Category Archives: Media

Charo!

Thank you Wil Wheaton. This will never leave my soul. As to if that’s a good thing, click through, and you be the judge.

Hidden Mickey Pins? Really?

I had no idea. Anyone that’s been to a Disney park has probably noticed all those pins that people wear on lanyards, and for sale in the shops. What I didn’t know is there are special ones: hidden Mickey pins. Apparently you can only get these pins by trading other ones with cast members. Man, Disney is good. That really has to be almost irresistable to obsessive collectors that live near the parks, or visit regularly. Luckily, I’m not obsessive.

(My wife arches her eyebrow in my direction.)

OK, at least I don’t live near the parks. Honestly, though, after reading this post on the Disney Parks Blog, it’s pretty neat. There’s so much back story to, well, everything that Disney does. Layers upon layers.

Why You Should Love a Geek

Wired Magazine’s Matt Blum certainly makes a compelling case why geeky spouses kick butt. He lists out the top ten “endearing habits” of geeky spouses. My favorite:

4. Owning lots of really good, though not mainstream, books. We geeks tend to read a lot, and we tend to be pretty picky about the books we buy. For instance, it’s only in the past eight years, since the first Lord of the Rings movie came out, that Tolkien has become more mainstream. My wife had never read any Tolkien until we met, so after I pushed her for a while, we read The Hobbit together; she became a fan quickly.

Now, I’m already married to a geeky girl, so she also has some… interesting reading material. For the most part, though, the lists are different, which is a good thing.

To Jammie Thomas: I’m Boycotting All Recording Artists With the RIAA

I’ve had enough. For years I’ve seen the Recording Industry Association of America make a mockery of their customers, common sense, and fair play. I love music, though, and I really respect a lot of the artists that are represented by the RIAA. Yesterday, though, I read this story about a verdict handed down in the trial of the RIAA versus Jammie Thomas-Rasset:

The $1.92 million verdict against a Minnesota woman accused of sharing 24 songs over the Internet could ratchet up the pressure on other defendants to settle with the recording industry — if the big fine can withstand an appeal.

This is the result of a retrial, by the way, so it’s not like this is some one-off crazy jury. She downloaded 24 songs off of Kazaa, a popular file sharing software, and made those songs available to others. Boom: lawsuit. She fought it, mistakenly thinking that you can depend on the courts and the U.S. legal system (I’m not that much of a cynic, mind: usually you can, but not always). Years later, after a retrial was allowed, a jury hands down a judgment against her for $80,000 per song. Because, you know, that’s how much money the recording industry might have lost due to her evil machinations. I don’t use that word carelessly, either: it was decided that her actions were “willful”. Right. Like this woman decided to get those horrible industry executives, managers, and oh, especially the artists.

Listen: the intellectual property system needs to change. The whole mess needs to be rethought, refactored, and redesigned from the ground up. Regular work-a-day artists aren’t going to make this happen themselves, and I understand that. The thing that’s pushed me over the edge is the fact that the RIAA doesn’t have to do this. It’s a choice they make. The law gives them the power to go after people like Thomas-Rasset for “damages”, and they don’t pass those laws. They have a choice to exercise that power or not. And they choose to. The RIAA’s reaction:

“We appreciate the jury’s service and that they take this as seriously as we do. We are pleased that the jury agreed with the evidence and found the defendant liable. Since day one, we have been willing to settle this case and we remain willing to do so.”

So to heck with them, and to heck with any artist that’s represented by them. This is Arstechnica said about the ruling:

The recording industry lawyers, though clearly pleased, had no desire to showboat this one. The massive damage award, which increased from $9,250 per song in the first trial to $80,000, might sounds like a “win,” but will probably stoke grassroots anger against the industry’s campaign…

From now on, I will only buy music by way of used CD’s, or from artists who are either self-published or on labels not represented by the RIAA. Here’s a list of the RIAA member labels. I’ll be checking this from now on with every purchase. I encourage more people to do the same.

Things need to change. Keep voting at the ballot box, but vote with your dollar, as well.

A Cop That Needs to Get Fired. Now.

Most cops are generally good people. Not all of them, though. Some are flat out power hungry freaks that are only working in the job because it gives them authority over others. Case in point: 72 year old great-grandmother getting a taser in the chest. Yeah, she was certainly a threat and a clear and present danger. This dude needs to get fired. No excuses and no second chances. If something in his brain rationalizes how this is an OK thing, then he is not fit to be in a uniform. Click through.

Note that I think the taser — and other non-lethal options — are great tools for law enforcement (and private citizens) to have in their bag ‘o tools. The wielder of the tool, though, needs to realize that the line for using it is still pretty far down the road.

Murderer From White Salmon

OK, it’s just strange to see anything connected to White Salmon in the BBC site. To have that thing be a murder from White Salmon? Weirder still. I graduated from Columbia High School 5 years before this Matthew Fagan, so I’m happy to say I have no memory of the guy. Wow. Janet McCutcheon and FBLA on the BBC. I mean, good for her, right? Hmm. Maybe not the best of ways to break into British media, Janet.

Middle School Protesters Cutting Class in Tigard

Yesterday at the local middle school, a bunch of students decided to cut class and protest some teacher layoffs (just like their grandparents did! (kinda)) that are likely coming down the pike. Interesting topic at the dinner table: is cutting class for this reason a good thing or not? I’d say that as long as they were ready to suffer the consequences, then it’s a valuable teaching lesson about both civic disobedience as well as economic realities. After they got their nod from the media, though, they probably had gotten what they could out of the stunt. Note, though, that simply saying you’re protesting and ready the suffer the consequences doesn’t make it something to be proud of; I think there’s a knee jerk reaction to the word “protest”, especially from the Left, that all dissidence is a great thing.

Probably most interesting to me, though, is where the students cast blame and how they’re starting to come to their own conclusions about things, and not just regurgitating what they’ve heard from adults (even though there’s plenty of that, too). Here’s a comment from one of the young dissidents, a “katlynLS”. Note the comment about “paying back money to banks and paying their taxes” (sic):

I am a student at Fowler Middle School, and i was in the protest. Now i know that people say that this generation is a selfish one but most of us do care about the people and the world around us. We did this for a reson and that reson is that we just got money to get more teachers for things like health and spanish…ect. things like that! But now its all being taken away from us! Now you may not think that we know what is going on with the comunity but we do we just want to show that we care and get our piont across!
Some of the kids yes did not care about the teachers and only did it to skip school but the kids that did this for the teachers got punishment that were not right yeah they knew were we were and refurals were so uncalled for maybe a lunch or an after school detention.
Yes we were skiping school but even Mr.Rice knew why we did it and was proud of us i hope that the econamy will get better before the next school year! i would hate for a pregnent spanish teacher to get layed off her first year. Or a new health teacher Mrs. pollici, we didnt have a health class the past year or 2 because we didnt have a teacher right for the job but now we have a perfect strict but funny and fun teacher!
SO PEOPLE THAT ARNT PAYING BACK MONEY TO BANKS AND PAYIN THERE TAXES THINK ABOUT YOUR COMUNITY. you may be effecting the people you know and love. please..voters of USA help with your cominity and help your schools around you we need your help!

The New York Times Travel Blog Meets Columbia Gorge Wineries

It’s always pretty cool, if you’re from a small town, to see the area you were raised in mentioned in a national rag. So, imagine my surprise and  happiness when my Google Alert for White Salmon told me about an article in the New York Times Travel blogs (the Frugal Traveler) where the writer biked from White Salmon to Lyle and did a little wine tasting. Pretty neat.

Then, after I had picked as my base the town of Hood River, Ore., I discovered that bicycles were banned from the bridge over the Columbia. Oops!

Yeah dude, it’s a bit narrow for bicycles. And yes, Syncline does make some fine vino. My wife and I purchased a few bottles there last year, as a matter of fact.

Cameron’s House for Sale!

Only 2.3 million! Can I still get 0% down adjustable rate jumbos? And the funny thing is — seriously — I just watched the movie last Saturday. Just what did Cameron’s Dad go when he got home after the Ferrari was wrecked? The body is probably still in the woods.

Thanks to Scalzi for the on-the-ball web action.

Graphical Representation

If you read my last post about the tea party movement and were still thinking, “Well, I still think they’re shills for Rush and FOX, and I don’t see a problem with what President Obama and Congress are doing,” well, click through to this post by Jimmy Akin and watch the video. Then tell me that you have complete trust in our government that it’ll be alright, and it’s just the super rich that are going to pay for this.

Butcher’s bill on our wallets and our way of life. Everyone’s.