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December 2007 Archives

December 1, 2007

Hardfought

Part of the reason I was so hard on Cascade Point, I've realized, was that it's in my least favorite segment of speculative fiction -- the future as a simple mapping of the past* -- the starship version of a tramp steamer is even called a "tramp starmer", which really rings hollow to my ears. And it had a side helping of "the technical problem with your imaginary technology" ala the technobabble problem of the week on Star Trek: TNG. Boo, I say.

These problems are highlighted by the nature of Cascade Point's companion novella in this Tor Double -- Greg Bear's Hardfought. Hardfought is truly speculative fiction -- a look at a battle between a completely alien race and a humanity so far removed from us that they are on their way to becoming alien as well. There're plenty of universal questions pondered -- the nature and limits of war and what it means to be human -- but there's also some pretty far out stuff. I mean, there are flashbacks in this story to the year 29,000! In 85 pages, Cascade Point felt like a stretched out short story. Clocking in at 92 pages, Hardfought feels like a vast novel whizzing by. FuzzyCo grade: A.

* Which, of course, can be done well -- Firefly's future as old west, for example. But I still don't like it in general.

Headed back to Mississippi

I'm on a 3 hour layover in Houston Hobby Airport right now, headed back down to Mississippi to join Erica and her family. Just after I left earlier this week, David's health took another sharp nose-dive and the feeling is that he may not have long. Of course, the hospice nurses, who have seen these kinds of situations plenty of times before, say that he may also have months left. We don't want him to go, but I'd be less than honest if I didn't say that that uncertainty is part of the strain we're all feeling.

David Reid has been the best father-in-law I could imagine having. From the first time he met me, he welcomed me into the family with open arms. I'm sorry that we won't be talking about movies and music for years to come. Cancer sucks.

(And, as I post cute kitten pictures or book and movie reviews over the next few weeks, please don't take that as a sign that I'm not grieving or that I don't respect David -- a) it's part of how I cope and b) it's not the Reid way to be serious all the time. As much as there have been tears around the Reid house, there have also been gales of laughter at dumb, dumb jokes.)

Chat Noir

Chat Noir

Is there any actual strategy to winning other than getting lucky on the original arrangements of green dots?

(via Apelad)

December 2, 2007

Remember Duane Allman, followups

Vicksburg Post, October 26, 2007

A couple of things to follow up on that Vicksburg Post article about when David and three of his friends carved "Remember Duane Allman" into the side of a Mississippi road cut.

A scan of the Vicksburg Post of October 15, 2007 (it's the article I had previously linked to, but I scanned it so you can see how big it was on the front page of the Post).

A detail from the photo the Post printed showing David Reid standing next to the 6 foot high carved letters.

Above, the Vicksburg Post of October 26, 2007 -- the four fellows got to meet Gregg Allman.

A scan of the Rolling Stone "Random Notes" item from April 11, 1974 that first brought the carving to national attention. This photo has appeared in several of the Rolling Stone's "best of" collections over the years. (And now, I suppose, it's in the new Rolling Stone Cover to Cover: The First 40 Years three DVD set.)

Update: Don Antoine loaned me some slides of the carving in progress to scan in and I did so.

David

David

Tonight at 9:40, surrounded by his loving family, David Reid passed away. Memorial details when I have them.

It's been a long, long day. It's been a long 3 and a half years. Dammit.

I've got cuter pictures of David, but I picked this one because it's what I'm going to miss the most, I think. David loved music and an evening at the Reid house often went late because David always kept thinking of another song you really should hear.

No, that's a lie. (This is a few hours later.) There's tons I'm going to miss.

Tricia
Christopher
Erica
Katie

December 3, 2007

Services for David

Visitation, Wednesday, December 5, 2007 from 5-7 pm at the Riles Funeral Home (5000 Indiana Ave, Vicksburg, MS 39180).

Service, Thursday, December 6, 2007 at 11 am at Riles Funeral Home. Burial to follow at Green Acres Cemetery (191 Highway 80, Vicksburg, MS 39180).

December 4, 2007

David's Obituary

From today's Vicksburg Post:

G. David Reid died Sunday, Dec. 2, 2007, at his residence. He was 53.

Mr. Reid was born in Jackson and moved to Vicksburg when he was 1 month old. He was a 1972 graduate of Warren Central High School and attended Hinds Community College and Mississippi College. He was an electrical technician with various companies and, at the time of his death, was an employee of IGT. Mr. Reid loved his family, music, movies, animals and laughter. He was devoted to his faith.

He is survived by his wife, Patricia Bane Reid of Vicksburg; a daughter, Erica Reid Gerdes and her husband, Fuzzy, of Chicago; a son, Christopher Reid and his wife, Katie, of Columbia, S.C.; his mother, Norma Reid of Vicksburg; a sister, Susan Mahan of Vevay, Ind.; and two brothers, Carl Reid of Flowood and Kyle Reid of Hattiesburg.

He was preceded in death by his father, George L. Reid.

Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at Riles Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Jimmy Biedenharn, pastor of the Byhalia United Methodist Church in Byhalia, officiating. Burial will be at Green Acres Cemetery.

Visitation will be from 5 until 7 p.m. Wednesday at Riles Funeral Home.

Memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society, Box 1193, Vicksburg, MS 39181.

December 5, 2007

The Reids

Reid family

At David's own wishes, the visitation tonight and service tomorrow are both going to be closed casket. Instead, we're going to have 8x10 photos scattered around the funeral home -- mostly enlargements of family photos that I've scanned over the last couple of days.

December 7, 2007

Layer Tennis

So I've gotten totally addicted to this weekly online design contest called Layer Tennis, hosted by Coudal Partners. Two designers duke it out in 15 minute rounds, with commentary by a guest writer. What makes it really feel like a sporting contest is the forum, with live kibbitzing from the peanut gallery. Coudal also gets people involved by having a sidecontest going in the forum during the live match and then by making the layered source files from each "volley" available afterwards for remixing during the week. I've entered many of the sidecontests and done a few remixes (and even won a few prizes from Coudal) but I'm particularly proud of my entry from this last week. I woke up this morning well before anyone else, made a pot of coffee, and learned enough Flash from some online tutorials to make this simple game. I know it's not much, but I'm happy with it for being two hours of effort (from scratch, no less).

December 8, 2007

The Time Machine

I picked up The Time Ships at a used bookstore last week to read on the plane, but discovered in the first few pages that it was a sequel, of sorts, to H.G. Wells' The Time Machine. And I realized that while I certainly knew the story of Wells' novel, I wasn't sure if I had ever read it.

So I downloaded the text from Project Gutenberg and read it on my laptop. Given the current debate over whether a computer screen is a suitable replacement for books, it was an interesting experiment. I opened up the text into BBedit, enlarged the text to a comfortable 14 points, and read away. For a short novel (at 32,600 words, The Time Machine would just be just shy of qualifying for NaNoWriMo) it was a fine reading experience. Of course, it's a lot harder to hold a MacBook Pro in one hand on the El.

And also, given my frustrations with the last few "classics" I've read, I was happy to discover that The Time Machine is a pretty good read.

December 9, 2007

Child's Play 2007

Childs Play 2007

Let's talk about Child's Play for a second. Back in 2003 the guys from the mostly-videogame-oriented webcomic Penny Arcade got mad at a newspaper columnist who was recycling the too-easy trope "violent videogames are training children to kill." But instead of just spluttering to the choir on their website, they decided to put their money, and action, where their mouth was and organized a donation of videogames and toys to a Seattle children's hospital. That first year they raised about $150,000 in toys and cash for a single hospital. This year they're on their way to a goal of $750,000 for 40 different children's hospitals around the world. Likely there is one near you.

December 10, 2007

Layer Tennis: A lil' movie

Layer Tennis this week was played in video created out of Adobe After Effects, which is incredible, if nothing else, for render times and pushing sizable files around (and in fact, they did go over their 15 minute time limits a hair). The remix challenge was to take the footage and turn it into some sort of coherent story. I'm not sure how coherent it is, but I just dropped off my entry and you can check it out, if you like.

Vicksburg Post eulogy

Today's Vicksburg Post has an editorial by the executive editor, Charlie Mitchell, eulogizing David. In addition to running the Post, Charlie moonlights at Riles funeral home and he actually went home to get his own beard trimmer to trim David's mustache. He also drove the hearse from the funeral home to the cemetery.

Remember David Reid, who never lost the melody

We met in elementary school.

After those days our encounters were rare and brief. They came at predictable intervals as we aged, in grocery store aisles, at back-to-school nights for our own children, reunions.

Exchanges with David Reid always went past, "Hi, how are you? Fine and you? Fine." He always had something wry, something personal, something sincere to say.

David made an impression, a good impression. He was consistently upbeat.

It was good that the Post had David on the front page a few weeks ago, "outing" him to the world for what was probably the most outlandish deed of his life. David was one of four Hinds Community College commuters from Vicksburg who in 1973 carved, in giant letters, "Remember Duane Allman" into an earthen wall along the then-new Interstate 20 near Bovina. Prompting the news story was a performance in Vicksburg by Gregg Allman, brother of the legendary guitarist who had been killed in a 1971 motorcycle wreck.

The carved memorial lasted for years, becoming an icon to I-20 travelers. Gregg told David and his co-conspirators the family had seen photos and appreciated the gesture. That meant a lot.

Anybody who knows anything about music--and David knew a lot about music--will tell you that Duane Allman, though a rocker's rocker, always kept the melody, never lost it to the noise.

And so it was with David.

He was keenly intelligent, with an excellent memory, but he didn't care whether anyone knew it or not. Impressing others wasn't something he desired to do. David was as casual as the Hawaiian shirts and wide-brimmed hats that were his stock-in-trade.

He and his classmate, Tricia, equally smart and warm in her friendships, formed a marital partnership in which they derived pleasure from being considerate of one another. Money didn't matter. Having a posh house didn't matter. Having the newest car didn't matter. What other people thought, did, cared about or worried about didn't matter. People mattered. Relationships mattered.

Together, David and Tricia infused their ideals into their children, Erica and Christopher, talented and creative children who have become talented and creative adults. The Reids equipped their daughter and son with roots and wings the way great parents do--a grounding in values plus decency plus a yearning to explore, learn, serve.

Word that David had cancer came years ago. Tricia, an Internet blogger before that term was even invented, wrote about it the same as she had everything else. Both were realistic, prayerful, confident, scared, accepting the challenge. What choice did they have?

They won a hell of a lot of battles, but, as the cliche goes, not the war.

Just a few weeks ago, a backache sent David to the doctor. It wasn't a pulled muscle. It was another malignancy. The verdict: David would die in a matter of weeks.

They say hospice nurses are compassionate, which would be expected. But they're also pretty seasoned. After David's nurse had her first private meeting with him, telling him how things would go, I'm told she left the room in tears.

The end came last Sunday night just as forecast, family and friends all there. A free spirit became free.

Encounters with people like David Reid are brief and rare. When they happen, listen for the melody. They've learned to sustain it through the noise.

-- Charlie Mitchell is executive editor of The Vicksburg Post. Write to him at Box 821668, Vicksburg, MS 39182, or e-mail post@vicksburg.com.

Some photos from Vicksburg, early December 2007

Daisy detail

I don't mean to minimize my father-in-law's death with pictures of cats and berries -- these are the things my eye sees and it does happen that on the same day you bury a great man, you also see impossibly cute children bouncing on a trampoline. That is, to cliche, life.

Public Dance Halls of Chicago

A few months ago, there was a link on Gapers Block to scans at the Library of Congress of a 1917 pamphlet by the Juvenile Protective Association of Chicago titled "The Public Dance Halls of Chicago". The short pamphlet is a treasure trove of glimpses into Chicago Life of a century ago, turn-of-the-century-moralizing, and the-more-things-change-the-more-they-stay-the-same. In one of my fits of... OCD? mania? civic enthusiasm? I OCRed the whole thing and present it after the jump.

(I also made a PDF, if you want to download the whole thing, but don't want to download 13 individual TIFFs from the LOC.)

Continue reading "Public Dance Halls of Chicago" »

December 11, 2007

Allie circling

I've been threatening promising to make this video for months and finally got around to it. She also circles the coffee table in the living room and people sitting in the office. She also just sits, sometimes, so you don't worry that she's an endless circler.

December 12, 2007

The Time Ships

I'm glad I read The Time Machine before The Time Ships, because it heightened my appreciation for what Stephen Baxter has achieved in the latter book -- writing an marvelous novel that manages to be both a faithful sequel to a hundred-year-old book and an epic journey through millions of years and several very different human (and post-human) civilizations. FuzzyCo grade: A.

Remember Duane Allman from slides

Remember Duane Allman

Erica's uncle Don Antoine, who was one of the four carvers of the Remember Duane Allman tribute, gave me some slides last week to scan in. He's got shots of the carving work in progress, of the four friends posing with their work (above, and also for comparison), and the best picture I've seen yet of the carving itself.

Previously on FuzzyCo:
Remember when David Reid remembered Duane Allman?
Remember Duane Allman, followups
From back in 2005: Sometimes the Internet answers

December 14, 2007

Another Layer Tennis Remix

Click <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qK16NTzb0QU">here</a> to see the video

I've got, as you might imagine, a hefty to-do list (though I did check one big item off last night). I mean, I haven't finished editing my own wedding video, which is now a year-and-a-half-old project. But someone on the Layer Tennis forums made a comment that gave me an idea and I've got a problem where sometimes when I get these ideas and I can't rest until I get them out of my head and onto the page or screen. So... I made this dumb ol' video*. Yeah, another remix of the footage I already remixed. I'm dumb.

* Higher rez versions than the YouTube here, if you care.

December 16, 2007

Portal

Erica gave me The Orange Box as an early Christmas present and I spent the weekend playing the heck out of Portal.

The game has an interesting history -- a prototype was developed by a group of students using the Half Life 2 engine that so impressed Valve (the makers of Half Life) that they hired the whole team and polished the game into its present form.

The game itself is awesome. The gameplay is remarkably different from usual first person shooter games -- the only weapon the main character has is a "portal gun" that allows you to create two "portals" nearly anywhere in your environment that you can step, or jump, or fall through. It makes for very interesting puzzle solving. And the story presented in the game is , by turns, funny, touching, and disturbing. It's certainly not an epic -- I've read it described as a 'short story' of a video game. But it's definitely a complete piece. FuzzyCo grade: A+.

December 18, 2007

What I did over the weekend

I was the camera guy who knows how to set the exposure.

More details from Steve.

December 19, 2007

Warning

Careful, my remix from the elements of last week's Layer Tennis match may induce dizziness, nausea, or the urge to read.

(The boxing glove is from a CC-licensed photo by adamhenning.)

OpenID

I took a few minutes last night to set up http://fuzzyco.com as my OpenID identity, using Sam Ruby's super-easy instructions*. I went the super-geeky route of setting up my own OpenID server, but his instructions could also be of service to you if you have a) your own website and b) also an account on an OpenID-enabled web service like LiveJournal, MyOpenID, Technorati, Vox, TypeKey or others. By putting two lines of code in your home page's html you can use your own URL as an OpenID signon when logging onto an OpenID service (mostly blog commenting at this point).

(What's OpenID anyway? It's a way to login to multiple websites with one login, and for you to control where that login 'lives' so that you aren't stuck under the control of any one company or service that might go out of business (or go evil).)

The next step is to modify the commenting system here at FuzzyCo to accept OpenID. Unfortunately, that's going to get dumped into the big "properly redesign the freakin' website already" project bin. It's embarassing, I tell you. This whole website is a crazy patched-together beast that's been gradually updated since my first tentative "This should be <i>italic</i>" was vi'ed into a text file on schenectady.ecn.purdue.edu back in 1994. Since then, whenever I see a shiny web technology, I just clamp it on wherever it'll fit. Recent Flickr photos on the sidebar? Sure! I think we can duct tape 'em to the headlights. And when you get off the front page, you're either in NiceMT1.0Template City** or WowHaveYouEverHeardOfCSSville. Sigh.

* Be sure to notice his updates for PHPmyID 0.7 if you're following along to setup your own OpenID server.
** With its suburb -- HeyDidYouNoticeThatYourLayoutIsCroppingOffThatPictureburg.

Bridget Jones's Diary

Yeah, I read pop culture sensation novels 10 years after they're popular -- that's just how I roll.

Actually, let's digress about the tricky notion of picking what book to read next. My main reading time these days is the 45-minutes each way I'm on the train going to and from work. (On average, that's 100 pages a day.) So a book has to be messenger bag friendly, doubly so if I'm carting my laptop around. I've got, for example, a copy of 1491 I'm itching to sink my teeth into. But it's a 450 page hardcover. No way I'm lugging that thing around. Bridget Jones's Diary, on the other hand, is a 260 page trade paperback (and further, printed on pretty thin paper, it seems). Bingo! Though, I did feel a bit funny reading BJD on the train, and not because it's girly or ten years out of vogue or anything. It's just that from a distance, the cover might seem to be some other sort of book, if you know what I mean.

Veering back towards the track, I'll mention that I started giving my reviews a 'grade' (ala, I suppose, Christgau via Entertainment Weekly) and BJD is decidedly hard to pin down. There's some good stuff in there. For example, I really got into the obsessive chronically of numbers of drinks drunk, cigarettes smoked, calories eaten, etc at the start of each day's diary entry, and especially the subtle variations thereon. And there are some funny set pieces (though some clunkers too -- much of Bridget's life is a little too sitcom-y for me). And the plot's pretty good, except that there we run into the rub that it's not really Helen Fielding's, is it? (And that's a point -- is it 'cheeky' or 'self-aware' of an author ripping off Jane Austin to reference both Clueless and Pride and Prejudice itself?)

Ultimately, I think the reliance on that plot might be the book's real Achilles' heel. Because... (and I'm about to drop a spoiler here, but surely you've seen the movie. Or seen Clueless. Or read Pride and Prejudice. Or seen Pride and Prejudice. Or, perhaps, seen Pride an Prejudice.) ... I think "now she's with the right man, even though she's hardly even spoken to him, so everything will be fine" worked better in 1813 than 1996.

FuzzyCo grade: B-

Therapy's Great

Whenever someone mentions that they're thinking of doing some therapy or counseling, I tell them, "I have a little saying about therapy. It's: 'therapy's great!'" I'm dumb, but I want to do whatever I can to help remove any stigma from f'ing going and getting some help for what ails you. You don't have to wait until you're dying to go to a regular doctor -- no one will look at you weird if you go in to the doctor to deal with some joint pain or a nagging cold or such. And just so, you don't have to be full-out crazy to go get some help from a professional about mental issues. If nothing else, having someone's whose job it is to listen to you complain -- what could be better?

I did some therapy a few years ago here in Chicago, not to fix anything major, just to kind of figure out where I was at. I figured some stuff out, and got some good tools for just dealing with things better. (My guy was great, and if you're looking for a recommendation in Chicago, I've got one. Especially if you're a guyish-guy. My guy had a bunch of baseball analogies and stuff that I could tell were aimed at making 'I'm a manly man, why am I in therapy' types feel more comfortable. Almost made me wish I cared about baseball.)

Heather Armstrong posted something really powerful today about her own experiences with therapy and brain-fixing drugs and says the same thing -- if you need help, go get it. Ain't no shame in that.

December 20, 2007

links for 2007-12-20

Not bad

16

Please note that the code they give you to include on your site includes a spam-ish link at the bottom. Feel free to delete that.

Update: Dan has pointed out in the comments that the site is broken and doesn't give you a score and I wouldn't suggest bothering to take the test. (Though it's not any more shady than they already were -- http://www.howmanyfiveyearoldscouldyoutakeinafight.com/ was already redirecting to http://www.justsayhi.com/bb/fight5. I'm guessing that their give-you-your-score code has crashed.) More entertaining, anyway, is to just go read the old forum thread from 2005 that started the whole thing. (It's a Poker forum, by the way, but one that seems to foster interesting side-discussions.)

(via Shaun, of course)

Mi hermano

That's my darling brother in the red shirt (#40) smooth-dancing his way to second place in the Jack And Jill of Lhaif 2007.

December 21, 2007

Santy Claus!

Santy Claus!

This is the second year in a row that I've just happened to catch the CTA's Holiday Train by accident. Last year, I was able to call up Erica and she met me and the train at Bryn Mawr and we rode all the way up to Howard. Remembering that made me miss my wife (24 hours until I'm back in Mississippi!), but it's hard to stay sad on the Holiday Train. Woo-oo!

December 23, 2007

Inversions

Iain M. Banks' scifi novels are all* set far in the future when the dominant human society is the Culture, a post-scarcity near-utopia. As a utopia, the Culture is somewhat boring, because nothing dramatic really ever happens there. So most of his novels are set in the ranks of Contact (and its secretive sibling "Special Circumstances") the branch of the Culture that interfaces with other species and isolated planets where humans live under less enlightened governments.

Inversions is set on such a human planet where they no longer have knowledge of the stars and things are just making the first tentative steps out of a feudal system, and is told from the perspective of natives who have no notion that Contact might be working among them. In fact, other than a few touches that might be puzzling to someone who hadn't read any of Banks' other books, this might as well be a stand-alone fantasy or ahistorical novel. In any case, it's a pair of lightly intertwined stories -- one of a bodyguard to a ruler in one nation and the other of a doctor to a king in another.

Both stories cover a lot of ground -- there's court intrigue and the clash of nations and romance and unrequited love and torture and despair and, perhaps, redemption. Heady stuff. A great read.

FuzzyCo grade: A

* or mostly, at least. I haven't read them all, so I'm not sure.

Death Note: Vol 1

I've been hearing a lot about this manga (which is also an anime and a live action movie, now) so I took the opportunity at Erica's cousins' to read Volume 1. So, yes, I can understand the appeal to high school misfits -- Japanese high schooler Light Yagami finds a "Death Note" dropped by a Shinigami ("death god") and decides to use the powers of the note to cleanse the earth of evil doers. Half the book reads like a late night 'philosophical' discussion as Light tests the increasingly detailed rules governing the use of the Note.

I guess this was the first translated-but-not-inverted manga I've read and I was surprised at how quickly I adapted to reading right-to-left. Neato.

December 27, 2007

Twitterific

As some of you may know, I use a little service called Twitter to do something that you might call micro-blogging. (Besides my Twitter profile, recent "tweets", as entries are called, also show up on the sidebar of the FuzzyCo home page.) It's easy enough to use the web interface, but I also use a Mac desktop client called Twitterific. It's a $15 app, or you can use it for free in a mode where it will display an ad once an hour.

I had a great experience with Twitterific customer service just before Christmas -- I wrote in with what I thought was a feature request and I noted in my email that they could feel free to ignore my request since I wasn't one of their paying customers--I was still using the free, ad-ridden version. I had a friendly email back from them in minutes pointing out that the feature already existed and where in the preferences I could activate it. I promised myself that once we were past the holidays and present-buying, I would go ahead and register the app.

So it was an oddly good thing today when John Gruber pointed out that some jagmo was publicizing a hack to disable the ads in the free version of Twitterific. It's terrible that this jerk is trying to steal food out of the mouths of the developers of Twitterific*, but it's good because it reminded me to get off my butt and fulfill my promise.

* All of whom are orphans who live in an eco-friendly commune.**
** Not actually true, but Icon Factory really is an odd target for a "they're the man, keeping us down" rant.

Coal Miner's Daughter

Erica got Coal Miner's Daughter for an early Christmas present and in the course of watching it I realized that I've never actually seen the whole thing--TBS syndrome strikes again. At times it seems to be skipping furiously through Loretta Lynn's life to fit the whole thing into an 125 minute movie, and a huge section of the third act--a long sequence of song performances--seems like more fan service than artful biography, but overall there are enough deft brushstrokes that the sketchiness works--I really do feel like I got the sense of Lynn's life.

FuzzyCo grade: A-

Enchanted

Enchanted walks a tight rope: trying to make fun of the Disney princess movies while still actually being a Disney princess movie. I think it succeeds and is frightfully adorable. There are plenty of fine performances, but Amy Adams really carries the show with a realistic portrayal of her initially very unrealistic character. We heartily recommend it particularly to all of our friends with princess-obsessed girlchildren, but everyone else as well.

FuzzyCo grade: A

Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story

I'm glad we had just watched Coal Miner's Daughter earlier in the week before we saw Walk Hard--it helped to be familiar with the musical biopic genre before seeing this hardcore skewering of the same. I laughed a lot at the movie, but the jokes are so fast and furious that some of the narrative, and chances for deeper, character-based jokes, are sacrificed. Ultimately, as Erica put it, it's more Scary Movie than Spinal Tap.

(Oh, and there are a few hilarious-but-gratuitous scenes of full frontal nudity (male and female) that prevent me from recommending the movie to friends with kids. Well, and maybe all the drug stuff, too. Yeah, OK, completely unsuitable for kids.)

FuzzyCo grade: B

December 28, 2007

Knocked Up

Look at me getting caught up on PopCulture2007! And Knocked Up is exactly what I was talking about in my Walk Hard review with respect to character-based comedy vs. jokes (and it makes an excellent contrast since there's such an overlap of actors and writer). There are plenty of jokes in Knocked Up, but never at the expense of us really learning about the characters. And I was also surprised to discover how brutally honest the film is about the dynamics of marriage and parenthood.

FuzzyCo grade: A

December 30, 2007

Fried Chicken: An American Story

Fried Chicken is the first in a short series of books by John T. Edge exploring iconic American foods (donuts, hamburgers and fries, and apple pie are the other subjects). There are short sketches of distinctive fried chicken cooks and histories of several regional variations, and each chapter ends with a recipe. I was impressed that despite the fact that Edge is the director of the Southern Foodways Alliance that he starts the book off with the thesis that "fried chicken is best served without a side of provincial bluster" and gives equal weight to Guatemalan and New York fried chicken, for example. But most impressive to me was that I made it to page 100 before I took a trip to Popeyes. Love that chicken!

FuzzyCo grade: B

Jump In!

Erica and I have an irregular, on-going private film festival of what I call, for lack of a more precise term, "teen performance" movies. You know, movies where an individual or team, usually teen-aged, has to overcome obstacles, whether internal or external, to excel at some performance art (occasionally a sport, but usually, for us, dance or roller-skating or cheerleader, etc.). We've been watching these movies for a while, but I'm only just starting to narrow in on why we watch them. There's the performances, of course, and with Erica a choreographer it's research, more or less. The plots of these movies, however, are usually laughable, when they're not downright insulting to the intelligence. I'm starting to wonder that if, in a perverse way, yelling at the terrible plots isn't pleasing to my cantankerous old heart.

Jump In! highlights the bipolar nature of this sort of movie perfectly. The performances (double-dutch jump-roping, in this case) are fairly interesting, if repetitive (and suffer from the problem this sorts of movies often have, where it's hard to really tell the difference between the performance that's supposed to be 'pretty good' and the one that's supposed to be 'incredible'). The acting is respectable. The plot was cheesy, and especially the subtext of "girls are dumb and need a skilled boy to come in and fix their routines and change the name of the team" had Erica cringing. I suppose the messages of "it's OK for girls to box and boys to double-dutch, do what you love" and "be honest with your parents -- they might just understand that you don't want to box any more" are good enough, but the whole "maybe bullies just need to be told that they don't need to be angry anymore" story was just ridiculous to me.

Also note that this was a Disney Channel movie, originally, so there are periodic hard fades to black and it's required (for Team Gerdes, anyway) to shout "commercial break" at the fade.

FuzzyCo grade, for the performances: B, for the plot: D

Chicago

I watched Chicago expecting to see a startlingly accurate portrayal of life in 1920s Chicago. I was sorely disappointed.

But for reals I was impressed by the interesting intermingling of somewhat realistic scenes with the "stage" versions of the songs, but I don't think it was 100% successful in every case. (Erica, I think, disagrees because she's still walking around the house singing the songs.)

FuzzyCo grade: B

December 31, 2007

Peggle

I'll admit, Yahtzee's review of Peggle (umm.. probably NSFW) intrigued me enough to go check out the demo, but I decided that $20 was too much for a casual game like that. But then the Orange Box included a special Halflife- (and Portal-) themed set of levels and Steam (Valve's game download service) had the game for $10. And Erica was out of town and I was being dumb and staying up all night. So... I bought it. And played and played. It's a dumb game, but it sure satisfies some sort of primal clicky-make-noise impulse.

FuzzyCo grade: B-

Half Life 2

So I'm working through The Orange Box and Half Life 2 was next on my list. I had actually played Half Life back when it came out, so I've been meaning to play the sequel for some time. (A Mac Book Pro running XP under Boot Camp turns out to be a half-decent gaming machine, it turns out. Better than my actual PC, anyway.)

So, am I going to be the guy who comes along 3 years later and says "naw, that game isn't that great"? No, I am not. Fun stuff. I was a little surprised by the abruptness of the ending, but unlike someone playing the game in 2004, I can immediately load up Episode One. And that's just what I'm off to do.

Xmas was Ribs

Xmas is Ribs

Did I mention that Xmas was ribs?. What's that even mean? I don't know. But I went down to Mississippi for Christmas and came back with my wife. That's awesome.

I got a new cheap pocket camera to replace my dead Sony W100 and I'm fighting with it a bit, but it's taking some interesting shots. I barely pulled out my old faithful F717 because I couldn't find a charger for it before I left. I own six Sony cameras that all use the same charger. Two are out on loan, but that means that there should be four chargers somewhere in this house. But I couldn't find a single one. Drove me crazy.

December 11, 2007

Artopita

Artopita

There's one thing that makes the prospect of an early morning flight out of Midway bearable -- the thought of an Artopita from Pegasus On-the-fly. An Artopita is a tasty breakfast sandwich, fluffy eggs, cheese, and ham, spinach, or mushrooms in a flakey phyllo shell. It's the "Arto"-pita, because Pegasus is the Midway branch of Greektown's Artopolis(306 S Halsted). I've never gone to Artopolis for breakfast -- I'm not sure the Artopita is a delicacy worth driving across town for. But bleary-eyed at Midway at 6:40 am it's a much better way to wake up than McDonald's.

(Originally posted on Chicago Metblog: Artopita)

About December 2007

This page contains all entries posted to FuzzyCo in December 2007. They are listed from oldest to newest.

November 2007 is the previous archive.

January 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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