey, Jr., uses his talent for good, not evil (much as his character Tony Stark, learns to become a superhero). Gwyneth Paltrow as Pepper Potts, Stark’s executive assistant; Jeff Bridges as Obidiah Stane; and Terrence Howard as Col. “Rhodey” Rhodes – they were all quite good.

    And, yes, you must stay and watch what comes after the credits – a possible hint of what an Iron Man sequel may bring.

    Amusingly, the movie came after the trailer for the Batman movie sequel, “The Dark Knight.” Hmm! Different franchises (DC vs. Marvel), but the pairing was fascinating!

    For your consideration, see: on YouTube: ItJustSomeRandomGuy has his parody of the PC/Mac commercials, with Batman and Iron Man understanding and appreciating their commonalities and differences (playboy billionaire superheroes with kickass summer movies). I’m embedding Parts 1 and 2 – too funny! Highly recommended!

  • Hope

    NY Times continues to gather more details of the China earthquake, and less so the Burmese cyclone (not for lack of trying). Just the concept of this one-two punch is hard enough to get anyone’s mind around, and we’re still recovering from our disasters. To see both the big picture and that every individual life is special is something that we need to to be reminded of daily. A lesson easier learned for some than others – that they should do something, anything.

    (Numbers from Wikipedia as of today)

    9/11: 2,974 killed – 24 missing

    2004 earthquake/tsunami: 283,100 killed, 14,100 missing

    Katrina: 1,836 killed, 705 missing

    Burma cyclone: 80,000 dead, 56,000 missing

    Sichuan earthquake: 60,560 dead,  352,290 injured, 26,221missing