Ocelopotamus

News, culture, and politics. Not necessarily in that order.

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Remembering Kurt Vonnegut: “A Rather Daft and Kind Old Man”

April 16th, 2007 · Blogroll, Blogs, Books, Culture, History, Lit, News, Peace, Uncategorized

Vonnegut Cage DrawingGregory Rodriguez has a piece in the LA Times today in which he remembers working as an editorial assistant for Kurt Vonnegut’s publisher, and getting to know Vonnegut as he worked on revising Hocus Pocus for publication.

Their first meeting, as Rodriguez recounts it, has Vonnegut displaying a vulnerability
that is at once charming and wrenchingly familiar to us lesser writers who scratch away in his shadow:

I was a 23-year-old, highly impressionable and generally terrified editorial assistant at Putnam Publishing in New York when I first met Kurt Vonnegut. One day, when his editor, my boss, Faith Sale, was out of town, he came to the office, slipped by the receptionist and asked to see Sale. What he got was me.

“I’m sorry, Mr. Vonnegut, I’m Gregory, Faith’s assistant. She’ll be in London for the next two weeks. Is there anything I can do for you?”

He looked dejected, even scared. And referring to the “Hocus Pocus” manuscript he had recently handed in, he asked, “Gregory, is the book terrible?”

From there they develop a glancing but warm professional friendship, and Rodriguez is able to give us the rare perspective of someone who got to know Vonnegut the man before reading Slaughterhouse-Five. Go read the full piece, but here’s the essence of it:

A critic once wrote that “Slaughterhouse-Five” “was less about Dresden than about Vonnegut’s failure to come to terms with it.” I couldn’t agree more. Like Lot’s wife, Vonnegut looked back at the firebombing of Dresden, the defining event of his life, and never got over it. No, he didn’t turn to salt, and more important, he didn’t resort to anger. He saw and he wept, but, like one of his protagonists in another novel, millionaire philanthropist Eliot Rosewater, Vonnegut’s answer throughout his writing was to exhort us to be kind.

Based on my few days and hours as a lowly editorial assistant toiling beside the great Kurt Vonnegut, I can honestly say that he practiced what he preached.

Also: here’s a small roundup of blog elegies for Vonnegut I liked, from Earthgoat, NZBC, and Starling.

Previously on Ocelopotamus: Kurt Vonnegut, Home at Last.

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News Roundup: Indirect Role-Playing Edition

April 16th, 2007 · Adobe, Business, Comics, Culture, Food, Hate Crimes, Health, LGBT, Media, Music, New Wave, News, Politics, Software

Water Balloons

  • Gonzales is now helpfully explaining that he only had an “indirect” role in the firing of the U.S. attorneys. Yes, just like I had an indirect role in what happened to the passersby who got hit by those water balloons I dropped yesterday. I mean, all I did was let go! It was the water balloons themselves that got the people all wet.
     

    In hindsight, of course, I would have handled it differently. I’m sorry for the missteps I made that helped to fuel the controversy. It’s clear I should have done more to ensure that the review process was more rigorous before I let go of the balloons, and the ass-kicking I got from all the mad wet people had nothing to do with the timing of this apology.

    Fortunately, Kiwi and Mr. Blue say they have “every confidence” in my ability to handle water balloons responsibly in the future, so really, that’s all that matters.

  • At a time when everything, including food production, is increasingly outsourced overseas, food safety experts say that imported food is rarely inspected, and the US doesn’t have adequate control over the situation.
     

    The FDA and the USDA have adopted a “risk-based” inspection philosophy, focusing on specific foods, sources or producers that they believe represent the largest potential risk to the public’s health.

    … Caroline Smith DeWaal, director of food safety at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group, countered that “risk-based” is just shorthand for “reduced resources.”

    “Whenever they say ‘risk-based approach,’ it often means they don’t have enough staff to actually do the job. They’re doing triage. They’re trying to hit what’s most important to inspect but they’re missing a lot,” DeWaal said.

  • Meanwhile, during Senate hearings on the pet food recall, Dick Durbin hits the nail on the head (as usual):
     

    “What’s the connection between E. coli on spinach and contaminated pet food?” Durbin asked. “Unfortunately it’s the same broken food safety program.”

  • Hate Crimes bill introduced in the Senate, now named after Matthew Shepard.
  • Adobe unveils its new free video player (called, cleverly enough, Adobe Video Player). The new player builds on the technology of Flash player, and will let consumers play back video both online and offline.
  • The comics: Tom Tomorrow has Bush vs. Nixon, while Tom the Dancing Bug has Bush vs. a hornet’s nest.
  • Harvey Fierstein’s take on the Don Imus meltdown, from the NYT. Via Joe. My. God.
  • More on the forthcoming B-52’s album from the band’s official News page:
     

    The new album is under way!
    The B’s have gone back to their Athens, GA. roots to record the second half of their long-awaited new album. (The first half was recorded in Rhinebeck, NY. last fall.) They are currently in the studio crafting some heavy grooves with producer Steve Osborne (KT Tunstall, New Order, Manic Street Preachers) and programmers Damian Taylor (Bjork) and Pete Davis (New Order). We project a release of fall 2007! Read the album updates from Keith and Kate and Fred at www.theb52s.com for more info.

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“Has Anyone in This Family Ever Even Seen a Chicken?”

April 16th, 2007 · Comedy, Culture, TV, Video

Because Ocelopotamus has been on a little bit of an Arrested Development kick lately … and because we know you need something to chase those Monday blues away — we bring you the Chicken Dance compilation.

 
Chickens don’t clap. Believe it.

And just to really bless the beginning of your week, we follow that with the Ultimate Buster Compilation — described by its compiler as, “almost every instance of ‘Hey, brother’ or a variation thereof from Arrested Development.”

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In Chicago: More on the May 2nd Special Edition of The Partly Dave Show

April 13th, 2007 · Chicago, Comedy, Culture, Fringe, Journal, Music, Neo-Futurists, News, Performance, Poetry, The Partly Dave Show, Theater

Partly Dave Show logoContinuing the brand-new tradition of breaking news about The Partly Dave Show here on Ocelopotamus first, I can now confirm the full lineup for our upcoming show, and fill you in on why we’re doing it and what’s so goll-dang special about it.

Here’s the deal: the shadowy white-coated figures at The Partly Dave Show’s underwater research laboratories have for some time now been working on developing a podcast version of the show. It’ll essentially be the same recipe as the live show: Dave, his co-hosts and his spoken-word guests mixing comedy, monologues, poetry, and stories with the rocking musical contributions of rocking bands we love, all adapted into a radio-show format that will allow us to branch out in some fun new directions.

So, first thing, this show on May 2nd at The Neo-Futurarium is going to be a mix of favorite pieces from past editions of The Partly Dave Show (with a few new bits thrown in for spice), and we’re going to be recording it live in order to try out our podcast recording skills and get some live recordings we can feature in the first few episodes of the podcast. So if you show up, you get to be part of our first-ever studio audience!

Second thing: it’s a benefit party in support of the podcast! (That’s why we’re calling it the Party Mix Edition.) We’re looking to raise funds to cover some start-up expenses — bandwidth, recording equipment, etc. — and all the performers are donating their performances toward that goal.

We’ll be asking a slightly higher suggested donation for this event than in the past — $12 instead of our previous $7 — but it’ll still be our usual “pay what you can” approach, so you don’t have to stay home washing your hair again if it turns out you’re broke that week or something.

And of course, if you want to donate a little more toward making the Partly Dave Show podcast a reality, we’ll be thrilled at your largesse. (Of course, we’re always thrilled at your largesse, because who doesn’t love largesse?)

So, here’s that confirmed lineup I promised you!

WHAT: The Partly Dave Show: Party Mix Edition!

WHO: Hosted by Dave Awl, with his co-hosts Christopher Piatt and Diana Slickman, plus performances by Neo-Futurist Rachel Claff, Kurt Heintz of e-poets.net, and Jonathan Messinger of The Dollar Store show. Plus live music by the one and only EVEN IN BLACKOUTS!

WHEN: Wednesday night, May 2nd, at 7:30pm.

WHERE: The Neo-Futurarium, 5153 N. Ashland (at Foster), in Chicago

HOW MUCH: $12 suggested donation, or “pay what you can.” Feel free to donate more if you can, but don’t stay home ’cause you’re broke!

Also: Ocelopotamus would like to mention that Oobleckian and Partly Dave Show regular Dan Telfer will be performing in the preliminary rounds of a stand-up comedy competition this Saturday night, April 14, at a “billiards cafe” called Pressure, located at 6318 N. Clark (near Granville). Admission is $10, $5 for students. Snacks are available. More info on the competition is here. Go support Dan, he’s bound to be entertaining.

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UPDATE: Regarding the stand-up comedy competition mentioned just above, Dan Telfer notes in the comments that he’ll be performing in the 8:30pm show but not the 11pm show.

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DVD: The History Boys

April 13th, 2007 · Culture, Education, Film, History, LGBT, Lit, New Wave, News, Poetry, Theater

History Boys DVDThe History Boys is finally being released on DVD this coming Tuesday, April 17.

According to this review, the DVD comes with a solid curriculum of extras:

Writer Alan Bennett and director Nicholas Hynter share an informative track addressing the changes made to the play but, sadly, do not discuss the interesting cast in personal detail. More information on the cast of The History Boys appears in two featurettes. History Boys around the World: Tour Diaries covers their touring engagements with the play in the Far East, Australia and New York. It’s structured like fast-paced TV fluff, while the piece on the making of the film Pass It On: The History Boys on Screen is less rushed, giving us more input from the various personalities.

The History Boys was one of my two favorite movies of 2006, with a superb adaptation of the Tony-winning script by Alan Bennett and a tour de force performance by Richard Griffiths. You get sublimely witty dialogue interspersed with snatches of Auden and Philip Larkin, a provocative dialetical examination of teaching styles (teaching students to be “thoughtful” versus teaching them to be “smart”), a brief appearance by Harriet Jones, MP for Flydale North Penelope Wilton as the art teacher, a soundtrack of Smiths, New Order, and Aztec Camera songs, and of course a uniformly talented cast of adorable English schoolboys. (Uniformly talented, see how that worked?) Don’t bother calling me for about two days after I get my copy, because the phone will be unplugged.

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UPDATE: Chris Bell has an appreciation of Alan Bennett up at NZBC.

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News Roundup: Dinosaur Dig Edition

April 13th, 2007 · Apple, Business, Comedy, Culture, Feminism, Hate Crimes, Health, Human Rights, LGBT, Music, Nature, New Wave, News, Politics, Science, Software, TV

Tyrannosaurus

  • The White House is claiming that oops, they managed to lose a whole bunch of critically important emails, but as any decent techie knows, deleted emails aren’t really deleted. Someone better sit poor Karl Rove down and explain to him about file recovery utilities.
  • Speaking of recovering things thought lost forever — scientists have recovered and analyzed protein from soft tissue in a well-preserved dinosaur bone from 68 million years ago.
  • Stem cell research may be able to cure insulin-dependent diabetes.
  • A 15-year-old openly gay high school student in Colorado has been violently attacked by a group of six fellow students. The student’s mother says she feels authorities are “dragging their feet” in responding to the incident. The attackers have been suspended from school but not yet expelled, and no arrests have been made.
  • Meanwhile, a man in Tennessee has been the victim of two attacks in the past three weeks, including having the words “fags deserve to die” painted on his home as well as a smashed mailbox and a rock through his window. He believes the attackers are trying to drive him out of his community, but he’s vowing to stay.
  • Wikipedia had to lock down its entry on business negotiations after last week’s episode of The Office which featured boss Michael getting tips from the fictional version of that entry. None of the very questionable tips Michael supposedly found in the episode were actually part of the entry, but after the show, people started trying to add them.
  • I know this much is true — Spandau Ballet is reforming.
  • EMI and Beatles settle royalties dispute — moving the world one step closer toward downloadable Beatles songs.
  • Apple delays release of Leopard by four months in order to deliver the iPhone on time. Fine by me — I’m still learning my way around Tiger. I’d really prefer that they wait a little longer between these major OS releases, and I bet most users would agree with me.
  • Mattel creates a line of toy cars just for girls. And why do they think girls would want a car? So they can go to the mall, silly! Why else?

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Where There’s a Will There’s a Segway

April 13th, 2007 · Blogroll, Blogs, Comedy, Culture, TV

Will Arnett’s Magic HandsNew to the blogroll — check out The Will Arnett Research Project, which really does justice to the phrase “will power.” Because nobody on television wears a shorter bathrobe! (Well, except maybe David Duchovny on that one episode of The Larry Sanders Show, but that was so totally back in the Clinton Era before the start of recorded history.)

Ocelopotamus especially approves of the post about Will running his hands through Jason Bateman’s beautiful hair. Because as we’re sure you’ll agree, there are times when that scamp Jason just needs a really good tousling. And we admire Will for stepping up to the task and being the man who’s going to give Jason the kind of serious, go-for-broke, take-no-prisoners tousling he deserves.

Previously: 30 Rock Is Finally Starting To

***
UPDATE: WARP has the bathrobe video, for as long as it stays up on YouTube. “You warlock — you came to entrance me.”

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Kurt Vonnegut, Home at Last

April 12th, 2007 · Books, Culture, Journal, LGBT, Lit, News, Science Fiction

VonnegutKurt Vonnegut is dead.

Today the world is a little less kind than it was yesterday.

American literary idol Kurt Vonnegut, best known for such classic novels as “Slaughterhouse-Five” and “Cat’s Cradle,” died on Tuesday night in Manhattan at age 84, The New York Times reported on Wednesday.

Longtime family friend, Morgan Entrekin, who reported Vonnegut’s death, said the writer had suffered brain injuries as a result of a fall several weeks ago, the newspaper reported.

Oddly enough, just a few weeks ago a college friend of mine emailed me to ask if I was a Vonnegut fan. He’d started reading Slaughterhouse-Five and remembered a random reference I’d made to Tralfamadorians in an earlier email.

Here’s what I wrote him back:

Oh, yes. He was an early, primary influence on my worldview and writing style. I discovered him as a freshman in high school and I read 11 of his books (everything the high school library had) in something like two months. It was one of those moments you have as a young person when you feel your perspective coalescing. I remember saying to my sister something like, “Kurt Vonnegut is the only one who *understands.*”

After a few years I got to where I’d read too *much* Vonnegut — you know that feeling where you overindulge on a certain food and then you suddenly never want it again? I do that with writers, too. I read so much of them that I internalize their voices and start to feel like I’m imitating them too much in my own work. It’s like needing to move out of your literary parents’ house. You love them, but you have to get away for a while.

So it had been almost 15 years since I’d read any Vonnegut when, a few years ago, a local theater company staged an excellent adaptation of Cat’s Cradle, which got me in the mood to revisit him. I ended up re-reading Slaughterhouse-Five, Breakfast of Champions, and The Sirens of Titan, and really enjoyed reconnecting with them from an adult perspective. I was gratified to find that his work still holds up and that in some ways, he’s even better than I remembered.

I would say that the famous epitaph of Kilgore Trout is still pretty much the core of my value system:

“We are healthy only to the extent that our ideas are humane.”

I think everyone ought to read a stack of Vonnegut books starting at about age 14, or as soon as possible thereafter. I think the world would be a wiser and better place for it.

Also: although Mother Night is not a book about being gay, and (as best I can recall at the moment) there are no gay characters in it, the fact remains that nobody has ever written a better book about what it’s like to live in the closet. Reading that book helped me tear down the wall dividing one half of my psyche from the other — the wall that came from growing up gay in a deeply homophobic time and culture.

Vonnegut’s Wikipedia entry quotes a Rolling Stone article from August 2006:

He has stalled finishing his highly anticipated novel If God Were Alive Today — or so he claims. “I’ve given up on it … It won’t happen. … The Army kept me on because I could type, so I was typing other people’s discharges and stuff. And my feeling was, ‘Please, I’ve done everything I was supposed to do. Can I go home now?’ That’s what I feel right now. I’ve written books. Lots of them. Please, I’ve done everything I’m supposed to do. Can I go home now?”

Yes, Mr. Vonnegut. You can go home now, with honors.

Kurt Vonnegut is dead, but the Tralfamadorians know he’s still alive in all the moments in time in which he helped messed-up teenagers — of all ages — find a little bit of sense in a senseless world.

He was a victim of a series of accidents. As are we all.

So it goes.

(h/t NZBC)

***
UPDATE: Tom Tomorrow has a postcard he got from Kurt Vonnegut a couple of years ago up on This Modern World.

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DVD: Shortbus and the Joy of Deleted Scenes

April 11th, 2007 · Culture, Film, Fringe, LGBT, Neo-Futurists, Theater

Shortbus DVDI was strangely resistant to seeing Shortbus when it was playing in theaters last fall, and I’m not entirely sure why. I suppose partly I was put off by all the buzz about it, because I’m the kind of person who gets put off by buzz sometimes, and partly I was suspicious of the “graphic sex” angle because it made me worry that graphic sex would be all the movie had going for it.

So I was pleasantly surprised when I finally got the DVD and watched it — it’s a smart, well-crafted story with a talented cast and a lot of beautiful small moments. (Plus, I got a kick out of the fact that my old college roommate’s little brother, Paul Oakley Stovall, is in it. Last time I saw Paul was in the early 90s at Live Bait Theater, when The Neo-Futurists were still performing there!)

But I’m actually glad that I waited to see Shortbus on DVD, because watching the making-of featurette added a lot to my appreciation of the film and how the characters and their relationships were developed.

Also, some of my favorite scenes are the ones that got cut out of the theatrical release. Can I just say how much I love deleted scenes? I live for deleted scenes. I can’t tell you how many times I find myself shouting at the TV set, “WHY DID THEY CUT THAT OUT? THAT WAS THE BEST FREAKING LINE IN THE MOVIE!” Well, my downstairs neighbors can probably tell you, or my cats.

In fact, if I were starting a band this week, I’d name it The Deleted Scenes. Wait, let me Google that, I bet it’s taken. Ah, here we go!

Have I mentioned yet the existence of Awl’s Law, which is that if you think of a good name for a band you can rest assured that it’s already taken, simply by virtue of the fact that you thought of it? Wait, I’ll bet someone else has already thought of that law and named it after themselves. Oh, Google it yourself, I need some tea.

Bonus: If you haven’t already seen it, here’s Jay Brannan doing that soda shop song on YouTube. On the toidy, natch.

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Music: “We Can Get Together”

April 11th, 2007 · Culture, Journal, Music, New Wave, Peoria, Video

Here’s Icehouse’s ecstatically edgy crossover single “We Can Get Together” from 1980, which never fails to give me that particular New Wave frisson that results from just the right ratio of synthesizers to spiky guitars complemented by a sublime angst-in-my-pants vocal style.

And oh yeah, they were still called Flowers when they made this video, though they were Icehouse by the time the song started turning up on fine American album-rock stations like WWCT “The Home of Rock ‘n’ Roll” in Peoria, where I heard it as a high school freshman clutching my first David Bowie, B-52’s, and Cars albums to my bosom, and carefully wrote down the name of the band and the title of the song in blue ink in my spiral-bound notebook once the goosebumps had subsided.

 
Of course, if you saw the American video on MTV in the early 80s, like I did, you remember an entirely different video, with a snappy animated look and lots of energetic geometric patterns.

In fact, you probably remember it looking a lot like the video below, for an entirely different Icehouse song called “Love in Motion.” I’m not sure which video came first or why the treatment for one was grafted onto the other, but if you listen to “We Can Get Together” while watching this video with the sound turned down, it’ll open a magic door back to 1981.

Oh, and A-ha pretty much ripped off this look for the “Take On Me” video, too.

 
If you don’t already have them, you can find both songs on this compilation.

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The Invisible Front Runner in the Living Room

April 11th, 2007 · LGBT, Media, News, Politics

Despite the ongoing media narrative that the race for the 2008 Democratic nomination is a two-person race between Hillary and Obama, the latest Rassmussen poll shows Edwards beating every single Republican contender by at least six points.

Let me say that again. John Edwards currently beats all Republican contenders by at least six points in direct matchups.

Edwards (49%) Giuliani (43%)
Edwards (50%) Huckabee (41%)
Edwards (47%) McCain (38%)
Edwards (55%) Romney (29%)
Edwards (50%) Thompson (36%)

By contrast, Hillary and Obama both trail Giuliani by 1 point, and McCain ties Obama.

Amazing how the mainstream media keeps conveniently glossing over the candidate who’s currently most effective against the Repubs. Yes, what an amusing little coincidence that is. Funny old world!

Oh, also, Edwards has the highest favorable rating of all three candidates (he’s at 57% versus 54% Obama and 48% Hillary) and the lowest unfavorable rating (35% versus 36% for Obama and a whopping 50% for Hillary.)

EDWARDS: 57% / 35%
HILLARY: 48% / 50%
OBAMA: 54%/ 36%

Why exactly is Hillary running again? At least half the country have already made up their minds that they can’t stand her, and it’s not like they haven’t had years and years and years to arrive at that conclusion. How on earth does she think she’s going to turn that around? Does she think the press will suddenly start going easier on her and making her seem likeable once she becomes the Democratic nominee? Because, you know, that would be so just like them!

Related: 25 gay leaders endorse John Edwards.

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30 Rock Is Finally Starting To

April 11th, 2007 · Comedy, Culture, News, TV

It’s interesting that 30 Rock seems to have pulled off a dark horse victory over Studio 60 as the backstage-at-SNL show that’s most likely to survive.

I think NBC made a good move putting 30 Rock right after The Office last week, and I hope they keep it there. It feels like the show is finally coming into its own creatively. The first few episodes I saw did nothing for me, but it’s been getting better and better — the dialogue sharper and and funnier, the characters more clearly understood and their chemistry more effectively used. The real turning point for me was the episode with Paul Reubens as the Hapsburg prince — it was probably the funniest non-Pee Wee performance I’ve ever seen him give, and casting him was a savvy move.

This past week’s episode made a similarly smart call, bringing in Gob — excuse me, Will Arnett — from the late, lamented Arrested Development for a little of that bananagrabber magic. 30 Rock has finally moved from something I might watch because it fits on the same VCR tape as The Office, to a show I kinda look forward to.

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The Beatles Are Irish, and Ted Haggard Is Completely Heterosexual

April 10th, 2007 · Blogroll, Comedy, LGBT, Music, Performance, Politics, Video

I owe Joe. My. God. for turning me on to musical comedian (comedical musician?) Roy Zimmerman, whom I hadn’t heard of before — but he’s smart as paint and reminds me a little of Barry Crimmins.

Anyway, here, for a warm-up, is “What if the Beatles Were Irish?”

 
And here’s the one Mr. My. God. linked to. Yeah, it’s a showstopper: “Ted Haggard is Completely Heterosexual.” The best part is about two-thirds of the way through, when he sets up a rhyme that has the the audience laughing in anticipation, and Zimmerman has to tell them, “You’re right — but wait for it.” And it’s worth the wait!

I’ll also issue a Level 2 spit take warning: put your beverage aside before clicking the play button.

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News Roundup: Fresh Prints Edition

April 9th, 2007 · Activism, Advertising, Apple, Business, Climate Change, Culture, Health, HIV/AIDS, Human Rights, iTunes, Labor, LGBT, Media, Music, News, Politics, Science

fingerprint

  • Newt Gingrich calls on Abu Gonzales to resign.
  • Trying to sound like a big, butch hunter to please the NRA, dreadfully amusing little joke of a candidate Mitt Romney says he likes to hunt rabbits and refers to them as “varmints.” Tell it to the Easter bunny, Mitt. I hope he left a gaily decorated rotten egg under your pillow.
  • New report from the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says that the poorest parts of the world will be hit hardest, but no one will escape its impact.
  • America in the 21st century: Participating in peace marches is enough to get you placed on the Terrorist Watch list and banned from flying. So is giving a lecture critical of GWB — even if you’re a retired Marine colonel who fought in the Korean War, decorated for heroism.
  • Meanwhile, some public schools are apparently planning to use a fingerprint ID system as a way for students to pay for their lunches. The always eloquent James Carroll uses this as a starting point for a meditation on privacy and the legacy of J. Edgar Hoover in the age of Google. He goes the whole column without ever mentioning the name Orwell, probably because he knows he doesn’t have to. Here’s a quote, but you should go read the whole thing:
     

    Privacy, the dictionary says, is the state of being free from unsanctioned intrusion. But that definition seems anachronistic, with ubiquitous intrusion a new fact of life. For security, or mere efficiency, we Americans are sanctioning the end of our right to deny sanction to such invasion. Now, of course, it is not just law enforcers in the mode of J. Edgar Hoover who have the capacity to intrude, but also MasterCard, the credit bureaus, the Google user, the phone company, the e-mail provider, the airport screener — and the lunch room cashier in the local school.

    (Hat tip to Norm Sloan.)

  • New York City health officials consider encouraging circumcision for men at high risk of contracting HIV.
  • A new protease inhibitor called Darunavir is significantly better at attacking highly resistant HIV than other drugs, according to a just-released study. This may be especially important to patients for whom existing drugs aren’t working — the study focused on patients who had already failed to respond to at least three different kinds of HIV drugs.
  • Author says new evidence suggests Alger Hiss wasn’t a spy.
  • Federal judge rules that a local school board in Florida can’t prohibit the school’s Gay-Straight Alliance from meeting.
  • Microsoft spins frantically and flails around wildly in the wake of Apple and EMI’s deal to sell music without DRM restrictions.
  • AfterElton reports that a video for Erasure’s new single “I Could Fall in Love With You” includes shocking scenes of heterosexual people kissing each other. What’s next, a movie about straight cowboys? As if anyone would go see that! Click through to see the video.
  • Most people don’t think of cities as being environmentally friendly, but in terms of energy efficiency, they may be the key to sustainable living.
  • Can an inherited disease causing tumors of the adrenal gland be the key factor behind the legendary Hatfield-McCoy family feud?
  • Facing the awful tooth: Dentist found guilty of urinating in surgery sink, and cleaning his fingernails with same dental tools he used on patients.
  • This is genius PR: Rental retail company Aaron Rents swoops in on the 3,400 employees Circuit City is laying off.
     

    Just one day after the electronics chain Circuit City Stores (CC) announced that it would lay off 3,400 workers and replace them with lower-paid employees, Charles Loudermilk, chief executive of the rental retail company Aaron Rents (RNT) began posting advertisements on recruiting Web sites: “Attention Circuit City employees: So they say you make too much and are laying you off to hire lower paid employees? Aaron’s doesn’t lay off our highly paid employees…. We put them on a pedestal, and show others how they can make more.”

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