Digging in the Dirt – Again

Posted May 12, 2007 By Dave Thomer

OK, so remember all those plants we put out front last Saturday? Today’s Saturday was spent ripping them all out and putting new ones in. Hooray!

At least part of the blame goes to the fact that the night we planted those flowers, we had a huge wind storm that actually broke at least one plant in half. Some might go to the fact that we skipped a day of watering in there during the week while my brain was in Blue Book Land. I’m also not sure the plants we bought from Lowe’s were of the highest quality. Today we went to a local nursery, and I’m telling you, those plants looked a heck of a lot healthier.

Now let’s see how they look a week from now.

        

As Residuals Fizzle

Posted May 11, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Someone asked J. Michael Straczynski if he was getting any financial benefit from the repurposing of Babylon 5 as DVDs, iTunes files, and so on. His answer:

Not a gripe, just an answer…as writer, creator and EP I have never
received anything from the DVD sales, Itunes, AOL, bittorrent,
soundtracks or any other form of video distribution on B5.

This is one of the reasons why there’s almost certainly going to be a
writer’s strike this year.

I’ve seen John Rogers at Kung Fu Monkey express similar sentiments. And I can’t say I blame any writer for thinking this way. The economics of entertainment has a lot of catching up to do.

        

Nuts Over Nutter

Posted May 10, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Boy, when I said it was gonna be an interesting two weeks, I wasn’t kidding, was I?

Michael Nutter has become the clear front-runner in the mayoral primary. You can read some of Chris Bowers’ thoughts on that over at MyDD; Chris’s ward is one of those endorsing Nutter, so you can get a sense of the logic. Other candidates have clearly set their sights on Nutter – today Pattie and I each got two separate pieces of direct mail from Tom Knox calling Nutter a “typical politician,” and I saw a TV ad with the same theme. I gotta laugh at that. The purer-than-thou campaign might have worked before Knox held a press conference with another member of City Council to support her bid for the Council presidency. Then again, if there is a Throw All the Bums Out mentality in the city, maybe the message will stick. I tend to doubt it.

I’m actually surprised at how ineffectual other candidates have been in trying to take down Nutter. I can certainly understand the concerns over the stop-and-frisk and state-of-emergency elements of his crime plan, and I’d expect city unions and neighborhood groups to be concerned about his tax-cutting enthusiasm. But those messages aren’t getting a huge amount of play, and when someone tries to raise them, they seem to whack themselves in the foot – witness Chaka Fattah’s comments in the last TV debate where he suggested Nutter needed to remind himself he was African-American, a comment many people (including myself, but not everyone) thought was a low blow.

Ah well. They’re dropping off the voting machines on Saturday. Then the fun really begins.

        

Priority: Pizza

Posted May 9, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I’m glad to see that Fort Dix apparently employs the same security protocols as my college in the Bronx did:

Fort Dix has heavily guarded checkpoints with serpentine courses leading to guardhouses, gates and metal pop-up strips to stop the traffic.

The post has an X-ray machine that sees through trucks, and it checks the military credentials of the top commanders and police officials.

But it allows pizza delivery drivers with temporary vehicle passes to enter after basic local background checks – at least for now.

Although come to think of it, at Fordham we didn’t even bother with the vehicle passes. You had a pizza box or a brown bag filled with Chinese food, you were good to go.

        

More on Pluralism

Posted May 8, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Let me point you to a post on MyDD on the idea of pluralism and how it intersects with American politics right now; I had an interesting back and forth within the comment thread on defining pluralism and what demands it makes from a cultural standpoint – a theme that might be familiar to you if you’ve been reading this blog, but the conversation is worth a look.

        

Been Down This Road Before

Posted May 7, 2007 By Dave Thomer

With the news that ABC has announced a planned end date for Lost three years from now, I’ve imagined recurring guest star Mira Furlan holding seminars entitled “What to Do When My Executive Producer Cuts My Steady Gig Short Because His Story Has an Ending.”

Given Furlan’s presence on Lost, I have found it kind of amusing that there hasn’t been much mainstream mention of Babylon 5’s defined five-year structure. Then again, B5 barely scraped by year to year, and Lost is a Top 20 hit. So it’s clearly a much bigger deal for a network to say, “Yeah, we’re gonna end this thing, no matter how popular it is,” and to say it so far in advance.

        

On Politics and Balance

Posted May 6, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Interesting AP report on the Web today about Keith Olbermann’s anchoring coverage of the recent Republican presidential candidate debate, shortly after making a Special Comment that criticized Rudy Giuliani. There’s a parallel drawn between the way Republicans view Olbermann and Democrats view Fox News, and a discussion of whether someone who quite openly editorializes on television can also have the neutrality that we tend to associate with “objective” news reporters/anchors.

It’s an interesting question, but I think the article comes close to setting up false dichotomies. It says that “the danger for MSNBC is provoking the same anger among Republicans that Democrats feel toward Fox News Channel.” I find it hard to believe that one person could generate the kind of hostility that Democrats feel toward Fox as an institution. Olbermann is followed by former Republican congressman Joe Scarborough on the air, and preceded by Chris Matthews – who didn’t do much to hide his antipathy toward Bill Clinton – and conservative pundit Tucker Carlson. Liberal bloggers like Atrios have even wondered why MSNBC hasn’t taken note of Olbermann’s ratings performance and tried to develop more shows/personalities to appeal to Olbermann’s audience. The closest I can think of to an analogous Democratic presence on Fox is retired General Wesley Clark’s time there as a military analyst, and from what I understand Sean Hannity’s co-host is supposed to provide some liberal balance. (And I’m deliberately leaving aside here the issue of how the two networks’ anchors cover news, since I’m sure different sides of the partisan divide have very different views.)

As for whether or not Olbermann can be neutral enough, I guess that gets us back to the old question of whether it’s really possible to do what the AP article claims is the historic standard: “maintain strict objectivity.” Is this possible? What does it mean? Does it mean removing all efforts at intelligent analysis? If it does, what’s the use of having a trained journalist ask questions?

It’s also worth noting that many of the reporters who are supposed to have the “objectivity” in their day jobs wind up assuming the roles of pundits on TV news programming, at which point they have to start having a point of view. So why not make that point of view clear? Now, if that point of view starts leading to falsehoods or selective editing of information, then we should start to be concerned. But then again, striving for “objectivity” and “neutrality” has led some journalists to hold information back from the public for fear of seeming to interfere with the political process. So, again, what use is there in pretending to be objective when one isn’t? You can have an opinion and still be even-handed in considering both sides of a question. I wonder if that’s just a skill we’ve lost.

All that said, if Giuliani or any other candidate was concerned that he would not be able to accurately get his message out with Olbermann as an anchor, I wouldn’t blame them from stepping back from the debate. We’re all kind of feeling our way through this right now, and it will be interesting to see how the media comes to define its role and its code of behavior in the years ahead.

        

Digging in the Dirt

Posted May 5, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Spent most of today on some long-delayed gardening-type projects in the front of our house. We have a very small dirt hill next to our front walk/front steps, and a very thin strip of dirt between our driveway and the neighbor’s driveway. Last year we had our retaining wall replaced with a new brick wall, and we were very happy with the results. But we never got around to actually doing anything to the small dirt areas inside the wall. So today we went out and bought some garden soil and some flowers and set out to try and neaten things up. We still want to get some small garden stones for some of the areas, rather than plant there.

I truly have no idea how people with larger houses maintain large lawns and gardens. I appreciate the aesthetic appeal, but it is such a time sink. Then again, several years ago my brother was talking about the type of house he’d one day like to have, and mentioned that he probably had different goals than me. “I mean, not everyone needs a lot of land. What’s Dave gonna do with land, anyway?” There was absolutely no malice there, just a recognition that, yeah, Dave isn’t much of an outdoors type.

Still, it was nice to add some color to the front of the house. Now let’s set the clock running and see how long it’ll take for the neighborhood rabbits to come and make off with the flowers. If it weren’t for them, I probably would’ve just set up an herb garden and been done with it.

        

A Man of Impeccable Taste

Posted May 4, 2007 By Dave Thomer

So Pete Yorn, having previously opened for R.E.M. and collaborated with the Dixie Chicks, will be doing some shows opening for the reformed Crowded House in August, including a show in Philly. One of these days I really ought to go see Yorn headline a show, but if he keeps opening for groups I’m going to see anyway, he’s going to make it hard.

Reaction on Yorn’s message board is sparse and mixed. Some people like the idea, but at least one person is wondering at the wisdom of opening for a band that, truthfully, many people outside the adult album alternative market will write off as an exercise in 80s nostalgia. (Never mind that for me, Crowded House is a 90s nostalgia band, given how much I love Together Alone.) I can see the point. On the other hand, the AAA market seems like it’s the one place that’s still really supporting Yorn. So it probably doesn’t hurt to get a little additional exposure in that market while he’s between tours.

And hey, it’d be great if more acts would pay attention to what I want to see anyway. 🙂

        

Mmmm… Waffles

Posted May 4, 2007 By Pattie Gillett

There’s no real point to this post, just waffles…shaped like keyboards, but I think they’re pretty cool.

Made on a waffle iron composed of re-purposed typewriter parts, this is recycling at its most delicious. Pass the organic maple syrup and locally grown CSA berries, please.