Art of the Playlist

Posted April 1, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I have finally saved up enough cash to order my own new iPod Nano, and as I eagerly await its arrival, I’ve been putting together some playlists within iTunes. Now, one of the reasons I want to upgrade to a Nano is that I want to be able to store the 1200 songs I have in my library on one device, rather than the 64 or so that fit on my current Rio Chiba. So I imagine I’ll spend a lot of my time listening to the entire library on shuffle (as I’m doing right now), or listening to specific albums, or perhaps all songs by a particular artist. But there may be times that I am in specific moods, and I figure it wouldn’t be bad to have playlists ready to go for those occasions. Now, almost as long as I’ve been making musical compilations, I’ve referred to at least one of them by the name Daves Rich Pageant. It’s a riff on the R.E.M. album Lifes Rich Pageant which a friend once coined for me, and once I like something I tend to stick with it. Right now I’m using the Daves Rich Pageant tag for a general Best of the Best compilation – my favorite song from my favorite artists. (I try to limit myself to one song per artist per compilation. These rules are somewhat random, especially now in the iPod age. Once upon a time they helped me make sure every mix tape had some diversity on it.) The heck of it is, my memory must be shot. Because when I later put together two themed collections, I kept sticking songs there that I had already put on the latest version of DRP. What can I say? I guess I have a lot of ties in the favorite-song category, and I don’t always remember which one I picked.

The themes I’ve picked so far are Sonic Caffeine, for when I just want to hear a bunch of up-tempo songs that’ll get my enthusiasm and energy level going, and Sunrise Walk. Since I never really am awake at sunrise to take walks, I’m going more for a certain vibe. When I used to be really nocturnal, I sometimes stayed up until after dawn. And when I would walk outside, watching the sun come up and the world stir awake, I would feel a strange mix of exultation and calm. It’s a certain feeling of reflection, taking stock of the situation and feeling hope for what’s to come. There are certain songs that fit that mood, and I’m curious to see how it feels when I listen to them all in a row the next time I’m walking to class.

iTunes’ smart playlists already let me organize my library by year of release, but I’m still wondering if I should put together a list of songs from, say, high school or college. That might be a bit too backward-looking even for me. We shall see. In the meantime I’m gonna need to think of some more themes.

        

Sometimes It Just Comes Down to Money

Posted March 31, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Chris Lehmann at Practical Theory recently wrote a post titled “School 0.5,” about the frustration he feels when he realizes that Philadelphia school just don’t have the resources to implement the technology-driven reforms that he and other education bloggers and thinkers refer to as School 2.0. He also has a follow-up post where he discusses the reasons that a strict comparison of the dollars a district spends won’t tell you what resources they have available to them. In addition to the cost of living issues I’ve mentioned before, there are also issues like interest on debt which mean that missing resources from the past have a negative effect on the present. It’s an interesting set of posts, and they tie into a concept that one prominent urban educator called the “education debt.” I get disheartened sometimes just hearing from some of my colleagues in the certification program about the conditions Philadelphia public schools face. I can’t imagine what it must be like to try and run a school in those conditions.

        

Corrected Info on Fattah

Posted March 30, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Please note an update to Wednesday night’s post on the Philadelphia mayoral election aand Chaka Fattah’s decision not to release his tax returns. Thursday’s Inquirer reports that there is, in fact, a confidentiality agreement that allows NBC10 to terminate Renee Chenault-Fattah’s contract if there is a breach of confidentiality. The Inquirer says that Chenault-Fattah provided a copy of the contract to the newspaper. On Wednesday the Daily News had reported that NBC10 refused to confirm the existence of such a clause, which led me to make my original posting. At the moment I can’t spot anything wrong with the Daily News’s reporting, and I’m a little uncomfortable at how a news outlet like NBC10 winds up having such influence over a story. But that’s the pitfall that comes with this situation.

Please note a further update to this story: NBC10 has waived the confidentiality requirement, and Chenault-Fattah says she still won’t let Fattah release the tax return information.

I’m starting to think that Chenault-Fattah is the one who comes off looking the worst in all of this. And I’m just cynical enough to briefly wonder if that’s the idea.

It also occurs to me that with Fattah in Congress, where he votes on defense appropriations and telecommunications policy, there’s probably more of a conflict of interest potential with GE (the parent company of NBC10) than there would be if Fattah were to win the mayoral race. What a world.

        

Philosophy Lost in USA Today

Posted March 29, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I’m just going to throw up a link to an article in yesterday’s USA Today discussing Lost’s use of philosophical figures as namesakes for many of its characters. I’m quoted a couple of times in the article, but the real interesting discussion is probably in the comments thread. (There goes the online edition beating the print version again.)

        

The Marriage of Politics and Media

Posted March 28, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I find it a little disconcerting that I’ve picked a preferred 2008 presidential candidate before a preferred 2007 mayoral candidate. There is something about everyone in the running that rubs me the wrong way. That may say something about my mood right now. It might even say something good about the crop of candidates, in that I don’t hate any one of them enough that I’m willing to overlook negative traits of other candidates in order to defeat them. (I think I’m stretching there, but I figured I should acknowledge the possibility.) But I also think there’s a problem that no one is doing anything to jump up and grab me., and most of the things candidates do for attention just bugs me.

Lately I had been leaning toward Chaka Fattah, because I like the fact that he’s making opportunity for the poor one of his major ideas. But this week he reminded me of one of the things that bugged me about him in the first place, and did so in a way that compounds the problem. Fattah is married to a local news anchor, Renee Chenault-Fattah. Chenault-Fattah has not taken a leave of absence from her anchoring duties, and last I checked she had made no statement about what she would do if Chaka Fattah were elected. I think that just about the only person who can not see this as a major conflict of interest is Aaron Sorkin. (Don’t get me started on The American President. Seriously.) I was starting to not hold that against Chaka Fattah’s candidacy – although I won’t watch Channel 10’s news as long as this conflict of interest persists.

But then this week the Fattah campaign announced that it would not release Fattah’s tax returns. This is a voluntary disclosure, but just about every candidate for citywide or statewide office makes it. Fattah’s campaign claimed that they couldn’t release the data because it would violate a confidentiality clause in Chenault-Fattah’s contract with Channel 10. Only it turns out that there is no such contractual obligation. If I were a diehard Fattah supporter, I’d probably shrug this off as an unfortunate dumb decision. I figure every campaign’s going to make some of those. But when I’m on the fence, it won’t take much to throw me off.

Update: Thursday’s Inquirer reports that there is, in fact, a confidentiality agreement that allows the station to terminate Chenault-Fattah’s contract if there is a breach of confidentiality. The Inquirer says that Chenault-Fattah provided a copy of the contract; on Wednesday the Daily News had reported that NBC10 refused to confirm the existence of such a clause. At the moment I can’t spot anything wrong with the Daily News’s reporting, and I’m a little uncomfortable at how a news outlet like NBC10 winds up having such influence over a story. But that’s the pitfall that comes with this situation.

        

Feeling Brighter

Posted March 27, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I walked home from physical therapy, after dark, in a short-sleeved shirt, and felt fine. Granted, it’ll probably be about 15 degrees cooler tomorrow, but I’ve been amazed at how much better I’ve felt the last few weeks, now that earlier Daylight Saving Time has kicked in and it’s getting a little warmer. (By the way, I’m officially in favor of earlier DST. That hour of daylight was totally wasted on me at 6 AM.) I really don’t remember the seasons affecting me quite so strongly before. But maybe that’s just hazy memory making me think I was more active in winter.

And hey, at least I didn’t spend the winter up in the Arctic like the Stargate crew did. Man, realism is all well and good, but when getting splashed with water is a medivac situation, it’s time to call in the CG.

        

For the Sake of Whose Children?

Posted March 26, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Jill Porter in the Philadelphia Daily News had a column last Friday saying that John Edwards should end his presidential campaign because of the recurrence of Elizabeth Edwards’ cancer. Most of her points seem pretty weak to me, and Porter seems to know it. She quotes a breast cancer survivor who says that the decision should be up to Elizabeth and John, and she says she’s sure that this is what Elizabeth wants. (Press coverage since Friday has only confirmed that impression.) So what Porter seems to be saying is that Elizabeth is wrong to want to continue the campaign, and that John should override her wishes and make the “right� decision for her. I can imagine a dozen other contexts where that paradigm would provoke outrage.

I don’t think Porter’s attempt at gender reversal really works, either. If Hillary Clinton were in this situation with Bill, I think that everyone on the planet would know that Bill would want the campaign to continue. Hell, he’d probably campaign from his hospital bed if he could. Would some people criticize her for it? Yes, but those people would likely criticize Hillary Clinton for the color of her socks. If she dropped out, they’d snicker that it just proved she wasn’t tough enough to handle the campaign, or to try and win without Bill around.

There is one point that Porter makes that gives me some pause, though. John and Elizabeth have two young children. They did not ask to go through this campaign. They did not ask for the stress that it causes. They did not ask for the extra burdens it will place on their parents. They did not ask to live in a world where their family pain would become political fodder. There is a point in asking whether this is fair to them. But truthfully, you could say the same of any candidate with young kids. I remember watching the 60 Minutes segment on Barack Obama and his family and looking at his two small daughters, and wondering what on Earth they might be in for during this campaign – and especially if he wins. Since I’m an Obama supporter, a small part of me felt selfish for wanting to take these kids’ daddy away for an all-consuming job for the next ten years or so. With the uncertainty that comes with Elizabeth’s cancer recurrence, I can imagine that such concerns multiply a hundredfold. It probably would be better for the Edwards kids, all things considered, if John wasn’t running for president and Elizabeth wasn’t working so hard on the campaign.

But here’s the reason why I went over to Neil Sinhababu’s site last night. Since he’s the most prominent Edwards-supporting philosophical utilitarian I know of, I couldn’t help but think of him as I pondered this question. (He had no commentary up at the time, but he’s since posted a link to this post.) John Edwards is running under a belief that if he becomes president, it will improve the lives of thousands, probably millions of children from where they would be if he were not president. I have no reason to doubt his belief is sincere, and I see no reason why John Edwards shouldn’t think he has a chance to accomplish that good. If he believes that the lives of millions of people will be better if he’s president, and the lives of his own children will be worse off (but still good), then it certainly seems like the ethical thing to do would be to help all of those other kids.

As a parent myself, there’s a part of that argument that goes against every fiber of my being. I feel like I have a special obligation to my daughter, that I have to put her well-being above the well-being of not just other individuals, but entire groups if need be. But in part, that’s because I don’t feel like there are other people to pick up the slack for what my wife and I (and our families and friends) don’t provide. That lack of trust, that lack of feeling like we’re all in this together, is precisely the problem that’s tearing up our society. Porter even points out the problem:

Few individuals have the opportunity he does: to quit work and be there for his family.
Many spouses in John’s situation would be desperate to do so, but need to continue working to earn a paycheck and perhaps retain health benefits.

John and Elizabeth Edwards may have an enormous opportunity to change that dynamic. If they’re right, I certainly can’t fault them for making that effort. In fact, I applaud them.

        

An Ontological Dating Argument

Posted March 25, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I went to Neil Sinhababu’s site to research something for a longer, more serious piece I wanted to write. And I will still write that piece. Tomorrow. Because what I found on Neil’s site was a link to a webcomic called Lump of Clay, which did a long series of strips attempting to use the ontological argument to prove the existence of a perfect girlfriend.

(If you don’t know the ontological argument, here’s the very condensed version: if you can imagine a perfect x, then there must be an x in the world. Because a perfect x would have to be an x that exists. Why? Because existing is better than not existing. So an x that didn’t exist would have something wrong with it, and couldn’t be perfect. This argument is usually used to try to prove the existence of God. It is much more entertaining when used to prove the existence of a perfect girlfriend.)

        

A Lot to Mull Over

Posted March 24, 2007 By Dave Thomer

The forum at the Library went pretty well today, I believe. When the conversation between Kloppenberg, Kuklick, and Westbook expanded to include the audience, there was definitely an intellectual energy that I found welcome. It brought me back to the excitement I felt when I first started studying pragmatism, and felt like I had found philosophical work that had some of the resources I was looking for. So I feel fortunate to have had a chance to help out with the event. It also left me thinking that there’s a useful purpose to this site, in getting some of these ideas out into the electronic conversation. Since I finished the dissertation, I think I’ve been taking the pragmatist background of the site more for granted and occasionally bringing it up in reference to particular issues. So I’m going to try to balance those posts out with the occasional re-visit to some of the important themes and texts in the pragmatist democratic tradition. We’ll see how that goes.

        

Even My Senator Won’t Vote

Posted March 23, 2007 By Dave Thomer

OK, this is ridiculous. Arlen Specter, ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, apparently decided to abstain from a voice vote on whether or not to authorize the Senate to issue subpoenas to Karl Rove and others in the US Attorney fiasco.

Cameras picked up his lips moving when the “ayes” were called for. Reporters tried to pin down whether or not Specter actually said aye. At first he wouldn’t tell them. Then he later admitted he had been silent during both calls, apparently waiting for an option he liked better.

You know, it’s not like this is important or anything. No reason why Pennsylvanians would want their senator to use that seniority of his to actually take a position on something.

And this guy’s planning on running again in 2010. Can’t wait.