Friday, February 26, 2016
A Short Stay in Houston: Old Pals, Work Stuff, a GOP Debate
This week I was in Houston for a short conference at which I presented. A nice, friendly little conference we have once a year with folks that have known each other a while, and where new folks are usually made to feel very welcome.
I was staying at the hotel on campus, a Hilton commissioned by the late, great Conrad Hilton as part of the hotel management school at the University of Houston that bears his name. During the conference, the candidates for the Republican party were slated to have a debate on the other end of campus, but CNN had set up adjacent to the library. So, yes, yesterday I saw the back of Anderson Cooper's magnificently silver head.
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
If you see me on the news, it's going to be because I followed my lesser angels
So, a while back I scheduled myself to be at a conference at the University of Houston. It's a small, local conference and important to my professional community.
And, ha ha, that is the same campus at the same time where the Republican Party has scheduled it's next debate. That's right. As I'm eating the most-food like substance librarian money can buy and talking about the excitement of Thesis and Dissertation workflow over a glass of iced tea, somewhere on that same campus, Trump, Rubio and Cruz will be hollering at each other.
It's gonna be a disaster.
I was working at Arizona State University when President Bush and Senator Kerry had a debate on campus, and it was one of the worst days at that job. And that was a job where I pulled all-nighters and 100 hour weeks. Basically, it was super loud and crazy on campus, and I failed to leave early (because I was working. Like a chump.) and it took me two hours to get home as a post 9-11 Secret Service thought it wise to shut down all the useful roads.
So, we'll see what's up. Could be fine, but I'm staying at a hotel on campus that I assume will be filled with press and party faithful, so, if I get no sleep Wednesday or Thursday night, I blame the free-wheeling ways of an overly-excited bunch of political conservatives loaded up on Pixie Sticks and too many sodas.
Basically, I'm saying - I may go dark for a few days. Unless, of course, I see a news camera. In which case - LOOK FOR ME. Then, send bail. Because I have a LOT to say about this election cycle. Also: workflow for theses and dissertations.
Monday, February 22, 2016
Caine Watch: The Italian Job (1969)
Sunday evening, our own SimonUK - who moonlights as a server at The Alamo Drafthouse near my house - was given the opportunity to take it up a notch with their "Staff Presents" program, wherein a member of the staff not usually in programming selects a movie and the Alamo shows it.
You like movies. I like movies. We all like movies. Simon LOVES movies. He lives amongst piles of them and may well have underwear made of celluloid taped into a rough briefs shape. I don't know. And, no matter how many movies you think you've seen, Simon has seen more. During the Alamo pre-shows when they're showing clips of deep-cut obscure 1970's horror flicks, Simon has seen them all.
Simon is from some far-flung part of England I can never remember, so he had access to movies we really didn't in the U.S., and he's seen a goodly chunk of American movies we all watched growing up, too. Every once in a while I'm surprised he hasn't seen something from a typical American kid of the 1980's heyday, but not all that often. He's been responsible for me seeing a lot of flat out great stuff the past several years, gotten me out of the house for Planet of the Apes marathons, etc... and for all that and more, and making me eat a Full English Breakfast only once, I am forever in his debt.
So, while I had previously seen The Italian Job (1969), when I heard he was showing and introducing the movie, I couldn't not go. Plus, I really like the movie. It's good, cheery fun and a great heist pic. Plus: Michael Caine.
Parker Watch: The Outfit (1973)
I've seen a few adaptations of the Richard Stark-penned series of crime novels starring heist-man, Parker. Point Blank (great), Payback (not so great), Parker (really not so great). Maybe another one or two. But The Outfit (1973) was maybe the closest to an actual Parker book in spirit and execution. I won't dwell on the differences, because they're many, but the movie does use scenes from the book in whole and in part (it's been a while since I read the early Parker books, and I think they pulled a scene or two from other Parker books, but I may be wrong).
The movie captures a lot about the world of Parker. It's a lot of backroads, hiding or waiting in cheap motel rooms, the people you try to work with are unreliable and dangerous, and the people who are the closest thing to something you'd call "friend" tend to wind up dead, in prison or both.
I really didn't know much about the movie before SimonUK brought it over Sunday morning for a view, other than that it starred Robert Duvall in the Parker role - here named "Macklin" (author Richard Stark wouldn't let films use the name "Parker" - I suppose until they made a straight adaptation). The film co-stars Karen Black and Joe Don F'ing Baker.
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Bond Watch: You Only Live Twice (1967)
We give You Only Live Twice (1967) the most prized of all Signal Watch awards: The Stefon (the award for the movie that has EVERYTHING).
After the frantic shenanigans of Goldfinger, producers Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman clearly believed they were in some sort of race against The Devil who would consume their souls if they did not keep making bigger and crazier James Bond films. Thunderball went all over the place, winding up in a massive underwater battle and then out of control hydrofoil battle.
You Only Live Twice has:
Friday, February 19, 2016
Harper Lee Merges With The Infinite
According to The New York Times, author Harper Lee has merged with The Infinite.
Of all the books I read in K-12 as assigned reading, To Kill a Mockingbird one of only two I picked up again and again after the assignments were over and done (the other being Fahrenheit 451).
The book is so profoundly and stunningly... American. But, I assume, also universal. And as important as it is, in general, its also so, so important to share with young people as they move from childhood onto the path to adulthood.
But I don't need to tell you about the book, or its impact. Heck, it's written above the title in the image of the cover I've posted above. And, it's assigned reading in every school district in the US, I assume.
For all the work so many authors put out there, it's fascinating to know Harper Lee released her one novel and then retreated, only releasing new material in the last year, and under shady circumstances. And, yes, I have chosen not to read the other book, which i do not believe she would have intended to release while alive.
Geoff Johns Offers Vision of DCU "Rebirth" Didio will @#$% Up Before Issue 1
New day. Same company.
DC Comics, in a sales death spiral, continues to not fire the people making the same terrible decisions they've been making for well over a decade. On Thursday, DC Comics released a video of famed comics writer and live-action area liaison, Geoff Johns talking the mysterious "Rebirth" event hinted at by DC Comics Publisher Dan Didio via an obnoxious image released via twitter a couple of weeks ago.
This week is a sort of comics retailers meeting in Portland, OR, and DC has to say something to make retailers think the shoddy output and related plummeting sales of their company currently running comic shops right into the ground is due for am upturn. Knowing that Dan Didio has about the same level of credibility as the Sham-Wow guy (and Jim Lee is, let's be honest, not great at this sort of thing), at least for the public face they put good ol' Geoff Johns out there in front with a video and some announcements about new price points, new #1's and a return to the numbering on Detective and Action Comics.
DC Comics, in a sales death spiral, continues to not fire the people making the same terrible decisions they've been making for well over a decade. On Thursday, DC Comics released a video of famed comics writer and live-action area liaison, Geoff Johns talking the mysterious "Rebirth" event hinted at by DC Comics Publisher Dan Didio via an obnoxious image released via twitter a couple of weeks ago.
this isn't even no data, this is negative data |
This week is a sort of comics retailers meeting in Portland, OR, and DC has to say something to make retailers think the shoddy output and related plummeting sales of their company currently running comic shops right into the ground is due for am upturn. Knowing that Dan Didio has about the same level of credibility as the Sham-Wow guy (and Jim Lee is, let's be honest, not great at this sort of thing), at least for the public face they put good ol' Geoff Johns out there in front with a video and some announcements about new price points, new #1's and a return to the numbering on Detective and Action Comics.
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Monday, February 15, 2016
Disney Watch: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)
On Nathaniel Capp's recommendation, I'm currently reading Walt Disney: Triumph of the Imagination, a Disney biography from a couple of years ago (and, spoiler: it's fantastic). Naturally, part of reading the book is the reminder it is that I haven't seen a bunch of Disney films and cartoons in years and years.
The last time I remember seeing Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (1937) was during a theatrical run in summer of 1993 when I was working at The Disney Store and we were semi-required to go see the animated films so we could talk to customers about them. Don't worry, they paid us to do so. Terrific perk, and I would have been going, anyway. And while it's likely I've seen it since then, it had to have been on VHS, to date the last screening I took in.
You guys can be cynical and weird about Disney's feature films, but I only feel that way about certain eras of their movies, and even then - not entirely.
But it all started, first, with a mouse. And then with Snow White.
President's Day: Warren Gamaliel Harding, America's 29th President
Ol' Number 29 |
In the wake of World War I and the iffy conclusion of the Woodrow Wilson presidency,* an unlikely Republican took the nomination on the 10th ballot of the GOP convention in the summer of 1920. back then, party folks showed up at a real convention and really placed ballots. The convention was not a televised advertisement. A lot of dirty laundry got aired and political fortunes were won and lost overnight, and if I could reduce the election cycle to four months, I would gladly opt for the old-style form of corrupt politics over today's corrupt politics.
Once selected, Warren G. stayed home and ran a "front porch campaign", something I think 99% of America would fully back if it would mean the news cycle would stop shouting at us.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)